I am assuming you want to know whether you can move and take a child without there being a custody agreement in place. This depends upon whether there is a court already taking care of the family issues. If so, the court may restrict your ability to move the child, but you are usually free to move. Of course, this means the child may end up with the other parent.
If there is no court involvement, no paternity orders, no divorce decree, no custody agreement of any court - then yes, the parent with possession of the children (usually the mother) is usually free to move anywhere. But, if you do, and the other parent objects, expect that to come back to bite you in court when they sue for access to the children.
You will have to show significant change in order to change the custody agreement in North Carolina. Even if there are significant changes, it is up to the judge to decide the custody of a child.
Not unless they are a minor and you have parental custody or guardianship
If you signed a reaffirmation agreement in bankruptcy, but the court discharged that agreement, the lender will come to take the car. This will occur even if you're currently up to date.
Of course they met in person. They even signed an agreement, which Hitler then broke.
Yes he can file for divorce and they will have to come to a new agreement.
It will depend on the agreement signed and what it says. It is possible that they have permission to make the billing on a monthly basis until you tell them to stop.
Unless there has been a new agreement signed since the original, that original agreement is still binding, and the cosigners are still on the hook.
If the grandparents do not have legal permanent custody and the mother has proof she is the child's legal custodian, even if she has been absent in the child's life--yes, they can. If you believe the mother is unfit to care for the child or you have had physical custody for a long period of time with little or no contact from the mother, you can file an emergency appeal for custody with the courts. A temporary custody paper will not keep the child with you if she ever signed one as she can revoke it at anytime.
You can ask a court to modify the custody agreement if the situation has changed, yes. However, there's no guarantee the court WILL modify the agreement even if child support payments are not being made (though there will of course be a de factomodification if he gets thrown in jail for being a deadbeat dad).
If not married, the mother always has sole custody, even without an order. see links below
Usually the debt is reaffirmed under the same terms and conditions as originally agreed. Most of those allow attorney's fees to be added, along with costs. If the original agreement did not allow those expenses, they are not allowed in the reaffirmation unless the reaffirmation agreement allows them. Did you not read your reaffirmation agreement before you signed it? Do you even have the original agreement?
This should be outlined in your custody and child support agreement. The custody agreement should specify which parent is required to provide medical and dental insurance. Some states even require that both parents provide insurance for the child if it's available. Check your custody agreement. If it does not specify which parent is required to provide the insurance, typically the custodial parent will pay the bill and the non-custodial parent will reimburse them for half.