A Team Approach To Your Family Law Matter
Family Law

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Divorce

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Collaborative And Cooperative Law

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Mediation And Arbitration

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Ending A Marriage Through A Collaborative Process

Our partners are certified to practice collaborative law. Collaborative law is a means of resolving a case without litigation. The one thing that most distinguishes collaborative law from our other resolution efforts is that the parties sign a retainer agreeing that we will either resolve the matter collaboratively or end our representation. This means that if the case goes forward to litigation, the client has to retain a new and different lawyer. In collaborative law, the parties agree to voluntarily disclose all financial documentation, to meet together with their attorneys and joint experts to try to resolve the issues in their case.

Solving Complex Divorces Through Cooperative Law Representation

Cooperative law follows a process that is similar to the collaborative law process. The major difference is that our representation does not end if the case is not resolved before litigation. This means that you can continue with our representation rather than having to retain new counsel as you would with collaborative law.

We prefer cooperative law to collaborative law for the following reasons: first, we believe this requirement is burdensome to our clients since they must then pay for a new lawyer to review the entire file and proceed to trial. If our client has bonded with us, he or she will not want to go out and search for another compatible lawyer.

Staying The Course Through Your Marriage Dissolution

We believe that having to obtain a new lawyer, if the case is not resolved before litigation in collaborative law, is unworkable for us, since we consider ourselves first and foremost to be litigators. This does not mean we push cases to litigation, but rather that we view our cases through the lens of what a court might or might not do on a given issue in the case. We believe that the expectation that the case may eventually go before one of our family court judges provides a settlement framework. For example, it is impossible to determine how much alimony or what kind of visitation might be appropriate in a given case without considering what a judge might or might not order at trial.

However, we believe that other components of collaborative law are incredibly useful, and have incorporated many of them into our overall practice. When we take a case on as a cooperative law case, our immediate goal is resolution. We immediately set up meetings first with the attorneys, and then with the attorneys and clients, and agree to exchange specific financial documents and other information relevant to the case. We also retain joint financial and custody experts when necessary.

We take all of these steps before we begin formal discovery, which is a much more extensive exchange of information through court pleadings, and which is far more expensive. If these efforts do not resolve the case, we then proceed toward formal discovery through court pleadings, and ultimately toward litigation.

We Can Guide You Through Divorce In Whatever Process You Choose

This is a difficult time for you. We understand and have helped numerous clients through the divorce process, so they can start a new life. Call for an initial consultation with our empathetic, yet aggressive divorce lawyers by calling 843-769-0311 or requesting an appointment by using this handy, fast email. We respond promptly to every communication.