If CP had provided advanced notice of a family reunion in the South of France, or the child was in a select soccer competition with scholarship & national competition potential, or if the child had a summer school requirement with schedules set by the school district needed to advance to the next grade, what examples can you cite where the bench has found a CP in willfull contempt for not wanting to cooperate with NCP's summer plans? Even if they technically did jive with the statutes? (Rhetorical question there).
The simple reality is I'm trying to help him build a solid case in a biased system where he prevails on slapping the wiatch down hard, has all his "i's" dotted, and perhaps has a shot at fees.
In the middle of a custoy hearing, my ex wanted to take the kids on a vacation that involved international travel. The judge almost fell out of her robes granting her that request, over my lawyer's objections, even though it was technically not 100% in line with orders, and it involved deferring a day of court by a few days. All because it had a direct benefit to the kids. Although I perceived it as manipulative, and was disappointed in the judge's naive position, I still see why the judge did that.
Technically, he can be right about a lot of things. But a finding of willful contempt and fees is a gift that will shut her down hard and will continue giving for every situation in the future where she might have an inclination of not wanting to cooperate. It's a gift that keeps on giving.
Also, I am not an attorney, and not from Utah. In TX, the PC doesn't have huge authority, and they are currently not allowed to testify what was told to them in confidence under most circs. In some states, they do have more authority. Whether they can report or testify to the court varies. In Utah, who knows? If it's PC lite, he may be golden. If it's not, if it's closer to a GAL, and the PC can testify against him in open court, or perhaps even interpret orders or advocate as a friend of the court for order changes if the PC feels it will "improve the family dynamic", he needs to tread lightly.
Good points Trev, oh wise one, but I hope you see my points, at least a little.
