Tag: <span>supervised visitation</span>

Domestic Violence and Family Law. Know Your Rights. Child Custody

Domestic Violence: 3 Family Law Factors to Break Free…

Domestic violence is not your fault. We can help.

A Safe Haven During Troubled Times

Domestic violence casts a dark shadow over families, leaving a trail of pain, fear, and uncertainty. We understand that arriving at this page might mean you’re facing a difficult and frightening situation. At Maples Family Law in Stockton, we believe that no one should endure abuse, and we are committed to providing a safe haven of family law support for victims seeking justice and protection.

In California, the courts recognize the devastating impact of domestic violence and have laws in place to protect victims while holding abusers accountable. But navigating the legal system while dealing with the trauma of domestic violence and abuse can be overwhelming. That’s where we come in.

This article explores how domestic violence intersects with family law proceedings and outlines the options available for those seeking safety and a fresh start. We’ll discuss how domestic violence affects:

  • Custody and Visitation: Prioritizing the safety of children
  • Protective Orders: Creating a shield against further abuse
  • Financial Support: Ensuring victims are not further burdened

If you or someone you know is experiencing domestic violence, please know that you are not alone. Maples Family Law is here to provide compassionate legal guidance and unwavering support as you navigate this challenging journey.

Domestic Violence, Custody, and Visitation: Putting Children First

When domestic violence enters a home, it’s not just the adults who suffer. Children caught in the crossfire are deeply affected, and their safety and well-being become paramount in any family law proceeding. California courts understand this and take a strong stance in prioritizing children’s best interests when domestic violence is present. Here’s how a history of abuse can shape custody and visitation orders:

Supervised Visitation: Shielding Children from Harm

In cases where there’s a risk that a parent might harm a child, either physically or emotionally, the court may order supervised visitation. This means that visits with the child must occur in the presence of a neutral third party, such as a social worker or a trained supervisor at a designated facility.

Why Supervised Visitation? 

  • This measure allows a child to maintain some form of contact with a parent while ensuring their safety. 
  • It also offers the court a chance to observe the parent-child interaction and assess any potential risks.

Restricting Custody: Prioritizing Safety Above All Else

When domestic violence is severe or poses a significant threat to a child, the court may limit or even terminate the abuser’s custody rights. This decision is never taken lightly and is based on evidence that demonstrates a clear danger to the child’s well-being.

What Factors Are Considered? 

  • The court carefully evaluates the severity of the abuse, the impact on the child, any patterns of coercive control, and the abuser’s willingness to address their behavior. 
  • The primary goal is to protect the child from physical or emotional harm.

Protecting the Victim: Creating a Safety Net

The court has the power to issue orders that safeguard both the victim of domestic violence and the child. These may include:

Restraining Orders: 

  • These orders prohibit the abuser from contacting or coming near the victim and their children. 
  • They can provide a crucial barrier against further abuse and harassment.

No-Contact Orders: 

  • These orders may be put in place to prevent any direct or indirect contact between the abuser and the child, especially in cases where the abuse was directed at the child.

The Financial Scars of Abuse: How California Law Protects Victims

Domestic violence often leaves victims grappling with more than just emotional and physical wounds. Abusers frequently use financial control as a tool of power and manipulation, leaving their partners in a precarious economic position. California law recognizes the devastating impact of this financial abuse and offers several protections:

Spousal Support: Acknowledging the Impact on Earning Capacity

When determining spousal support (also known as alimony), the court takes into account the impact domestic violence has had on a victim’s ability to earn a living. Abuse can disrupt careers, limit educational opportunities, and create long-lasting financial insecurity.

  • Factors Considered: The court may consider the length of the marriage, the victim’s earning potential, the abuser’s financial resources, and the extent to which the abuse hindered the victim’s ability to become self-sufficient.
  • Goal of Support: Spousal support aims to help the victim regain their footing and establish financial stability after leaving an abusive relationship.

Child Support: Ensuring Children’s Needs Are Met

Domestic violence doesn’t just affect the adults involved; it also has a profound impact on children. California courts prioritize the well-being of children in cases of abuse.

