Eddie - //There is just one overriding rule for family courts and that is to do whatever is 'in the best interests of the child' //
I agree entirely with your post - the only concept open to interpretation is exactly what the 'rights of the child' are, and indeed, what is right for the child.
My youngest daughter's marriage broke up after violence, and she left the marital home when her son was two.
Two years later, her ex-husband applied for access to his son via the Family Court - no preamble, no personal request, which would have been granted - straight to court.
Supervised access was granted, and contact began at a local contact centre, progressing to four hours of contact on a Saturday, as agreed by the court.
Following an incident in a local park when my daughter was threated with physical violence by her ex-father-in-law (he was cautioned by the police) - an incident that frightened her son so much he soiled himself, my daughter denied contact on the next weekend, fearing for her child's safety, since it was to the parental home that he was taken by her ex.
A return to court saw the court rule in her ex's favour.
Her son has had to meet his father each Wedneday for tea, and now has to spend every other weekend with his father at his father's girlfriend's house. My daughter is not allowed to know the address where he stays, she must 'trust' her ex-husband says the court.
The girlfriend of her ex husband has a child who hits my grandson, and shuts him in rooms. My grandson cries each time he goes, the first time, he refused, my son-in-law's mother dragged him from his car seat and pinned him in her sons car seat, and he was driven away screaming.
No-one has ever asked my grandson if he would like to see his father.
My grandson is just six years old.
The upside of all this for byffymad and her partner is that - even after the circumstances outlined, the court saw my daughter's withdrawal of contact as contempt, and she received eighty hours of community service suspended for two years.
Unless buffymand's partner is a recognised murderer, he is unlikely to have is request for access denied.