Your 15 year old grandson is not an adult. Any decisions made by him would have to be approved by his legal guardian. If that is you, then congratulations, if it is not then you have no legal right to him.
2006-11-18 12:54:34
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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She has custody as the biological mother but if he wants to live with you rather than her for serious reasons, then you can petition the court and it can be very legal. Please talk to a lawyer. You can find help for people on a fixed income. Call the bar association.
2006-11-18 12:54:50
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answer #2
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answered by Isis 7
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It all depends what state you are in! Here in New York if a 16 year old does not want to go home there is nothing a parent can do. They can call the cops but if the teen is safe there is nothing they can do...........
Check with child protective services..
2006-11-18 12:54:33
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answer #3
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answered by littlegoober75 4
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I think it depends on the state. It might be 16 in most states, so unless the mother agrees with the him staying with the GP's, he will have to stay with the mother for another year. Good luck.
2006-11-18 12:55:02
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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he's an grownup, and as a result now no longer under your legal administration. He might fall under the policies for any deadbeat renter. in case you have a signed settlement, then persist with the settlement. in case you do not have a settlement, get one and supply him a raffle. Then a minimum of you have the piece of paper to exact evict him with.
2016-10-04 03:03:12
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answer #5
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answered by esannason 4
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I got to choose between my divorced parents when I was 12 years old. I'm not sure about Grandparents though.
2006-11-18 12:56:39
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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If u go to court then yes.Most judges will ask the teen.Otherwise no. The parents have all the right to the child till he is 18.Thats the law...
2006-11-18 12:54:20
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answer #7
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answered by sweet_thing_kay04 6
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Your grandson can legally live with you, if you adopt him, especially if his mother is unfit.
2006-11-18 12:54:31
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answer #8
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answered by stick man 6
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Depends on the state and always get a lawyer he may want to leave her for good reason.
2006-11-18 13:00:14
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answer #9
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answered by helen l 2
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He probably would, but if his mother doesn't like it, she can sue for custody beginning a court battle (if things go that far)
2006-11-18 12:53:51
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answer #10
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answered by DonSoze 5
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