  • Calculating Support: When determining child support, the court considers the financial needs of the child and the income of both parents. Domestic violence can be a factor in this calculation, as the court seeks to ensure the child’s needs are met despite the circumstances.
  • Protecting the Child’s Future: The court may order the abuser to pay a higher amount of child support if their abuse has negatively impacted the victim’s ability to provide for the child.

Financial Abuse: A Hidden Form of Control

California law explicitly recognizes financial abuse as a form of domestic violence. This type of abuse involves tactics designed to control a partner’s access to resources and create economic dependency. Examples include:

  • Controlling Finances: Limiting access to bank accounts, credit cards, or cash.
  • Sabotaging Employment: Interfering with a partner’s job by constantly calling, making them miss work, or even getting them fired.
  • Running Up Debt: Secretly using a partner’s credit cards or opening accounts in their name.
  • Withholding Necessities: Refusing to provide basic needs like food, shelter, or medical care.

Finding Strength and Support in the Face of Abuse

Leaving an abusive relationship takes immense courage. It’s a journey fraught with emotional turmoil, legal complexities, and financial uncertainties. It is a journey that encompasses rebuilding your emotional health and self-esteem (mental health) and navigating the complexities of the legal system concurrently. But you don’t have to walk this path alone. At Maples Family Law, we understand the challenges you face and are here to provide compassionate guidance and unwavering support every step of the way.

Our experienced team is dedicated to protecting your rights and advocating for your safety and well-being. Whether you need help securing a restraining order, navigating child custody arrangements, or establishing financial independence from your abuser, we will be your steadfast allies in the pursuit of justice and healing.

Remember, you are not defined by the abuse you’ve endured. You are strong, resilient, and deserving of a life free from fear and violence. Let us help you reclaim your power and build a brighter future for yourself and your children.

If you are ready to take the first step towards a safer tomorrow, reach out to Maples Family Law today. We are here to listen, to support, and to empower you on your journey to healing and freedom.

Resources

Child Custody

Visitation Schedules

Between school and work schedules, the modern family has a lot going on. As a result, even when both parents are qualified, it’s not always possible for California courts to split a child’s time fifty/fifty. 

When this happens, the court will sometimes choose a primary residence for the child, and award the non-resident parent ample visitation. 

Visitation comes in several types and can be either scheduled or not. This important parental right ensures both parents have time to cultivate a meaningful relationship with their child and to influence how they’re raised.  

Here’s what you need to know about visitation schedules in California, and what Maples Family Law can do to help you figure out the plan that’s right for your family.  

 

What is Visitation?

Visitation is a critical part of child custody, and refers to the allotted parenting time given to a non-custodial parent. This in-person time is critical to maintaining parental rights, and ensures both parents have access to their child. 

When visitation is planned in advance, this is called a visitation schedule. Visitation schedules can be as detailed or flexible as parents can handle; some need everything planned out, while others work better on an as-needed basis.

Visitation—whether scheduled or not—is only really applicable in situations where one parent is assigned sole physical custody. If both parents have their child for an equal (or close to) amount of time, this is called joint custody

In California, all custody decisions—including visitation—will be determined, according to a child’s best interest. 

 

Figuring Out the Visitation That’s Best for Your Child

The best interest of the child is a legal standard that makes a child’s long-term health and wellbeing the driving force behind every decision made.

When applied to custody and visitation, the court will weigh a number of different individualized facts, and choose the outcome that will serve your child best. 

Some of these considerations include: 

  • The child’s age;
  • The child’s health; 
  • The child’s relationship with each parent; 
  • The child’s ties to school, home, and community; 
  • Each parent’s ability to care for the child; and,
  • Any history of family violence or substance abuse. 

Judges are also free to consider any other tidbits they think might be relevant to this decision—though, we should point that, that a parent’s wishes will never be one of those morsels. 

 

Types of Visitation

Like with everything else in family law, visitation isn’t a one size fits all situation. Families are each unique, and thus, each will need an arrangement tailored to their child’s unique needs.  

