{| |- | Yes, you can. Florida has an emancipation statute. The current guardian has to file the petition. |}
Yes when you get emancipated, turn 18 or with parents permission.
You need to have a legal guardian until you are 18.
A pregnant minor or one who is already a parent is not emancipated apart from regarding their health or the child. And adopted children are legally like the biological ones to the adoptive parent. This means you are not emancipated until you are 18 and can only then decide where to go or move.
No. Being pregnant/having a child does not emancipate a minor.
Yes, unless the child has been emancipated, or is in the care of the state or another guardian.
Not until they are 18 years of age in Florida. Until then the parents determine where you live.
Yes, emancipated means legally an adult.
If you get emancipated, you don't have a legal guardian; that's part of what "emancipated" means. If you're asking if you can ask for support from your former legal guardian, then sure, it's okay for you to ask. And it's okay for them to say "no." Or "No, but you can come back and live here again if you want." You're legally an adult, and you can live with any other adult that's willing to put up with you. If you need support in order to survive, then the court erred in granting you emancipation in the first place.
if they have been legally emancipated by the court or through marriage, yes. Otherwise they can only move out with parental permission but will not be emancipated then.
in Washington state a minor can legally be emancipated at the age of 16
Yes. An emancipated minor is legally an adult.
you have to be an adult witch is 18 years old if you dont live under your parents roof