[ii] Parents
with joint legal custody share these rights and make decisions about the child together.
Legal custody has statutory liabilities to be aware of even if a parent
with joint legal custody does not share physical custody.
A parent
with joint legal custody but without physical custody still has a right to view child care records about the child, like records of illness, injury reports, or notes from parent - provider conferences.
It also should be pointed out that fathers
with joint legal custody as a group also have court orders granting them more visitation time.
Seltzer concluded that «Controlling for the quality of family relationships before separation and socioeconomic status, fathers
with joint legal custody see their children more frequently, have more overnight visits, and pay more child support than fathers in families in which mothers have sole legal custody.»
With that joint legal custody then, that parent would have to confer with the other parent, regarding major decisions and that may be the child needs some medical care, not a flu shot but maybe something more specific.
With joint legal custody we would have a parent of primary residence who will be responsible for the day - to - day decisions concerning the children.
This standard visitation form works for parents
with joint legal custody and joint physical custody, where one parent is the primary caregiver and the other parent has standard visitation rights including week - end, evening and summer visitation.
With joint legal custody, both parents may inquire schools and doctors about information regarding the children, while this may not be the case with sole legal custody.
With joint legal custody, you might find that your children live with you and have visitation with your ex, but the two of you must cooperate to make major decisions on their behalf.
For example, if a child needs orthodontia and one parent
with joint legal custody does not agree that the expense is necessary, the child can not have her teeth aligned without the approval of the court.
Many couples confuse joint physical custody
with joint legal custody.
With joint legal custody, it can be very important for parents to come up with a plan for how to communicate and make decisions about the child's welfare.
With joint legal custody, both parents make decisions about their child's medical care, religious affiliation or schooling.
Although move out of state by parent
with joint legal custody and primary physical custody is not per se substantial change of circumstances such as to make that parent's continuing custody unreasonable, this does not mean that circumstances inherent in such move are always insufficient as a matter of law to warrant modifying child custody.
Whether move out of state by parent
with joint legal custody and primary physical custody would be sufficient to satisfy standard of proof required for modification of child custody orders depends upon facts.
With joint legal custody, both parents take part.
This means the parties will end up
with joint legal custody in the majority of divorces.
Not exact matches
With an ever increasing
legal trend toward
joint custody or mutual
custody, fathers need to know what it takes to make
joint custody a good solution for them, their kids and their kids» mom.
The court may award
joint legal custody with primary physical
custody to one parent.
New Mexico and New Hampshire are the only two states in the country that start out all divorce cases
with the assumption that
joint legal custody is in the best interest of every child.
Like the majority of states, New Mexico approaches divorce
with the assumption that
joint legal custody is in the «best interest of the child» in every case.
Often, a parent who has spends less than half time
with a child still considers it very important that the
legal designation is for
joint custody.
Because New Mexico is just one of two states in the country that starts off
with the presumption that
joint legal custody is always best, fighting for sole
custody will probably be an uphill battle.
Joint custody is an order that means that both you and your former partner share, at all times, the
legal rights and responsibilities associated
with custody even though you live apart.
Citing Indiana Code Section 31 -17-2-15, it ruled that because the parents could communicate without being hostile, it would be in the best interests of the children to award
joint legal custody, as well as overnight stays on Sundays, and additionally reduced his support payments from about $ 250 a week to $ 150 a week, based on the increased amount of time he was spending
with the children and the fact that the mother's pay had increased and the cost of child care had gone down.
Alaska law also creates a «rebuttable presumption» (a
legal assumption that has to be overcome
with credible evidence to the contrary) that if an abusive parent has a history of committing domestic violence against the other parent, a child, or even a domestic living partner, the abusive parent must not be awarded sole
legal custody, sole physical
custody,
joint legal custody, or
joint physical
custody.
In most cases, parents share
joint legal custody and are encouraged to confer
with one another regarding parenting decisions even after divorce.
Joint Legal with Physical to Mom or Physical to Dad — Both have legal custody but one parent is the primary physical custodian, and the other parent visits on a schedule, generally standard visitation schedule for particular co
Legal with Physical to Mom or Physical to Dad — Both have
legal custody but one parent is the primary physical custodian, and the other parent visits on a schedule, generally standard visitation schedule for particular co
legal custody but one parent is the primary physical custodian, and the other parent visits on a schedule, generally standard visitation schedule for particular county.
In 1993, Father filed for a modification of that decision and was awarded
joint legal custody and parenting time
with Mother retaining primary physical
custody.
