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Published byJoan Howard Modified over 9 years ago
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Custody and Visitation Review April 8, 2003
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Custody and Visitation Review 1)Parent vs. Parent Custody Standard Majority: Best Interests of Child (multifactor, discretionary standard) 2)Parent vs. Parent Visitation Standard Majority: Best Interests but presumption that visitation with non-custodial parent in best interests of children 3)Parent vs. Third Party Custody Standard Majority: Presumption in favor of parent unless parent unfit or other extraordinary circumstances
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Parent vs. Third Party Visitation Standard Examples: Washington State: “[any] person may petition the court for visitation rights at any time,” and the court may grant such visitation rights whenever “visitation may serve the best interest of the child.” Maryland: An equity court may: (1) consider a petition for reasonable visitation of a grandchild by a grandparent; and (2) if the court finds it to be in the best interests of the child, grant visitation rights to the grandparents.
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4)Parent vs. Third Party Visitation after Troxel v. Granville? Best Interest Not Enough to Overturn Parent’s Decision/Standard Applied by Court Must Include Something Else: Special Weight to Parent’s Decision Unreasonable Denial of Visitation by Parent(s) Finding that Parent is Unfit Finding that Parent’s Decision Harms Child(ren)
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3 rd Party Visitation Standard That Would Pass Constitutional Muster Under Troxel: Fit Parents’ Decisions About Circumstances Under Which Child(ren) Should Visit With 3 rd Parties Should Prevail: 1)Absent unreasonable denial of visitation? or 2)Unless actual or potential harm to child? or 3)Unless parent-like relationship with 3 rd party seeking visitation?
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Alternative Dispute Resolution and Custody
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ADR: Resolving Conflicts Without Resort to Litigation Negotiation: Two parties (usually through lawyers) seek to reach a settlement Arbitration: Neutral Third Party resolves dispute by rendering a decision after hearing from both sides Mediation: Neutral Third Party assists two or more disputing parties to reach a mutually agreeable settlement of dispute
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Mediation and Child Access Most states (including MD) now require parties to attempt to mediate child access disputes before resort to litigation See e.g. Md. Rule 9-205: requires parties to custody or visitation dispute to participate in up to two mediation sessions
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Types of Mediation Problem Solving Transformative Evaluative
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Lawyers as Mediators Ethical Issues: Conflicts; Confidentiality; Non-Attorney “Practice of Law”; Mediation and Domestic Violence Training: Varies from jurisdiction to jurisdiction MD: -Need not be lawyer -40 hours of general mediation training plus 20 hours specialized training if child access mediation See: Title 17, Md. Rules Vol. 2 Practice Opportunities - Mixing mediation with traditional law practice - Building a mediation practice
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