Quick Divorce - Pleadings & Orders
The format for all pleadings and proposed orders in uncontested, quick divorce cases must satisfy all legal
requirements. Both state and federal rules apply in divorce cases although all maters must be filed in state
courts. The primary sources of family law are: 1) State Constitutions, 2) Family Codes, 3) State General
Statutes, 4) Trial Court Verdicts, 5) Appellate Court Decisions, 6) Supreme Court Decisions, 7) Rules of Civil
Evidence, 8) Rules of Civil Procedure, 9) Agency Regulations, and 10) Local Court Rules. All applicable laws are
subject to amendment, repeal, and supplementation.
The definition of marriage (and implicitly divorce and child support laws) are now consider likely amendments
to the U.S. Constitution. The proposed amendment sparked vehement debate in both houses of Congress. The
controversy is not whether the amendment will sway public opinion in either direction. Criticism is two fold.
First, the amendment strips power from state legislatures, state courts, and federal courts in an attempt to
weaken separation of powers guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution. Secondly, the motive for Congressional
attention focused on the definition of marriage is highly questionable during a time when global terrorism,
conflict in Iraq, and conflict in Afghanistan are represented as eminent threats to national security.
Currently, while the marriage debate continues catching headlines, a bipartisan coalition of state Attorney
Generals filed suits against the federal government for the failure to fund national security measures required
by the Department of Homeland Security.
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