Legal Question in Family Law in California

can a 6 year old speak to the judge about thier parents?

can a parent arrange for a 6 year old child to speak to the judge to let the judge hear how he [the 6 year old] feels about each parent. my son is very smart and is being mentally abused by his father and nothing i say to the judge seems to matter and my son keeps telling me to please let him go talk to the judge. his father keeps telling him he is going to have to testify in court and the judge will make him live with him [his father]. he is not even supposed to discuss any court matters with our son.


Asked on 5/06/02, 2:35 pm

1 Answer from Attorneys

E. Daniel Bors Jr. Attorney & Counselor At Law

Re: can a 6 year old speak to the judge about thier parents?

Dear Inquirer:

Nothing herein shall create an attorney-client relationship, unless a written retainer agreement is executed by the attorney and client. This communication contains general information only. Nothing herein shall constitute an attorney-client communication nor legal advice. There likely are deadlines and time-limits associated with your case; you should contact an attorney of your choice for legal advice specific to your personal situation, at once.

If you haven't already done so, please visit my

web site at --

http://home.pacbell.net/edbjr/ OR

http://www.CaliforniaDivorceAttorney.com

The site contains quite a bit of general information about California Family Law, Tenants' Rights, and Juvenile Dependencies, and EDD hearings and appeals, as well as information about me (education, experience, et cetera) and my office (location, hours, fees, policies).

NOW, IN RESPONSE TO YOUR INQUIRY --

Rarely, if ever, will a judge talk to a child as young as your son. Occasionally a judge may talk to a teenager. The usual procedure if a judge wants the child's input is to either appoint minor's counsel (the child's own lawyer) or to order a family evaluation under Evidence Code �730 whereby a trained professional will talk to the child (as well as others) and provide a written report regarding the entire family situation. The former approach is usually followed if either or both of the parents' interests appear to be other than the best interest of the child; the later is often followed if the family appears to be dysfunctional on some level or in the case of contraditory "he said, she said" evidence.

Thanks for sharing your interesting inquiry with

us on LawGuru, and good luck with your case.

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Answered on 5/06/02, 6:03 pm


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