It's never easy to decide to get a divorce. However, when that time comes, you'll want to have a lawyer on your side to help you through the process. The first step will be meeting with a divorce lawyer, and you'll definitely want to ask these questions during that initial meeting
What Is Your Experience With Divorce Cases?
It's important to know that the lawyer you're working with does a lot of work with divorce cases.
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If you have sole legal and physical custody of your child, most states will consider you the "custodial" or "residential" parent. In other words, you are primarily responsible for your child's well-being and have sole discretion in decisions that may affect their day-to-day life. In most cases, you only need to consider the non-custodial parent when making decisions that may affect their court-awarded visitation rights.
The court usually decides custody arrangements during a divorce, so it's rare for these agreements to change significantly.
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When a personal injury lawyer examines most cases, their first question often covers how foreseeable the incident in question was to the defendant. They then have to consider whether the foreseeability of the incident was subjective or objective. Before you seek compensation, you should understand what foreseeability means to personal injury attorneys and how it might affect cases.
Definition
Accidents happen, and not all accidents happen for foreseeable reasons. If lightning strikes someone at a state fair on a perfectly clear day with nothing showing on the weather radar, it's hard to accuse the fair operators of negligence.
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When you own a piece of property, you have the right to use it however you want within the bounds of the law. To use your own property, however, you will need access to it. Depending on the ownership of the property surrounding your home, you may need access to someone else's property to get to it. However, you have the right to access your property through easement laws and should simply be able to construct a path that allows you to travel to and from your property.
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