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i have a question i need straight up answered please.
ok so lets say a father has full custody of a daughter but the daughter stays with the mom in another state with the dads permission but there is no court involved. the mother decides tht things arenot working out with the daughter so she decides to send her back to the fathers.

can the father object to this?

* the daughter is 16 years old

2007-03-01 15:48:59 · 21 answers · asked by Anonymous in Family & Relationships Family

21 answers

no,,, because there is no orders for her mother ,, or even joint custody,,,

2007-03-01 15:52:40 · answer #1 · answered by mala 3 · 0 0

No he can't object to it and he shouldn't. It takes a lot to prove a mother unfit (this may not be the case here). And why would he want to object to getting his daughter when he either fought to get full custody or the mother just up and decided she didn't want her child and agreed to full custody to be granted to the father.

I know sometimes other facts enter in: such as, one or both of the parents remarry and start a new family and that leaves the child not wanted and very much feeling unloved.

2007-03-01 16:32:52 · answer #2 · answered by ~Sheila~ 5 · 0 0

How could he object? He has full custody. The court decided that his mom was basically unfit to have the child (considering that men rarely get custody of kids in any other situation) so it's his responsibility to house her. Allowing his daughter to stay with her mom was a choice that he had no legal obligation to make and a situation that the mother didn't have to agree to. As long as she is paying her child support order, she is legally on track.

2007-03-01 16:28:30 · answer #3 · answered by Vince R 5 · 0 0

Well, I think this is something you, the father and the daughter need to work out. I would have to say that because he has custody he should not be able to object, simmply because he has custody. Why would he object? hopefully he loves his daughter and would be there for her and niether the mom or the father find her as a burden.

2007-03-01 15:54:19 · answer #4 · answered by MekTekPhil 4 · 0 0

No... you are the custodial parent. No, you cannot object to it! Love your daughter. Give her sense of value in life. She is beautiful and she needs you more than you know! Been there! My parents are divorced and it is the most HORRIBLE thing a child can go through. But, she will come around and your hard work will be rewarded! Don't give up on her because things are going peachy! She is probably acting up because there isn't enough in her life. Kids that age need LOVE! So much love! May God bless you and your daughter!

2007-03-01 15:52:49 · answer #5 · answered by Bink 2 · 1 0

If I am comprehending you correctly ... there was an agreement between you and the father of your child, that he has full custody. He sent your 16 y/o daughter to live with you, and it's not working out. Now you want to send your daughter back to her father ... and he doesn't want her either?

You know, when we have children ... we are supposed to love and support them, no matter what. You and your daughter's father are not giving her something she so desperately needs ... unconditional love.

That poor little girl ... that's all I have to say. :(

BTW: No, you can't object ... unless you both want to go to court over it. Wouldn't it look pitiful ... two parents who are not fighting for custody of their child, but rather, refusing to take care of their child. Sad, extremely sad.

2007-03-01 15:59:02 · answer #6 · answered by ♥Carol♥ 7 · 1 0

If he has full custody why would he? Besides, I think unless the two can work it out themselves the father would have to take her back once the law stepped in. Unless the mom won custody but I doubt she'd try for that.

2007-03-01 15:52:52 · answer #7 · answered by air_of_truth 2 · 0 0

No, but he could get the custody order amended. The court gave dad custody for a reason.

2007-03-01 15:53:46 · answer #8 · answered by Roll_Tide! 5 · 0 0

He can't because he has full custody, unless he proves himself
unfit. Which if he's moved on and doesn't want lose any other children with lady #2

2007-03-01 15:57:41 · answer #9 · answered by memel73 2 · 0 0

no, he cannot. If he has full custody then i guess not. But the rules can bend here and there, dont get teh court involved! good luck!

2007-03-01 16:48:10 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Well, if the court says he has full custody, what's he going to say?

2007-03-01 15:52:25 · answer #11 · answered by NORTH WEST 4 · 0 0

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