Tha
... Kids remain in CA and live with a nanny 10-15 days a month, without either parent, and without any relatives in the area...or kids move to FL and live with a parent full time, with lots of extended family in the area.
My wife would NEVER move without the kids.
It is important to show that it is purely by choice that she WISHES to move.
She does NOT have to move to FL.
It is purely a lifestyle choice. She does not have any responsibilities in FL, like sick parents or employment.
If anything she has a young adult son in CA, and two minors with established ties.
She may threaten to move.
That would only happen if advised so by her attorney, for the sole purpose of claiming exactly the argument you aforementioned.
The situation we are in now is very volatile.
The balance is fragile and the scale may tip either way.
If any move is made, it will be in late June, after the school year is over.
By then I will be able to feel how things are progressing.
If they get worse, I will file separation papers to be safe.
This however will create a tremendous obstacle in reconciling.
I would like to avoid that at all cost.
My primary objective is to get back together.
The truth is, that as much as I would hate to move, I put my family above any personal hardship.
If our relationship improves, then I reluctantly have to agree to move, since she has indicated that she is NOT staying in CA.
This is a necessary compromise I have to make.
Is there anything we could sign that would prevent her from keeping the children in FL, if we later end up divorcing?
That by the way is my greatest fear. The one that makes me even more reluctant to move in the first place.
I believe that it may be too late, once I agree to move. Then FL, rather than CA, would be our home state.
Maybe I could draw a contract that specifically addresses that.
Namely, that in case of divorce, the children would return to CA.
Thus making the move to FL, a "trial period", not permanent.
Would a written agreement like this, if signed and agreed upon by both parties in CA, be enforceable in the State of FL?
Thank you.