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Can A Stepfather Have Custody Of My Son
my mates ex partner remarried, both my mate and his ex had joint custody of there 14yr son now the stepfather now wants custody as they have spit up ,the mother wont give up custody neither, the boy is at the moment staying with the stepfather, so would the stepfather be able to do this, much appreciated for any comments.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Nothing we can do apart from telling your mate to get in touch with a solicitor who specialises in family law.
This will be decided by the family court who will look at all sides investigate and talk to all involved including the child. Children over 10 are asked what they want to happen and the court will take notice of what the child wants.
The overwhelming factor is what is in 'The Best Interest of the Child' in other words whatever is best for the child is what the court will order to be done.
This will be decided by the family court who will look at all sides investigate and talk to all involved including the child. Children over 10 are asked what they want to happen and the court will take notice of what the child wants.
The overwhelming factor is what is in 'The Best Interest of the Child' in other words whatever is best for the child is what the court will order to be done.
Just to add it will be better and cheaper, ( courts and solicitors cost a lot of money) , if the stepfather and mother can get together and with the child find a sensible arrangement between them. At 14 the child is going to have a very good idea as to what he wants, if it went to court the court would almost certainly go along with what the boy wants to happen.
Remember it is always the child who is the most important the other adults wishes are secondary.
The child's education will be the vital factor here , at 14 he is very near to taking exams and a change of school would almost certainly harm his chances. Continuing his education uninterrupted would be almost certainly what a court would order unless there was a VERY urgent reason to move him.
Remember it is always the child who is the most important the other adults wishes are secondary.
The child's education will be the vital factor here , at 14 he is very near to taking exams and a change of school would almost certainly harm his chances. Continuing his education uninterrupted would be almost certainly what a court would order unless there was a VERY urgent reason to move him.