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Court Hears Custody Battle

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In a child custody proceeding pursuant to Family Court Act article 6, a New York Family Lawyer said the mother appeals, as limited by her brief, from stated portions of an order of the Family Court, Queens County, which, after a hearing, inter alia, granted the father’s petition for sole custody of the subject child.

A New York Custody Family Lawyer said that the mother and the father were married in 2000, and after the birth of the subject child later that year, they lived together in their native country of Peru. After an altercation with the father in January 2006, the mother left the marital home with the subject child. In May 2006, during the pendency of a custody proceeding commenced by the father in Peru, the mother took the subject child to the United States and settled on Long Island with her boyfriend and his family, without informing the father of their whereabouts.

In March 2008, after discovering the whereabouts of the mother and the subject child, and after learning that the mother had, in May 2007, obtained an order from the Family Court, Queens County, awarding her custody of the subject child upon the father’s default, the father commenced this proceeding in the same court, seeking custody of the subject child. The Family Court conducted a hearing on the father’s petition, at which it heard testimony from the father and the mother, as well as a court-appointed forensic psychologist who, inter alia, interviewed the parties and the subject child and rendered a comprehensive evaluation specifically addressing the impact on the subject child of a change in custody.

After the hearing, the Family Court granted the father’s petition and, inter alia, awarded him sole custody of the subject child.

The Family Court’s paramount concern in a child custody proceeding is to determine what placement is in the child’s best interests under the totality of the circumstances. In this case, by removing the subject child from the marital home and relocating to a distant foreign country without informing the father of the subject child’s whereabouts, the mother severely interfered with the relationship between the subject child and the father, and thus committed ” ‘an act so inconsistent with the best interests of the child as to per se raise a strong probability that the offending party is unfit to act as a custodial parent’ ” In addition, the parties’ testimony—viewed in light of the Family Court’s assessment of their credibility, which is entitled to deference —as well as the testimony of the forensic psychologist, amply supported the Family Court’s finding that the father is “far superior [to the mother] as a parent.”

A Long Island Family Lawyer accordingly, the Family Court’s determination that the subject child’s best interests would be served by awarding sole custody to the father and permitting him to return with the subject child to their native country of Peru was supported by a sound and substantial basis in the record.

The portion of the order appealed from addressing the issue of visitation provides that the mother “shall have actual visits as she and the father agree,” with such visits to be “therapeutic, supervised, or unsupervised as they agree.” Based on the evidence presented at the hearing, including the recommendations of the forensic psychologist, the subject child’s best interests would be better served by the establishment of a detailed visitation schedule. Accordingly, we remit the matter to the Family Court, Queens County, for determination of a visitation schedule including, if necessary, a hearing, to be conducted with all convenient speed.

A Long Island Child Custody Lawyer said family-related cases is considered as a sensitive case which should be handled by a reliable law practitioners. This is a dispute among family members, which may ruin their relationships with each other by an event which can be settled even without court actions. However, if this cannot be settled by themselves, our Courts of justice may interfere. Through the help of our Queens County Family lawyers here in Stephen Bilkis, we will help these family members to settle their differences. In case of custody cases, our Queens County Child Custody attorneys will help a qualified person to obtain custody of its child. Contact us now for more details.

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