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I am asking this as a grandparent.. our son was not married to his babys mama, but in custody papers it states that she may not move more than 50 miles away. her new hubby is taking a promotion and she claims they are moving regardless of court orders (about 300 miles)

2007-01-29 12:40:32 · 5 answers · asked by Marco 2 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

5 answers

It's totally enforceable. It's just that the cops are not going to go put a cordon around the house. You'll have to wait until it happens to initiate legal action.

If they were smart, they'd seek a modification to the court order ahead of time, and there's a good chance it would be granted to them. If they just go ahead and break the law, they'll be in trouble, which probably won't amount to much, and then they can still seek a modification, though they'll be under a cloud for having already broken the law.

If/when a modification happens, your son would want the custodial parent to either cover or split the cost of either him or the child to travel for visitation (including mileage/tickets, meals away from home, hotel, etc).

2007-01-29 12:54:03 · answer #1 · answered by mattzcoz 5 · 1 0

First, a 7 3 hundred and sixty 5 days previous is usually in college Mon-Fri from approximately 9-3 authentic? So it would make sense that the mom and dad could pass back to courtroom and get a clean visitation order so college isn't disrupted. Bouncing a toddler back and forth from one living house to the different in the process the college week could be disastrous. Your challenge seems to be that the visitation substitute into informally altered and now the mummy is making an attempt to stick to the expert order and/or sabotage visitation. In those circumstances, the ultimate element to do is supply up appealing. faster or later, if the mummy and dad can't come to an contract, then pass back to courtroom. they look on the ultimate interest of the youngster and rigidity co mothers and fathers to artwork together and stop pushing their very own very own schedule. pass back, have the visitation rewritten. sturdy success!

2016-10-16 06:56:43 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

A court order is a court order. It can be enforced by the power of the court to enforce any of its orders. A person violating the order intentionally is subject to being cited for contempt. You are going to have to get a lawyer to go into court and make a motion before the judge who issued the order.

2007-01-29 12:51:13 · answer #3 · answered by JOHN B 6 · 1 0

It is hard to enforce this, as sometimes things happen like that. He could go back to court to have the orders modified, but the judge may still allow her to move with the children.

2007-01-29 13:09:53 · answer #4 · answered by ? 5 · 0 0

Better call an attorney, some states do enforce their orders, and some states, look the other way (like AZ). Its a sad situation, but you better get a hold of someone fast.

2007-01-29 12:49:57 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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