Stopping a Divorce After the Petition is Filed

Stopping a Divorce After the Petition is Filed

A divorce is an emotionally charged experience, which is why Colorado requires a 91-day wait, or “cooling-off period” after the initial petition. During this waiting period, a small percentage of spouses decide to reconcile. While a reconciliation is the best-case scenario for a family, many spouses in this situation wonder—what happens if they change their minds? How do you stop the divorce process from moving forward after the petition has already been filed? Dismissing a Divorce Case as the Petitioner…

What Are Default Hearings?

Divorce is an emotionally charged time for any spouse, but it’s especially painful and distressing when one spouse doesn’t want the divorce or seeks to avoid the process completely by failing to respond to the other spouse’s divorce petition. By refusing to sign papers, respond to a petition, or participate in the divorce hearing, does it mean the divorce doesn’t happen and the spouses remain married? In Colorado, refusing to sign divorce papers or respond to a spouse’s divorce petition…

What Happens If I Do Not Sign the Divorce Papers in Colorado

Divorce is rarely easy and amicable, but if one spouse doesn’t want the divorce, it makes the process even more distressing. But can a resistant spouse stop the divorce by refusing to sign the papers? What happens in a Colorado divorce if one spouse refuses to participate in the process? Before you can understand the consequences of failing to sign divorce papers, it’s important to understand how the process of divorce works in Colorado, and what it means to be…

How to Ask for a Divorce

Most couples walking down the aisle have the best intentions and hopes of a long, happy future together. Unfortunately, long after the wedding cake and flowers are just fading photographs, real life takes spouses on different paths. In the worst-case scenario, an angry spouse may shout out that they want a divorce during a fight or through unhappy tears, but for many individuals who’ve reached the conclusion that divorce is inevitable, determining the best way to approach the subject of…

Where to File Divorce Papers in Denver

Once you and/or your spouse determine that your marriage has ended and reconciliation isn’t possible, it’s time to start taking the necessary legal steps to begin your new journey forward. The first step in a divorce is filing the divorce petition. Getting divorced is never a simple process, either emotionally or legally. By moving forward into a Denver divorce with a clear understanding of the process, beginning with where to file the divorce papers, you can streamline the process, understand…