SPECIAL PROBLEMS WHEN DIVORCING A LAWYER

Divorce is a complicated process even under the best of circumstances. However, when your soon to be ex spouse is an attorney you can face very special challenges and problems on the way to obtaining a fair and equitable settlement or decision after trial. 

Here is a list of the top three problems faced by spouses divorcing attorneys:

1.      The Attorney is Known Throughout the Courthouse: If your spouse works regularly in Court, he or she may be well known to the Court and its staff. Even if the spouse works in a different area of the law, say criminal defense or civil litigation, judges and their staffs talk informally among themselves and Courthouse gossip is rampant. This might be the only case in a divorce setting in which the Court is familiar with one of the parties professionally but does not consider recusal. In this case, you and your attorney will have to work extra hard and be extra careful in how you handle your case.

 

2.        Valuation of the Law Practice: Attorneys whose spouses make a claim for a portion of the value of the law practice tend to raise the same objections time and time again: (1) that the practice has little or no value because it depends entirely on their own efforts and work, (2) that the contingent receivables can’t be accurately valued because of the uncertainties of the cases, and (3) that attorney-client privilege prevents the full disclosure of the information required to properly value the practice.  These arguments can be effectively defeated if your attorney is familiar with the specific rules and case law which govern this issue.

 

3.        Income “Management”: Attorneys who are planning to divorce their spouse or who know that they will be served with a divorce summons themselves use a wide variety of techniques to manage their income to their advantage. Changes to partnership agreements, decisions to reduce partnership compensation, deferral of revenue, referral and routing of work through other attorneys, and cash fees are familiar ruses designed to depress the income of the attorney and therefore lower the amount of money paid out in spousal support, child support, and equitable distribution. Like the valuation problem, this issue can be effectively countered with aggressive and thorough discovery and an understanding of how to identify and uncover income management in all of its forms.

 

For more information or to schedule a consultation, please visit my firm’s website at www.GabayLawFirm.com

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Comments (1) Read through and enter the discussion with the form at the end
Disability Insurance - January 5, 2010 11:57 PM

As if divorce wasn't difficult enough...

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