Posts tagged Child Custody
Cases COPIL Curti
Dec 21st
My son's father is aware that he will be served court papers child custody, but refuses to go to the door and said other employees at work to tell the processor that it is legal to work. Our court date is soon. And I know that if we extend the court date he continues to dodge legal processor anyway. What we do not just want this person to get served. You know what I discovered? He is smart enough to keep you and may do so only so long. The judge is wrong, it will have to stop. If he receives a court summons and does not come, you win. Be patient, it sounds like you have a loooong 18 years before you
Divorce Mediation Child Custody
Jul 28th
Virginia Mediation Mediation is a process to resolve conflict valuable and is a very useful process for the parties to divorce in Virginia. Even the most contested issues can be resolved through mediation. The parties may choose to address each issue of their case or only those that create the greatest challenges.In Virginia, mediators serve as neutral third parties, whose role is to facilitate communication and creative problem solving between the parties. The mediator assists the parties in addressing their interest, but also help them recognize problems that they may not be aware of that can become problems for them in the future if not addressed. Virginia divorce litigation does not give way to the parties to discuss their interests or values. If there are issues in dispute, it is necessary to discuss the parties' interests and values in order to develop a plan for progress that can be approved and adopted by all parties involved. Engaging in mediation can drastically reduce the costs of divorce. The cost of litigation can be avoided to the extent that problems are resolved through mediation. The cost of finding, training and process occurring in the process will be eliminated. Where the parties resolve conflicts through mediation, they have self-determination. They have more control of their situation, they decide how their future will be structured. In this case, the parties are able to "buy" the agreement. Research shows that as a result of "self-determination" and "buy-in" parties who choose mediation experience fewer cases of having to return to court to enforce their agreement or to review issues related to children their support or finance. Divorcing couples often feel that they had to succumb to the pressures of litigation and court procedural requirements that had to compromise unnecessarily due to lack of funds, or that they were not "heard" in the court room . These concerns do not plague no parties choose to mediate instead of litigate.