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Some background, My husband and I have been married five years and seperated for about 3 1/2 of them. My daughter was just 3 weeks old when we left. We lived in one county and I moved to another county with my parents. He has since moved to another county all together. He was the one to file for divorce and his attorney told him about a law that we can not live more than 50 miles apart. We currently live just over 80 miles apart. When we get divorced I will have full custody and he will have visitation rights. My question is; Can they make me move 30 miles closer to him even though we have lives 80 miles apart for almost 3 years now?

2007-07-27 03:22:52 · 7 answers · asked by ochya 3 in Family & Relationships Marriage & Divorce

7 answers

No there are always exceptions to every rule and sinceboth have established permanent residences, the Judge will grant an exception here

2007-07-27 03:29:31 · answer #1 · answered by Arthur W 7 · 4 0

My sister does this for a living, never heard of such a thing...call the Florida Bar if you can't afford an attorney, you might get legal aid, I'm divorced, have custody and was living in North Carolina, btw, both me and the ex are from Orlando, live here again, but I did my own divorce with the divorce packet from my county courthouse and no where did it say anything of the sort.

2007-07-28 06:08:21 · answer #2 · answered by Dolly J 3 · 0 0

Your first problem is he has an attorney and you don't.

I can only tell you that I am allowed to move out of state if I want to because when I did my divorce I did not put any stipulations on it.

I have never heard of a florida law stating such......it sounds like they are trying to put it in the settlement agreement......

GET AN ATTORNEY.....It could be less expensive than moving.

2007-08-01 15:21:30 · answer #3 · answered by warriorandangel 2 · 0 0

No the court cannot order you to change where you live. The law is there so that one party cannot deliberately move the children a long distance away out of spite..

2007-07-28 05:32:01 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

visit court docket docket with wish u have in spite of the undeniable fact that u prefer DNA checking out to ensure there us of a of americaif she does now no longer wish u around she would have been mendacity in spite of the undeniable fact that i evaluate it is going enable the right atttorny comprehend get DNA test by using the court docket docket then go from there in getting custdoy

2016-09-30 21:54:34 · answer #5 · answered by geissel 4 · 0 0

i asked my sister she is an attorney,and she said no,but they make you drop your daughter off for visits with her farther,and pick her up

2007-08-01 03:25:18 · answer #6 · answered by tnsupermomwhit 5 · 0 0

arthur w has the right answer

2007-07-27 03:31:38 · answer #7 · answered by Southern Comfort 6 · 0 0

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