DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE REQUIREMENTS
RESIDENCY: One of the spouses must be a resident of the State of Florida
for the past six months.
DISCLOSURE: A proper financial affidavit must be filed before a dissolution
of marriage can be granted. The parties are required to exchange mandatory
financial disclosure within 45 days after the opposing party is served
with the petition, unless the parties agree in writing to waive that
requirement.
GROUNDS: The marriage is irretrievably broken or one of the
parties has been adjudged to be mentally incapacitated according to
the provisions of Florida Statute Section 744.331 for at least the
last three years. There is no requirement that the other spouse must
consent to a dissolution of marriage.
COURSE: All parties to a dissolution of marriage proceeding
with minor children or a paternity action which involves issues of
parental responsibility shall be required to complete the Parent Education
and Family Stabilization Course prior to the entry by the court of
a final judgment. The court may excuse a party from attending the
parenting course for good cause.
COLLABORATIVE
FAMILY LAW
The traditional
way of getting a divorce is to involve the court system from the beginning.
Each party takes a position as to what he or she wants from the outset.
Then time, money, and emotions ensue to get a result as close to the
position taken as possible. Position-taking and the adversarial nature
of litigation may cause the parties positions to become even
further apart and further away from a settlement. If the case is tried,
results are limited by the options provided by law. The court records
of the case are open to the public. By the time the case is over,
the parties may have spent a great deal of money on attorneys
fees, leaving far less money for each to start a new life, and their
relationship with each other may be far worse than it had been before
the litigation.
Parents who are
unable to cooperate with each other or bear hostility toward one another
may damage their children emotionally. Thus, the traditional divorce
process can impact negatively on the children of divorce.
Collaborative family law is designed to have couples make an attempt to resolve their legal issues cooperatively and non-adversarially. Options may be greater than the minimum that the law allows. The only lawsuit filed is for an uncontested dissolution of marriage once a settlement has been reached.
So how do you get started in getting a divorce the collaborative way?
Your spouse and you would need to agree to have your case handled
collaboratively. Each of you retains your own lawyer who is specially
trained in the principles of collaborative family law and is a member
of a collaborative family law practice group. (Linda Singer is a member
of the Collaborative Family Law Institute, which is a group of Miami-Dade
lawyers who practice collaborative family law). Your spouse, you,
and both of your attorneys meet in a series of conferences and make
mutually agreed-upon decisions concerning your case.
For more information on collaborative family law, you may wish to
visit the following links:
Collaborative Family Law Institute: http://www.collaborativefamlaw.com
International Academy of Collaborative Professionals: http://www.collaborativepractice.com .
Legal information
provided on this website is general. You should not rely on the information
for your specific situation.
Please call Linda Singer at (305) 670-5291 for more information or to schedule an appointment. [Disclaimer]