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Today, Family Law clients in Kentucky have many options in choosing how
they want to resolve their domestic relations disputes.
COLLABORATIVE LAW
You have a right to be creative in solving your Family Law legal issues.
What is Collaborative Law?
"Collaborative Law" is one of several Alternative Dispute Resolution
(ADR)
methods enjoying increasing favor among consumers of legal services. It is
significantly different than mediation or arbitration and has become enormously
popular among legal services consumers and attorneys throughout the country.
In a Collaborative Family Law divorce action, the husband and wife are each
represented by their own attorneys, but those two attorneys have both been
trained in a new system of handling such cases by working together toward an
equitable solution. In addition, both parties and their respective attorneys
must sign a Collaborative Law Participation Agreement in which they agree to be
strictly bound by the principles of Collaborative Law, which include:
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Neither side will file any motions with the Court.
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Both sides agree to fully disclose all assets and liabilities
associated with the marriage.
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Both parties and their counsel agree that there will be no secrets
and no dirty tricks.
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If either side starts filing motions with the Court, then both
attorneys are automatically disqualified and the parties have to secure
new attorneys.
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If all efforts by the parties and their counsel fail to result in a
resolution, then both attorneys must resign from the case and the
parties must both go out and find new attorneys to represent them in
litigation.
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Collaborative Family Law requires that the attorneys on both sides
be trained to work collaboratively with the other side.
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Everyone involved has to sign a Collaborative Law Participation
Agreement. Other experts can be called in by the parties to assist them
in resolving the case -- psychologists, psychiatrists, therapist,
financial planners, etc. -- which makes these cases multi-disciplinary.
This type of cooperative efforts to resolve clients' family law issues
is a 180-degree shift from the way divorce and custody cases have
historically been handled.
In Collaborative Family Law, there are no motions filed and there are no
hearings. The parties and their attorneys meet together in a 4-way
conference and agree to settle the case in the best and most inventive way
possible, thereby eliminating much of the anger, hostility and resentment
that usually accompany these cases. This, too, is a way for parents to focus
their time, energy and attention on devising a creative way to share
parenting time with their children rather than concentrating on how to
defeat the "enemy".
Which Attorneys are Trained in Collaborative Law?
Specifically trained Family Law attorneys,
financial professionals and mental health professionals serving the greater
Louisville metropolitan area (including surrounding Kentucky counties) have
joined together to create the Kentucky Collaborative Family Network, Inc.
<www.kycollaborative.com>.
You can find a directory of attorneys and other professional trained in
collaboration.
The Lexington/Covington/Northern Kentucky area's
collaborative Family Law needs are served by the Northern
Kentucky Collaborative Group, Inc. <www.nkcfl.com>.
Getting Started
If you’ve made your decision to proceed collaboratively, here’s how to get
started:
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Talk with your spouse or the opposing party about the benefits of
collaboration.
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Each party needs to choose a trained collaborative lawyer. In the
Louisville area, we recommend talking to professionals listed at
www.kycollaborative.com/directories.php
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Each party needs to meet individually with his or her own collaborative
lawyer to discuss the details of the collaborative law process in your
situation.
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Both parties and both lawyers must sign a Collaborative Law
Participation Agreement that binds all the participants to the principles of
the collaborative process.
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Both parties and their lawyers attend the first collaborative law
meeting. The ground rules of the process will be discussed, primary
needs and issues will be identified, the executed Participation Agreement
will be exchanged and future collaborative sessions will be scheduled.
The American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers' website at
www.aaml.org offers a great deal of useful
advice on this and many related Family Law subjects, including:
Keen Interest in Gentler Way to Divorce (PDF file)
Split
Divorce: 'Collaborative Divorce' Helps People Avoid Judges,
Confrontation and Drama (Sacramento Bee, 01/17/2007)
Talk to us today about how ADR (alternative dispute
resolution) can help resolve your Family Law problem.
Learn more about:
Litigation
Mediation
Arbitration
Other important reading:
Choosing a Family Law Attorney
Controlling Legal Costs
What Lawyers Do
What Happens in a Divorce?
Dissolution Flow Chart (PDF)
Divorce Manual - A Client
Handbook (PDF)
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