Uncontested divorces typically do not require a hearing, but if you and your spouse can not settle all issues on your own, the court will decide those remaining issues for you at a trial.
Uncontested divorces typically take 90 to 120 days.
Although certain state eligibility requirements must first be met,
uncontested divorces typically can be finalized faster that traditional divorces, as the parties do not need to litigate their issues in court.
Not exact matches
Contested
divorce cases are
typically more complicated and time consuming than an
uncontested divorce.
So when people get into an
Uncontested Divorce, what they
typically mean is that the parties agree to get
divorced, and that no one has to go to...
As a rule of thumb, for
uncontested divorces, the spouse who really wants the
divorce to be finalized
typically does the filing.
Judges
typically only question spouses directly in
uncontested divorce hearings.
Typically, an
uncontested divorce occurs where both spouses understand that it would cost them more money to litigate a
divorce than either one of them wants to spend.
While the time period for the finalization of a
divorce is dependent on a court's caseload,
typically an
uncontested divorce in New York takes no longer than 60 days.
An
uncontested divorce is
typically cheaper and quicker than a contested
divorce, which is one in which the spouses dispute some or all of the issues of the
divorce.
Typically, in an
uncontested divorce proceeding, one party files for
divorce and serves the other party with the documents.
Courts
typically allow couples greater leeway in an
uncontested divorce when it comes to resolving financial issues.