Van Nuys Divorce Paralegal Firm Forges Court Forms

One of the most frustrating things about my business is my supposed competitors. The majority of paralegal companies are not licensed and this industry is not regulated. Most people don’t know that you have to be a Legal Document Assistant in California to provide legal services. This takes a college degree, experience working with the court’s and training under an attorney.

We have this legal document assistant certification.

 

What is frustrating is that these unlicensed paralegal companies only marketing tool is to offer cheap discounted prices. Then what they do is forge fee waiver court forms so that the money that is supposed to be paid to the court in filing fees is pocketed by the company.

The True Cost Of Getting Divorced In California

Unless you know someone who has gone through divorce who has talked about how much money they have spent on their divorce, you won’t believe me. But I am just going to come out and say it. The average cost of divorce is $30,000. That is $30,000 per person. Go ahead, do your own research and Google it… When you’re done with this book that is.

The thing is, it does not matter if it is $30,000, $20,000, or $50,000, it is just a lot of money. I am not trying to argue my point for the $30,000 either, I just want to make sure I caught your attention at how much a divorce can cost. Now, you may be saying, “We’ll, that is for highly contested cases that go to court”.

Some might be, but usually those types of cases go upwards of $60,000 to $100,000. I know you don’t believe me. It’s okay. Let’s just agree that divorce can be expensive. I can live with that and we can still be friends.

In this chapter I am going to explain to you why using an attorney for your divorce can be so expensive. I am going to discuss ways of saving money (in the event you do actually need an attorney) and how attorneys bill you. I am going to walk you through the process of calling an attorney, going to the consultation and reviewing the attorney retainer agreement.

What I am about to share with you is one of the most widely misunderstood issues of hiring an attorney. And this is the topic of how attorney retainers work.

Now, we are talking about divorce attorney retainers here as that is where my experience has been first hand. I am going to share with you how people quickly get in over their heads, spend way more money than they wanted or knew was being spent and how all that happens. Essentially, I am going to pull back the curtain on how the process of working with attorneys works.

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How To Fill Out California Divorce FL-150 When Self Employed

When You fill out the FL-150 for your California divorce and are self employed, you are going to fill out the FL-150 differently that you would if you were an employee. Essentially, you will not be completing the top of page 1 of the FL-150 as that is for people that are employed. Under the employer information, you can just write self employed. Make sure to fill out the rest of page 1 of the FL-150. Then on page 2 of the FL-150 you will see where it asks about business and self employment income. This is where you will indicate you are self employed or a business owner on the FL-150.

 

Do I Need A Specified Child Custody Schedule For My California Divorce

When you are going through divorce in California and have children, you are going to need to have a child custody order which is form FL-341. This is a 3 page form where you can get very specific about the custody arrangement.

Some people believe that because the child custody order goes into so much detail that they need to have a detailed child custody agreement. This is not the case. You can have a child custody agreement that simply says joint legal and joint physical custody.

 

You see, many of our clients don’t want a specified child custody schedule. Sometimes they don’t want the court’s involvement and sometimes they are amicable enough to figure out child custody schedules on an ongoing basis in the best interest of the children. Other times, the work schedules of the parents change so often that to have a specified child custody schedule would not make sense.

California Divorce FL-150 & Using Profit & Loss When Self Employed

If you are a small business owner and going through a divorce, you will complete the FL-150 Income & Expense Declaration slightly differently. First, you will not state your income on page 1 where is asks for employer information, rather you will use page 2 where it talks about business income.

I have found that many small business’s don’t keep monthly records up to date. So what do you do when you need to provide evidence of your income. Well, you are going to have to create a profit and loss statement.

 

This could be as simple as you going through your finances and using excel to show your income, cost of goods and expenses line item’d out so that it can be determined what you net income was each month. At a minimum you will likely need to do this for at least the last few months if going through a divorce in California for anything where you need to show income such as when one spouse is asking for spousal support.

How We Finalize California Divorce Cases Fast

We often have clients ask us how long the divorce process takes. I always say, “As fast as you can get me the information”. When parties going through divorce in California have all their agreements in place (i.e., custody, property division, etc.) I often have their entire California divorce completed the same day.

