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Showing posts with the label family law court proceeding

Steps in the Family Law Court Process: Step 5 - The Settlement Conference

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Family Law Court Process - The Settlement Conference In previous articles, I wrote about what you could expect at early stages of the family law court process. The procedure is that after a case conference and possibly a motion, another pre-trial hearing called a settlement conference is scheduled. At times a settlement conference can be combined with a case conference, but often a settlement conference will be held separately and after all disclosure has been made. A matter cannot proceed to trial without having held a settlement conference. What Can I Expect at My Settlement Conference? A settlement conference is intended to promote resolution of the issues after all financial disclosure and reporting has been made to the parties and the court. With the benefit of the entire picture, a judge at a settlement conference is in a position to provide a judicial opinion that gives each party a solid assessment of the strengths and weaknesses...

Steps in the Family Law Court Process: The Motion

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Family Law Court Process: The Motion A motion is a litigation tool that helps you manage the court process by allowing you to potentially get a result before a trial. The type of order you seek from a court on a motion is generally an order that temporarily deals with a major issue. It may be the real issue that brought you to court in the first place. If you succeed in your motion, the decision will usually have temporary effect. It is possible, however, that even though the motion may be in advance of a trial, the decision that you want the judge to make could permanently decide the issue. For example, in a vaccination dispute where one parent wants to vaccinate the child(ren) and the other wants to wait, if the pro-vaccination parent is given the decision making power and uses it, this would permanently deal with the matter because they can't un-vaccinate the child afterward. Motions are a major aspect of court proceedings and require much preparation on the ...

The Family Law Court Process: Step 3 - The Reply

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The Family Law Court Process: Step 3 - The Reply A possible third step in the family law or divorce court process is the Reply. I say it's possible because a Reply is made only when the responding person makes an Answer that raises new claims. In that case, the applicant can 'reply' to only the new claims or issues. Similar to the application and the answer, the Reply will set out the applicant's response to the new issue(s) raised by the respondent. But if the responding person does not raise new issues in his or her Answer, the applicant does not make a Reply. A Reply can be lengthy and your family law lawyer will write the response with your input. The costs associated with making a Reply are approximately the same as the other main documents -- estimated $3,500 to $5,000 plus tax -- depending on the length of the response and the complexity of gathering information needed to respond to the new claims. Photo credit: Olya Harytovich A Reply can be made only by the app...