Is there a statute of limitations to request alimony?
The answer is in your divorce judgment. Does it say you agreed to a permanent waiver of support, or dous it say you can come back later?
Glendale, CA
Family Lawyer at Glendale, CA
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The answer is in your divorce judgment. Does it say you agreed to a permanent waiver of support, or dous it say you can come back later?
Who is "we"? Birth mother can file a paternity case at any time. Birth father also has parental rights, which he may or may not choose to...
You need a lawyer. You should take the position that the property is 100% community property. The old "Please sign this quitclaim deed Dear" ploy...
Will the other birth parent agree? That parent's rights will be terminated, unless all parties agree to a "post adoption contact order" which...
Get a real lawyer and ask the Dependency Court to appoint you as guardian. This is different than "helping your daughter". It is helping the...
If you mean for IRS purposes probably not, but your judgment should be reviewed to make sure.
In fact, if "baby's father" is not married to you, and there is no custody court order, he presently has ZERO rights to the child, period. Don't...
Both of you are bound to the terms on your judgment, and the QDRO. If PERS is suggesting she now has an option other that the Plan A n the QDRO I...
Upon application, a new birth certificate is issued listing the adoptive parent as the parent. The adoptive parent is no longer a "step", and the...
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This will raise many issues about the validity of your non-court "agreement". Parties can sign postnuptial agreements on many topics, but not...