My sisters boyfriend got residential custody of their 4yr. old. He will not let her take her child out, he only allowes her to come and see her when he says it's okay. She did not give full custody to him. Yet she said the child could resign with him. That is where the child is living. Is she still allowed to pick up her child?
2007-07-30
09:23:39
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9 answers
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asked by
lilyanna_amora
2
in
Pregnancy & Parenting
➔ Other - Pregnancy & Parenting
in court when she signed the resential letter, they assured her she wasn't signing her rites away. That she still has her days with her daughter too. Her boyfriend who lives with his parents, will not let her take her daughter ever. She does not have the money to take it to court rite now. Can she go and take her daughter anyways?
2007-07-30
09:41:24 ·
update #1
she should ask the lawyer she spent money on for FULL explanation of her rights.
2007-07-30 09:54:47
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Residential Custody
2016-10-06 10:16:36
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answer #2
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answered by fearing 4
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This Site Might Help You.
RE:
What does residential custody mean?
My sisters boyfriend got residential custody of their 4yr. old. He will not let her take her child out, he only allowes her to come and see her when he says it's okay. She did not give full custody to him. Yet she said the child could resign with him. That is where the child is living. Is she still...
2016-02-10 20:36:06
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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This Site Might Help You.
RE:
What does residential custody mean?
My sisters boyfriend got residential custody of their 4yr. old. He will not let her take her child out, he only allowes her to come and see her when he says it's okay. She did not give full custody to him. Yet she said the child could resign with him. That is where the child is living. Is she...
2015-08-07 08:29:32
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answer #4
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answered by ? 1
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residential custody usually means where the child lives primarily, like for school purposes. if you have joint custody and the parents live in two different school districts, where does the child go to school? as for the visitation, that should have been clearly addressed by the court. during a divorce or child custody case, especially every one I've seen, it's clear cut. the custodial parent gets the child these days and these hours. the non-custodial parent gets the child these weekends for these hours and alternating major holidays starting ____ and ending ____. if she is not allowed to see her child outside of supervised visitation, she needs to refer to the custody agreement and see what holds up. if she was given specific visitation rights, she can press contempt charges and get a peace officer to accompany her to retreive her child for visitation. the best thing to do it talk it over with the lawyer who helped her with this. he/she would be better to answer questions.
2007-08-05 17:37:33
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answer #5
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answered by flgalinms 5
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I don't know the law in this matter, but I do know that forcibly extracting a child from her home, where a parent has residential custody will probably get her thrown in the joint. She might even get charged with kidnapping.
2007-08-07 08:42:14
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answer #6
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answered by TX Mom 7
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Al of this should be spelled out in the custody agreement.
I believe that residential custody usually refers to the parent/home where the child actually lives in a joint custody agreement. i.e. - each parent has shared input (and shared time) in child's life - child's main address is with the resident custodian.
2007-07-30 09:29:56
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answer #7
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answered by Maureen 7
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For the best answers, search on this site https://shorturl.im/DnaLN
Not rocket science: file the correct paperwork to get a custody / visitation hearing. If it's not laid out in your divorce paperwork, it's "as the parties may agree," and you don't have to agree. Do what is in the child's best interests.
2016-03-26 23:41:36
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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she needs to talk to the judge or a lawyer about this, but residential sounds like just where the kid is supposed to live, it shouldn't have anything to do with taking her child out. it sounds to me like he is trying to set his own rules and just give her supervised visitation, and if thats not part of the agreement, then she can definitly do something about it. is she a fit mother, to be alone with her child.
2007-08-07 06:58:26
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answer #9
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answered by ? 7
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