Court Opinion

ID: 9747359
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-27 15:12:42.407858+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:25:23.148146
License: Public Domain

SCHREIBER, J.,
concurring.
The question in this case is whether a divorced mother who has custody of her two sons, now ages eight and ten, has shown that the boys’ best interests will be served by moving them 3000 miles from their father, who visits them almost every weekend. The mother’s justifications for changing her children’s and her home from Princeton, New Jersey, to California are: (1) to make it more convenient for her to meet with a male companion who lives in California and is interested in marrying her; (2) to permit her to try out a possible new business venture; and (3) to give her and her sons the benefit of the warmer climate in Southern California.
The boys’ father objects to the childrens’ removal. He asserts that his former wife has not met the burden of demonstrating good cause for the move. “Good cause” is a statutory requirement that has hitherto been equated with a showing that the move will be in the best interests of the children. The father also contends that having his sons with him for blocks of time during school vacations, rather than every weekend, will drastically reduce the amount of time he spends with them, since his business — a business that has provided the sole sup*60port for his wife and sons at $50,000 a year — requires him to travel during the week.
In this setting the majority dilutes the burden of persuasion, which until now has been placed on the plaintiff when custody has been awarded to a parent in this state, in accordance with the statute governing removal of children from this state. N.J.S.A. 9:2-2. The majority also interprets “good cause,” the statutory basis for permitting removal from New Jersey, in a fashion that emphasizes the interests of the custodial parent rather than focusing on the best interests of the children. It should also be observed that the trial court’s analysis was predicated on the erroneous basic assumption in D’Onofrio v. D’Onofrio, 144 N.J.Super. 200 (Ch.Div.), aff'd o.b., 144 N.J.Super. 352 (App.Div.1976), that the family unit, after a divorce, consists only of the custodial parent and the children, and that what is best for the new family unit and its members is necessarily best for the children. Although the majority does not expressly adopt this position, it approaches that proposition by projecting as an essential “first factor” to be considered “maintaining or improving the general quality of life of both the custodial parent and the children.” Ante at 56-57.
I would remand the matter to the trial court to reexamine the record, as supplemented by the parties, to determine whether the proposed move to California is in the best interests of the children. The majority’s improper focus on the desires of the custodial parent and its misallocation and treatment of the burden of proof impel me to write separately.
I
Plaintiff, Karen W. Cooper, and defendant, Norton J. Cooper, were married on February 14, 1970. Two sons were born of the marriage: Toby, born December 8, 1974, and Robert James, born August 3, 1976.
The parties separated in 1977, and plaintiff filed a complaint for divorce in April, 1977. A settlement agreement was en*61tered into on October 6, 1977. The settlement agreement, with some modifications involving the amounts of Mrs. Cooper’s and the children’s support, was incorporated into the judgment of divorce in September, 1980.
The settlement agreement provided that Mrs. Cooper would have custody of the two boys, and that Mr. Cooper would have “reasonable visitation” with them. The marital home in Princeton, New Jersey, was deeded to plaintiff as part of the equitable distribution. Mrs. Cooper, her two sons, and her mother continued to live in the Princeton home after the divorce. The agreement provided that if Mrs. Cooper wished to change her residence, she would have to obtain the consent of defendant or of a court of competent jurisdiction “to said move and to make arrangements to assure that [the defendant] has appropriate visitation of the children.”
Shortly after the agreement was signed and while the divorce proceedings were pending, Mrs. Cooper restricted defendant’s visitation so that he could be with his sons only in the Princeton home and while his mother-in-law was present. Mr. Cooper thereafter moved to make his visitation less restrictive, and the court ordered that he could have custody of his sons on alternate Saturdays and Sundays between 10:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m. and one weekend per month from Saturday at 10:00 a.m. until Sunday at 7:00 p.m. Mr. Cooper exercised his visitation rights faithfully since that time, visiting with his sons about forty weekends a year.
