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In Texas, spring break is divided between each parent (odd yrs/even yrs). This is my year. It begins at 6pm when school lets out and ends at 6pm the day before school starts. School begins on a Monday; so this makes it Sunday. I need to know if Spring break custody supercedes regular court decreed visitations (he usually gets her every thursday 6-8pm and this coming weekend would have been his). If I am legally entitled to her all thursday AND this weekend, I want to know, as it will be the opposite next year and he will also take every minute legally his, if my weekend is superceded. Anyone going thru this? He is the NCP. Neither one of us wants to lose 1 minute of time we are legally entitled to.

2007-03-12 12:00:45 · 7 answers · asked by nowisthetime 2 in Family & Relationships Marriage & Divorce

yes, it is great when you are able to work things out, however, it takes two to do that, and he refuses to compromise.
As a result, neither of us will give the other 1 more minute with our child than legally decreed..yeah ok. Especially me!

2007-03-12 12:24:05 · update #1

7 answers

I live in Indiana, but how it works here, which it should say it in the guidelines, not court documents... it's the parenting guidelines. The vacation time takes precedence over the regular schedule. I know it is a bummer when it isn't your turn...but it does help if you plan an out of town trip. Makes it pretty simple for the unagreeable relationships. I know we still have one!!

2007-03-12 13:20:25 · answer #1 · answered by MrsJ S 2 · 0 0

Hey, that's a good question considering we're in Texas too and this years spring break my husband doesn't have his kids but this upcoming weekend he is suppose to have them as it's the 3rd weekend of the month! I'd say call your ex and ask what they want to do. I 'think' it would mean the entire week including the Thurs. and weekend but not sure. It doesn't state it clearly in the papers either I've read them many times lol. I'll have to have hubby call the ex but I'm pretty sure it would mean he entire week.

2007-03-12 12:23:37 · answer #2 · answered by Incognito 6 · 0 0

You may want to read ur visitation agreement . I know in mine in Ohio that yes u would get the spring break visit but if it makes it where ur ex misses a visit it should be made up . i.e. maybe when u return he gets tuesday evening and thursday evening, or the children may go to his house two weekends in a row. Thats how i read mine but my ex and i change times and dates all the time we just seem to be able to talk and i usually bend so my kids can see their dad.

2007-03-12 12:11:56 · answer #3 · answered by ~~*Brownie*~~ 2 · 0 0

first of all who has costody of the child.. if it is you then maybe you could be a little understanding of what he is going through.. i mean the parent whos has her all the time could certainly let the other one have her a little more than what the law states .. that way you maybe could reach a common ground.. when me and my ex split up i told him he could have our child any time both of them wanted.. he could even pick her up from school and keep her a night .. but he had to call and let me know.. but mine is now 15 yrs old and really dont want to stay with him.. i had to talk her into giving him a second chance with her father.. they just did not get along

2007-03-12 12:51:47 · answer #4 · answered by ? 5 · 0 0

i might say if she's no longer at school than there's no spring harm. in the adventure that your daycare has a "spring harm" the place daycare is out of consultation than possibly then it would be seen spring harm for her at this age. yet i might provide our legal professional a decision and get his/her handle it. yet my feeling, having been there and carried out that custody/visitation stuff, is that till she is at school than it would not notice.

2016-10-18 05:34:30 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

and you two can't just work that out between you, whether you are legally entitled to a whole Thursday.....good grief, poor kid

2007-03-12 12:06:07 · answer #6 · answered by abc 7 · 1 0

Check your court documents for clarification. If that doesn't help, contact the attorney who did your divorce.

2007-03-12 12:09:58 · answer #7 · answered by Starla_C 7 · 1 1

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