Difference between revisions of "Custody"

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<tr><td style="padding-right:10px"><b>Takeaway</b></td><Td>Custody is determined by whatever a judge feels is in the child's best interest.</td></tr>
<tr><td style="padding-right:10px"><b>Takeaway</b></td><Td>Custody is determined by whatever a judge feels is in the child's best interest.</td></tr>
</table>
</table>
'''Custody''' is determined by whatever a judge feels is in the child's best interest. There are two types of custody. Physical custody is who the minor lives with. Legal custody is who gets to make important decisions about the child. Generally, a judge is comparing one parent to the other to determine which (or both) are suitable parents. If one parent is substantially more responsible than the other, they will get primary physical custody. Each parent gets a minimum of custody of every other weekend due to their constitutional rights to be involved in their child's life, unless they are a danger to the child, abandoned the child, or otherwise demonstrated abandonment or disregard for their constitutional privilege.  
'''Custody''' is determined by whatever a judge feels is in the child(ren)'s best interest. There are two types of custody. Physical custody is who the minor lives with. Legal custody is who makes important decisions about the child(ren). Generally, a judge is comparing one parent to the other to determine which (or both) are competent parents.  


==Jurisdiction==
==Jurisdiction==

Revision as of 14:04, 15 October 2022

Custody
Statutes:Chapter 50A
DescriptionWho the child lives with (physical custody) and who makes important decisions about the child (legal custody).
TakeawayCustody is determined by whatever a judge feels is in the child's best interest.

Custody is determined by whatever a judge feels is in the child(ren)'s best interest. There are two types of custody. Physical custody is who the minor lives with. Legal custody is who makes important decisions about the child(ren). Generally, a judge is comparing one parent to the other to determine which (or both) are competent parents.

Jurisdiction

A North Carolina court will accept jurisdiction if North Carolina is the child's "home state."[1] However, if North Carolina was the home state of the child within the prior six months, and one spouse takes the child to another state, North Carolina courts will still accept jurisdiction.[1] You can also have North Carolina jurisdiction if no other state can or wants to.[1] However, if a spouse takes the child to another state for more than six months, their new state most likely is the only state that can accept jurisdiction. The plaintiff can pick the court for the county where the minor lives, or where one of the spouses live.[2]

Contact an Attorney

This wiki is provided by North Carolina divorce lawyer David King and his firm King @ Law. You can learn more about King @ Law at www.kinglawnc.com. If you are looking to hire an attorney, have questions, or would like to contribute to this wiki, you can contact attorney King using any of the following methods:

References