Mr. Cooper’s mother and sisters and their families resided in the Philadelphia area. On occasion, particularly on Jewish holidays, his sons and he would visit with them. Mr. Cooper wanted his sons to have an appreciation of Jewish tradition, which was made possible on these occasions. The parties had agreed when they were married to raise their sons in the Jewish faith, and Mrs. Cooper had no objection to this religious influence.
*62Mr. Cooper is president of a wholesale liquor business that has its principal office in Philadelphia. The business also has a distillery in Florida and a bottling operation in France. Mr. Cooper’s job requires him to travel constantly, so that during the week he is rarely at home. However, he has consistently arranged his schedule to be at home on weekends to spend time with his children. This arrangement existed throughout his married life. Defendant testified that his “priorities are twofold: [m]y children and my business.”
Since the birth of their first child, plaintiff has not been employed and defendant has maintained and supported her. Mr. Cooper has also supported his two sons, who attended a private school in Princeton at the time of the trial. He estimated that he was spending about $50,000 per year on behalf of his former wife and children at that time. His annual salary was then $110,000.
At the time of the hearing, Mrs. Cooper was forty-five years old. She was a college graduate and had worked as a model, but had not been employed since 1973. Sometime after her divorce, she became interested in obtaining a franchise to distribute Mountain Valley Spring Water. In 1981, upon being informed that the Princeton-area franchise was already taken, she investigated the possibility of a franchise in Tucson, Arizona, but thought it would be too much for her to handle alone. She then investigated a possibility in San Diego, California. The owner was interested in hiring Mrs. Cooper as a salesperson, and possibly allowing her to become a partner in the business some time later, if he determined, after seeing how he and Mrs. Cooper worked together, that such a relationship would be profitable to him. Other than speaking to friends and making a single visit to a temporary employment agency in Princeton about 1979, Mrs. Cooper had made no other efforts to seek employment or to acquire a business near home.
It was in this context that Mrs. Cooper sought court approval to move to California with the children. In her affidavit at*63tached to the moving papers she asserted three reasons for the proposed move. First, she stated that she had “been seeing a man who lives near La Jolla, California. * * * He wants to marry me and I believe that I want to marry him, but because we live on opposite Coasts it has been difficult to pursue our relationship to the point where we are both absolutely sure that we want to get married.”1
The second reason she gave for the move was that she believed the warmer climate in La Jolla, California, would be beneficial for the children’s health. She also had investigated a private school there that she found comparable to the schools in Princeton.
Her third reason was the possibility of her purchasing an interest there in the bottled-water distributorship. As noted above, she proposed to work with a distributor in La Jolla, but she would not be given an opportunity to buy an interest in the business unless the trial period was satisfactory.
In anticipation of a favorable court order, Mrs. Cooper sold the Princeton home for $330,000. She is still owed $57,695 of the purchase price (the amount of the first mortgage on the home, which defendant is obligated to pay). Upon the sale of the home, plaintiff, her mother, and her sons moved into a motel near Princeton.
Mrs. Cooper testified that even if she moved the children to California, the California school calendar was such that the boys would be able to be with their father during school vacations, particularly summers, totaling 128 days a year. She also contended that Mr. Cooper could visit his sons when he *64was in California. Mr. Cooper testified, however, that his travel schedule was such that if he were to have the boys with him for block periods, he would be able to see them on only one third of the weekends during the year instead of on weekends throughout the year. He also said that his California trips were on business, and, in any event, were not in Southern California, so that realistically they offered him little opportunity for visitation with his sons. The trial court, in separate interviews with the two children, did not directly ask either of them whether he preferred the existing visitation arrangement or one in which he would spend his summers and other vacation periods with his father.
Plaintiff’s motion for removal to California was consolidated with defendant’s motion to take his two sons with him on a business trip to Europe for three weeks during the 1983 summer. The trial court permitted this trip over Mrs. Cooper’s objection.
