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Please click here for updates.
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** COVID-19 - WE'RE STILL OPEN ***
Please click here for updates.
Some people do allow their divorce to proceed without their participation. Reasons include apathy, guilt, fear, depression or because they are attempting to delay or stop the divorce.
This is never a good idea!
Failure to appear means you have skipped a scheduled court date without notifying the court. You can be charged with contempt of court, and the judge can issue a bench warrant for your arrest. You may also have to pay a fine.
While such measures don't usually happen in a divorce case, you still should always show up in court if required to do so.
Skipping your court hearing not only gives a bad impression but allows the other spouse to tell the court what they want.
If you aren’t there, you can’t disprove their story or defend your self! Once this testimony is part of the court record it becomes very hard to discredit later—because you didn’t show up in the first place to refute it!
Getting a divorce in Ohio often requires going through several court hearings and participating in numerous rounds of negotiation with your soon to be ex-spouse.
Ohio requires that you are a resident of the state for a minimum of six months to file for divorce. Since you will be filing your paperwork through a county court, it is best to look up and see what their residency requirements are—usually a minimum of 90 days.
Jack’s Law Office
305 S Sandusky St
Delaware, OH 43015
(740) 369-7567