Jun 23, 2008
Grandparent Visitation Rights & Texas Law
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By: Virg E. Parks | Other Posts by Virg E. Parks Go to Comments | 9 Comments |
The potential for positive impact of grandparents on their children’s children is well established in literature regarding early childhood development. They are a bridge between the generations providing knowledge of the past and continuity within the family and community. Grandparents often act as rescuers of families in trouble, providing emotional and financial support.
In traditional extended families in which adults are at least amicable, the relationship between children and their grandparents develops with parental support. Where disputes arise over access and visitation rights, the benefits to a child of grandparents in her life must be balanced against the financial and emotional costs of a potentially lengthy court battle.
The demographics of grandparenthood are changing. The percentage of the population who are grandparents is growing. People are becoming grandparents at younger ages and living longer. As a result, more children are growing up with at least two living grandparents and those relationships last longer.
A growing number of grandparents find themselves completely responsible for their grandchildren often because a court determined it was in the children’s best interest to be removed from parental custody. Data from the 2000 census indicate that 4.5 million American children live in homes with grandparents as head-of-household. Almost 10% of those grandparent-dependent children reside in Texas and 244,000 of those have no parent living with them. Of the approximately 250,000 Texas grandparents who report being primary caregivers, 21% do so in poverty.
The potential also exists for grandparents to have a negative impact on the parent/child relationship or the wellbeing of the child. Abuse is one obvious situation. Another might arise when there is such contempt between parent and grandparent that an ongoing relationship would be in conflict with the child’s general welfare and relationship with her parent.
State courts have been examining the question of grandparent visitation for decades. In the early part of the 20th century there were no statutes permitting grandparents to petition for visitation. Courts took four different approaches when deciding questions of grandparent visitation over parental objections.
- If there was a pending action involving the child, the court may have allowed the grandparents standing to pursue visitation, and in the course of evaluating the particular facts, ordered such visitation.
- In limited circumstances, courts granted standing and visitation to grandparents even when there was no other matter before the court.
- Some courts granted standing to grandparents to seek visitation with their grandchildren and then conducted a best interest analysis.
- Lastly, some courts denied grandparents standing to request visitation outright and never addressed whether or not the visitation was in the child’s best interests.
As state legislatures developed laws to govern these custody decisions, Washington created the most liberal and far-reaching legislation allowing virtually anyone to sue for visitation if they could present evidence of a meaningful relationship with the child. This is the statute under which the Troxels sued to increase visitation with their grandchildren.
When the Troxels’ son divorced, he usually brought the children to the grandparents’ home during his visitations. Therefore, the children had a preexisting relationship with their paternal grandparents. When the son died, the grandparent/child relationship continued as before.
However when the children’s mother remarried, she reduced the visits hoping to encourage blending of the new family. Although their daughter-in-law never denied them visitation, they feared that this reduction would eventually lead to elimination of visits altogether.
So the Troxels sued and won, Mrs. Granville appealed, and the appeals continued to the Supreme Court which decided for Mrs. Granville.
The 2007-2008 Texas family code (FAM 153.433-434) allows that the court should order possession or access of a grandparent to a biological or adopted grandchild if at least one of the parents still have legal parenting rights, if the grandparent can prove by a preponderance of evidence that denial would “significantly impair the child’s physical health or emotional well-being.”
Further that the grandparent(s) requesting access is parent of an adult child who is either deceased, declared incompetent, incarcerated within the previous three months, or doesn’t have legal access to the child.
If both parents are deceased or have had their parental rights terminated and the child is subsequently being adopted by someone other than the child’s step-parent, grandparents aren’t granted the right to sue for access.
At least one other state has addressed the issue of grandchild visitation rights since Troxel v Granville. California law provides that a court may grant visitation if it finds that the bond between grandparent and child is such that visitation is in the child’s best interest.
Grandparents have standing to petition for visitation in California if the child’s parents are separated, one parent’s whereabouts are unknown for more than a month, or the child isn’t living with either parent. The refutable presumption is that if the parents (whether natural or adopted) or single parent oppose visitation then it probably isn’t in the child’s best interest.
A big difference between the California and Texas statutes is the extension of mandatory mediation to visitation disputes involving grandparents. Only if mediation is unsuccessful, does the mediator inform the court and a hearing is scheduled.
The first cultural system a child learns to function within is the family – first immediate then extended. They learn that each member plays a role in the family system and certain rules must be followed. The often unspoken rules of families vary greatly depending on ethnicity and culture, size and parenting style, income, class and education status, even geographic location.
The family is a basic building block of society yet also quite complicated and not easily defined by laws or courts. The generational bonds that connect a child to place and culture should not be severed easily.
Grandparents are vital to their grandchildren and the state when stepping in as substitute parents. They are just as important when simply playing the role of grandparents.
Constitutionality of more inclusive legislation will be preserved if resources such as family counseling and mediation are mandated in disputes prior to and hopefully instead of going to court. Doing so should save money for petitioners, parents, and the state.
In cases where mediation fails, parental rights will usually prevail. However, the need for visitation hearings will be reduced if the grownups try to work out among themselves what is in the child’s best interest before filing suit.
