Sentences with phrase «children wards of court»

The High Court made the children wards of court until further order.
Having discharged the interim care orders, the President made the children wards of court, giving the court the fullest possible range of powers to impose safeguards: «the courts, when exercising the parental power of the Crown, have, at any rate in legal theory, an unrestricted jurisdiction to do whatever is considered necessary for the welfare of a ward» (Re X (A Minor)(Wardship: Restriction on Publication)[1975] 1 All ER 697 at [706G]-RRB-.
The school financial aid administrator should ask for a copy of the court order that declared the child a ward of the court.

Not exact matches

Four days after a 72 - year - old retired government worker was brought to a southern California hospital's emergency ward by his 12 - year - old «companion,» a county welfare worker dropped in on the pair and initiated legal action to have the child made a dependent of the court.
Note that a child does not automatically become a ward of the court upon being incarcerated.
The key issue for financial aid purposes is that when a child becomes a ward of the court, no parent or other person is financially responsible for the child.
A legal guardian must have been appointed by the court for the child to be a ward of the court.
Often a minor becomes a ward of the court when the court determines that the child will be subject to abuse or neglect if they remain with the parent or if both of the student's biological or adoptive parents are deceased.
Note that a child can be a ward of the court and still have contact with his or her biological parents or even still be living with the parents (albeit under court supervision).
If there is any confusion as to whether the child is a ward of the court or not, the financial aid administrator should ask for a letter from the judge clarifying whether the child is a ward of the court.
In Re a Ward of Court [2017] EWHC 1022 (Fam), [2017] Fam Law 725, Sir James Munby P considered whether the police needed court permission to interview a child who was a ward of cCourt [2017] EWHC 1022 (Fam), [2017] Fam Law 725, Sir James Munby P considered whether the police needed court permission to interview a child who was a ward of ccourt permission to interview a child who was a ward of courtcourt.
He drew attention to FPR 2010 PD12D, which includes: «5.2 Where the police need to interview a child who is already a ward of court, an application must be made for permission for the police to do so...».
(2) Where a child has been interviewed by the police in connection with contemplated criminal proceedings and the child is, or subsequently becomes, a ward of court, the permission of the court is not required for the child to be called as a witness in the criminal proceedings....
The child was born in England, made a ward of court, removed from the mother at birth by consent, named by the local authority and placed with foster carers.
In the end, the judge ruled that the children should be made temporary wards of the court and placed in the interim care of relatives who reside in Florida.
She practiced extensively in the areas of child law and adoption, family law, mental health, wards of court and vulnerable adults.
In the light of the ward of court order, the father could not rely on Article 13 of the Hague Convention, which permitted the State authorities not to order the child's return, since Article 11 of Brussels Regulation II bis (on the enforcement of civil judgments) specified that a court could not refuse to return a child on the basis of Article 13 of the Hague Convention if adequate arrangements had been made to secure protection of the child after his or her return.
Often, when a child becomes a ward of the court, he or she is placed with a foster family.
A Children's Court order may have made you a State ward, placed you in the care of the Director - General or under the parental responsibility of the Minister.
An established legal permanency for children and youth who would otherwise be wards of the court
Shafer, a salesperson with Lahaina Realty Inc. in Fort Myers, spends up to 30 hours a week working with children who've been made wards of the court due to parental neglect or abuse.
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