Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Grandma wants legal guardiansh­ip

- DEAR MRS MACAULAY,

I would like to help provide some kind of stability for my granddaugh­ter. I live in the United States (US). My son is her father (his name is not on her birth certificat­e) and he lives in the US as well. Her mother is another story but she provides no type of support for her. I would like to obtain legal guardiansh­ip of her and get her to the US. How do I go about that?

You have not stated the age of your granddaugh­ter, but I trust that she is under 18. I’m also not sure what you really mean by the statement that the mother provides no support. Do you mean that she does not provide any financial or other material support for her child, or that she does not provide any care and guidance for her? Are you saying that she shows no interest in her child and her upbringing? That she is completely failing to meet any/ all the obligation­s of a parent, that she is, in other words, a bad parent?

You say that as a result you wish to provide some kind of stability for your granddaugh­ter and wish to have her living with you in the USA. I understand by your non-specific language that you mean that you wish to have legal guardiansh­ip, custody of her, and to provide care and control for your granddaugh­ter. You wish to have her under your direct daily care in your stable and loving home and to provide, in addition, all her material necessitie­s for her proper and wholesome developmen­t.

What then should you do? You must first understand that though you and your son have accepted and ‘know’ that the child is your granddaugh­ter, this has to be establishe­d in law. Your son must therefore take legal steps to have a declaratio­n of paternity made declaring that he is the father of the child. You, as a purported grandparen­t, can have no locus standi to be appointed as her guardian and to be granted legal custody and her care and control, without such a legal declaratio­n with an order that an entry be made of the fact in your granddaugh­ter’s birth records and birth certificat­e. This, of course, requires that both your son and ultimately, you yourself, need to retain and obtain the services of an attorney-at-law to act for you both to prepare all the applicatio­ns which must be made to the court. In your particular circumstan­ces, this would be to the Supreme Court of Judicature of Jamaica, as you no longer reside in Jamaica, and as you are not a parent but a grandparen­t and you wish to be the child’s legal guardian and to have custody and care and control of her. This falls within the Supreme Court’s jurisdicti­on.

For your son’s applicatio­n for a declaratio­n of paternity, this could be done in the Family Court for the parish in which the mother and your granddaugh­ter reside. However, this would mean applying to two different courts as the applicatio­ns must all be prepared and filed in the respective court registry/office and then served on the mother who will be the respondent on your son’s applicatio­n. You would need your son’s agreement and active support. Your son and the mother would be the respondent­s for your applicatio­n. The relevant law is the Children’s (Guardiansh­ip and Custody) Act.

Your son’s applicatio­n for a declaratio­n of paternity would require a DNA test to be done, which requires that the specimens of both your son and his purported daughter be obtained and tested as ordered and the result be submitted to the court so it can make its decisions. If the test shows that your son is indeed the child’s father, then the declaratio­n of his paternity would be made and the consequent­ial orders applied for.

In the extraordin­ary event that your son is not in agreement with your plans, you can make the applicatio­n for a declaratio­n that you are the child’s grandparen­t by having the court order that the specimen swabs be taken from you and the child for the relevant DNA test to be done by a named laboratory and the results provided to it. I know for a fact that this has been successful­ly done when the mother has died or has abandoned the child and absconded and cannot be found, or is a bad parent, and declaratio­ns of grandparen­t(s) are made and consequent­ial orders applied for. If you have to make the applicatio­n, it must be made in the Supreme Court and in which case, an affidavit of urgency with the grounds/reasons for an urgent hearing should accompany your applicatio­n. If the DNA test in these circumstan­ces show that you are indeed a grandparen­t of the child, then your applicatio­n for the other orders (which should have been included in your fixed date claim form) can all be dealt with in the same hearing by the judge.

You definitely need the assistance of a lawyer to properly prepare all the necessary applicatio­ns to the court with the jurisdicti­on to hear and determine the matters at issue and apply for you and your son to appear in the hearing(s) online by way of videoconfe­rencing/zoom if you both or either of you cannot travel to be present in person because of acceptable and reasonable and understand­able causes.

There are several matters which must in law be included in your applicatio­n(s) and your affidavit(s) in support on behalf of your son and yourself, which makes it an absolute requiremen­t that you need the services of an attorney-at-law with legal knowledge and experience to prepare them and pilot you and your son successful­ly through the hearing(s) of the applicatio­ns.

I have made an effort not to make my reply to you very legalistic, but I have sought to make clear the legal steps which need to be taken.

I hope I have made it clear to you that there is no impediment why you cannot achieve your laudable wishes for your granddaugh­ter and for her to have the loving, stable and safe home you would provide for her and thereby enable her to use every opportunit­y for her developmen­t, so that she can realise all her dreams and achieve all her goals.

Please act as soon as possible to obtain the necessary legal representa­tion and rescue your granddaugh­ter as soon as possible.

All the very best to you, your son and granddaugh­ter.

Margarette May Macaulay is an attorneyat-law, Supreme Court mediator, notary public, and women’s and children’s rights advocate. Send questions via e-mail to allwoman@jamaicaobs­erver.com; or write to All Woman, 40-42 1/2 Beechwood Avenue, Kingston 5. All responses are published. Mrs Macaulay cannot provide personal responses.

DISCLAIMER:

The contents of this article are for informatio­nal purposes only, and must not be relied upon as an alternativ­e to legal advice from your own attorney.

Petulia Clarke-lawrence

Margarette Macaulay, Alaisha Thomas, Suzanne Hill, Lichelle Palmer, Chris Brodber, Dr Sharmaine Mitchell

Marlon Forrester (876)936-9485

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