Custody of the six children Jolie and husband Brad Pitt share is expected to be the largest part of the divorce proceedings, as Jolie has filed for sole physical custody, with visitation rights for Pitt, while asking the two maintain joint legal c
Custody of the six children Jolie and husband Brad Pitt share is expected to be the largest part of the divorce proceedings, as Jolie has filed for sole physical
custody, with visitation rights for Pitt, while asking the two maintain joint legal c
custody,
with visitation rights for Pitt, while asking the two maintain
joint legal custodycustody.
If the parents have
joint legal custody and substantially equal periods of physical placement
with the child, either parent may file a petition, motion or order to show cause for modification of the
legal custody or physical placement order.
If the parent proposing the move or removal has sole
legal or
joint legal custody of the child and the child resides
with that parent for the greater period of time or the parents have substantially equal periods of physical placement
with the child, as an alternative to the petition, motion or order to show cause under par.
A man who donated sperm to help a friend conceive a child is the child's
legal father,
with the right to share
joint legal and physical
custody with the protesting mother, a Roanoke judge has ruled.
In some cases, parents share
joint legal custody, but one parent is designated as having primary physical
custody of the child,
with the other parent having a set parenting time to spend
with the child.
Joint custody can either be physical (the children physically live
with each parent for a portion of the time),
legal (children live
with one parent but both parents are equally responsible for making major parenting decisions), or a combination of both.
The court may order
joint custody — both parents share
custody — or sole
custody to one parent, and must decide
joint or sole
custody as to both
legal custody (the right to make decisions about a child's welfare) and physical
custody (the right to have a child live
with you).
If your shared physical
custody or
joint legal custody arrangement isn't working out post-divorce, you can file a motion
with the court to change it.
A parent who does not have
joint or sole
legal custody of his child can make these kinds of decisions without consulting the other parent while his child is visiting
with him.
If the parent proposing to move has sole or
joint legal custody of the child and the child resides
with that parent for the majority of time, the noncustodial parent can attempt to stop the move by filing paperwork
with the court.
If the parent proposing the move or removal has sole
legal or
joint legal custody of the child and the child resides
with that parent for the greater period of time, the parent objecting to the move or removal may file a petition, motion or order to show cause for modification of the
legal custody or physical placement order affecting the child.
The court may also award
joint physical
custody, meaning that the child lives
with both parents, or
joint legal custody, requiring the parents to agree on decisions for the child.
With a
joint custody arrangement, parents share
legal custody, which means that both parents have the right to make decisions regarding the child's upbringing.
Joint legal custody does not mean your child will spend half his time
with you and half
with your spouse, so if this is what you want, you'll also need to explain in your parenting plan where he's going to live and on what days.
New York courts often award
legal custody to both parents, known as
joint custody, and physical
custody to one parent
with the other granted visitation rights.
A parent
with sole physical and
legal custody is known as a «sole conservator,» and when parents have
joint custody, they are called «
joint conservators.»
Under the U.S.
legal system, you have a constitutional right to
joint or shared
custody and other contact
with your children, unless you have been found to be an unfit parent for such reasons as neglect, abuse or abandonment.
And
joint legal custody, or shared
custody,
with one parent remaining as the primary physical custodian does little to alter the amount of time a child spends
with the noncustodial parent, and does a lot to create control conflicts between parents who continue to harbor resentment stemming from the failure of the marriage.
The court may order sole
legal custody with shared physical
custody,
joint legal custody with sole physical
custody or make other
custody arrangements.
In the USA, 36 States now explicitly authorize
Joint Custody (i.e. some variant of joint legal and residential custody) with 14 having a presumption in favour of variably defined Joint Custody, and six having the equivalent of a rebuttable presumption of substantive shared paren
Joint Custody (i.e. some variant of joint legal and residential custody) with 14 having a presumption in favour of variably defined Joint Custody, and six having the equivalent of a rebuttable presumption of substantive shared par
Custody (i.e. some variant of
joint legal and residential custody) with 14 having a presumption in favour of variably defined Joint Custody, and six having the equivalent of a rebuttable presumption of substantive shared paren
joint legal and residential
custody) with 14 having a presumption in favour of variably defined Joint Custody, and six having the equivalent of a rebuttable presumption of substantive shared par
custody)
with 14 having a presumption in favour of variably defined
Joint Custody, and six having the equivalent of a rebuttable presumption of substantive shared paren
Joint Custody, and six having the equivalent of a rebuttable presumption of substantive shared par
Custody, and six having the equivalent of a rebuttable presumption of substantive shared parenting.