Divorces In Tennessee

I practice law in Clarksville and Nashville. Without hardly trying, I have begun to make a name for myself doing divorces, part of this may be because I represent Singer Terry Clark’s husband in her divorce, but regardless, I enjoy divorces and like aggressive attorney work. Contact me at Philips Law, PLLC. | There are two types of divorce in Tennessee, uncontested divorce and contested divorce. What this really means is this:

(1) an uncontested divorce is based on irreconciliable divorces, this means the husband and wife agree to disagree; and

(2) a contested divorce is based on fault based grounds, which means that for the parties to get divorced one of them will have to prove at trial that the other did something wrong. Ok, what does this really mean, uncontested divorce or contested divorce? An uncontested divorce is basically a divorce where the parties agree to everything, including property and kids. The essential requirement for an uncontested divorce is that the parties (husband and wife) have an ability to agree on the division of their stuff. Basically, they have to split money, accounts, cars, retirement, houses, alimony, taxes. Everything that the parties have acquired together; operative word together, during the time they have married is up for grabs and can be equitably divided. Now, the division of marital property has some caveats.

If a party owned something before the marriage, it may not be divisible because it is separate property. Also, gifts are generally going to be separate property. Once the parties can has out an agreement, they will then document this agreement in the form of a Marital Dissolution Agreement (MDA). This agreement has some specific requirements and generally must comply with the rules established by each local court in each Tennessee County. Pre-Divorce, a party can revoke an MDA. Once the divorce is finalized and there is a final decree, the MDA is hard to revoke. If children are involved, then for the divorce to be uncontested, the parents will have to agree on a parenting plan. In Tennessee, a parenting plan consists of several things: a day to day schedule for visitation, a holiday schedule (major holidays, summer, spring, fall and winter break), a determination of financial requirements through child support, life insurance and health care, and also a division of the tax credit. The parenting plan is usually very specific and is designed for the time when the parents may have a dispute. The parenting plan is a guide to fall back on, but does not necessarilly have to be the rule. The child support will usually not be deviated from the Tennessee Child Support Guidelines. Once these two documents are completed and the statutory waiting period has ended, the parties can be divorced. This is done through a final decree and notice of hearing.

The main thing to remember is that an uncontested divorce requires the agreement of the parties. If the parties can’t agree, the divorce becomes contested. This can be one big ass fight. The pattern in a contested divorce normally involves these parts:

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(1) filing of a contested complaint,

(2) motions involving support, paternity, possession of the home, custody etc,

(3) mediation,

(4) interrogatories,

(4) depositions,

(5) trial preparation,

(5) trial brief and

(6) trial. Some time there will also be a requirement for a forensic accounting if there is a dispute over where all the money has gone. Generally, the filing of the divorce complaint begins the process. In a contested divorce fault-based grounds will be alleged and the other party will need to be served the paperwork. What this means is that person of some kind will need to get the paperwork into the other party’s hands. Once this is done, they have thirty days to respond to the paperwork. After thirty days, if there is not response, the filing party may fiile a motion for default. If the party responds with an answer and “counter-complaint,” then the original filing party must file an answer to the new filings. At this point, generally it is on like donkey-kong. Motions are next. These are temporary orders from the Court to get the parties through to the trial. For example, many times one party or the other will file a Motion to Set Support.

This can be in the form of Alimony or Child Support or Both. Once the Court orders support, the order will normally last until the final hearing and is not meant to be ongoing beyond that. Mediation is also now required by statute. Mediation is designed to get the parties to resolve the divorce through the use of an neutral attorney or a Rule 31 mediator. Mediation is either with or without attorneys. Generally, what takes place is that the parties sit down in one room and try to hash out the terms of the divorce. The goal here, once again, is to create a Marital Dissolution Agreement and Parenting Plan (see uncontested divorce). If the party’s can’t come up with a complete agreement, many times it is helpful if they just agree on parts of the divorce. Interrogatories are also normally filed. These are written questions to the other side that are required to be answered as part of the discovery. They are sworn to and must be answered truthfully. As part of the interrogatories, there is a request for production of documents. This also each side to flesh out their file and get anything that they may need for trial.

After the interrogatories are returned, the lawyers may want to schedule depositions. Depositions are conducted with a court-reporter present. This is a question and answer session where the lawyer can ask questions of your spouse and have the answers recorded. The answers are under oath and lying in a depostion is perjury. The court reporter is expensive and charges for each page of the transcript, so sometimes clients who don’t have a lot of money to spend on a divorce may want to forgo the depositions unless they believe they are a vital part of the discovery proceedings. Trial preparation will require preparation of witnesses, filing of trial briefs, preparation of evidence for the court and preparation of the client. This is done after the evidence is gathered through discovery and will follow the rules of the local court. A divorce trial can be disappointing for the client. Many times clients are more concerned with vindication and justice than they are with the distribution of their assets.

The judge is generally less interested in sorting out the fault than he or she is in splitting the parties’ stuff and creating a parenting plan that is in the best interest of the child. What the judge wants is what is going to happen in trial, so for the most part, the lawyers will spend a limited amount of time having clients and witnesses testify about adultery, abuse, etc. The real crux of the argument will be on issues such as equitable division of property, custody of the kids, alimony, attorney fees, and the granting of the divorce. Once the judge rules, the Court will put out an order that outlines all of the issues that were brought up in the final hearing. This order becomes final and the parties are divorced. If one side or the other disagrees with the ruling, the have a limited amounted of time to appeal and may go to the next higher court to ask that court to grant relief. Also, later on down the line, as things change, one party or the other may want to reopen the divorce to have the judge review some or all of the determinations. In my experience, a contested divorce should never be handled pro se in Tennessee. Pro se is when a client represents themselves. There are just too many issues and a divorce in Tennessee can be too complex for a client to represent themselves. They will be at a serious disadvantage in front of the judge. I hope this helps. . Nothing in this blog constitutes establishing an attorney-client relationship. Also, this blog is general advice and commentary and should not be construed as a substitute for either the need for getting specific advice from a lawyer or from hiring a lawyer. In Tennessee, Divorces are complex and require the hiring of a lawyer.

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James Phillips bestclarksvillelawyer.comAuthor: James Phillips