Custody Basics: Issues Regarding your Child
If you have a child and are no longer an intact family with the other parent of your child, you may have issues regarding your child’s custody. But what is custody?
In New Jersey, there are two types of custody – physical custody and legal custody. Legal custody is the right to make decisions regarding your child. You may share legal custody with the other parent, which is known as joint legal custody. In such a circumstance, you and the child’s other parent will be making decisions for your child together. These decisions may include, but certainly are not limited to, where your child attends school, their extracurricular activities, and the medical care they receive. Our law heavily favors joint legal custody as it has been found that it is often in each child’s best interests that both of their parents play a role in decisions made on their behalf.
Sometimes, it is not appropriate for both you and your child’s other parent to make decisions together. If this is this case, then either you or the other parent will have sole legal custody. This would give one of you the sole right to make decisions on your child’s behalf.
The second type of custody is your child’s physical custody. This is the amount of time that you each spend with your child, known as parenting time. There are no presumptions that a certain schedule is preferable over another. If you and the other parent are unable to reach an agreement as to a regular and holiday parenting time schedule, a Judge may make this decision for you. To do so, Judges will evaluate the facts in your case using the factors iterated in N.J.S.A. 9:2-4, such as the parents' ability to cooperate, willingness to accept custody, the child's relationships with parents and siblings, the history of domestic violence, the child's safety, the child's preference (if of sufficient age and capacity), the child's needs, the stability of the home environment, the geographic proximity of the parents to each other, and the quality of the child's education (typically as it relates to public schools), among other issues.
Generally, it is in your child’s best interests that you and the other parent reach an agreement as to their custody. However, if you are unable to do so, DCS is able to help. Please call our office to schedule a consultation to learn how we may help you resolve custody and parenting time issues regarding your child.