tranquility
Senior Member
An attorney review would be needed as all the facts would need be known to see if the daughter's computer fell under the order.
Personally, from the way things are being written, I'd say it was. A 20-year-old daughter in college living in her parent's house would almost certainly be under the control of the parents absent other facts indicating a large distance and restriction on each other in a way that most families do not have. Say the daughter was in a mother-in-law's quarters separate from the home where the parents do not enter the unit without some emergency or consent with the daughter present, then a case could be made the computer was not in the possession, custody or control of the parent.
I suspect those are not our facts here and the OP really does not want to produce the computer for his own reasons and not his daughter's.
Personally, from the way things are being written, I'd say it was. A 20-year-old daughter in college living in her parent's house would almost certainly be under the control of the parents absent other facts indicating a large distance and restriction on each other in a way that most families do not have. Say the daughter was in a mother-in-law's quarters separate from the home where the parents do not enter the unit without some emergency or consent with the daughter present, then a case could be made the computer was not in the possession, custody or control of the parent.
I suspect those are not our facts here and the OP really does not want to produce the computer for his own reasons and not his daughter's.