The short answer to your question of whether
you have rights to visitation with your son at your home in
Florida is yes. The key questions which must be answered are
when and under what circumstances will you would be allowed
visitation with your son at your home in Florida.
Prior to starting any legal action to enforce
your parental rights, it is my recommendation that you speak to
the child's mother regarding utilizing a psychological
professional to assist you and your son’s mother in developing a
parenting plan which will address the concerns of both the
child’s mother and you. If utilizing a psychological
professional is not possible in your particular situation, you
can also avail yourself to the local mediation services which
almost all judicial districts have for mediating family law
child custody disputes.
If settlement is not a possibility through
mediation, you will need to file an action to establish your
paternity and to have a court order the parenting plan. Since
your son has been living in North Carolina for more than six
months, the North Carolina court will ultimately have
jurisdiction over the issues of child custody and visitation.
Therefore, given that North Carolina will ultimately be the
child’s home state, you will probably want to file the action in
North Carolina. Nevertheless, since the child was born in
Florida, you could file the action in Florida as to issues of
child support. You should discuss the issue of the choice of
courts with both attorneys in Florida and North Carolina. The
biggest downside to filing the action in North Carolina will be
the distance that you will have to travel to attend hearings,
depositions and other court proceedings, and the difficulty in
locating an attorney in North Carolina. You can check with the
North Carolina Bar Association to find a certified family law
specialist in North Carolina, or speak to your local attorney to
see if she or he has a recommendation for a Florida attorney.
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In deciding when your child will be allowed
to travel with you to Florida, the decision maker, whether it be
the courts or through mediation will be concerned with the issue
of the safety of your child, as well as the costs associated
with the various options. Since your child is only 3½ years old,
it is unlikely that the child’s mother and/or the courts will
believe that the child is old enough to travel on his own.
Therefore, at least for the near future, any plan to travel with
the child will require either you or the child’s mother to
travel with the child. The fact that your child is not in school
will provide some flexibility with regard to the dates and times
that the child will be available for travel. Your concern over
the costs of the travel is a common issue for parents with
children in other states. Generally, most courts will allow for
provisions in the child support order to allow for a sharing of
travel related expenses. You will need to speak with a qualified
family law attorney in the jurisdiction where the case is
ultimately handled.
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Your concerns regarding your child’s exposure
to cigarette smoke are well founded. Studies have clearly linked
exposure to second hand smoke with lung cancer and other
diseases. Many courts have taken judicial notice of the
association between exposure to second hand smoke and diseases
of the heart and lungs, and will routinely make orders
prohibiting parents from smoking in an enclosed area with
children present. You will need to check with an attorney in
your jurisdiction to determine whether or not your jurisdiction
is a jurisdiction that recognizes the link between second hand
smoke and the harmful effect on children.
Your efforts to stay in contact with your son
will reap large benefits over the long run. Given your son’s
young age of only 3½ years, the key issues that you will need to
deal with are going to be age appropriate decisions regarding
when your child can travel by himself, and for how long your
child can stay with you at any given time. In situations where
the parents live long distances apart, the courts will strive to
provide a parenting plan which will provide large blocks of time
to each parent in an effort to minimize the travel that the
child has to undergo. In the short run, take advantage of all of
the visitation that you can accomplish traveling to North
Carolina until such time as your son is old enough to spend
large blocks of time with you in Florida. Keep up the good work.
Steve Mindel, Attorney at Law
Family Law
Specialist, State of California Bar