To accommodate all these varying needs, California family law offers four main types of visitation. These include:  

  1. Scheduled Visitation
  2. Reasonable Visitation
  3. Supervised Visitation
  4. No Visitation

Here’s a closer look at each of these, and when you might use one over the other during a custody dispute. 

1. Scheduled Visitation 

When people think of visitation, scheduled visitation is usually what comes to mind. In this arrangement, a child’s time with each parent is planned out—often in fairly significant detail. 

Often, this calendar often will include information about: 

  • The dates and times with each parent; 
  • Drop off times and locations; 
  • Where the child will spend major holidays
  • Who gets the child on birthdays; 
  • School schedules, summer holidays, and family vacations; as well as, 
  • Directions for how special events will be handled. 

Contrary to popular belief, parents do not have to use the court in order to get a scheduled visitation. Parents are always free to make their own parenting plan, and can tailor it to meet their family’s specific needs. If you can’t, though, then the court will draft one for you.

This is usually done using a standard visitation schedule as a starting point. These standard schedules come in a variety of different formats, such as alternating weeks, every other weekend, and even age appropriate schedules, depending on the child’s needs. (For example, a daytime only schedule for a newborn baby.) 

Scheduled visitation is often preferred over other types of visitation, since both parents know what to expect. This helps them to avoid conflict, and provides children with a set routine. However, not all parents like the rigidity of a scheduled arrangement, which is why some choose our next option. 

 

2. Reasonable Visitation

Unlike scheduled visitation, reasonable visitation does not try to plan everything out. Instead, parents agree to allow the other a “reasonable” amount of time with the child, and get to decide—on their own—what, exactly, that means. 

Reasonable visitation is essentially an open-ended, “fly by the seat of your pants” arrangement, and offers families a lot of benefits. Like flexibility, and ongoing communication. Because of this, they work particularly well for amicable divorces, unmarried parents, and those with unpredictable work schedules. However, it’s definitely not for everyone. 

With no structure in place—or, even a definition of what “reasonable” might be—this type of visitation can easily lead to disagreements, requiring parents to head back to court again, later on down the road. 

3. Supervised Visitation

In a supervised visitation arrangement, a parent’s time with their child is chaperoned. This can be done either by a neutral third party (such as a family friend or family member), or, in some cases, may require a paid professional (such a social worker). 

Judges usually require supervised visitation, when the health and safety of the child are in question. Sometimes, this is because of domestic violence. Other times, the court might be worried about mental illness, substance abuse, or even, parental abduction. However, supervised visitation doesn’t always mean you’ve done something bad. 

Supervised visitation is also used to help parent and child ease into a relationship, if the two haven’t seen each other in a long time. 

 

4. No Visitation

And finally, there’s our least commonly used type of visitation: no visitation. 

We say “least commonly used,” here, because parental rights are pretty dang important in California. Hence, in order for the court to completely restrict a parent’s access to their child, the threat of harm has to be fairly significant.

This is usually implemented in cases of known domestic violence, where the threat of physical and/or emotional harm still exists. In California, the court will not put a child in danger just to uphold a parent’s right to access. That being said, keep in mind that you (as a parent) don’t get to make that call. 

In California, parents are not allowed to withhold visitation for any reason. Doing so could put your own parental rights at risk, and prompt the court to reevaluate your custody order. 

If you believe your child is in danger, then you should call the authorities. Afterwards, talk to your family law attorney about filing a formal case. 

 

Do You Need Help with a Visitation Schedule in California?

As a divorced or unmarried parent, your allotted parenting time is a critical part of establishing and maintaining a relationship with your child. That’s why it’s so important to have the right attorney fighting for your rights during a custody dispute. 

If you have more questions about visitation schedules in California, and how one might work in your situation, we want to hear from you. Call the Maples Family Law team at (209) 989-4425, or get in touch online, and let us fight for the arrangement that’s in your child’s best interest. 

Anna Y. Maples Maples Family Law



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