On plaintiff’s motion the trial court ruled that she could move with the children to California. Although it was convinced that both parents were “bona fide,” the trial court found that a large block of visitation time “would be better for the children and for the father.” The court acknowledged that it had not “specifically [gotten] into that area” in its discussions with the two boys. The trial court stated, however, that “it would be an improved relationship between the father and the benefit to the boys for being able to spend more consecutive time with them and so that is a positive factor in favor of the plaintiff as well.” The trial court also believed that plaintiff “should get employment,” that “[i]t would be good for her and will add to her income.” The court did not take a position on whether the boys’ health would improve as a result of the California weather.
The Appellate Division reversed in an unpublished opinion. It observed that the children were not suffering from any respiratory problems in New Jersey and that they were well-ad*65justed there and doing well in school. It concluded that “[a]ny benefits to the children from a move to California are minimal at best.” As for the alleged benefits of the move for Mrs. Cooper, it noted that the San Diego business opportunity was highly speculative, based, as it was, on a trial period, and that Mrs. Cooper had made little effort to find similar job opportunities in the Princeton area. Although acknowledging that a custodial parent should have a right to move to other locales, the Appellate Division held that that right was subordinate to the children’s right to continued visitation with their noncustodial parent. The Appellate Division pointed out that the nature of the defendant’s business, which had “enabled the family to enjoy a very high standard of living,” required his constant travel during the week, so that as a practical matter he could see the children only on weekends during most of the year. The Appellate Division, after having “carefully examined the transcript of the testimony,” was satisfied “that the trial court reached conclusions that [were] not supported by the evidence” before it. It reversed and directed entry of an order denying plaintiff’s application.
II
The settlement agreement that the parties made and that was incorporated in the divorce judgment provided that if the plaintiff
wishes to change her residence, she agrees to obtain the consent of Husband or a court of competent jurisdiction to said move and to make arrangements to assure that Husband has appropriate visitation of the children.
Two elements of this provision are significant. First, the provision restricted moves even within New Jersey, for it prevented the wife from changing her residence, which was in Princeton. Thus, the parties acknowledged there was something special about the mother’s residence in Princeton. Second, the provision recognized the importance of defendant’s visitation rights with his children. The provision was probably inserted because defendant’s employment required constant *66travel during the week, a situation that had existed throughout the Coopers’ married life, and because the location of the marital home was between defendant’s principal office in Philadelphia and his New York home.
Substantial deference is to be accorded to parents’ mutually-agreed-upon decisions with respect to custody and visitation. Cf. Petersen v. Petersen, 85 N.J. 638, 642 (1981) (alimony and support agreements “are essentially consensual and voluntary in character and therefore entitled to considerable weight * * * notwithstanding the fact that such an agreement has been incorporated in a judgment of divorce”); Lepis v. Lepis, 83 N.J. 139, 154 (1980) (support agreements are “more carefully tailored to the peculiar circumstances of the parties’ lives” than court orders); Smith v. Smith, 72 N.J. 350, 358 (1977) (property settlement agreements that represent “fair and definitive arrangements arrived at by mutual consent should not be unnecessarily or lightly disturbed”). Parents are probably in the best position to know the preferred arrangement for their children. In the absence of unusual circumstances, courts should be guided by a consensual position concerning custody and visitation. They should also be guided by the parents’ agreement regarding the physical situs of the children, for u e children’s geographical location can affect visitation with the noncustodial parent.
However, the parties’ agreement is not conclusive. Although the parents certainly have a strong interest in determining the future of their children, the state’s parens patriae authority permits it to override parents’ decisions for their children when necessary to protect the children’s interests. The touchstone of custody and visitation rights (which includes the physical location of the children) is the best interests of the children. See Sheehan v. Sheehan, 38 N.J. Super. 120, 126-27 (parents’ agreement authorizing removal of children to Maryland was not “sole determinant” since court judgment must be grounded on the “best interests” of the children), modified after remand, 51 N.J.Super. 276 (App.Div.1958).