If both parties to the divorce are available to meet at the same time, we can usually get the divorce completely done in about 2 hours.

 

Keep in mind that even though we may get all the divorce paperwork completed and signed, we still have about 30 days of work behind the scenes to get the case filed, served and processed with the court.

Fear & Divorce | Don’t Let Fear Dictate Your California Divorce

To be sure, getting a divorce is going to change your life one way or another and by how much will vary from person to person. But with change, comes fear. Fear of the unknown mostly. Fear of change. But don’t let fear overpower you or cause you to make rash decisions. Here is where I am going with on this.
When I was talking to you about not listening to your friends and to come to your own conclusions, I was referring to people who will either purposely or with the best of intensions, cause a certain level of fear in you. Specifically by stating that if you don’t get an attorney that you will get screwed in your divorce. I am using that language purposely, because that is usually how I hear it being stated by my clients so perhaps this terminology rings true for you too.

I am also talking about the fear attorneys will try to instill in you as well with similar rhetoric. Let me tell you how this works. You decide you want to speak to an attorney about your divorce. Let’s say you have some questions, which is fine. What most attorneys will do is tell you all the bad things that can happen to you if you don’t hire an attorney and why you need to retain them now to “protect your rights”.

You want to know why attorneys say this? Because they have to. They have to tell you all this scary stuff because it is their job to “fight for your rights”. It is their job to get you the “best deal” in your divorce. It is not that they are bad, necessarily, just that the very nature of having an attorney puts you in an adversarial position with your spouse. I mean it is called, “The Adversarial System”. I don’t want to go to far with this conversation because I have dedicated an entire chapter to this.

What I wanted you to get out of this chapter is that there is a better way. You don’t have to go down the path of the adversarial system. You don’t have to go to court, you don’t have to go to trial, you don’t even need to see a courtroom. I laugh to myself sometimes because when people call me they frequently will ask, “What would a judge say about (blank)”. And my answer is always the same.

No judge is ever going to make a decision about anything if you guys can work out your agreements outside of court. The only people who ever see a judge are the ones that could not figure it out by themselves and needed to have a judge to decide. There is a big misconception that to get divorced that you need to go in front of a judge for them to make a decision.

This is so far from the truth. My clients who use our service and ultimately come to an agreement will never set foot in court. My office deals directly with the spouses to come to an agreement and document that agreement. This turns the divorce process into more of simply drafting agreements and submitting them to the court for approval.

The Court does not look at your agreements to see if anything is fair or even equal. All they care is to make sure that the children are being taken care of and that procedure was followed property and the divorce paperwork done correctly. That’s it.

Here is how you get rid of fear about divorce and the divorce process. Get educated. You are taking a great first step here by reading this book. You can also go to my website at www.divorce661.com and read the over 2,000 articles, videos and podcasts I have produced on the topic of divorce in California.

You can also just pick up the phone and call 661-281-0266 for a free phone consultation where I can learn about your situation, discuss if our services are a good fit for you and answer any questions you have about divorce and the divorce process.

What To Say After Telling Your Spouse You Want A Divorce

What To Say After Telling Your Spouse You Want A Divorce

From Tim’s Book, “Why You Don’t Need A Divorce Attorney”

Here is what I tell my clients. Once you have told your spouse you want a divorce, explain to them that you want to try to figure out everything without having to hire an attorney. Tell them that you don’t want to spend a ton of money on your divorce and that you want to try and work it out amicably.

If you guys can at least agree to not use attorneys, you have a good chance of getting through the divorce process on your own with a non-attorney legal service provider like ours.

I then tell them, when they are ready, to make sure that their spouse is directed to our website or to call me so I can have a discussion with them to try to explain the process. I want them to know we are a neutral third party, not here to take sides or represent either party, rather just here to help facilitate the divorce process the best we can. The biggest thing I can help with this at this moment is to put the other spouse’s concerns at ease as quickly as possible.

Don’t Listen To Your Friends

You remember the last time you purchased a car? Then all of a sudden you start seeing that car everywhere? In a similar fashion, once you start going through the divorce process you will undoubtedly start talking about it and whether you want it or not, your friends, relatives and even strangers will start to give you advice and commentary.

