Missed exchanges, blocked time, or ignored decision-making? We move fast with clean evidence, the right motion, and orders that schools, police, and employers can follow.
What constitutes a violation of a custody agreement in NC?
Quick answer: A violation happens when a parent ignores clear terms of a North Carolina custody order, like missing or blocking exchanges, refusing communication, hiding school or medical info, breaking travel rules, or disregarding tie-breaker decision-making. Document it, then file for enforcement or contempt with a focused, evidence-based motion.
Your North Carolina Custody Enforcement Lawyer
Krispen Culbertson, North Carolina family lawyer with 20+ years handling contempt, make-up parenting time, pick-up orders, police assist provisions, and interstate UCCJEA enforcement.
Memberships: North Carolina State Bar; local family law sections. Courts: District Court calendars statewide with regular hearings in Guilford County.
What counts as a violation: missed or late exchanges, blocked calls, withholding school/medical info, refusing travel approvals, and ignoring tie-breaker terms.
Contempt tools: show-cause orders, make-up time, compliance plans, fees, and in serious cases, sanctions to secure future compliance.
Enforce vs. modify: enforce clear non-compliance; modify when facts materially changed or the plan no longer fits the child.
Police assist limits: officers won’t rewrite unclear orders. Clear “police assist” and civil-standby language prevents standoffs.
How custody enforcement works in North Carolina
We file a motion to show cause with your signed order, a dated violation timeline, and exhibits. The court sets a hearing, considers civil or criminal contempt, and can order make-up time, set compliance milestones, and award attorney’s fees where allowed.
Make-up time and compliance plans
Courts often restore time lost to violations. We propose practical exchanges, holiday adjustments, communication rules, and a step-down plan that keeps the child’s routine stable.
When a pick-up order is appropriate
For serious interference or safety risks, the judge can issue a pick-up order. We prepare sworn facts, location details, and narrow instructions so it can be carried out correctly.
Police assist and civil standby
Orders can include police assist or civil standby language. This tells agencies exactly what to do at exchanges, school releases, or medical offices.
Build a clean evidence packet
Calendar of missed or late exchanges
Texts, email, and app logs with dates and times
School/medical records and release refusals
Witness statements and location info for pick-up relief
Enforcing decision-making rights
If your order allocates legal decision-making or a tie-breaker, we enforce it with notices to schools, doctors, and plan administrators so your rights are honored.
Orders from outside North Carolina
To use an out-of-state order here, we register under the UCCJEA before enforcement. For support issues, we use UIFSA. Clean registration avoids delay.
Modify or enforce?
Enforce when the other parent won’t follow the order. Modify when facts materially changed. Often we do both in sequence: enforcement now, modification next.
What to bring and your first 72 hours
Documents checklist
Signed custody order(s) and any later modifications
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