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Legal Help?

Posted: Mon May 25, 15 6:25 pm
by Lady M
Hey..
Any of you lovelies on here a Solicitor at all? Need some advice

Cheers in advance 👍🏼

Posted: Mon May 25, 15 10:21 pm
by Trigger_Andy
Eeek, I just seen your username. Apologies. :/

Re: Legal Help?

Posted: Tue May 26, 15 8:13 am
by RobTwin
Lady M wrote:Hey..
Any of you lovelies on here a Solicitor at all? Need some advice

Cheers in advance 👍🏼

I presume you mean FREE advice?

Good luck with that ;)


Seriously tho, sorry cant help, but good luck :thumbright:

Posted: Tue May 26, 15 9:10 am
by Carl
Trigger_Andy wrote:I'm not a gynaecologist but I'll take a look.....
I am, I decorated my hallway through my letterbox ;)

Posted: Tue May 26, 15 9:13 am
by Carl
Lady M wrote:Hey..
Any of you lovelies on here a Solicitor at all? Need some advice

Cheers in advance 👍🏼
If its not too personal to put up, maybe someone may still be able to help through experience?

Posted: Tue May 26, 15 10:59 am
by Lady M
Carl wrote:
Lady M wrote:Hey..
Any of you lovelies on here a Solicitor at all? Need some advice

Cheers in advance 👍🏼
If its not too personal to put up, maybe someone may still be able to help through experience?
It's Family Law Advice I require.. My Court experience has finished but my Ex Husband is breaking the Order made and I'm not in a financial position to be able to take him back to Court now so am needing advice as to what I can do now.
It's rather important as its regarding my Sons Welfare.

Thank you :-)

Posted: Tue May 26, 15 11:01 am
by Lady M
Trigger_Andy wrote:Eeek, I just seen your username. Apologies. :/
😂 why?!

Posted: Tue May 26, 15 11:18 am
by Adam
Many solicitors will give a 30 minute free consultation. Where are you based?

Posted: Tue May 26, 15 11:31 am
by Scooby
Try Citizens advice there normally pretty good at helping out. And its Free.

Posted: Tue May 26, 15 11:38 am
by autofetish
Mum is that you ?

Posted: Tue May 26, 15 1:50 pm
by Steve
Citizens advice have access to solicitors so should be able to help. They can also give you accurate, up to date advice.

Breaching a court order is considered contempt of court so is serious. If there is and immediate danger to your son, call the Police. They can deal with the threat there and then and the fact that a court order is in place, although a civil matter from a logistical point of view, will influence any action taken.

If its around access etc then a civil court will deal with it and social services can be helpful in appropriate circumstances.

Im not up to date with the latest rules around legal aid but that might be worth exploring.

Good luck with this, these matters are very stressful. It is worth remembering that your sons welfare and interests will be the priority in any developments so its important to keep your wishes separate from your sons best interests if they conflict. Thats how a Court will deal with it so its worth clicking your thought process into 'whats good for him' mode (not always easy!!!).

Good luck with this and hope it all works out for you

Best wishes...Steve

Posted: Tue May 26, 15 4:19 pm
by Dart Vader
Guys, come on. Less of the jokes.

A lot of us ask advice on here not car related, yes sometimes we get banter but this is not one of those times.

I, like a lot of us, have been through a divorce when kids are involved and it isn't pretty. By the sounds of it the ex is playing up about access or money, it's dumb arse types like that give us good absent dad's a bad rap.

I've known mums who get real stressed over money and the kids welfare when the dad's play silly buggers, especially the self employed ones that claim poverty then go off on holiday.

hope you get some help, as said before, citizens advice, mums net, womens divorce charities may exist. A bit of peer pressure from his mates may also work.

Good lick

Posted: Tue May 26, 15 4:21 pm
by Dart Vader
GOOD LUCK......bloody spell check

It wasn't an offer lol

Posted: Tue May 26, 15 4:24 pm
by Dart Vader
Taxi for Vader...

Posted: Tue May 26, 15 5:05 pm
by Bryan
you apply to the court for an emergency hearing and you tell them he is breaking the court order.

I think you only have to ring the court for this.

He will have to explain why he is not sticking to the court order and in his failing of turning up, a new order will be made, hopefully in your favour.