Custody, Visitation and Support
The family court can also decide matters regarding children’s custody, visitation, and support. Any issue involving children can be modified upon a showing of a substantial change of circumstances. Once a child turns age 18, the family court no longer has authority to decide custody or visitation issues. However, under certain circumstances, child support can be addressed despite a child turning 18. Most often these circumstances are when a child is still attending high school (in which case support can continue to age 19), where a child or the other parent needs assistance paying for a child’s college, or where an adult child is permanently disabled and one parent requires financial support for that child.
Child Protective Services
When children have allegedly been abused or neglected by their caregivers, the South Carolina Department of Social Services (DSS) can ask the family court to remove the children or require the caregivers to obtain treatment as a condition of keeping or obtaining return of their children. Such cases are addressed by a special section of the children’s code and having a family law attorney who is familiar with that code is vitally important to protecting a parent’s rights.
Third-Party Custody and Visitation
The family court has the ability to award third parties custody of, or visitation with, children. Typically, custody can only be awarded to a third party when both parents are dead, absent, or unfit. Under certain circumstances grandparents and siblings can be awarded visitation. Folks who meet the definition of de facto custodian can be awarded custody or visitation.
Adoption/Termination of Parental Rights
The family court can address matters of adoption. When one or both parents have not had their parental rights terminated or voluntarily relinquished, one must terminate those parental rights before the adoption can take place. In rare circumstances, one might terminate a parent’s parental rights even when no adoption is anticipated.