Divorce Don’t #1:
Don’t Be a Rights Fighter. Don’t let your perception of what’s “right” and your “rights” overshadow and overtake your goals.
Being overly principled and a “rights fighter” will fuel your energies in your divorce battle. But know that proclamations of right/wrong and good/bad inevitably invite offensive and defensive response tactics from the other side. War tactics come at great cost; some people can spend their entire divorce budget on one motion.
The Stevenson family lives in an upscale Los Angeles suburb. The Stevensons have recently separated and have started discussing how to handle the logistics of their separation and modest finances (moving out, telling the kids, splitting the debt, selling the house, etc.). Recently, seven-year-old Julia has been exhibiting behavioral issues in class. Julia’s teacher reached out to her parents, Mary and Jonathan, to address Julia’s behaviors and consider different options for help. Mary and Jonathan cannot agree on which option to choose. Mary wants to try some non-interventionist options, like yoga and changes to diet; Jonathan wants to enlist the assistance of a therapist. Mary is vehemently opposed to mental health interventions. After hearing that Jonathan met with a therapist for a consultation without her, Mary calls a lawyer.
After retaining the lawyer, Mary spends two hours in his office discussing the issue in detail. Mary instructs her lawyer to proceed with a motion seeking sole legal custody of Julia, or in the alternative, sole decision-making authority for all mental health-related decisions. Mary’s lawyer spends 3 hours preparing motion materials (in California, a family law motion is known as a Request for Order). Mary augments some facts in support of her request. After a further one-hour meeting, Mary’s lawyer revises the paperwork to add the new facts and apply them to her legal arguments (1.5 hours). She then sends it to the Court for filing and serves Jonathan with the motion. Mary’s lawyer has already spent 7.5 hours on her case, which at $500 per hour, calculates to a $3,750 legal bill.
On receiving Mary’s motion, Jonathan is incensed. He spends days stewing in disbelief and rage over Mary’s narrative, which he thinks relegates his fatherly role to nothing more than chauffeur and short-order cook. Jonathan calls three divorced dads he knows for advice. He’s referred to a lawyer his friends think is a real ‘shark’.
Jonathan meets with the lawyer, who prepares a response and, after a few drafts, files and serves the Response on Mary’s lawyer, who prepares and serves a “Reply.” Jonathan’s fees to this point are $6,000 and Mary’s fees, inclusive of the Reply, now total $6,500. In other words, together, Mary and Jonathan have already cumulatively spent $12,500. They are still 6 weeks away from their hearing date.
By the date of the hearing, Mary and Jonathan have each spent another $2,000, on telephone calls to their respective lawyers and the lawyers’ telephone calls to one another trying to negotiate an out of court settlement, bringing their total combined legal fees to $16,500 .
Tensions in the home have gotten pretty bad and Mary and Jonathan can no longer stand to be in the other’s presence. Julia’s behaviors have gotten worse and her grades have suffered. She has also taken to biting her nails and the skin on her fingertips. Julia has also been experiencing nightly nightmares. Mary now sleeps with Julia at night in effort to help calm her. Jonathan thinks this is hindering Julia’s ability to self-regulate and exacerbating her anxieties. He asks his lawyer to prepare a supplemental declaration to inform the judge of these new facts and developments. Mary, of course, prepares her own responding supplemental declaration. The current total combined legal fees are now $19,000.
On the date of the hearing, the motion is continued to a new date. The new current total combined legal fees are $21,000. The case is eventually heard on the new motion date at 11:30 a.m. and is argued in the span of 30 minutes. The judge takes the matter upon submission and reserves her decision. The combined total legal fees are now $25,000 and, by the time they receive the judge’s decision two weeks later, it is over $27,000.
Julia’s behaviors have continued to escalate. Her nail biting has caused a finger fungus for which she is now being medicated. Jonathan has moved out and has recently motioned the court for an order for the immediate sale of the family residence.
If, after reading the above vignette, you find yourself wondering, “Who won?” instead of “Does anyone really win?”, you may be a rights fighter and you may be at risk of dragging out the length and increasing the cost and conflict of your divorce (without even trying). You will recall from the start of this vignette that Mary and Jonathan have modest assets and current debt. They also have a child who has evidenced some new troubling patterns that need to be addressed.
When the issue with Julia arose, Mary and Jonathan had different opinions about how to best address it, but they shared a common interest. Mary and Jonathan wanted to help their daughter. By focusing on this mutual goal, Mary and Jonathan could have had a dialogue and brainstormed all options together. While it is unlikely that either would have convinced the other that his/her opinion was right, they would have at least had the opportunity to properly consider all options, including the option they both ultimately chose – a costly and lengthy court battle. The risks of the ultimately chosen path included enormous family financial cost, which resulted in decreased family resources. It also delayed Julia receiving any help at all for some time, which exacerbated the problem.
Curious about other Divorce Don’ts? Check out our upcoming post for Divorce Don’t #2: “Don’t Get Married… To Your Divorce"
401 Wilshire Blvd, Suite 1200
Santa Monica CA 90401
Copyright 2021 - Winestone Mediation, Inc, All Rights Reserved | Web Design by 6Minutes Agency
The content is provided solely for informational, educational and advertising purposes, and does not constitute legal advice nor does it create an attorney-client or mediator-client relationship. Communications and transmissions through this website do not create a formal attorney-client or mediator-client relationship. Please do not send Winestone Mediation any confidential information until a mediator-client relationship has been created by way of a written mediation agreement that has been mutually executed.