Originally posted by Buckaroo's Dad
I agree. It's only an issue if you make it one.
Should this not "sit well" with you, I'd imagine you could request an emergency family-court hearing in order to secure a formal decree from the court... (Can they "decree" that someone is an arshole?...
Regretfully it's not that easy.
In order to file a petition for a termination of parental rights, which is what you are talking about, there is a long process and series of conditions which must be met.
First, you have to prove that he is either an unfit parent, or that he has abandoned the children.
If he's still paying child support and hasn't been accused of abuse or arrented for dealing crack or something like that, you don't have a chance in heck.
If he's not paying support, then you have a better chance, but the courts generally want to see a documented history that you have made attempts to arrange for visitation and he has either declined or not shown up for over a year.
Now you can files a motion with the court for a hearing and request a TPA. Depending on the jurisdiction you may have to actually go before the judge and present your case before they will give a hearing date, in other jurisdictions you just get a date. Its generally two-three months, and they generally won't do a TPR hearing an an emergent basis, unless there is a truly compelling reason, and sorry to say a vacation will not be considered truly compelling.
At that point you have to publish the summons and complaint for predetermined by law period in a local paper (and if suspect he is living in another area, a local paper there as well). Generally it is three or four publications over a two to four week period. This is called Service by Publication. You also have to make reasonable effort to ascertain his whereabouts and serve him directly. An attorney or private investigator can get a current address from his employer, MVS/DMV, or in some cases there are other ways (that are gray areas legally).
If he doesn't show, the judge will usually NOT TPR on the first try (unless you can prove just cause--like he was a child abuser and crack addict who killed his neighbors and owns four attack dogs). Generally the court will send the case to mediation to try and work something out. Courts DO NOT like to sign involuntary TPR orders without a long history of just cause.
The only other way is to get him to voluntarily surrender his rights, which probably won't happen.
I'd hire an attorney and have them track him down and ask him to sign the papers.
I used to work for the county dept of social services, my job was to write petitions for TPR to free children in the foster care system for adoption. It is NOT a fast an easy process. You wouldn't believe the whoel thing. I recall one case where the father was serving a life sentence for murder and the mother was a crack addicted prostitute, whereabouts unknown, and the judge wouldn't sign an involuntary TPR because it violated the fathers rights, even though he had never seen the kid!
By the way, this should not be construed as legal advice. Please consult an attorney licensed to practice law in your state or province. I am not a lawyer, I do not play one on tv, and I didn't sleep in a Holiday Inn Express last night.
Anne