LdiJ
Senior Member
Ok, I MUST disagree with you here, at least in part. Those kinds of provisions are part of what is defined as "open adoption". There is considerable legal press as well as case law that indicates that open adoption provisions are absolutely NOT enforceable in almost all states.We had a judgement entry that the bio could send letters and emails to my son. We all know that that is not legally binding, and that we don't have to give these things to my son.
If the judgment entry was filed with the court and the judge signed off on it then you have yourself a COURT ORDER that must be followed. What makes you think it doesn't need to followed or is not binding? Sorry but you are barking up the wrong tree by thinking that you do not have to abide by this.
If Ohio is different, and Ohio enforces open adoptions, then fine. However we both know that just because a judge signed off on an agreement, doesn't mean that the agreement is automatically enforceable. Judges sign off on lots of agreements that are not legally enforceable.