Grandparents’ Visitation
Rights in Illinois
A child’s
relationship with a grandparent can be a rewarding and enriching experience for
both the grandchild and the grandparent. However, in some cases, a parent may
feel the need to restrict the relationship due to various reasons. It may be
because the parent feels the grandparents are not a safe or positive influence
on the child, or because the parent has a bad relationship with the
grandparents. Whatever the reason, some grandparents may decide to pursue access
to their grandchildren through legal means.
Can Grandparents Be Granted Visitation or Custody?
Generally,
Illinois grandparents may seek visitation rights, and in some limited
circumstances, custody of grandchildren. There is no automatic right to either
grandparent visitation rights or custody. A judge has to make a case by case
determination based on guidance from the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of
Marriage Act.
The U.S.
Supreme Court in Troxel v. Granville
recognized a fit parent’s parenting decisions, including a decision to restrict
or deny a grandparent’s ability to see a grandchild. Similarly, the Illinois
law that allows grandparents to petition for visitation sets certain
restrictions on when grandparents can seek visitation. Grandparents are allowed
to ask for visitation if there is an unreasonable denial of visitation by a
parent AND of the following conditions are fulfilled:
1.
The child’s other parent is deceased or has been
missing for 3 months or longer;
2.
One of the parents is legally incompetent;
3.
One of the parents has been incarcerated for 3
months or longer right before the petition for visitation is filed;
4.
The parents are getting divorced or separated,
and at least one parent does not object to the grandparents having visitation
rights; or
5.
The child is born to an unmarried couple and the
parents are not living together; in this case, however, for a paternal
grandparent to request visitation, the child’s paternity has to have been
established by a court.
Even if
the grandparent can satisfy the requirements above, there is still a presumption
that the child’s parent is making the best decision for the child. The
grandparent has to show that the parent’s decision to deny visitation is harmful to the child’s mental,
physical, or emotional health. This may be easier to show if the grandparent
had a prior relationship with the child, which was later restricted by the
parent.
1.
The child’s preference – if the child is old
enough to choose;
2.
The mental and physical health of both the child
and grandparents;
3.
The length and quality of the previous
grandparent-grandchild relationship;
4.
The good faith of both the grandparent asking for
visitation, and the parent denying it;
5.
Whether or not the grandparent was the child’s
primary caregiver for at least 6 months;
6.
Any other factors that tend to show that denying
visitation will harm the child physically, mentally and emotionally; and
7.
Whether the grandparent was the child’s primary
caregiver for 6 consecutive months or more.
A grandparent
who is granted visitation does not have to be granted overnight or even
unsupervised visitation. Additionally, if the parent who is related to the
grandparent is not allowed to see the child, or is restricted in the way he or
she may interact with the child, the grandparent cannot use his or her
visitation to get around these restrictions. If he or she does, visitation rights could
be lost.
Contact a Chicago Family Law Attorney
If you
are a grandparent who would like to see a grandchild and the parents are
refusing visitation, you may be able to petition the court for visitation.
Contact the experienced family law attorneys at M. Scott Gordon &
Associates for a consultation.