Florida Divorce * Child Custody * Domestic Violence Law Lawyer | Boynton Beach

Divorce information, advice and help on questions about rights under Florida divorce, alimony, property, child support, custody, visitation and domestic violence laws, cases, procedures and guidelines from Fort Lauderdale Broward & West Palm Beach County divorce lawyer and domestic violence attorney Janet Langjahr

August 26, 2005

But Junior Wants to Live with Me …

Posted by Filed under Child Custody or Parental Responsibility.

“Junior wants to live with me. That means I’ll get custody, right?”

Parents often boil the anticipated child custody determination down to the above analysis and conclusion. But rarely is a judicial custody determination that simple, either legally or factually.

Legally, the child’s preference is one factor that the court may consider in determining primary residential custody, one factor among many.

Obviously, choosing which parent to live with is a “heavy” decision for a child. Children don’t always know what they really want or what is in their own best interests. Even if they do know deep down, they may prefer (or think they would prefer) the other alternative.

The court, on the other hand, will balance all pertinent factors to make the determination that is in the child’s best interests. That is why the court will only consider the child’s preference if the court concludes that the child has “sufficient intelligence, understanding and experience” to form a “reasonable” preference.

In a nutshell, the court will weigh the maturity supporting the child’s expressed preference. Maturity doesn’t come at any set age.

It depends on the individual child. Some children are not mature enough at sixteen. Others are mature enough at thirteen. But, generally speaking, the older the child, the more mature the child is likely to be.

Even so, no matter how mature the child, the child’s expressed preference is still only one of several factors that the court will consider in the child’s best interests.

Then again, legal rules aside, it is not always so clear to the non-expert what the child’s true preference is in fact, something which will have to be proved to the court.

Children have been known to tell each parent that they would prefer to live with that parent. Especially if the parent grills the child (which the parent should definitely not do).

Children are children. They may not want to hurt or disappoint either parent by stating a preference to live primarily with the other parent. Or they may be fearful of resulting rejection or even punishment. Not to mention that children change like the wind.

In some cases, parents should think twice before pinning too much on a child’s expressed preference.

Bookmark and Share

contact info:

resources:

internal links:

Listen to Janet

feedblitz

bloglines

Subscribe with Bloglines, a third party service

Subscribe to the Feeds

categories:

search blog:

archives:

family law blogs:

Florida law blogs:

miscellaneous blogs:

FREE REPORTS on Florida divorce, child custody and domestic violence law

FREE periodic newsletter on Florida divorce, child custody and domestic violence law

Upcoming seminars on Florida divorce, child custody and domestic violence law

Email general questions on Florida divorce, child custody and domestic violence law for FREE answers as time permits

In-depth FREE articles on Florida divorce, child custody and domestic violence law.

Select Florida Attorneys and Other Divorce Professionals: Apply Now to Join Our Exclusive Network.

How I can help you with your Florida divorce and child custody legal problems

How I can help you with your Florida domestic violence legal problems

Case studies of people I have helped with Florida divorce, child custody and domestic abuse legal problems

Excerpts from contested court papers I used to help people with their Florida divorce, child custody and domestic violence legal problems

See if the nonprofit Association against Hidden Family Abuse, Inc. can help you or someone you care about.

How we can even help you with Florida Uncontested Divorce Forms Preparation.

Save The Net

Powered by Wordpress
© 2005 - 2011 Copyright by Law Office of Janet Langjahr PA. All rights reserved. This web site is owned exclusively by Law Office of Janet Langjahr PA and all content on it is protected by US and international copyright laws.