Acumulación de pretensiones en acciones judiciales de tenencia, regimen de visitas y alimentos.

Currently, in family law, there are judicial actions such as custody, visitation rights, and child support, which due to their nature can be resolved jointly within a single lawsuit, regardless of the fact that they are distinct claims. This is because they all seek to protect and uphold the rights...

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Autor principal: Valencia Condemaita, Karing Antonella (author)
Format: bachelorThesis
Idioma:spa
Publicat: 2025
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Accés en línia:https://dspace.uniandes.edu.ec/handle/123456789/19507
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Sumari:Currently, in family law, there are judicial actions such as custody, visitation rights, and child support, which due to their nature can be resolved jointly within a single lawsuit, regardless of the fact that they are distinct claims. This is because they all seek to protect and uphold the rights of children and adolescents. However, in certain cases, this type of lawsuit has been deemed inadmissible. Therefore, the main objective of this research was to establish the admissibility of accumulating judicial actions for custody, visitation, and child support by conducting a critical analysis of the legal foundations that justify such a proposal. The goal is to allow for these claims to be consolidated within a single judicial proceeding and there by ensure procedural speed, which is a defining feature of this type of case. For this purpose, a mixed methodology was employed both qualitative and quantitative with the use of exegetical, deductive, and analytical-synthetic methods. The research was both field-based and documentary in nature. Likewise, the techniques used included interviews, case analysis, and document review. Upon completion of the study, it was concluded that actions related to custody, visitation, and child support are legally compatible with one another and can be resolved within the same judicial decision. For this reason, it is entirely appropriate for them to be accumulated within a single proceeding in order to uphold the principle of procedural speed and efficiency that governs cases involving children and adolescents.