Title: Interesting conversation with lawyer Post by: bus boy on June 29, 2016, 06:34:27 PM In December I got a new order that gave me a lot more with s9. Dealing with someone who has a PD is a nightmare at the best of times. There good to bad scale starts at evil and get worse from there. The judge wasn't to see who is lying, I'm claiming denied access and the usual horid ness of dealing with an NPD/BPD and she's claiming I'm not a father to s9. I have kept a very detailed journal of her actions since the new order. She found a way to manipulate the vacation time for the summer. My lawyer and a family court worker said the judge will not be happy, on top of everything else since December, we have a review date set for August 24. My ex contacted her lawyer and told him to contact my lawyer, verbally only, no emails or texts. Stated that s9 schooling is suffering, my lawyer asked if this was true, I have all my emails to the teacher and she says s9 is doing fine. Ex also wants to settle without going back to court in August.
Title: Re: Interesting conversation with lawyer Post by: Turkish on June 30, 2016, 12:38:15 AM This sounds frustrating to say the least. She sounds scared and is trying to control the situation to validate her disordered world view: that your son isn't doing well despite evidence to the contrary. looks like court in August, no matter how much she's trying to avoid it, no?
I'd advise your lawyer not to telegraph what's real. Let her expose herself in court. Title: Re: Interesting conversation with lawyer Post by: ForeverDad on June 30, 2016, 11:24:58 AM Problems with settlements:
Problems with court:
To summarize, if she really is serious about settling before court (many pwBPD try to avoid court since it is the Real Authority) then you need to not just fix this one issue but address others. Don't settle for just this one tweak. Believe me, odds are you'll be in court over and over in the years to come, may as well see how much the court will improve the order — if not by much this time, then the next — she surely won't. And if you do settle, then make sure it is filed in court so it amends the order. Often an out-of-court agreement has no teeth in court. Title: Re: Interesting conversation with lawyer Post by: david on June 30, 2016, 12:20:40 PM I second ForeverDad.
Courts ,I believe, don't want to make a decision and want the parents to do that. I had one judge say he wasn't making a decision. Instead, he gave each of us two weeks to write a proposal and he would decide after both were handed in. I wrote out 14 specific things. Ex handed in a two or three page paper saying I was abusive... .blah, blah, blah, and never once mentioned our kids or a custody schedule. The judge copied 13 of my points exactly as I wrote them and that became the majority of our custody order. I spelled out every holiday, summer and school time, and rotated them year to year. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Spring break were divided equally. The odd day was rotated year to year. I also wrote that any changes to the custody order had to be handled through email. Once both parties agreed to a change that became the order. It could only be changed again with another email exchange. Anytime I agreed to a change I made sure I stated in my email that this was a one time change for this one specific event. I also wrote all communication be done through email (this made things easy since neither one could simply say that is not what I said, it is there in black and white) and any email pertaining to the children must be replied to within 48 hours. Figuring out what specific issues you have had and finding solutions that are reasonable and make sense is what the courts look for. Don't hesitate to ask for things that are not in the order now that you believe are best for S9. The more you ask for the more you will probably get. Just make sure the things are reasonable and what would be deemed in the childs' best interest. Title: Re: Interesting conversation with lawyer Post by: david on June 30, 2016, 12:30:53 PM Also, there is no harm in asking for the lost time from before.
Years back my ex sent an email asking if she could have our boys for Mothers Day. It wasn't in or order then and I agreed provided Fathers Day be treated the same way. Ex agreed. It happened that both days needed to be switched. Mothers Day went smoothly. I picked the boys up Fathers Day and we went to see Kung Fu Panda (gives you a timeline of how many years ago). My phone was off since we were in a movie theater. When we were on our way home I turned my phone on and had two nasty voicemails from ex wanting to know where "her" boys are. When I arrived home she was in the driveway. I got out and she verbally assaulted me. I went back in my car and drove away. Went back around ten minutes later and she was still there so I drove to the police station in our township. I explained the situation and the officer called ex on her cell. He got blasted and told me that he wasn't going to do anything. I told him I was driving back home and if she was still there I would be coming back for a police escort. As I was leaving ex was driving into the police station. I went home and put the boys to sleep. Took them to school the next day. A few days later ex sent an email saying I was in contempt of court and she was taking me to court. I replied that we had an agreement, gave her the date of the email, and left it at that. She replied that she couldn't figure out why she would agree to such a thing. |