Best Interests of the children. Are you talking about physical custody or legal custody? Visitation schedule?
Hopefully the parents can work it out in concilation court.
for more details see steveshorr.com
ANSWER:: my parents are divorced and live three hours away from each other and have joint custody so it is possible.
can a prent who shares joint custody move to a different city but is staying within the same state?
no
Not without permission of the judge/court where the custodial order was issued.
You would have to talk to your lawyers or a judge.
Shouldn't, but mothers do it anyway.
Tricky and the laws will depend on the jurisdiction. Most will not allow a minor outside of their jurisdiction, so that they can validate the welfare of the child. You need to go to court to get your parental rights if you have not already. Immigration status have no bearing on parental rights so if the mother dies you will get the child. She can not will the child away from the other parent. It's not the will that will decide where the child goes but the court. What she wants for the child is just a wish since you can not will a child away as if they were property. So go get shared custody, visitation rights etc. If she dies and you have custody you can take the child to your home country if you wish.
Both parents have a cause of action with respect to the child's wrongful death. Each parent is an heir of the child, in equal shares, absent a Will. hm im not 2 sure whys that Why? Because the divorce of a child's parents is not a divorce of a child from a parent. In other words, it does not terminate the parent-child relationship between the child and either parent.
Not without permission of the judge/court where the custodial order was issued.
You would have to talk to your lawyers or a judge.
by whom?
Shouldn't, but mothers do it anyway.
Parental Custody is whoever the child lives with. Joint custody is when a child lives part time with both parents or when each parent shares in raising the child. They make decisions together.
Child shares the same parent, but the other parent is different. such as Child has same mom different dad, and other child has same mom different dad
A corporation is owned by its shareholders. A number of people (shareholders) can invest their money into a corporation and own shares in that company. In a parent company, a company such as the one above starts up another corporation (subsidiary corporation), and the original (parent) company itself owns the shares of the subsidiary. The individual shareholders of the parent own the subsidiary, but indirectly. They are not, themselves, shareholders in the subsidiay -- the parent owns the shares. One of the reasons for this is to "limit" the liability of shareholders. If the parent owns several subsidiares, and one of them gets into financial difficulty, it can be closed down (or sold) without upsetting the operations of the other subsidiaries. Selling one operation as a subsidiary is also easier because it is financially "self-contained." Similarly, if a person or a group of people owns several corporations, they can form a "holding" company, and transfer their shares of each companyinto it, rather than holding them personally. The individuals then become shareholders in the holding (parent) company, and the parent company owns the shares in each of the original companies, which then are subsidiaries of the parent. Indiviuals own shares in parent.> Parent owns shares in each subsidiary.
Does anyone know? we asssume this in happening in the U.S..
Your sister is your female relative who shares the same mother and father as you do. If she shares only one parent, she is your half sister.
That would be called joint custody and can be a good arrangement if it can be accomplished.
The simple answer is - you can't ! The company 'Warburg Pincus' - the 'parent' company of Poundland - is a private company. They do not trade their shares on the stock exchange.
A mother who has sole custody of a child may leave the state with the child. If the mother shares custody, she has to have consent for the other parent or the court before leaving the state with the child.