Morgan County Ohio court records

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I'm sure we can all agree that people do foolish things. One of the most foolish is to disobey a court order, particularly in a court where divorce matters of custody and family support are concerned. And compounding the foolishness are the attempts of divorce attorneys who try to rationalize their clients' disobedience. Both divorce clients and divorce attorneys often rely on the same two excuses to try to justify disregarding court orders with regard to divorce. They are: (1) the other side did it first and (2) the court's order was based on dishonest or incorrect information. Neither of those excuses
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Copyright 2005 The Divorce Center P.A. Conjure up an image of divorce. The average person visualizes people sitting in a courtroom, giving testimony, with a judge at a bench presiding over everything. But the actual reality of most divorces is dramatically different. Forget high profile, exciting confrontations in courtrooms that were built 50 years ago. Most of the time, one or both spouses will never see the inside of a courtroom. More often that not, one spouse attends a short, 10 minute hearing. During the hearing a judge reviews a mediated settlement agreement, previously negotiated by the parties. If everything looks proper, the judge signs off on the divorce. The vast majority
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