References
American Association of Retired Persons (AARP), Texas State Fact Sheet for Grandparents and Other Relatives Raising Children.
Senate Jurisprudence Committee Testimony on Current Charges involving Grandparent Visitation Rights, May 23, 2008, (Interim, Charges, Audio of Testimony [requires RealPlayer])
Casper, Lynne M. (2002) Continuity and Continuity in the American Family. Sage Publications, Inc. Thousand Oaks, CA
Family Law Code, Selected States and Ali Principles with Commentary (2008) Wolters Kluwer, Austin, TX
O’Connor’s Family Code Plus (2007-08). Jones McClure Publishing, Houston, Texas
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My grandsons parents my son and his wife have robbed my grandsons rights … He can only visit my husband and I when it is convient for them. I feel that childrens rights should always be considered by the courts regardless of the parents. It is not my grandsons problem that his parents choose not to recognize my husband and I. Why should he have to suffer their personal decision? Can anyone help me to know what i am to do as a grandparent I love my grandson with all my heart and the few times that they do let him visit he has a wonderful time and is never ready to go home when they come to pick him up. They are not abusive parents physically by any means but I feel they are mentally abusive to him by witholding him from us.
Please help email me at wylieroadrunner@verizon.net
I have 2 grandsons in my home 24/7. The mom, my daughter, walked out on them and the biological fathers have not stepped up, unitl recently when my 6 1/2 year olds dad decided he wants unsupervised visits. My first question to him is “where have you been for the last 6 years”. This has disrupted his and the little ones whole life. His behavior has changed and he is full of questions all the time. He went from A-B honor in first grade to barely making C’s. He fights with the little one. I had to start taking him to a therapist, hoping to help him deal with this.
I make too much money for legal aid and not enough to afford an attorney. How can I keep things normal and continue to keep things stable with the threat of this man being able to legally take my grandson from the only home he has ever known looming over us?
My son (when he was young and foolish) gave up his parental rights to his son. He of course regrets it now, but he realizes he has to live with the decision. My grandson’s mom and new husband used to be close to me and allowed me to see my grandson often. We all celebrated holidays together, and everything was great. They have now decided that they do not want my grandson to have anything to do with us, so they stopped taking phone calls and whenever I ask to go and see him, my ex-daughter-in-law says he is too busy playing with his friend for me to come to their house. It has been almost a year since I have seen him. Any suggestions?
We have a new grand daughter. I am the step-mom of the mother of the baby. Baby’s mom doesn’t call her father, we are an hour away, found out about the birth 5 days later….she only wants her Dad to visit for an hour or so, but not me, her brother or her sister. It is very sad as we so desperately wanted them to a a part of a family that has been together for 15 years. Dad knows he will not visit w/o the family together. We haven’t even seen a picture. Have no clue where to go from here.
Need to know more about visitation rights of grandparent in Texas. Attorney in Dallas, TX that handles such cases.
@Barbara: I don’t have any specific referral to offer, but the Dallas Bar Association publishes a list of Family Law Section members that would at the very least be a start. Hope it helps.
http://www.dfls.echapters.com/members.php
Barbara: I am a Texas attorney and child advocacy attorney located in Smith County. I know a bit about Grandparent access law in Texas. Please drop me a line and I’ll see if I can answer your question. Patty
I have two grandkids, from my oldest son. Who is seperated from the kids and their mom. He is behind on child support, and not paying at all since he is out of work. My family and I used to be able to see the kids all of the time. My Son, my Mom (Greatgrandma), my sisters, and myself. Now we can’t see them at all. It has been months since I have been able to have them over. Now I can only drop by for a few minutes to visit. My Son has tried to text her, call her, and leave messages on the home phone, but no return calls. I have also tried to call her, but no response. I took presents to them on Christmas, and asked if she can bring them over, even if it was only while she goes to the store. Her answer was we will see. I still haven’t been able to see them. Living in a small town, we know that she tells people we don’t bother trying to find out how the kids are doing, or help with them in anyway. My Grandson has been admitted to the Hospital a few times, and my son was never notified. I know that my son has a right to see his kids even if he doesn’t pay support. He used to have them all of the time, and I don’t know why things have changed? He says that he is tired of fighting with her, just to have to see his kids. I see and feel the hurt that he, and my family are going through without my Grandkids. We were so used to having them around, and I know it has to effect them also. My Grandaughter made a comment to her maternal Grandmother at one of my visits “Can I go with my Grandma to her house? We don’t have to tell my mom, we can keep it a secret” She is only three years old! To think that she has to lie in order to see our family hurts me. Any advise.
yes patty i am having sme problems with my sons ex girl friend they have got a six month son which they have went to the attorney generals office he pays his child support but she does not bring hi or will not let my son come pickup the baby on his weekend to have him and i have not got to see him since nov before that i kept him 90 % of the time then she lefted and has gone a little crazy and i was concerned about some things she was doing and i called cps because i was and still worried about the baby ,but i have been told he did not need me in his life because he has her mother which does grandmother when she wants to can you please help me and tell me what i need to do so i can atleast see my grandson .i was not even allow to spend anytime with him christmas i still have his gifts i was to to take them back and get my money back this is my only grandchild if you can please help me pmoore105@hotmail.com