*67Legislative policy favors keeping children whose domicile is in this state within New Jersey. N.J.S.A. 9:2-4, which deals with the initial designation of a custodial parent in cases involving custody disputes between their parents, expresses a legislative policy not to grant custody to a parent who will take the children to another state. It provides:
[I]n no case shall the court having jurisdiction in this State over the person and custody of any minor permit such child to be removed from this State where the mother or father resides in this State and is the suitable person who should have the custody of such child for its best welfare.
When custody has been awarded to a parent in this state, the Legislature has decreed in N.J.S.A. 9:2-2 that the children
shall not be removed out of [this] jurisdiction against their own consent, if of suitable age to signify the same, nor while under that age without the consent of both parents, unless the court, upon cause shown, shall otherwise order. [Emphasis added.]
This statute clearly places the burden of showing cause on the parent seeking to remove the children from the state.
This legislation supplements the parens patriae jurisdiction of the court. Fantony v. Fantony, 21 N.J. 525, 535 (1956); Silverman, “Marriage, Divorce, Separation,” 11 New Jersey Practice 538 (4th ed. 1981). Judge Conford, writing in Casteel v. Casteel, 45 N.J.Super. 338 (App.Div.1957), reminds us:
Section 9:2-2 evinces a strong policy predilection for keeping minor native residents of this State of tender years, children of divorced or separated parents, from being removed from the jurisdiction without the consent of both parents. [Id. at 353.]
In removal cases, as in cases dealing with child custody, the key question is the best interests of the child. When a New Jersey divorce decree concerns parties who reside in New Jersey with their children, who have been born and raised in this state, the custodial parent generally may not remove the children in the absence of a showing that the best interests of the children warrant that removal. See Grove v. Grove, 26 N.J.Super. 154, 156-57 (App.Div.1953). “Only if the court is satisfied that the best interests of the child call for it may such removal take place.” Casteel v. Casteel, supra, 45 N.J.Super. at 353.
*68Because of the children’s interests in maintaining significant contact with both parents following the parents’ divorce, it has long been recognized that removal of a child to another jurisdiction ordinarily should not be granted if it will have an adverse impact on the right of visitation. In Feinberg v. Feinberg, 72 N.J.Eq. 810 (Ch.1907), the trial court refused to permit the mother to remove minor children to Pittsburgh over the father’s objection. The court stated:
It is manifest in this cause it would be destructive of the right of visitation to make an order permitting the custody of the minor to be maintained in [Pittsburgh] * * *. [Id. at 811.]
Judge Kole, writing then as a judge of the Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court, stated the general rule in Daly v. Daly, 39 N.J.Super. 117 (Juv. & Dom.Rel.), aff’d, 21 N.J. 599 (1956):
The policy of the law of this State against the thwarting of effective visitation rights is evident from our statutes which, generally, prohibit one parent from removing the children from this State and restrain the awarding of custody to a parent who will take the children to another state, except where the welfare of the children dictates otherwise. [Id. at 123-24.]
Thus, in determining whether “cause” for removal has been shown, analysis should initially focus on the best interests of the children. Generally the resolution of that issue will decide the question. It is self-evident that the well-being of both parents may be relevant factors in determining what is in the best interests of the children. It is primarily in that respect that the well-being of the parents, both custodial and noncustodial, should be considered. The majority’s notion that this concurrence insists that “determination of a child’s best interest should be made independent of, even if not exclusive of, the well-being of the custodial parent,” ante at 54, it is respectfully submitted, is a misunderstanding of the position advocated herein. Obviously the best interests of a child may be intertwined with the well-being of the custodial parent.
