Delaware Code § 13-2410

Persons eligible to petition for third-party visitation
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(a) Unless otherwise specified in this chapter, any adult person or persons may file a petition for a third-party visitation order regarding a
child not that adult person's or persons' own against the child's guardians, parents, or DSCYF, provided that the adult person or persons
can establish that the adult person or persons petitioning for visitation:
(1) Has a substantial and positive prior relationship with the child; or
(2) Is a grandparent, aunt, uncle or adult sibling of the child.
(b) Unless otherwise specified in this chapter, a guardian ad litem may petition for a third-party visitation order on behalf of the child
against the child's guardian, parent, and/or DSCYF if:
(1) The adult person with whom visitation is sought consents to visitation with the child and;
(2) The adult person with whom visitation is sought:
a. Has a substantial and positive prior relationship with the child; or
b. Is a grandparent, aunt, uncle or adult sibling of the child.
(c) Any child, through a guardian ad litem, may file a petition seeking visitation with any other child with whom they have at least 1
parent in common.
(d) Notwithstanding subsections (a) through (c) of this section, if a parent's rights have been terminated in the child with whom a parent
seeks third-party visitation, the terminated parent and the terminated parent's relatives are prohibited from filing for third-party visitation
unless:
(1) More than 3 years have passed since the termination of parental rights order was entered and the child has not been adopted; or
(2) The adoptive parent, if there is only 1 adoptive parent, or both adoptive parents have previously entered into a written notarized
agreement or court-approved agreement for continued visitation and a copy of the agreement is attached to the petition.

‹ Prev All Delaware sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.