Charlene O’Keefe
LA265 Unit 7 Assignment
Link for opinion: https://casetext.com/case/blair-v-blair-44
Minnesota
Appeals Court Upholds District in Modifying Parenting Time
The Minnesota Court of Appeals held in Blair v. Blair, A12-1154 (Minn. Ct. App.
Mar 11, 2013) that the father could not alter the parenting time agreement
originally agreed upon without using the endangerment issue. The original
custody order was for joint physical custody, but the father was spending the
same amount of time with his children as if he had only been granted basic visitation
rights.
In asking for an increase in parenting time to a 50/50
arrangement, the father was denied based upon the effect it would have on the
mother’s parenting time. Mother’s parenting time would have been decreased from
upwards of 80% to only 50%. This time change also would have included a change
in primary residence for the children who had spent the past 5 years visiting
father on weekends and Wednesdays.
After the father relocated to be closer to the
children he petitioned the court for a change in the parenting plan. Because
the parenting plan used language that the agreement of the parents could
supersede the “best interest of the child” theory, the father was denied his
request for a change to the parenting plan.
The court held that visitation would not be changed
and the only recourse for the father was to prove some type of endangerment
existed should the current plan continue.
Labels for the post: child visitation, parenting time,
parenting plan