If the best interests of the children would be unaffected by a move to another jurisdiction, the custodial parent should be free to move. For example, if the custodial parent desires to move *69to another jurisdiction, the noncustodial parent, though not consenting to the request,2 does not seek and exercise visitation, and the move would not otherwise harm the children, the custodial parent’s desire in and of itself should be sufficient cause for the move, irrespective of that parent’s motives. The majority, on the other hand, would deny the custodial parent the permission to move in that situation, despite the fact that the best interests of the children would not be adversely affected, so that the noncustodial parent, having little, if any, interest in the children, could move freely about, while the custodial parent would have to remain in New Jersey. In this sense, the majority restricts the custodial parent’s freedom of movement far more than necessary to protect the best interests of the children.
Ill
Determining what is in the best interests of children requires an evaluation of intricate, complex, and sensitive matters arising out of the single-parent home. In 1980 there were approximately twelve million children living in a single-parent environment. “One-Parent Families and Their Children: The School’s Most Significant Minority (An NAESP Staff Report),” 60(1) Principal 31 (1980) [hereinafter cited as “The School’s Most Significant Minority”]. About ninety percent of those children resided with their mothers. Id. at 32. It has been estimated that four out of ten children born in the 1970’s will live in single-parent homes, many as the result of the separation or divorce of their parents. Bloom-Feshbach, “Historical Perspectives on the Father’s Role,” in The Role of the Father in Child Development 97 (M. Lamb ed. 2d ed. 1981) [hereinafter cited as M. Lamb]. Another important factor is the growth in the *70number of mothers in the work force. In 1940, 8.6% of the mothers were employed; in 1978, the percentage had risen to 53%. Id.
The children’s ties to the parents after a divorce may take a variety of forms. The parents may have joint custody of the children. Beck v. Beck, 86 N.J. 480 (1981). The sole custodial parent may become employed and have less contact with them, thereby emphasizing the importance to the children of visitation by the noncustodial parent. The noncustodial parent may exercise visitation rights that include some physical custody, such as overnight stays. Or the noncustodial parent may drift completely away from the children.
The last scenario, unfortunately, is one of the most common. Following a divorce in which custody is awarded to one parent, the noncustodial parent, usually the father, often fades out of his children’s lives. As one mental health guidebook states:
Although access to the noncustodial parent is healthy for children, it is not as widely available as might be expected. In a study of 560 divorced parents, Fulton (1979) found that only one custodial parent in five reported a steady pattern of visitation by the noncustodial parent; 44% reported a tapering off of visitation, 6% reported once or twice a year visiting, and 28% reported that there was no visitation at all. Almost 40% of the custodial mothers admitted to actively preventing access to the children for reasons that were punitive in nature. [D. Cantor & E. Drake, Divorced Parents and Their Children: A Guide for Mental Health Professionals 109 (1983) (citing Fulton, “Parental Report of Children’s Post-Divorce Adjustment,” 35(4) J. Soc. Issues 126-39 (1979)).]
One study of thirty families found that the average time that fathers spent in the presence of their children decreased markedly following the parents’ separation, from 53.6 hours for a two-week period prior to separation to 20.12 hours after the separation. Jacobson, “The Impact of Marital Separation/Divorce on Children: Parent/ Child Separation and Child Adjustment,” 1(4) J. Divorce 341-60 (1978), cited in D. Cantor & E. Drake, supra, at 109.
