Alaska
Stat. § 25.24.150
Alaska
Statutes
Title
25. Marital and Domestic Relations.
Chapter
24. Divorce and Dissolution of Marriage.
Article
1. Divorce and Annulment.
Sec.
25.24.150 Judgments for custody.
(a)
In an action for divorce or for legal separation or
for placement of a child when one or both parents
have died, the court may, if it has jurisdiction under
AS 25.30.300 -- 25.30.320, and is an appropriate forum under
AS 25.30.350 and 25.30.360, during the pendency of the action,
or at the final hearing or at any time thereafter
during the minority of a child of the marriage, make,
modify, or vacate an order for the custody of or
visitation with the minor child that may seem necessary or
proper, including an order that provides for visitation by a
grandparent or other person if that is in the best
interests of the child.
(b)
If a guardian ad litem for a child is appointed,
the appointment shall be made under the terms of AS
25.24.310(c).
(c)
The court shall determine custody in accordance with the best
interests of the child under AS 25.20.060 -- 25.20.130. In
determining the best interests of the child the court shall
consider
(1)
the physical, emotional, mental, religious, and social needs of the
child;
(2)
the capability and desire of each parent to meet these
needs;
(3)
the child's preference if the child is of sufficient age
and capacity to form a preference;
(4)
the love and affection existing between the child and each
parent;
(5)
the length of time the child has lived in a
stable, satisfactory environment and the desirability of maintaining continuity;
(6)
the willingness and ability of each parent to facilitate and
encourage a close and continuing relationship between the other parent
and the child, except that the court may not consider
this willingness and ability if one parent
shows that the other parent has sexually assaulted or engaged
in domestic violence against the parent or a child, and
that a continuing relationship with the other parent will endanger
the health or safety of either the parent or the
child;
(7)
any evidence of domestic violence, child abuse, or child neglect
in the proposed custodial household or a history of violence
between the parents;
(8)
evidence that substance abuse by either parent or other members
of the household directly affects the emotional or physical well-being
of the child;
(9)
other factors that the court considers pertinent.
(d)
In awarding custody the court may consider only those facts
that directly affect the well-being of the child.
(e)
Notwithstanding the provisions of (d) of this section, in awarding
custody the court shall comply with the provisions of 25
U.S.C. 1901 -- 1963 (P.L. 95-608, the Indian Child Welfare
Act of 1978).
(f)
If the issue of child custody is before the court
at the time it issues a judgment under AS 25.24.160,
the court shall concurrently issue a judgment for custody under
this section unless, subject to AS 25.24.155, the court delays
the custody decision for a later time.
(g)
There is a rebuttable presumption that a parent who has
a history of perpetrating domestic violence against the other parent,
a child, or a domestic living partner may not be
awarded sole legal custody, sole physical custody, joint legal custody,
or joint physical custody of a child.
(h)
A parent has a history of perpetrating domestic violence under
(g) of this section if the court finds that, during
one incident of domestic violence, the parent caused serious physical
injury or the court finds that the parent has engaged
in more than one incident of domestic violence. The presumption
may be overcome by a preponderance of the evidence that
the perpetrating parent has successfully completed an intervention program for
batterers, where reasonably available, that the parent does not engage
in substance abuse, and that the best interests of the
child require that parent's participation as a custodial parent because
the other parent is absent, suffers from a diagnosed mental
illness that affects parenting abilities, or engages in substance abuse
that affects
parenting abilities, or because of other circumstances that affect the
best interests of the child.
(i)
If the court finds that both parents have a history
of perpetrating domestic violence under (g) of this section, the
court shall either
(1)
award sole legal and physical custody to the parent who
is less likely to continue to perpetrate the violence and
require that the custodial parent complete a treatment program; or
(2)
if necessary to protect the welfare of the child, award
sole legal or physical custody, or both, to a suitable
third person if the person would not allow access to
a violent parent except as ordered by the court.
(j)
If the court finds that a parent has a history
of perpetrating domestic violence under (g) of this section, the
court shall allow only supervised visitation by that parent with
the child, conditioned on that parent's participating in and successfully
completing an intervention program for batterers, and a parenting education
program, where reasonably available, except that the court may allow
unsupervised visitation if it is shown by a preponderance
of the evidence that the violent parent has completed a
substance abuse treatment program if the court considers it appropriate,
is not abusing alcohol or psychoactive drugs, does not pose
a danger of mental or physical harm to the child,
and unsupervised visitation is in the child's best interests.
(k)
The fact that an abused parent suffers from the effects
of the abuse does not constitute a basis for denying
custody to the abused parent unless the court finds that
the effects of the domestic violence are so severe that
they render the parent unable to safely parent the child.
(§
1 ch 160 SLA 1968; am § 1
ch 167 SLA 1975; am § 2
ch 61 SLA 1977; am § 1
ch 63 SLA 1977; am § 1
ch 15 SLA 1982; am §§ 2,
3 ch 88 SLA 1982; am § 2
ch 52 SLA 1989; am § 1
ch 76 SLA 1991; am § 1
ch 133 SLA 1998; am §§ 4,
5 ch 111 SLA 2004)
HISTORICAL
NOTES
Revisor's
notes.
-- Formerly AS 09.55.205. Renumbered in 1983.
HISTORICAL
NOTES
Effect
of amendment.
-- The 1991 amendment, effective June 25, 1991, added subsection
(f).
The
1998 amendment, effective September 23, 1998, made section reference substitutions
in subsection (a).
The
2004 amendment, effective July 1, 2004, rewrote paragraph (c)(6), which
read "the desire and ability of each parent to allow
an open and loving frequent relationship between the child and
the other parent," and added subsections (g) through (k).
Editor's
notes.
-- Section 4, ch. 76, SLA 1991 provides that subsection
(f) applies "to actions for divorce and actions declaring a
marriage void for which no judgment on any claim in
the action has been entered before June 25, 1991."
A. S. 25.24.150, AK ST
§ 25.24.150