Santa Ysabel Divorce & Family Law Lawyer, California

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Heidi Dionne Collier Lawyer

Heidi Dionne Collier

VERIFIED
Divorce & Family Law

Attorney Collier is a San Diego Native. She graduated with her Bachelor’s degree from UCSD in 1993 and earned her law degree in from USD 1996. For o... (more)

Lena  Ghianni Lawyer

Lena Ghianni

VERIFIED
Divorce & Family Law, Estate

"The law has always fascinated me. I told my parents when I was about 7 years old that I wanted to be an attorney and strived for that goal throughout... (more)

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800-875-9680

Michelle Louise Blair

Family Law, Divorce & Family Law
Status:  In Good Standing           

Patricia L Cleary

Family Law, Divorce & Family Law
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  44 Years

James Warren Talley

Workers' Compensation, Employment, Family Law, Divorce & Family Law
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  53 Years

Rose Marie Garcia

Real Estate, Divorce & Family Law, Bankruptcy & Debt
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  21 Years

Stephanie Mendez

Deportation, Family Law, Divorce & Family Law
Status:  In Good Standing           

Richard Louis Zierden

Family Law, Divorce & Family Law, Bankruptcy, Personal Injury
Status:  In Good Standing           

Robert Bennett

Foreclosure, Mediation, Divorce, Bankruptcy
Status:  In Good Standing           

E James H Jeffries

Other, Trusts, Estate Planning, Family Law
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  53 Years

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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.

COMPLAINT

Papers filed with a court clerk by the plaintiff to initiate a lawsuit by setting out facts and legal claims (usually called causes of action). In some states a... (more...)
Papers filed with a court clerk by the plaintiff to initiate a lawsuit by setting out facts and legal claims (usually called causes of action). In some states and in some types of legal actions, such as divorce, complaints are called petitions and the person filing is called the petitioner. To complete the initial stage of a lawsuit, the plaintiff's complaint must be served on the defendant, who then has the opportunity to respond by filing an answer. In practice, few lawyers prepare complaints from scratch. Instead they use -- and sometimes modify -- pre-drafted complaints widely available in form books.

PETITIONER

A person who initiates a lawsuit. A synonym for plaintiff, used almost universally in some states and in others for certain types of lawsuits, most commonly div... (more...)
A person who initiates a lawsuit. A synonym for plaintiff, used almost universally in some states and in others for certain types of lawsuits, most commonly divorce and other family law cases.

ISSUE

A term generally meaning all your children and their children down through the generations, including grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and so on. Also called... (more...)
A term generally meaning all your children and their children down through the generations, including grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and so on. Also called 'lineal descendants.'

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.

COMPARABLE RECTITUDE

A doctrine that grants the spouse least at fault a divorce when both spouses have shown grounds for divorce. It is a response to an old common-law rule that pre... (more...)
A doctrine that grants the spouse least at fault a divorce when both spouses have shown grounds for divorce. It is a response to an old common-law rule that prevented a divorce when both spouses were at fault.

ADOPTED CHILD

Any person, whether an adult or a minor, who is legally adopted as the child of another in a court proceeding. See adoption.

DEFAULT DIVORCE

See uncontested divorce.

FAMILY AND MEDICAL LEAVE ACT (FMLA)

A federal law that requires employers to provide an employee with 12 weeks of unpaid leave during a year's time for the birth or adoption of a child, family hea... (more...)
A federal law that requires employers to provide an employee with 12 weeks of unpaid leave during a year's time for the birth or adoption of a child, family health needs or personal illness. The employer must allow the employee to return to the same position or a position similar to that held before taking the leave. There are exceptions to the FMLA: the most notable is that only employers with 50 or more employees are covered--about half the workforce.