However, children continue to have an interest in maintaining a close and abiding relationship with both their parents following a divorce. Researchers have found that a large majority of *71children whose parents have divorced yearn for their absent parent with surprising persistence and passion. Wallerstein and Kelly, in one of the most complete, long-term studies of children of divorced parents, found that children expressed the wish for increased contact with the noncustodial parent, usually the father, “with a startling and moving intensity,” that they found twice-monthly weekend visits woefully inadequate, and that “[t]he intense longing for greater contact persisted undiminished over many years.” J. Wallerstein & J. Kelly, Surviving the Breakup: How Children and Parents Cope with Divorce 134 (1980); accord Warshak & Santrock, “The Impact of Divorce in Father-Custody and Mother-Custody Homes: The Child’s Perspective,” in Children and Divorce 41 (L. Kurdek ed. 1983) (62% of children surveyed felt that their visits with their father were too infrequent); see also Rosen, “Some Crucial Issues Concerning Children of Divorce,” 3(1) J. Divorce 19-26 (1979), cited in D. Cantor & E. Drake, supra, at 109 (69% of ninety-six children surveyed would have chosen free access to the noncustodial parent). Wallerstein and Kelly placed “continuity with both parents” first in their list of factors contributing to a child’s successful adjustment to a divorce. J. Wallerstein & J. Kelly, supra, at 215. Other psychological and sociological studies have similarly pointed to a continued, significant relationship with both parents as critical to a child’s development. See, e.g., Machtlinger, “The Father in Psychoanalytic Theory,” in M. Lamb, supra, at 147 (stating that psychoanalysts consider the presence of both parents essential in promoting healthy personality growth). It follows that regular visitation by the noncustodial parent is generally in the best interests of the children and that creating circumstances that will reduce such visitation is probably not in their best interests.
Usually, custody of children of tender years following divorce is granted to the mother if she is fit and proper. Silverman, “Marriage, Divorce, Separation,” 11 N.J. Practice 508 (4th ed. 1981). Continuing contact with the father in such situations is *72critical to the children’s emotional and cognitive development. Professor M.E. Lamb, in an essay on the role of the father in child development, has stated:
The absence of a primary socializing agent (usually the father) is likely to have direct effects on the child as well as indirect effects mediated by the emotionally and economically strained * * * and socially isolated * * * single parent. [Lamb, “Fathers and Child Development: An Integrative Overview,” in M. Lamb, supra, at 30-31.]
Fathers may be as sensitive and as concerned with the child-rearing process as mothers. Lewis, Feiring & Weinraub, “The Father as a Member of the Child’s Social Network,” in M. Lamb, supra, at 275. Professor Biller has written that “the quality of fathering that the boy receives is generally the most crucial factor in the positive development of his view of himself as a male.” Biller, “The Father and Sex Role Development,” in M. Lamb, supra, at 323. Studies have revealed that a father’s absence from his son noticeably impedes the child’s academic achievement. Biller, “Father Absence, Divorce, and Personality Development,” in M. Lamb, supra, at 506-08; accord J. Wallerstein & J. Kelly, supra, at 283. Radin observes that a “recent review of the relevant literature concluded that growing up in a fatherless home is likely to have a damaging effect on the child’s cognitive development.” Radin, “The Role of the Father in Cognitive, Academic and Intellectual Development,” in M. Lamb, supra, at 409-10; accord “The School’s Most Significant Minority,” supra, 60(1) Principal at 33. Other studies showed that “boys from homes without fathers obtained lower scores on all the moral indices — significantly lower on internal moral judgment, guilt, acceptance of blame, prosocial moral values, and conformity to the rules.” Hoffman, “The Role of the Father in Moral Internalization,” in M. Lamb, supra, at 364. Professor Hoffman writes:
It seems reasonable to conclude that the absence of a father from the home does appear to have a deleterious effect on the moral development of boys. Boys without fathers are apparently more aggressive and less likely to have an internalized moral perspective than boys with fathers. [Id. at 365.]
In any event, fathers can no longer be deemed “forgotten contributors to child development.” Lamb, “Fathers: Forgot*73ten Contributors to Child Development,” 18 Human Development 245 (1975), cited in Lamb, “Fathers and Child Development: An Integrative Overview,” in M. Lamb, supra, at 6.
How best will the father-son relationship be furthered in the absence of custody? The trial court assumed that summer, Christmas, and spring vacation visits with the father are an adequate substitute for weekly visits and that blocking out a substantial number of consecutive days during the year is better than permitting the children frequent visitations throughout the year. Apparently, it believed that a father’s availability to his preadolescent sons for guidance and support in their day-to-day lives is relatively unimportant.
