Families are complicated, and can become even more so when parents and grandparents disagree on the grandparents’ visitation rights. Tennessee courts do recognize a grandparent’s rights to see their grandchildren, but as in other states, the rights of the parents are most often seen as having greater importance, given parents’ right to raise their children as they see fit. If you are struggling right now with not being able to see your grandchildren, keep reading to learn the basics of grandparent visitation rights and contact a Memphis child visitation lawyer. We’ll analyze your specific situation and help you however we can.
To start, we need to talk about who are seen as grandparents in Tennessee. Typically, it would be one of three: the biological grandparent, the spouse of the biological grandparent, or if the child is adopted, the parent of the adoptive parent.
If you belong to one of these groups, and the child’s parent doesn’t want you to spend time with your grandchild, you can request visitation rights from a Tennessee court. That said, ideally, you should try to mend fences if there exists some family dispute. Tennesse Code Annotated 36-6-306 is very specific about the circumstances in which it will allow the court to compel visitation.
The six possible sets of circumstances are as follows:
This last example sets in place a rebuttable presumption that the court’s denial of visitation rights could end in substantial harm to the child.
Continuing on, if the grandparent(s) can prove one of these situations exists, then the court would weigh whether the child would experience substantial harm in the absence of visitation with their grandparent(s). As defined in the Tennesse Court of Appeal case Ray v. Ray (83 S.W.3d 726), substantial harm means a “real hazard” which is more than a “theoretical possibility.”
Once that is established, the court will consider if the child and grandparent have a significant relationship: if the grandparent has been a full-time caretaker for the child or frequently visited the child over six months.
If after this determination, the court also finds that grandparent visitation rights are in the best interest of the child, then the court may award such rights to the grandparent(s).
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