Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Emancipation

IT’S THE LAW!
EMANCIPATION - ITS NOT WHAT YOU THINK IT IS
By Christopher C. Meyer copyright January 2010


“Emancipation” refers to the removal of disabilities associated with childhood. Emancipation is not an all or nothing proposition. You can be emancipated for some purposes, but not for others: you can vote when you are eighteen; but you can’t drink alcohol until you are twenty-one. There is no set age of emancipatation for any and all purposes.

There is no specific lawsuit that you can file in Colorado to have a Court declare you emancipated. You have to file an action for declaratory judgment and request the relief you want the Court to grant.

The issue of emancipation most often arises in the context of parents’ child support obligations - since this involves money! For child support purposes, once a child is emancipated, parents no longer have child support obligations to the child. Let’s look at what “emancipation” means for child support purposes.

In Colorado the age of emancipation is nineteen for child support purposes, but there are some uncommon exceptions: the parties may agree otherwise in a written stipulation; if a child is mentally or physically disabled the Court may order child support to continue; if the child is still in high school, child support continues until the end of the month following graduation, but not beyond age twenty-one; or if the child is “otherwise emancipated”. A child is “otherwise emancipated” if: she has entered the military; she is married; or she is living away from home, she is self-supporting, and it is not a temporary situation.

A child who becomes emancipated for child support purposes may later become un-emancipated and the child support obligation may be reinstated. For example, if the child is married but the marriage is later annulled, dissolved or declared invalid, the child support obligated may be reinstated. Similarly, a child who moves out and is self-supporting loses her job and moves back in with her parents. This child may again be eligible for child support if she is not yet nineteen.

The law of emancipation is like any other law: you may not like it; you may not understand it; and you may not think it is fair, but it’s the law!

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice about your case.

Chris Meyer is an attorney practicing family law in Northern El Paso County. Chris’ law practice is limited to domestic relations cases. Chris has been practicing law since 1977. He is a former prosecutor and is licensed to practice law in Colorado, Florida, California and Wisconsin. Chris can be contacted at 719-488-9395. Chris’s website (www.cmeyerlaw.com) has additional divorce and family law information and many other articles.