There is not one iota of support in the record for this assumption. In fact, the only authority that my research has disclosed indicates the contrary. Professor Biller states that “investigators point out the importance of frequent” father-child visiting patterns. Biller, “Father Absence, Divorce, and Personality Development,” in M. Lamb, supra, at 527 (emphasis added). Kurdek and Berg list the extent of “regular visitation by the noncustodial parent” as an important predictor of children’s adjustments to their parents’ divorce. Kurdek & Berg, “Correlates of Children’s Adjustment to Their Parents’ Divorces,” in Children and Divorce 50 (Kurdek ed. 1983) (emphasis added). Dr. Gardner, a psychiatrist, when asked to testify about optimal visitation arrangements, states that “shorter, more frequent visitations [with the noncustodial parent] are preferable to fewer, longer ones.” R. Gardner, Psychotherapy with Children of Divorce 379 (1976). Rogers and Long found that boys whose fathers were out of town for long periods of time had more difficulties in their sexual identification and development than boys who saw their fathers regularly. Rogers & Long, “Male Models and Sexual Identification: A Case from the Out Island Bahamas,” 27 Human Organization 326-31 (1958). Wallerstein and Kelly found that “[i]n the youngest children the good father-child relationship was closely related to a regular and frequent visiting schedule and to a *74visiting pattern that included continuity and pleasure in the visiting. For most children, this meant overnight and weekend stays.” J. Wallerstein & J. Kelly, supra, at 219 (emphasis added). The authors also found that “infrequent visiting pattern[s]” had an adverse impact on children’s academic performance, id. at 283, and noted a correlation between infrequent visits from the father and depression among young boys, id. at 172. In sum, the social science literature is virtually unanimous in stressing the importance to children of regular, frequent contact with both their parents and in recommending that children’s relationships with their noncustodial parents not be lightly disturbed or frustrated.
IV
The trial court seemed to equate the best interests of the children with the best interests of the custodial parent, ignoring entirely the impact of the noncustodial parent on the child’s well-being. In doing so, it followed the guidelines articulated by the Chancery Division in D’Onofrio v. D’Onofrio, supra, 144 NJ.Super. 200:
The children, after the parents’ divorce or separation, belong to a different family unit than they did when the parents lived together. The new family unit consists only of the children and the custodial parent, and what is advantageous to that unit as a whole, to each of its members individually and to the way they relate to each other and function together is obviously in the best interests of the children. [Id. at 206 (emphasis added).]
I disagree. The D’Onofrio standard is contrary to preexisting law and to the overwhelming consensus of the social science literature on divorce. Husbands and wives may divorce each other, but they cannot divorce their children. From the children’s frame of reference, the members of the family unit are not necessarily changed by their parents’ divorce or by the move of one of their parents from the matrimonial home. The children continue to have and to need two parents even after the parents’ divorce.
This position is in contrast with D’Onofrio’s proposition that the new family unit consists only of the custodial parent and *75the children, and that what is best for that unit and any of its members is best for the children. The D’Onofrio approach diminishes the importance of the child’s relationship to the noncustodial parent. It thereby transforms the test from what is in the best interests of the children into what is in the best interests of the custodial parent. Cf. Grove v. Grove, supra, 26 N.J.Super. 154 (reversing order that had permitted custodial parent to remove child to Florida, and stating, “The order seems * * * to have been responsive to the personal aspirations” of the custodial parent rather than to the welfare of the child).
It is easy to rationalize cutting off children from frequent, easy access to their father, as the trial court’s order would have done, on the ground that the custodial parent should be able to move about as freely as the noncustodial parent. But the benefit of full-time custody carries with it the obligation to protect the best interests of the children and, as part of that obligation, a duty to refrain from impeding the children’s relationship with the noncustodial parent absent compelling reasons. Children’s rights to regular visitation with their father should not be sacrificed merely to accommodate the convenience or whims of their mother.
Y
N.J.S.A. 9:2-2 has enunciated a public policy in favor of keeping children of divorced parents in New Jersey. Until today the burden of proving that a child’s removal from the state will be in that child’s best interests has always been placed on the party who seeks to change the status quo and to come within the rule’s exception. That no longer is the guideline.
