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Maine Divorce Laws on Child Custody
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Shared Legal Custody and Maine Laws.
When the parents have agreed to share parental rights and responsibilities, the court will make that award unless there is substantial evidence that it should not be ordered. (1653)(2)(A)

 

Maine Laws on Best Interest of the Child.
The court shall consider the best interest of the child in making an award for custody. The safety and well-being of the child are primary concerns, taking into account the following factors:

1. The age of the child; 

2. The relationship of the child with the child's parents and any other persons who may significantly affect the child's welfare; 

3. The preference of the child, if old enough to express a meaningful preference; 

4. The duration and adequacy of the child's current living arrangements and the desirability of maintaining continuity; 

5. The stability of any proposed living arrangements for the child; 

6. The motivation of the parties involved and their capacities to give the child love, affection and guidance; 

7. The child's adjustment to the child's present home, school and community; 

8. The capacity of each parent to allow and encourage frequent and continuing contact between the child and the other parent, including physical access; 

9. The capacity of each parent to cooperate or to learn to cooperate in child care; 

10. Methods for assisting parental cooperation and resolving disputes and each parent's willingness to use those methods; 

11. The effect on the child if one parent has sole authority over the child's upbringing; 

12. The existence of domestic abuse between the parents, in the past or currently, and how that abuse affects the child's safety and emotional health;

13. The existence of any history of child abuse by a parent; 

14. All other factors having a reasonable bearing on the physical and psychological well-being of the child; 

15. A parent's prior willful misuse of the protection from abuse process in chapter 101 in order to gain tactical advantage in a proceeding involving the determination of parental rights and responsibilities of a minor child. Such willful misuse may only be considered if established by clear and convincing evidence, and if it is further found by clear and convincing evidence that in the particular circumstances of the parents and child, that willful misuse tends to show that the acting parent will in the future have a lessened ability and willingness to cooperate and work with the other parent in their shared responsibilities for the child. The court shall articulate findings of fact whenever relying upon this factor as part of its determination of a child's best interest. The voluntary dismissal of a protection from abuse petition may not, taken alone, be treated as evidence of the willful misuse of the protection from abuse process; and 

16. If the child is under one year of age, whether the child is being breast-fed. 

Find out more about general child custody laws.

 

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General Maine Divorce Laws
Maine Alimony Laws
Maine Child Custody Laws
Maine Child Support Laws
Maine Property Division Laws

 

© Help Yourself Divorce 2002-2008

 

IMPORTANT: Help Yourself Divorce is a paralegal service, not a law firm. Please don't rely on this information for legal advice. Seek help from an attorney if you need legal advice.

This information has been summarized from the Maine statutes. You can find the full-text version of these and other Maine divorce statutes online here: Maine Divorce Law.

 

 

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