Divorce Lawyers in North Carolina Near Me, page 5
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Hankins, Pauline Attorney
Bolivia,
North Carolina
Attorneys - Criminal Defense Lawyers - Custody & Support Lawyers - Divorce Lawyers - Family Lawyers
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Hicks, N. Kyle Attorney
Oxford,
North Carolina
Adoption Lawyers - Attorneys - Divorce Lawyers - Family Lawyers
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Law Office of Anna N. Westmoreland
Charlotte,
North Carolina
Attorneys - Bankruptcy Lawyers - Debt Consolidation Lawyers - Divorce Lawyers - Family Lawyers
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Law Offices of Susan M. Brown, P.A.
Chapel Hill,
North Carolina
Adoption Lawyers - Attorneys - Civil Law Attorneys - Divorce Lawyers - Family Lawyers
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Butler, Ronald P. Attorney
High Point,
North Carolina
Accident Lawyers - Attorneys - Criminal Defense Lawyers - Divorce Lawyers - DUI DWI Lawyers - Family Lawyers
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Cosgrove, Timithy R. Attorney
Hendersonville,
North Carolina
Accident Lawyers - Adoption Lawyers - Attorneys - Criminal Defense Lawyers - Divorce Lawyers - Family Lawyers
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Ehrmann, Jacob C. Attorney
Asheville,
North Carolina
Attorneys - Custody & Support Lawyers - Divorce Lawyers - Entertainment & Sports Lawyers - Family Lawyers
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Charles R. Ullman & Associates
Raleigh,
North Carolina
Adoption Lawyers - Attorneys - Custody & Support Lawyers - Divorce Lawyers - Family Lawyers
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Janet B. Dudley Attorney at Law
Scotland Neck,
North Carolina
Adoption Lawyers - Attorneys - Custody & Support Lawyers - Divorce Lawyers - Family Lawyers
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Bennick, Donna E. Attorney
Chapel Hill,
North Carolina
Attorneys - Divorce Lawyers - Family Lawyers - Tax Attorneys
117 Lawyer(s)
A divorce is the legal termination of a marriage by a court in a legal proceeding, requiring a petition or complaint for divorce (or dissolution in some states) by one party.There are two types of divorce-- fault and no-fault. A fault divorce is a judicial termination of a marriage based on marital misconduct or other statutory cause requiring proof in a court of law by the divorcing party that the divorcee had done one of several enumerated things as sufficient grounds for the divorce. All states now have adopted some form of no-fault divorce; although some such as New York, restrict the availability of no-fault divorce and retain fault divorce generally. A no-fault divorce is one in which neither party is required to prove fault, and one party must allege and testify only that either irretrievable breakdown of the marriage or irreconcilable differences between the parties makes termination of the marriage appropriate. Many states continue to offer a separation agreement or decree, under which the right to cohabitation is terminated but the marriage is not dissolved and the marital status of the parties is unaltered.