Divorce Process in Gwinnett County: Step-by-Step Guide for First-Time Filers
Divorce Process in Gwinnett County: Step-by-Step Guide for First-Time Filers Filing for divorce for the first time often feels heavier than expected. People usually think it will be paperwork and court dates. It is that, yes, but it is also personal. Emotions...
What Happens If a Parent Violates a Custody Order in DeKalb County
When a custody order is signed, many parents assume the most challenging part is over. The rules are written. The schedule is set. Life should settle. In reality, custody orders are often tested in small ways first. A late pickup here. A missed weekend there. Over...
Alimony Rules in Newton County: Who Pays and For How Long?
Questions about alimony tend to surface early in a divorce. Sometimes, even before the paperwork is filed. People worry about whether they will have to pay support. Others wonder if they can rely on it to stay financially stable. In Newton County, alimony decisions...
How the Divorce Process Works in Gwinnett County, Georgia?
Divorce is not only a legal filing. For many people, it starts during a period of stress and uncertainty. Questions come up quickly. What happens first? How long will this take? What mistakes should be avoided? Understanding how the divorce process in Gwinnett County...
Can Child Custody Be Modified After Divorce in DeKalb County?
Can Child Custody Be Modified After Divorce in DeKalb County? Child custody orders often feel final when a divorce ends. Many parents assume that once a judge signs the order, nothing can change. Custody arrangements can change, though not easily. Life...
What Happens If My Spouse Does Not Respond to Divorce Papers in Newton County?
It happens more often than people expect. A spouse is served with divorce papers, and then nothing follows. No call. No response filed with the court. Just silence. For the person who filed, that silence creates stress. Questions start piling up. Is the case stuck?...
Business Ownership and Divorce – What Gwinnett Spouses Need to Know
Divorce With a Business in Gwinnett County. How Assets Are Divided A business can hold more weight than a house, a bank account, or a car. It carries late nights, planning, risk, and maybe long years of building something that finally turned steady. When...
Relocation After Divorce. Can You Move with Your Child Out of DeKalb County?
A thought about moving away often begins quietly. A parent may sit with it late at night or while looking at a job posting. A different city could offer a steadier income or a school with programs the child has never had access to. Another parent might hope to return...
Father’s Rights in Newton County Divorce Cases: What Every Dad Should Know
Father’s Rights in Newton County Divorce Cases What Every Dad Should Know A father facing divorce may feel uncertain in many moments. He may worry about time with his child. He may wonder what the court expects. Friends may tell him that his mother always receives...
How Judges Determine Alimony in Gwinnett County Divorce Cases
Alimony often becomes one of the hardest parts of divorce. When two people decide to end their marriage, money can keep them connected long after emotions fade. In Gwinnett County, Georgia, judges look at both sides carefully before deciding whether one spouse should...
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Common Legal Questions
How do I file for divorce?
A divorce is initiated by filing a Domestic Relations Case Initiation Form, Summons, and Petition for Divorce with the Court Clerk of the relevant County of the Parties; and paying a filing fee. Once a divorce is properly filed the Respondent (person not initiating the divorce) must be served with process.
How long before I get my license back?
It depends on your past driving history, your age, the class of driver’s license you have and the current charges against you. As an example, for drivers over 21 years old a second, non-drug-related DUI conviction within five years of the prior conviction will result in DDS will suspending your license for three years. Call to discuss the specifics of your case.
What Can i drive with a DUI?
Once again, it depends. If your DUI conviction was drug-related (the influence of drugs alone, or alcohol and drugs combined) you face different rules regarding license suspension. For a second DUI-Drug conviction in five years, DDS will issue a yearlong “hard suspension” of your license, meaning that you won’t be allowed to drive for 12 months, period. But if you enter an alternative sentencing program like a DUI or Drug Court, you might be eligible for limited permit.
Can I get 50/50 Custody?
In Georgia child custody has two components: legal custody and physical custody. Legal custody is the right and ability to talk to your child’s doctor, teachers and such. Think of it as the ability to have a say in their life. Physical custody is the person who the child primarily lives with. Most divorcing parents will have joint legal custody (50/50 custody) of any minor children born of the marriage, while designating one parent as the physical custodian of the child or children. However, it is possible to have 50/50 joint legal and physical custody.
How much does a divorce cost?
There is no magic answer to that question. Other than everybody paying the same filing fee to initiate a divorce each divorce contains different issues, different disputes and different personalities. The Parties to the divorce have the biggest influence on the final cost of the divorce. Litigants who are fighting over silverware and toiletries out of spite for each other are likely to spend a larger amount that people who have resolved most of their issues. High value divorces with stocks, multiple parcels of real property, business or large pre-marital assets will also cost more than divorces with less assets. Lawyers sell their time. A divorce that takes more hours is going to cost more than a divorce that takes less hours. Let’s talk about your divorce so you will have an idea of the total cost.
Can i leave the state with my kids?
A well drafted parenting plan will cover contingencies and events you might not have though of. Interstate, intrastate and international travel are all issues that should be considered before signing any agreement. Depending on the facts of your case out of state travel with your children should be permissible with reasonable notice to the child’s other parent. What is reasonable notice? Call me, and lets talk.
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