My question involves a child custody case from the State of: NH
If both parties agreed to a modification of a parenting plan, and stipulated that at the end of a certain period of time they would "re-evaluate" it, then had it entered as a final order and signed by a judge, what are the legal ramifications of that? If the parties re-evaluated and do not agree at the end of that stipulated time period...does the current plan stand, or does it revert to the original? To be clear, one party argues that the modification was meant to be temporary for that specific amount of time, the other party argues that "re-evaluate" means exactly that...not revert. Each parties lawyer has a different opinion.
If both parties agreed to a modification of a parenting plan, and stipulated that at the end of a certain period of time they would "re-evaluate" it, then had it entered as a final order and signed by a judge, what are the legal ramifications of that? If the parties re-evaluated and do not agree at the end of that stipulated time period...does the current plan stand, or does it revert to the original? To be clear, one party argues that the modification was meant to be temporary for that specific amount of time, the other party argues that "re-evaluate" means exactly that...not revert. Each parties lawyer has a different opinion.
Modification of Custody: Legal Meaning of Modification
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