If I understand the majority correctly, a removal case is to proceed in this fashion. Initially the custodial parent, having a sincere desire to move, must state a sensible, good-faith reason for that move and must show that the move is not contrary to *76the best interests of the children. Ante at 56. The effect of the move on the children’s visitation with the noncustodial parent is not considered when the children’s best interests are evaluated. Ante at 56. After the threshold showing is made, the trial court is to weigh three “additional” factors: (1) the projected quality of life of the custodial parent and children after the move; (2) the integrity of the parents’ motives; and (3) whether a realistic and reasonable future visitation schedule can be reached if the move is permitted. Ante at 56-57. The noncustodial parent has the burden of coming forward with evidence on the third factor. Ante at 57-58. Finally, the court is to balance “the competing interests of the parties” — in other words, the parents. Ante at 58.
The threshold that must be met includes a demonstration that the move is not inimical to the best interests of the children. The majority admits that an adverse impact on the noncustodial parent’s visitation would affect these best interests. Ante at 54-55. However, visitation is treated by the majority separately, when the court proceeds with its balancing act, rather than as part of the best interests determination, and the burden of coming forward with evidence on that issue is shifted from the custodial parent to the defendant. Who has the ultimate burden of persuasion that the removal may be sanctioned is unclear.
The Legislature has not amended N.J.S.A. 9:2-2; only the Court’s perception of it has changed. No policy reasons have been advanced why the key focal point should not remain what is in the best interests of the children. Nor has any compelling reason been advanced for separating out visitation, which may critically affect the best interests of children, from the best interests determination, and shifting the burden of coming forward with evidence on that issue from the moving party to *77the defendant.3 I would adhere to the existing state of the law: the moving party must establish “cause,” meaning that the move, considering its possible impact on visitation as well as all other factors, would be consistent with the children’s best interests; the adversary has no affirmative defense; the only defense of the noncustodial parent is that the “cause” advanced is not sufficient under the circumstances.
I fully concur in the remand. The trial court should hear any and all evidence relevant to determining the best interests of the children and identifying the plaintiff’s motives for the proposed move. The record as it now stands is unsatisfactory. The trial court approached the problem as if the test were the best interests of the custodial parent, not the children. There is a dearth of evidence on the importance of the father-son relationship and the advantages and disadvantages of the possible visitation plans to the children. No consideration was given to changing the basic custody to the husband so that plaintiff would not have to be restricted to this state. No deference or weight was given to the parties’ voluntary agreement. Furthermore, more than a year has elapsed since the hearings were held. The record should be supplemented in a way that will adequately safeguard the best interests of the Cooper children.
SCHREIBER, J., concurring in the result.
For reversal and remandment — Chief Justice WILENTZ and Justices CLIFFORD, HANDLER, POLLOCK, O’HERN and GARIBALDI — 6.
For affirmance — None.

 The majority seems to indicate that this fact should be ignored because it was not considered by either of the courts below. Ante at 47. It is unclear whether either court considered the fact. However, the trial court should have weighed this factor, among others, in view of its responsibility to determine and promote the best interests of the children. In response to the majority’s implication, I note that this is not simply an adversarial proceeding between private parties; it also involves the state’s interests as parens patriae.

 N.J.S.A. 9:2-2, contrary to the majority's position, ante at 56, must be satisfied in the absence of consent of the noncustodial parent. Thus, a nonconsenting parent who either objects to or does not affirmatively consent to the children’s removal would trigger the operation of the statute.

 The majority shifts the burden of proof on the visitation issue because it claims that the noncustodial parent has the necessary information. Ante at 57. But cf. Gayet v. Gayet, 92 N.J. 149 (1983) (refusing to shift to former wife burden of proving that alimony was still necessary when she was living with another man although she was in possession of all the facts pertinent to her continued need for alimony).