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tomturkey

tomturkey

Brain (6,477)

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Submitted 24 days ago...

iamconcerned

iamconcerned

New User (3)

At what age can a child in Louisiana decide where to live?

At what age can a child decide which parent they want to live with. I am custodial/domiciliary parent.

If i get taken back to court for custody just because he wants to take me, at what age can a child decide?

I have been with the same person ever since the divore- about 5 years ago.

Please let me know. Thanks

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Answer 1 / 4 - Submitted 24 days ago...

iamconcerned

iamconcerned

New User (3)

There is no abuse or anything going on. Just a normal family environment.

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Answer 2 / 4 - Submitted 24 days ago...

moyerjr

moyerjr

Beginner (40)

Generally a judge will "listen" to what the child has to say at about age 12, espically if they have a GAL appointed, not saying that the judge will follow through but in most cases he/she will atleast hear the child out.

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Answer 3 / 4 - Submitted 24 days ago...

iamconcerned

iamconcerned

New User (3)

Sry. but my child is 8. So.... What do yout think?

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Awarded Answer (What’s This?)

Answer 4 / 4 - Submitted 21 days ago...

tomturkey

tomturkey

Brain (6,477)

Custody laws in Louisiana;
May a child decide where he or she wants to live?
The wishes of a child can be an important factor in deciding custody. The weight a court gives the child's wishes will depend on the child's age, maturity, and quality of reasons. Some judges do not even listen to the preferences of a young child (for example, a child less than eight years old) and instead assume the child is too young to express an informed preference. A court is more likely to follow the preferences of an older child, although the court will want to assess the quality of the child's reasons. If a child wants to be with a parent only because that parent offers more freedom and less discipline, a judge is not likely to honor the preference. A child whose reasons are vague or whose answers seem coached may not have his or her preferences followed.

On the other hand, if a child expresses a good reason related to the child's best interest--such as genuinely feeling closer to one parent than the other--the court will probably follow the preference. Although most states treat a child's wishes as only one factor among many to be considered, a few states allow a child of twelve or fourteen the "absolute right" to choose the parent with whom the child will live, as long as the parent is fit.

 

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