Tuesday, January 1, 2008

Understand The Divorce Procedure And Protect Yourself

By Tony Pang Platinum Quality Author



A divorce procedure is never easy to go through, but it is possible to end a marriage amicably with little or no difficulty at all. However, this is not the case in many incidents.


Divorce lawyers are usually the only ones that truly win in a long drawn out divorce proceeding, which tends to be extremely overwhelming for both the parties involved psychologically and as well financially. The longer it takes to settle a divorce case, the longer the conflict continues, and creating huge legal fees for both sides in the process. If both parties agree during the divorce procedure, on the settlement and other pertinent matters within a reasonable amount of time, with little or no intervention from an attorney, then the final dissolution can take place pretty quickly, before the mandated waiting period is up in many of the cases.


Firstly, when reconciliation fails and no other options remain, many questions about the divorce procedure arise that need to be answered. A divorce procedure usually starts with a divorce petition that is initiated by one spouse (ie the petitioner) and served on the other (the respondent). The petition, which includes detail information about the marriage, is also filed with the clerk of court in the county where the petitioner resides at this time. The facts disclosed in the petition pertaining to the names of the husband and wife, the date and place of marriage, names of any children resulting from the union, separate or community property held by the parties, child custody, child support, spousal support, and any other issued to be addressed regarding the dissolution of the marriage. Proper divorce procedure mandates that the respondent spouse be given suitable notice that the divorce petition has been filed, either by the petitioning spouse or process server. The respondent then ordinarily has thirty-five days to answer or file a counter-claim if require. If both parties agree on the settlement, a court hearing is not required and the divorce will be final.


A minimum waiting period (usually six months) is mandated in most of the states, and is not waived during proper divorce procedure, even if the marriage is dissolved before this time duration has elapsed. Remarriage is also not allowed until the waiting period is over, which commences at the date of the case filing.


Issues arising out of marriage tend to be complex and the divorce procedure itself tends to be very overwhelming for most of us. Keeping physically and emotionally fit during this time will keep the stress levels down, and the less legal involvement, the more money in the bank when the procedure is all over.








Life need not be the end after divorce. Protect your asset at Protecting Your Credit When You Divorce. Learn more about divorce at Understand Divorce And Protect Yourself.


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