Anything from, “you need an attorney” to “I got screwed in my divorce”. People have their opinions and experiences with divorce, but their negative experiences is not what you have to go through.

You and your spouse are in control of the outcome of your divorce. How it starts and how it ends. In my experience, speaking to your friends about your divorce or asking them for advice is generally a bad idea. Nothing ever comes good of it and everything they are telling you is filtered by them.

We all rely on friends and family when going through times like these, so I can’t expect you to listen to me, a stranger, so I will leave you with something you hopefully follow. Take what your friends say with a grain of salt. Listen to them, but then come to your own conclusions.

How And When To Tell Your Spouse You Want A Divorce

How & When To Tell Your Spouse You Want A Divorce

From Tim’s Book “Why You Don’t Need A Divorce Attorney”

This is going to be different for everyone of course, but I could probably provide you a little help here seeing as I deal with so many people going through divorce. I think the “How” and “When” you tell your spouse can really make a difference on how well your divorce case ultimately plays out.

How are you going to tell your spouse you want a divorce? Remember here that we are talking about folks trying to go through an amicable divorce and we are trying to set up a situation where the environment is best suited for having the conversation.

I would suggest that you plan this out so that you are not placed in a situation where you get upset at your spouse and just blurt it out, “I want a divorce!” We want to do this amicably, so even if there is a lot of upset and emotion you can handle this as a business decision so both of you can deal with what’s about to happen.

Remember, as I stated previously, (and I am talking to you women right now) that your husband may have absolutely no idea you are about to drop this on him, so the how and the when are going to really matter. Give it some thought and think about how your week normally happens.

Think about your schedule, when the kids are home or at practice, etc. Make sure to be in a place that is quiet and that you have ample time to discuss as much as possible and that you don’t have to run out for some errand in 10 minutes, interrupting the conversation. You are going to want to get this out in a single conversation.

Not everything will be discussed here of course, but you want to make sure your spouse fully understands that you are not bringing this up as casual conversation, but that this is really happening.

Now for the when. I think I will answer this in two ways. “When” as in when you should tell them after you have made the decision that you want to get a divorce and, “When” as in what part of the hour, day or week do you tell them.

When clients call us for our divorce service, many have already discussed getting a divorce with their spouse, but many others have not and they will ask me what I think is the best time to tell their spouse. I tell them that it is better to talk to their spouse about wanting a divorce before any actual court documents start flying around. I think the conversation should come first and the actual filing of divorce papers should come after.

So what I am recommending is that when you talk to your spouse that you are not there to hand them any type of divorce papers. It will be overwhelming enough to have the conversation and you are going to want to focus on just the conversation and not be distracted by court documents.

I recommend telling your spouse soon after you have made the decision that you absolutely want to get divorced. When you know for certain that you want a divorce, that is the time to tell them. Here is what you have to watch out for if you hold off or wait. Y

ou are going to have this thought of having to tell them on your mind constantly until you tell them. It will consume you and you will be thinking about it all day and night and it will effect you. The other thing you need to be mindful of is that you may start to look for things they are doing wrong more often or frequently, in more of a coping method for you to make them out to be the bad person so it makes it easier for you to break the news.

While this may work in helping make them the bad person, it will certainly effect the delivery of the news to them. You may have this sick feeling in your stomach as you wait to tell them. The longer you wait the more you will feel this sick feeling. I can tell you from experience that my clients feel a sense of relief once their feelings are out in the open and they have discussed this with their spouse.

The other “when” is time of the hour, day or week. Think of your normal schedule and try to find the right time. It might be better to wait until your spouse has unwound from work for a while, but before they start into their glass of wine or beer.

This discussion is best done sober, and that goes for both of you. If you are going to have a cocktail, have it after you guys have talked. Do you tell them on a weekend or weekday? Is it better that you have the discussion on a weekday where at least during the day you are not together and risk the chances of fighting?

Maybe right after discussing this it is best to have a little space between you. Or maybe you would rather discuss this on the weekend where you do have additional time to talk and discuss the details of the divorce. You will have to make a judgment call.

