This is а post-judgment application for relief. The issue is whether the following language in a Property Settlement Agreement signed by both parties is valid and enforceable:
F. The parties agree that the children shall not have any contact with any gMMend/boyfriend or love interest of the other if the children express reluctance to do so.
For the reasons that follow, the court is satisfied that the language in question is contrary to the best interests of the children. Accordingly, paragraph F of the parties’ Settlement Agreement (Agreement) violates public policy and it is invalid and unenforceable.
The parties were married in 1988 and they have two сhildren. William was bom on November 1, 1988 and is now nine years old. Raymond was born on April 24, 1991 and is now six years old. The Dual Judgment of Divorce entered on April 3, 1997 incorpo
In most cases, settlement agreements benefit the parties by promoting stability and certainty. Therefore, the policy of the courts is to encourage settlements and enforce agreements whenever it is fair and equitable to do so. Lepis v. Lepis 83 N.J. 139, 148-149,
Nevertheless, when a court is asked to enforce or review a visitation agreement, or other agreements pertaining to the wel
In this case, both parties certify to post-judgment visitation disputes. Therefore, the court must exercise “supervisory jurisdiction as parens patrie.” Sheehan v. Sheehan, 38 N.J.Super. 120, 125,
The parents in this case have agreed that their two young children shоuld have the final say whenever either parent seeks to spend time with the children while in the presence of a significant other. Although paragraph F may have been intended to encourage the parents tо be sensitive to their children’s feelings and considerate of their wishes, it has actually placed a heavy burden on the shoulders of two young children. For example, plaintiff certifies to an unpleasant incident that took place on July 25,1997. According to Ms. Giangeruso, Raymond did not want to visit with his father because his older brother, William, objected to the visitation taking place in the presence of the defendant’s girlfriend, Laura. Thus, it is apрarent that the children are influ
Ms. Giangeruso argues that defendant consistently violates paragraph F by refusing to respect the children’s wishes. However, according to Mr. Giangeruso, plaintiff manipulates the children ■ into not wanting to spend time with his girlfriend because the plaintiff dislikes defendant’s girlfriend. Defendant certifies that “My kids will tell her (plaintiff) what she wants to hear because she questions them constаntly and they are afraid to say how they really feel. This is not fair to these children.” The court has been presented with conflicting certifications regarding the actions of the parents as well as the wishes of the children. Nevertheless, regardless of who is right or wrong, it is clear that the present arrangement is not in the children’s best interests. As things now stand, the children are too intimately involved in complex and personal adult matters.
Plaintiff argues that paragraph F of the Agreement should be enforced by the court. She certifies that “The children were so adamant about not wanting to be in Laura’s presence that our Judgment of Divorce specifically states at paragraph 2.1F that they do not have to have any contact with her ‘if the children express a reluctance to do so.” ’ In response, defendant argues that the ability of the children to express their “rеluctance” as to where they want to spend their visitation negatively impacts on his ability to exercise meaningful visitation even when his girlfriend is not present. According to Mr. Giangeruso, “It has gotten to the point that if the childrеn don’t feel like going to my house for whatever reason, they know that all they have to say to their mother is that they don’t want to be around my girlfriend
While a sincere and genuine preference by a child is certainly a valid consideration in any custody or visitation dispute, such preferences are frequently subject to change and should not be viewed as conclusive or determinative with respect to visitation issues. In Wilke v. Culp, 196 N.J.Super. 487, 498,
The two children in this case are only six and nine years old and should not be expected to know what is in their best interests. By shifting the decision making burden to the children, paragraph F of the Agreement places the children in the midst of ongoing post-judgment visitation disputes. The children should not have the power to veto visitation any more than they should be allowed to exercise veto power over other important matters in their lives— such as attending school on a daily basis. Furthermore, it is unfair to require the children to be policing their parents’ relationships and they should not be forced to pass judgment on any present or future love interest that either parent may have.
Ms. Giangeruso has certified that the children resent the girlfriend “as they feel that she is the cause of daddy leaving them and breaking up our marriage.” Nevertheless, plaintiff has not
Plaintiff and the children have been participating in outpatient counseling at Northwest Covеnant Medical Center since May 30, 1996. In a letter dated September 15, 1997, the treating clinician indicates that “the children have been seriously affected by the marital separation and subsequent divorce. They have had negative and angry feelings toward their father. He openly had an affair with a female neighbor known to the children when Mr. and Ms. Giangeruso were together. This caused pain and embarrassment in their lives as it was the subject of gossip among the neighbors and their playmates. The children have been the focus of many arguments in this volatile relationship and it apparently has not improved since their divorce on March 26, 1997.” Thus, the staff clinician has recommended that the court mandate family counseling.
Ms. Giangeruso is to be commended for initiating individual psychotherapy and family sessions and Mr. Giangeruso will be required to fully participate and coopеrate with family counseling. If visitation problems persist after family counseling is initiated, the parties are to access mediation pursuant to Rule 1:40-5 in an effort to resolve their disagreements. If family counseling and mediatiоn are not successful, then either party may request a plenary hearing so that the court may resolve outstanding visitation issues consistent with the best interests of the children.
Courts are only required to enforce agreements to the extent that they are fair, equitable and just. Petersen, at 644,
