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Drafting Divorce Proposals

Most people do not know that they need a separation agreement to get divorced that must be filed in court. There are two components to a drafted separation agreement: the divorce proposal (also called a memorandum of understanding if drafted by a mediator) and the legalese part that is a boiler plate form that is required by state law.

Why is the Divorce Proposal So Important?

Most people do not know that they can design, and craft their own proposals to suit their personal family needs. A lawyer can draft the entire separation agreement. However, once Lawyers are retained, it often takes years to complete the proposal because time is wasted on unnecessary adversarial procedures, costly paper work, and miscommunications. Also, Lawyers do not begin with an organized workable plan. Without a point of reference or organized plan, you are all over the place accomplishing very little if anything at all. The only thing you will be doing is losing your hard-earned money and paying for services that are not worth the price.

Map Your Way to Success!

We have created a map you can follow that accomplishes what you need to cover in a much shorter timeframe keeping you out of the adversarial legal system, saving you emotional duress, thousands of dollars and valuable time. Once you know all the information that needs to be in the proposal and can negotiate all those points, you have mastered the divorce process. The divorce proposal is the meat and potatoes of your agreement. It states how you will divide your marital assets, real estate, personal property, liabilities, and designates how the custody, parenting, education, support, and maintenance of your children shall be managed.

We can draft quality divorce proposals quickly and efficiently that covers everything that needs to be in your agreement. The proposals are comprehensive, sound, correct and complete. The proposal is the most important contract you will ever write personally, legally, and financially. You are deciding on no less than your future.

We can draft a proposal that you mediate with your spouse or one that you design yourself. If we draft one for you alone, you give it to your spouse to review. Your spouse checks off everything he/she agrees to, and you keep negotiating until you have agreed on all pertinent issues. Once you feel satisfied on how you are dividing up your marital pie, you have successfully gone around the system instead of through it. It is suggested that you and your spouse take the proposal to be reviewed by separate lawyers. Some lawyers charge one flat fee to review an agreement or you can pay one by the hour.

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Separation Agreements

The divorce proposal can easily be converted into a separation agreement. Most people do not know that they can draft the legalese piece of their separation agreement themselves. The information can be found in books, bought off the inter net or you can take the proposal to an attorney to have the legalese that every state requires incorporated into the proposal at a minimal fee. Once you have your separation agreement ready to file in court, you can pick up the rest of the forms you need to file "free" at the appropriate court. The court clerk will be glad to answer all your questions, explain the filing process, and make sure you have completed all the right forms. Once again, you will have saved yourself a lot of money.

Agreements Designed Around Your Needs

We can help you map your way to success by showing you the shortest efficient path through divorce by helping you craft your proposal in a fair and equitable way by providing you with the information you need so you can make informed decisions to protect your future. We can also review proposals already drafted giving you additional information but not advice. It is essential to know all the contingencies that can adversely affect your agreement. Every word can change its meaning. The language has to be clear and precise so there are no misinterpretations. It is wise to get your proposal reviewed by more than one professional and to never sign anything unless you totally understand what you are signing.

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