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Fort Lauderdale Divorce Lawyer Blog

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What Can You Do When the Judge in Your Florida Divorce Issues an Order You Think Was Wrong?

Everyone who is familiar with the legal system has, at some point, encountered a judicial order or case that they thought was wrongly decided. In your family law case, it is very important to know how to respond to various situations, including receiving an order that you think was incorrectly…

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When Your Florida Timesharing Dispute Can (and Cannot) Allow You to Recoup from Your Ex-Spouse the Cost of Your Attorney’s Fees

Ideally, divorced parents are able to work together in a collaborative and cooperative fashion to meet the needs of their child when it comes to things like timesharing. Sometimes, though, that doesn’t happen. In some families, the issues of custody and timesharing can be matters of intense disagreement. Whether you…

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An Out-of-State Move and Your Florida Child Custody and Timesharing Arrangement

Before you sign any agreement regarding your rights in a child custody and timesharing situation, it is important to understand fully exactly what you are agreeing to do. If the terms of an agreement include provisions that clearly encompass a move out of state, you may very possibly not be…

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How Your Constitutional Right to ‘Due Process of Law’ Can Affect Your Florida Family Law Case

Many times, people may associate legal phrases like “due process of law” with criminal cases. The reality is, though, that all parties in criminal and civil cases are entitled to due process of law. Part of this due process protection says that a court generally cannot take action against you…

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What You Need to Prove in Order to Count Your Business Losses in Your Florida Child Support Calculation

In some ways, calculating an appropriate child support obligation can be a bit like calculating income taxes. In situations in which the supporting parent (or the taxpayer in the tax return analogy) has exactly one source of income, the calculation may be very direct because it requires proof of only…

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What It Takes to Prove That the Judge in Your Florida Child Custody Case Should Be Disqualified from Your Case

Although the precise origin is unknown, a proverb that dates back at least as far as the 1810s says that a lawyer who represents himself in a legal matter “has a fool for a client.” The moral of the proverb is that almost any legal representation will be stronger when…

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Situations in Which a Child Support Obligation Can Extend Past the Child’s 18th Birthday Under Florida Law

There exists in many places, including within popular culture, an idea that the obligation to provide child support lasts for, at most, 18 years. Under this notion, once the child reaches the age of majority, on his or her 18th birthday, he or she is a legal adult, and the…

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Facing a Domestic Violence Case Far from Your Florida Home? Don’t Ignore It; Take Strong Action to Protect Yourself

If you find yourself in the stressful and likely frightening situation of facing a domestic violence case in some faraway state where you’ve not lived for many years (or never lived at all), you have several options. One option is to ignore the case. This is almost always a terrible…

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Equitable Distribution and the Correct Date for Analyzing a Marital Estate in Florida

When you go through a divorce, there are several steps that you must complete. The equitable distribution of marital assets is one of them. Of course, most people’s marital estates are not an unchangeable thing but instead experience change every time the couple buys or sells something or every time…

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