Now, when you have figured out when you are going to talk to your spouse, what words are you going to use? How are you going to start the conversation? My recommendation is to think of it as firing an employee. I am not trying to diminish the circumstances, just trying to put this in perspective of the type of tone you need to have.

When you are going to fire an employee, you don’t start talking about all the things they have done and provide reasons and examples or apologize or provide excuses. You just say, “you’re fired” or “I have to let you go”. I prefer the latter of those examples. The divorce equivalent of those phrases is, “I want a divorce” and “I can’t be married to you anymore”. Again, I like the second one better than the first.

The direct route is going to serve you well in this situation and you need to get right to the point. “I wanted to speak to you because I need to tell you that I can’t be married to you anymore”.

Divorce – An Epidemic – Chapter 1 of Why You Don’t Need A Divorce Attorney Book

This is chapter 1 of Why You Don’t Need A Divorce Attorney – One Paralegal’s Take On Divorce, Responsibility, And Compromise

CHAPTER 1 – Divorce – An Epidemic

Divorce is everywhere, all around us. Our friends are getting divorced, our parents are getting divorced, our children are getting divorced. My children’s friends parents all seem to be divorced. My divorce paralegal firm handles approximately 30 divorce cases every month and we are just one company in one town in America.

The phone literally rings off the hook each and every day and I keep thinking to myself, “Isn’t everyone already divorced yet?” Indeed, good for business, but sad to see so many people going through this.

While I wish I had a cure for divorce, I will just have to continue feeling good about providing a divorce solution to people that makes going through divorce a much more comfortable experience.

What Is The Divorce Rate?

There is much debate on this topic. If you were to do a Google search, you would come across numerous articles that say the divorce rate is around the 40% to 50% mark. Honestly, the actual rate at which people are divorcing is not important except to show that it is pretty high.

From personal experience, all I can say is that there is a lot of divorce going on. And don’t get me started on my opinion on where we are going with the younger generations. So much is changing with our culture. 40 or so years ago people got married young, got a job and worked that one job for 30 years.

These days the younger folks are not getting married until well into their 30’s and working at multiple jobs. I just wonder if this trend will carry over into relationships. I think it will and already has.

Why People Divorce

Obviously I don’t have the answer to why people divorce. In fact, I don’t really even want to discuss this topic. You want to know why? Because it just does not matter. I am not saying you don’t matter, just that learning the reasons why are not going to help you with what you have going on in your life, except to learn that you are not alone.

We know all the negative things that spouses do that causes divorce, but what about where spouses just grow apart and it is not working anymore? In my business I see more people simply growing apart than anything else. And it may be less about growing apart and more about that they did not continue to grow together as a unit.

I feel that in most cases divorce is not a surprise. What I mean to say is that if the relationship is so poor that one of you feels that it is bad enough to feel it necessary to file for divorce, or even start talking divorce, that the other party has to have some idea that things are not very rosy.

That said, there are some exceptions. I have lots of women clients that say that nothing is really wrong, that things are just the same as always. Or they will say that they don’t really know why they are not happy, they are just not happy.

What does this tell us? I don’t know, but it could mean that men and women are just different. How profound a statement, right? It may be a reason or It may be an excuse, but it seems some men feel that to go to work, provide shelter, food and safety is enough. But I think we need to get out of that caveman style mentality if we want to see any reversal of the divorce epidemic.

But we are not here to talk about the why. We are here to talk about the how. How are you going to get through this divorce and how are things going to look on the other end of this? I will tell you, based upon my clients conversations and experiences, that there is light at the end of the tunnel. That as bad as it might seem while you are going through divorce, that happiness will reenter your life soon after.

Women Lead In Filing For Divorce

I could research the statistic, but I don’t have to. Women take the lead in initiating the divorce process. In my business, most of my inquiries about divorce are from women and in suit, women are the ones to come in to our offices and initiate the divorce process.

If I had to put a number to it, I would put it at about 80% of the time. Why is this? In my experience I have found that there is just something about the men who simply stick their head in the sand and don’t want to deal with the issues. This is not a blanket statement for all men, but I see this all too often.

Even when the women starts the divorce process, we are still having to drag most men through the process. The men are not uncooperative as much as they just don’t want to deal with it.