By Allison Dunn | January 30, 2023
The Idaho Supreme Court accepted Marsh's resignation in lieu of disciplinary proceedings. She may not apply for admission to the Idaho State Bar sooner than five years from the Jan. 18. If she does apply for admission, she will be have the burden of overcoming the rebuttable presumption of the "unfitness to practice law," the order said.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Bari Weinberger | January 30, 2023
As 2023 begins, it is up to the legal community to not only educate our clients about the realities of the strained family court system, but also help them understand the opportunities and choices they can make to still expedite their divorce matters, even during these trying times.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Rebecca Palmer | January 30, 2023
Many millennials are pursuing a different approach to long-term commitments—domestic partnerships. These are used to legally recognize any two-person relationship of those who live together and share a common domestic life while retaining similar, but not identical, rights to traditional marriage.
By ALM Staff | January 27, 2023
This ruling was selected and summarized by the New York Law Journal's decisions editors.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Lawrence J. Persick | January 26, 2023
While a divorce decree is "final" and, supposedly, nonmodifiable 30 days after it is docketed, special relief is available when a party sees the need to appeal to the court's equitable powers to modify the specifics of a divorce decree.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Rebecca L. Palmer | January 23, 2023
Many millennials are pursuing a different approach to long-term commitments—domestic partnerships. These are used to legally recognize any two-person relationship of those who live together and share a common domestic life while retaining similar, but not identical, rights to traditional marriage.
By Lisa Willis | January 20, 2023
The group is the recipient of the 2023 Voluntary Bar Association Pro Bono Award, which is scheduled to be presented by Chief Justice Carlos G. Muñiz in a Jan. 26 ceremony.
By Adolfo Pesquera | January 19, 2023
"Generally, a party in a partition suit is not entitled to recover attorney fees because there is no statutory authorization for the award of fees," the appeals court said.
By Jennifer Weisberg Millner | January 17, 2023
When a family has a child with special needs or disabilities, particular attention must be paid to how the obligation to maintain the child is structured.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Joel R. Brandes | January 17, 2023
In his Law and the Family column, Joel Brandes discusses the factors needed for a marital agreement to qualify as binding and enforceable and when the court will step in to "fill in the gaps."
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