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wonderfulthree
Nov 12, 2009, 06:23 PM
I was married and was able to get permision from the court to leave the state with my 3 kids from my first marriage.my ex husband signed and let me go. I came back due to personal problems with my now husband and we worked things out and would like to move back out of state again,my ex- owes me over 14 thousand dollars in child support and I have full custidy of my children.is he allowed to now try to fight me and keep our kids here when I cannot afford to live in this state. please I need some answers quick.

Fr_Chuck
Nov 12, 2009, 08:14 PM
Has he developed a relationship with the kids, is he visiting on any regular basis.

His owing child support has nothing to do with it.

Full custody has nothing to do with it, it is his visitatation rights that come to call on this.

I would assume yes, he could fight it, if he can show the court he has now establish a regular relationship with the children. It would be up to the judge to decide if the original permission is still valid now.

wonderfulthree
Nov 13, 2009, 06:09 AM
has he developed a relationship with the kids, is he visiting on any regular basis.

His owing child support has nothing to do with it.

full custody has nothing to do with it, it is his visitatation rights that come to call on this.

I would assume yes, he could fight it, if he can show the court he has now establish a regular relationship with the children. It would be up to the judge to decide if the orginal permission is still valid now.

He has supervised visits with the kids ,does that make a difference.he has to complete aa meetings which he will not do.

s_cianci
Nov 13, 2009, 06:21 AM
Sure, he's allowed to try to fight you. Whether he'll prevail is another issue. As always, whatever decision the court makes will be done in what's deemed to be in the children's best interests. I will say that playing "musical chairs" with your state of residence might be a red flag in the court's eyes as stability in the children's' lives will be high on the court's priorities. If your ex is willing and able to provide such stability for the children without constantly moving around that could weigh in his favor.