
Disclosure of Materials
During a divorce, both parties are required to disclose all material facts about the parties’ community assets to each other. Failure to do so can result in a breach of the fiduciary duty.
During a divorce, both parties are required to disclose all material facts about the parties’ community assets to each other. Failure to do so can result in a breach of the fiduciary duty.
Family Code sections 6203 and 6320 defines domestic violence to include acts which disturb the peace of the other party.
Family Code Section 1101(a) and (g) describe how attorney’s fees can be granted to a spouse in a divorce case.
When one spouse uses a community asset–such as a house–after the parties have filed for divorce but before a judgment has been entered, that spouse is charged with the use of a community asset.
A person who files numerous motions can be found to be a vexatious litigant under California Code of Civil Procedure section 391 (b)(3).
There are times when two people get into an altercation and both file a request for a restraining orders against each other.