Divorce, Custody, Partition
We provide legal assistance for divorce, parental authority arrangements, child support, and division of jointly held assets.
Family disputes often require quick decisions about living arrangements, communication with the other parent, interim expenses, and the documents needed to support each request. A structured legal review from the beginning helps clarify the available procedural route and the evidence worth preparing early.
What Legal Assistance Covers
- analysis of the procedural route best suited to the concrete situation;
- drafting requests and structuring supporting evidence;
- representation in matters regarding parental authority and child-contact schedule;
- assistance in partition of jointly owned assets.
Assistance can be useful both in negotiations and in court proceedings when the parties disagree on children, property, or the way the separation should be organized.
Useful Documents for the First Discussion
- civil-status records and documents regarding minor children;
- evidence of relevant income, expenses, and financial support;
- ownership records for assets that may be divided;
- correspondence and any materials that clarify the factual background.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Which documents are needed for divorce proceedings?
Documents differ depending on procedure and family context. Usually civil-status records, child-related documents, and financial/property elements are reviewed.
2. How long can a divorce procedure take?
Timeline varies based on procedure type and whether disputes exist regarding children or assets.
3. How is partition handled after divorce?
Partition requires review of jointly held assets, contributions, and available evidence, with strategy adapted to each case.
4. Can child-related arrangements be clarified before the entire dispute is over?
In many situations, yes. The appropriate procedural route depends on the urgency of the matter, the issues in dispute, and the evidence available at that stage.
The information above is general and does not represent legal advice for a specific case.