The first step in determining custody and visitation — whether it is temporary or permanent — begins with the court
establishing legal and physical custody.
Not exact matches
As used in this paragraph, a «Covered Borrower» means any person who, at the time such person becomes obligated on a loan transaction or
establishes an account for consumer credit, satisfies the requirements under any one or more of the following classifications, or is otherwise under applicable laws deemed to be a «Covered Borrower» under the Military Lending Act, 10 U.S. Code Section 987: (a) An active duty member of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force or Coast Guard, or a person serving on active Guard
and Reserve duty (a person described in this clause (a) of the definition of «Covered Borrower» is hereinafter referred to as a «Service Member»); or (b) Any of the following persons, relative to a Service Member: (1) The spouse; (2) A child under the age of 21; or (3) If dependent on the Service Member for more than one half of such person's support, any one or more of the following persons: (i) A child under the age of 23 enrolled in a full time course of study at an institution of higher learning; (ii) A child of any age incapable of self support due to a mental or
physical incapacity that occurred before attaining age 23 while such person was dependent on the Service Member; (iii) Any unmarried person placed in
legal custody of the Service Member who resides with such Service Member unless separated by military service or to receive institutional care or under other circumstances covered by Regulation; or (iv) A parent or parent - in - law residing in the Service Member's household.
Once you have
established paternity
and your rights to participate in decisions regarding religion, education,
and medical care (
legal custody), your right to parenting time, visitation or
physical custody, your child's mother will not be allowed to dictate to you when you see your child, or relocate out of state without your agreement.
Establishing custody of any child in Tennessee involves both
legal and physical custody components, regardless of his age.
A parent with full
custody rights might have
legal custody, which allows the parent to make all of the major decisions in the child's life,
and physical custody, which
establishes the child's residence in that parent's home.
Florida law
establishes two kinds of child
custody:
legal and physical.
Parents share
legal and physical custody of a child if they were married when the child was born or if paternity was
established by a court of law.
Legal custody does not generally describe the child's living arrangements; rather,
physical custody establishes where the child will live
and who can spend time with her.
Temporary
custody orders
establish both
legal custody and physical custody of a child.
If the existing court order grants periods of
physical placement to more than one parent, it shall order a parent with
legal custody of
and physical placement rights to a child to provide not less than 60 days written notice to the other parent, with a copy to the court, of his or her intent to
establish his or her
legal residence with the child at any location outside the state.