T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1216.1 | | SIETTG::HETRICK | All you demons go back to hell | Fri Nov 01 1991 12:52 | 46 |
| Neil, you accept the papers from the sheriff with a "thank you."
You do not need to sign for them. Under no circumstances object to
the sheriff or harrass him. He will be getting enough of that from
the twenty other people he'll be serving papers on that day.
Then, you look at the papers for (i) the grounds, (ii) the return
date, and (iii) the preliminary hearing date. The rest is impressive
verbiage. Then you put the preliminary hearing date on your calendar,
and take the papers to your attorney.
If you do not have a divorce attorney, I STRONGLY suggest you get
one. Do not use your family attorney, if you have one -- family law
is a complex subject, and contains surprises even for experienced
family law attorneys. Talk to friends, look in the yellow pages for
attorneys specializing in family law, call the bar association.
Interview several before you decide on one. If there are custody
issues, get an attorney of the opposite sex, so that the marital
master or judge will not receive an impression of "the As" ganging up
on "the Bs." Look for an attorney with whom you are comfortable. If
the attorney starts telling you what you should want, walk -- the
attorney should listen to what _you_ want, and then try to get it for
you. The attorney should also point out opportunities you may have,
but should not insist you pursue them. Usually, the initial
consultation with an attorney is free; but do not let that deter you
from spending $60 for half an hour with someone who has come highly
recommended if they happen not to offer a free initial consultation.
$60 is trivial compared to what happens next.
The attorney's retainer will be in the one to two thousand dollar
range. This is not the total cost; this is the first installment.
Generally, attorneys cost as much as you are willing to pay them. If
there are custody issues involved, figure on spending $20,000 over the
next two years.
Under no circumstances lie to or try to hide things from your
attorney. If you have done something incredibly damaging, tell your
attorney immediately, so he or she can figure out how best to contain
or deflect the damage.
Also, line up friends. You'll need them for shoulders on which
to cry, and for sanity checks. If you can find a copy of "Crazy Time:
Surviving Divorce," read that, too.
Good luck.
Brian
|
1216.2 | | TROOA::AKERMANIS | ԥ� | Fri Nov 01 1991 13:26 | 2 |
| Also check out the notes file on NON_CUSTODIAL_PARENTS for custody and
non-custody rat holes.
|
1216.4 | | DEBUG::SCHULDT | I'm Occupant! | Fri Nov 01 1991 13:45 | 9 |
| Additionally.... the papers will have some pretty scarey stuff in
them, such as that she wants you to pay for HER attorney, she wants
EVERYTHING, etc., etc. Don't let this frighten you, it's only
boilerplate! I almost had a heart attack when I was served and read
the papers.
best of luck... and life can be terrific after divorce!
larry
|
1216.5 | I resemble this .... | MORO::BEELER_JE | Go for broke! | Fri Nov 01 1991 22:00 | 23 |
| .4> Don't let this frighten you, it's only boilerplate! I almost
.4> had a heart attack when I was served and read the papers.
Let me add emphasis to this. Attorneys take courses in "How to Scare
The Hell Out of Ordinary People With Common English", and, most of it
is common boilerplate that every Tom, Dick, Harry, Mary, Jane and Sue
will get when they're served these papers.
Psychologically? We're all different. We'll all react differently and
you don't know what you'll *actually* do until the time comes. Just be
cool my friend ... don't look at as the beginning of the end but a new
beginning. You know now that it's going to happen. There's nothing
that you can do about it. It's rough, no matter what the grounds.
The only "advice" that I can give is to get it over as SOON as possible
and as EQUITABLY as possible, and, as much as possible ...DON'T burn any
bridges behind you.
A number of us have "been there". I'm always available to talk - send
me mail and you've got my home phone number for the asking ... I'm
single and got a lot of time to talk ...
Bubba
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1216.6 | Don't let it get to you | CADSYS::HECTOR::RICHARDSON | | Mon Nov 04 1991 12:21 | 22 |
| When my ex-husband moved out and moved in with his girlfriend and then
wanted a divorce, he called me up at work and demanded to know if I
wanted the divorce papers "served", which he planned to then have me
pay the fee for (he didn't say what it cost), or would I prefer that
he deliver them himself! So, I told him to bring them to me at work,
and collected them from him in the lobby of MRO... I actually had
something to "trade" for the legalese redtape - I paid off the loan
on his car (he was unemployed when he moved out) to avoid it becoming
part of the lawyer nightmare, and had sent him the title at his
girlfriend's address, and she had apparently hidden or lost the paper,
so he also had a form for a replacement title which I had to sign!
(They got married the day after our divorce was final, and she divorced
him three months later! - but that's another story!)
Don't be intimidated by the legal paperwork! If some of the stuff in
the boilerplate form were said in a private conversation, you'd want to
punch out the person saying it, but for some reason, in legalese,
intimidation is the norm! Ignore the insulting stuff it says and take
the whole thing to your lawyer - the only important thing in it is the
hearing date.
/Charlotte (went through this 11 years ago)
|
1216.7 | finally | DSTEG::SHEEHAN | | Tue Dec 17 1991 12:07 | 17 |
| OOPS Sorry for deleting the base note. Anyway the Libel for Divorce notification
arrived yesterday it wasn't as big a deal as I was anticipating. Due to a screw
up by her lawyer the documents signed on Nov. 1 didn't arrive till December 16
She is suing for everything. Custody of our 2 children, Child Support and Alimony
Time to contact my Lawyer! We currently have a joint physical custody arrangement
thats been going on since our seperation 6 months ago. I'm hoping to keep this
arrangement or something close to it since it seems to be working very well for
all of us. I'm hoping to partition the court to allow this arrangement at the
temporary custody hearing. Anyone have any input on what I should do to help
continue our custody situation. By the way I still live in the marital home
which has been home for our children for the past 6 years. Also both children
go to school in the town which I currently reside and they leave from our home
for school 3 days during the week. Do I have a chance??
Thanks for all your previous replies!
Neil...
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1216.8 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Dec 17 1991 12:12 | 4 |
| Yes, you have a chance, but if you're only now contacting your lawyer, you
may have done something to harm your case unwittingly.
Steve
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1216.9 | | PROXY::HOPKINS | Volunteer of the month | Tue Dec 17 1991 15:40 | 4 |
| Alimony?? I didn't think that was done anymore (unless while married
to you she didn't/doesn't work). If she has a job I think it's doubtful
she'd get alimony.
|
1216.10 | | RIPPLE::KENNEDY_KA | Trust God | Tue Dec 17 1991 22:09 | 8 |
| Neil,
I don't know if this has been suggested to you yet and if it has I
apologize. Run, don't walk over to the Non-Custodial Parents file.
There is a wealth of information in there!
It's on QUOKKA::NON_CUSTODIAL_PARENTS
Karen
|