East Haven Divorce & Family Law Lawyer, Connecticut


Herbert Ira Mendelsohn Lawyer

Herbert Ira Mendelsohn

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Accident & Injury, Workers' Compensation, Criminal, Divorce & Family Law, Estate
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Herbert Mendelsohn is a personal injury lawyer proudly serving clients in New Haven, Connecticut and the neighboring communities.

Timothy W. Crowley

Estate Administration, Estate Planning, Family Law, Real Estate
Status:  In Good Standing           

Gia Schioppo Calistro

Family Law, Workers' Compensation, Estate Planning, Real Estate
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Bernard Christianson

Alimony & Spousal Support, Divorce, Prenuptial Agreements
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Stacy E. Votto

Family Law, Antitrust, Constitutional Law, Workers' Compensation
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Anthony D. Sutton

Litigation, Estate Planning, Family Law, Criminal
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Edward F. Piazza

Litigation, Wills & Probate, Estate Planning, Family Law, Personal Injury
Status:  In Good Standing           

John F. Riley

Real Estate, Litigation, Family Law, Criminal
Status:  In Good Standing           

Lee Marlow

Divorce & Family Law
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John M. Shannon

Workers' Compensation, Family Law, Products Liability, Medical Malpractice, Legal Malpractice
Status:  In Good Standing           

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Lawyer.com can help you easily and quickly find East Haven Divorce & Family Law Lawyers and East Haven Divorce & Family Law Firms. Refine your search by specific Divorce & Family Law practice areas such as Adoption, Child Custody, Child Support, Divorce and Family Law matters.

LEGAL TERMS

ADOPT

(1) To assume the legal relationship of parent to another person's child. See also adoption. (2) To approve or accept something -- for example, a legislative bo... (more...)
(1) To assume the legal relationship of parent to another person's child. See also adoption. (2) To approve or accept something -- for example, a legislative body may adopt a law or an amendment, a government agency may adopt a regulation or a party to a lawsuit may adopt a particular argument.

FOSTER CARE

Court-ordered care provided to children who are unable to live in their own homes, usually because their parents have abused or neglected them. Foster parents h... (more...)
Court-ordered care provided to children who are unable to live in their own homes, usually because their parents have abused or neglected them. Foster parents have a legal responsibility to care for their foster children, but do not have all the rights of a biological parent--for example, they may have limited rights to discipline the children, to raise them according to a certain religion or to authorize non-emergency medical procedures for them. The foster parents do not become the child's legal parents unless the biological parents' rights are terminated by a court and the foster parents adopt the child. This is not typically encouraged, as the goal of foster care is to provide temporary support for the children until they can be returned to their parents. See also foster child.

MARITAL TERMINATION AGREEMENT

See divorce agreement.

OPEN ADOPTION

An adoption in which there is some degree of contact between the birthparents and the adoptive parents and sometimes with the child as well. As opposed to most ... (more...)
An adoption in which there is some degree of contact between the birthparents and the adoptive parents and sometimes with the child as well. As opposed to most adoptions in which birth and adoption records are sealed by court order, open adoptions allow the parties to decide how much contact the adoptive family and the birthparents will have.

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.

CONSUMMATION

The actualization of a marriage. Sexual intercourse is required to 'consummate' a marriage. Failure to do so is grounds for divorce or annulment.

STIRPES

A term used in wills that refers to descendants of a common ancestor or branch of a family.

BRIEF

A document used to submit a legal contention or argument to a court. A brief typically sets out the facts of the case and a party's argument as to why she shoul... (more...)
A document used to submit a legal contention or argument to a court. A brief typically sets out the facts of the case and a party's argument as to why she should prevail. These arguments must be supported by legal authority and precedent, such as statutes, regulations and previous court decisions. Although it is usually possible to submit a brief to a trial court (called a trial brief), briefs are most commonly used as a central part of the appeal process (an appellate brief). But don't be fooled by the name -- briefs are usually anything but brief, as pointed out by writer Franz Kafka, who defined a lawyer as 'a person who writes a 10,000 word decision and calls it a brief.'

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.