Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I made sure that my daughter was the plaintiff. If he was going to be that much of a horrible person who literally left her reeling and shellshocked, with no explanation, because he had a crush on someone (who later told him he was way off, BTW) then he was going to be the defendant. Damn straight.
But you realize the judge probably couldn't care less.
Not about the judge, Einstein. It's about :
1. Public records
2. Future employment
3. Future relationships
4. Letting the world know who was the asshole.
Ex husband asked for the record to be unpublished. My daughter said "Nope."
It matters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I made sure that my daughter was the plaintiff. If he was going to be that much of a horrible person who literally left her reeling and shellshocked, with no explanation, because he had a crush on someone (who later told him he was way off, BTW) then he was going to be the defendant. Damn straight.
But you realize the judge probably couldn't care less.
Anonymous wrote:We have dear friends who amicably separated and hashed out the custody and financial details without a lawyer. They did crowd-source ideas from divorced loved ones. But it all went south when they realized someone had to be the defendant. Two years latter, they have lawyers and are still not speaking to each other.
Judges might not care, but obviously the word triggers some people. Perhaps we could use petitioner in no fault cases?
Anonymous wrote:I made sure that my daughter was the plaintiff. If he was going to be that much of a horrible person who literally left her reeling and shellshocked, with no explanation, because he had a crush on someone (who later told him he was way off, BTW) then he was going to be the defendant. Damn straight.