Texas Family Law and Interstate Custody Cases
Often when a relationship altogether ends, the initial response of the parent moving out of the family home is to shift as far away from their estranged partner as possible. Apart from the affects this can have on your child's emotional health, it can also affect the processes of filing a suit by raising problems of court jurisdiction.
In Texas, your choice of where you move to is not only a private issue between you and your child. It is also very much a legal question. When starting a child custody suit, you first depend on to give notice to the other parent. Before filing a child custody lawsuit in Texas you need to settle whether the suit has been filed in the proper state and court. Texas has very definite laws to determine whether a custody suit has been filed in the correct court.
It is important to note, however, that all states in the United States are governed by the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act (UCCJA). This is a law that determines which state can make custody resolutions. It sets out the rules that establish which state can hear a custody action and avoids confusion, where two states could make custody verdicts involving the same child! Under this law, states must try to co-operate with one another and must recognise and enforce the custody orders of other states.
In the state of Texas, clashes arise when one parent does not reside in Texas, or the child and other parent have left Texas. Whether they have moved to another state or another country it is dealt with in the same way.
Normally, the problem of which state has jurisdiction is worked out by where the child (on the date of the commencement of the proceeding) is residing, regardless of whether the family members may have afterward moved. This includes circumstances where the child no longer lives in the state but the parents do.
Things are not always this clear-cut however. In some battles, the court of the state where the child resides may decline to exercise their right of jurisdiction if it is felt that another state is a more appropriate setting.
Again, this reflects the best interest of the little ones, because often a child and their parent has a meaningful connection with a particular state, other than their mere physical presence, or were there is asubstantial amount of relevant evidence available in a particular state - evidence regarding the child's care, protection, training and personal associations.
In other cases, the parent may have already been served the citation of the previous state and agreed to it prior to relocating interstate, allowing the original county to exercise it's jurisdiction over them.
Technically, jurisdiction of a child custody dispute can be fixed in Texas even if a party has never resided in Texas! A party can be accountable to a state's jurisdiction if they had merely engaged in sex in that state, and the child was conceived as a result of that act!
Where one parent does rent or buy in another state, the court can require them to appear before the court in person. This can be with or without the children. When the parent in this state has existing custody of the child, the court can subpoena them to appear in person with the child.
The parent issuing the citation needs to be aware that if a non-resident-of-the-state parent is required to be present at a child custody hearing, the court may compel the other parent to cover travel and accommodation expenses. The child however need not be there.
Once it is resolved that jurisdiction is appropriate in Texas, when a party or the child resides out of state, then the proper county for the case is determined by the general venue stipulations, as previously set out above, concerning where most of the information concerning the dispute exists.
Beyond that, where a court in Texas has already made a child custody determination, it has absolute ongoing jurisdiction over that result unless or until it is worked through that the kids or parent's significant connection with that state no longer exists and that substantial evidence concerning the child's care, protection and training now can be found in another state.
For more information on Dallas Law and Interstate Custody Rights:
http://www.texaschild-custody.com/texas-child-custody-law---an-introduction.php


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