Colorado Divorce & Family Law Guide

A Comprehensive Collection of Articles about Colorado Family Law

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About the Guide

The Colorado Divorce & Family Law Guide was created by Carl O. Graham, a Colorado Springs, CO divorce lawyer and former Army JAG officer. As a principal in Black & Graham, LLC, a domestic relations and criminal defense firm, Carl heads up the firm's family law practice, and focuses exclusively on Colorado divorce & family law, including military divorce issues. To learn more about our Colorado Springs family law practice, visit the law firm web site at:
www.blackgraham.com.

 

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  • Colorado Divorce & Family Law Guide
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    • Divorce
    • Legal Separation
    • Annulment / Declaration of Invalidity
    • Paternity
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    • Bankruptcy & Divorce
    • Children & Custody
      • Jurisdiction
      • Parental Decision-Making
      • Decision-Making Modification
      • Child Custody / Parenting Time
      • Parenting Time Modification
      • Relocation of Children
      • Children Passports
      • Grandparent Rights & Visitation
      • Best Interests of the Children
    • Asset & Debt Division
    • Child & Spousal Support
    • Entering Into Marriage
    • Protective Orders
    • Useful Links

Jurisdiction

Colorado has adopted the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (UCCJEA), codified at C.R.S. 14-13-101, et seq. The statute provides that Colorado has jurisdiction to enter or modify parenting orders if one of the following conditions is met:

1. Colorado is the child's home state, which means the child has lived here with a parent or acting parent for the six-month period immediately preceding the filing of a Colorado child custody action (or for the child's life, if the child is less than six months old),

2. Colorado was the child's home state within six months prior to the filing of a custody action, and a parent/acting parent still lives in Colorado,

3. No other state has jurisdiction, or the child's home state has declined to exercise jurisdiction on the grounds that Colorado is a more convenient forum, and the child has a significant connection to Colorado,

4. Colorado initially entered parenting orders (e.g. a Colorado divorce or paternity action), and either the child or one of the parents has lived in Colorado continuously since then, or

5. Temporary emergency jurisdiction exists because the child is physically present in Colorado and has been abandoned or some other emergency, such as abuse, threatens the child.

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Colorado Divorce & Family Law Guide, Copyright © Black & Graham, LLC  (www.blackgraham.com). Reprint Information

128 S. Tejon St Ste 410, Colorado Springs, CO 80903  (Map to Office)  Tel: (719) 328-1616.

This site is informational, and not a substitute for legal advice from one of the Colorado Springs law firms, divorce lawyers or family law attorneys. Only a signed agreement with this Colorado Springs divorce lawyer creates a lawyer-client relationship. We practice in Colorado Springs / El Paso, Teller, Douglas, and Pueblo Counties in Colorado family law (Colorado divorce, military divorce issues, child support law, grandparent visitation & rights, common law marriage, child custody law, legal separation law, annulment, alimony law, etc).  Login