Forest City Divorce & Family Law Lawyer, Illinois


Phillip Kirby

Traffic, Divorce, DUI-DWI, Personal Injury
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  41 Years

Roger Brian Thomson

Other, Estate, Family Law, Divorce & Family Law
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  33 Years

Bob Neiner

Traffic, Family Law, Divorce, DUI-DWI
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  20 Years

Bob Anthony Neiner

Traffic, Family Law, Divorce, DUI-DWI
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  20 Years

Ryan Lee Powers

Estate, Workers' Compensation, Divorce, DUI-DWI
Status:  In Good Standing           

Matthew Stropes

Divorce & Family Law, Bankruptcy, Business & Trade, Civil Rights
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  20 Years

Brian Addy

Traffic, Family Law, Divorce, DUI-DWI
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  43 Years

Brian A. Addy

Traffic, Family Law, Divorce, DUI-DWI
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  43 Years

Ted Collins

Estate Planning, Divorce & Family Law, Civil Rights, Collection
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  49 Years

Nathan Andrew Collins

Municipal, Workers' Compensation, Divorce & Family Law, Transactions
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  15 Years

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Free Help: Use This Form or Call 800-943-8690

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LEGAL TERMS

ACKNOWLEDGED FATHER

The biological father of a child born to an unmarried couple who has been established as the father either by his admission or by an agreement between him and t... (more...)
The biological father of a child born to an unmarried couple who has been established as the father either by his admission or by an agreement between him and the child's mother. An acknowledged father must pay child support.

COLLUSION

Secret cooperation between two people in order to fool another. Collusion was often practiced by couples before no-fault divorce in order to make up a grounds f... (more...)
Secret cooperation between two people in order to fool another. Collusion was often practiced by couples before no-fault divorce in order to make up a grounds for divorce (such as adultery). By fabricating a permitted reason for divorce, colluding couples hoped to trick a judge into granting their freedom from the marriage. But a spouse accused of wrongdoing who later changed his or her mind about the divorce could expose the collusion to prevent the divorce from going through.

JOINT CUSTODY

An arrangement by which parents who do not live together share the upbringing of a child. Joint custody can be joint legal custody (in which both parents have a... (more...)
An arrangement by which parents who do not live together share the upbringing of a child. Joint custody can be joint legal custody (in which both parents have a say in decisions affecting the child) joint physical custody (in which the child spends a significant amount of time with both parents) or, very rarely, both.

MARITAL TERMINATION AGREEMENT

See divorce agreement.

POT TRUST

A trust for children in which the trustee decides how to spend money on each child, taking money out of the trust to meet each child's specific needs. One impor... (more...)
A trust for children in which the trustee decides how to spend money on each child, taking money out of the trust to meet each child's specific needs. One important advantage of a pot trust over separate trusts is that it allows the trustee to provide for one child's unforeseen need, such as a medical emergency. But a pot trust can also make the trustee's life difficult by requiring choices about disbursing funds to the various children. A pot trust ends when the youngest child reaches a certain age, usually 18 or 21.

INCURABLE INSANITY

A legal reason for obtaining either a fault divorce or a no-fault divorce. It is rarely used, however, because of the difficulty of proving both the insanity of... (more...)
A legal reason for obtaining either a fault divorce or a no-fault divorce. It is rarely used, however, because of the difficulty of proving both the insanity of the spouse being divorced and that the insanity is incurable.

MARITAL SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT

See divorce agreement.

ANNULMENT

A court procedure that dissolves a marriage and treats it as if it never happened. Annulments are rare since the advent of no-fault divorce but may be obtained ... (more...)
A court procedure that dissolves a marriage and treats it as if it never happened. Annulments are rare since the advent of no-fault divorce but may be obtained in most states for one of the following reasons: misrepresentation, concealment (for example, of an addiction or criminal record), misunderstanding and refusal to consummate the marriage.

CLOSE CORPORATION

A corporation owned and operated by a few individuals, often members of the same family, rather than by public shareholders. State laws permit close corporation... (more...)
A corporation owned and operated by a few individuals, often members of the same family, rather than by public shareholders. State laws permit close corporations to function more informally than regular corporations. For example, shareholders can make decisions without holding meetings of the board of directors, and can fill vacancies on the board without a vote of the shareholders.