Does
A Parent With Joint Legal Custody Have The Right To Request Psychological
Treatment For A Minor Child Without The Consent Of The Other Parent?
I am frequently
asked whether a parent with joint legal custody has the right to request
psychological treatment for a minor child without the consent of the
other parent. Unfortunately, the Michigan Child Custody Act and applicable
case law provide very little guidance on this issue.
The Child
Custody Act(1) provides somewhat contradictory
language regarding the authority of each parent with joint legal custody.
The Act states that “[D]uring the time a child resides with a
parent, that parent shall decide all routine matters concerning the
child.”(2) However, in the same provision
of the Act, joint custody is defined as cases where “the parents
shall share decision-making authority as to the important decisions
affecting the welfare of the child.”(3)
Disputes
frequently arise over these types of definitions. Many parents argue
that therapy is a routine matter which they may decide to employ when
the children are in their care. Others would argue that therapy is a
major decision in which the parties should consult and agree on a course
of action and the therapist.
So how
do the parents decide? If one parent has sole physical custody do they
have the right to make this decision?
Surprisingly,
considering the frequency that this issue seems to arise, there are
no Michigan cases that specifically deal with this issue. However, in Lombardo v. Lombardo(4), a case involving
a dispute over which school a child attends, the Michigan Court of Appeals
completed an analysis which can easily translate to the present issue.
In Lombardo,
the circuit court held that absent any law on the subject, the parent
who is the primary physical custodian should make the decision. The
Court of Appeals reversed.
In its
decision, the Court first held that by permitting the primary physical
custodial parent to resolve any disputes concerning decisions regarding
the welfare of the children, the Circuit court was permitting the primary
physical custodial parent to violate the Child Custody Act which clearly
states that parents shall share this authority.
The Court
then held that child custody disputes are to be decided in the best
interests of the minor children(5), and that the
parties cannot usurp the court's authority to make determinations in
the children's best interests(6). Thus, if parents
who have joint legal custody are unable to reach an agreement regarding
important decisions affecting the welfare of the child, the court should
make the determination based on the best interest of the minor children.
Therefore,
mental health professionals should use caution in treating a minor child
without consent from both parents when the parents share joint legal
custody, even when one parent has sole physical custody. The other parent
retains the right to file a Motion with the court and ask the Judge
to cease the therapy or to request a different therapist.
(1) MCL
722.21 et al
(2) MCL 722.26a(4)
(3) MCL722.26a(7)(b)
(4) 202 Mich.App. 151; 507 NW2d 788 (1993)
(5) MCL 722.25
(6) West v. West, 241 Mich 679, 683-684; 217 NW 924 (1928); Ebel v.
Brown, 70 Mich App 705, 709; 246 NW2d 379 (1976)