§ 4-112. Visitation agreement and order
(a) Upon the request of the petitioner, the petitioner’s spouse, the adoptee’s other parent,
or a relative of the adoptee, the court shall review a written agreement that permits
another person to visit or communicate with the minor after the decree of adoption
becomes final. The agreement shall be signed by the person, the petitioner, the petitioner’s
spouse, the minor if 14 years of age or older, and, if an agency placed the minor
for adoption, an authorized employee of the agency.
(b) The court may enter an order approving the agreement only upon determining that the
agreement is in the best interests of the minor adoptee. In making this determination,
the court shall consider:
(1) the preference of the minor, if the minor is mature enough to express a preference;
(2) any special needs of the minor and how they would be affected by performance of the
agreement;
(3) the length and quality of any existing relationship between the minor and the person
who would be entitled to visit or communicate, and the likely effect on the minor
of allowing this relationship to continue;
(4) the specific terms of the agreement and the likelihood that the parties to the agreement
will cooperate in performing its terms;
(5) the recommendation of the minor’s guardian ad litem, attorney, social worker, or other
counselor; and
(6) any other factor relevant to the best interests of the minor.
(c) In addition to any agreement approved pursuant to subsections (a) and (b) of this
section, the court may approve the continuation of an existing order or issue a new
order permitting the minor adoptee’s former parent, grandparent, or sibling to visit
or communicate with the minor if:
(1) the grandparent is the parent of a deceased parent of the minor or the parent of the
adoptee’s parent whose parental relationship to the minor is terminated by the decree
of adoption;
(2) the former parent, grandparent, or sibling requests that an existing order be permitted
to survive the decree of adoption or that a new order be issued; and
(3) the court determines that the requested visitation or communication is in the best
interests of the minor.
(d) In making a determination under subdivision (c)(3) of this section, the court shall
consider the factors listed in subsection (b) and any objections to the requested
order by the adoptive stepparent and the stepparent’s spouse.
(e) An order issued under this section may be enforced in a civil action only if the court
finds that enforcement is in the best interests of a minor adoptee.
(f) An order issued under this section may not be modified unless the court finds that
modification is in the best interests of a minor adoptee, and:
(1) the persons subject to the order request the modification; or
(2) exceptional circumstances arising since the order was issued justify the modification.
(g) Failure to comply with the terms of an order approved under this section or with any
other agreement for visitation or communication is not a ground for revoking, setting
aside, or otherwise challenging the validity of a consent, relinquishment, or adoption
pertaining to a minor stepchild, and the validity of the consent, relinquishment,
and adoption is not affected by any later action to enforce, modify, or set aside
the order or agreement. (Added 1995, No. 161 (Adj. Sess.), § 1.)