Sometimes former spouses try to use bankruptcy to get around living up to the demands of a property settlement agreement.
Sometimes former spouses think they've agreed on these issues only to have one spouse change his or her mind.
Joint decision - making requires extensive communication and cooperation between parents, and
sometimes former spouses can not accomplish that without fighting.
Not exact matches
Into the middle of this bog stepped Merryl H. Tisch, a
former 1st - grade teacher with an EdD from Teachers College, Columbia University, and a
spouse, James Tisch, who heads Loews Corporation and has
sometimes appeared on the Forbes 400 list of the richest people in America.
Sometimes spouses will opt to hold onto the shares in a corporation owned or operated by their
former spouse.
Sometimes you hear about Family litigants for whom their dispute against the
former spouse has taken on a life of its own, and who will not stop until they have literally exhausted every possible legal and procedural avenue.
Sometimes the routines of the custodial parent bump against the expectations of the visiting parent, and this causes continuing friction between the two
former spouses.
Add to that baggage is the realization that there are often a lot more players in a second marriage — such as children from
former spouses, step - children, and
sometimes even new children from this marriage.