English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Has anyone here got divorce with do it yourself Filling out forms and filing? Noncontested without children in Georgia? Please help.
On my forms already purchase with uslegalforms.com. We will be married 14 years. These forms state that alimony is waieved. How ever, it also states that an added afidated can be added to imply alimony if needed. We have agreed to alimony and have a letter notarized to do so. And sign by me and my husband as he is to pay me. Is this what they are asking for or do we write it next to the staement on the forms and mark out waieved. To initial change. Or is this letter afadatis enough. Please I need to get this behind me.
littledebbiedodd@yahoo.com or dpowers301@charter.net

2007-09-23 08:52:59 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

Sensible_man, when you say we do you mean the clerk or your ex? Also was this uncontested? The Clerks in Ga. say they can not advise me of nothing even allowed us to file in the wrong county and cost us useless dollars. Do you or anyone please know the answers to my question above about the Alimony as no one else will tell me and I can't afford an atty. Thank

2007-09-23 15:51:08 · update #1

P.S. They are legal and binding in Ga. But they act so picky about details also seem affended I don't use an attorney that was in Paulding County of Dallas Ga. I hope Polk county of Rockmart Ga will be nicer as this is hard enough, you know?

2007-09-23 15:54:35 · update #2

P.S.S. Did Domestic Relations Court clerk charge and how much for these forms and did they help fill them out?

2007-09-23 15:57:27 · update #3

3 answers

Make sure the papers you bought and filled out are legal in your State. I got a Disolution of Marriage in florida and I got the papers from the Domestic Relations Court clerk. We filled them out and then paid a fee when we filed them with the court.

2007-09-23 09:28:41 · answer #1 · answered by sensible_man 7 · 0 0

You will both still need to be present for the final hearing. If anything at all is contested, don't count on the court accepting the forms.

Check with your Clerk of Courts (or whatever they call it in your jurisdiction) for more information.

2007-09-23 09:01:03 · answer #2 · answered by trooper3316 7 · 0 0

That should be enough. When you are in front of the judge at your court date the judge will ask you some questions and that will be that.

2007-09-23 08:58:11 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers