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Free legal information and self-help materials that provide information about non criminal legal problems affecting low-income people in Washington state. Divorce and Other Options for Ending Your Marriage with Children in Washington State. No .
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Washington is a “no-fault” divorce state. You do not need to prove a spouse was “at fault.” You must only prove irreconcilable differences: you no longer get along. It legally ends your marriage. The court can also divide your property and debts, award one of you maintenance (alimony), limit one spouse’s contact with the children or other spouse, change a spouse’s name, and, if you have children, enter a parenting plan and order child support. The court may give you everything a divorce does, but does not end the marriage. You are still married. Read Legal Separation. It is called invalidity” in Washington State. This court action can make it as if your marriage never happened. Generally, you will have to be able to prove that you were not competent to agree to marry in the first place, or you could not legally agree to be married for other reasons. Read Divorce: General Information to learn more. No. If you are in a registered domestic partnership, you file to end your partnership. Use our File for Divorce packet or Washington Forms Online interview. The forms and procedure are the same for divorce and domestic partnership. Part 2: Where to file. Yes, IF one of these is true: You live in Washington. Your spouse lives in Washington. You are in the military and stationed in Washington. Your military spouse will be stationed in Washington for at least 90 days after you file and serve the divorce. Washington must have personal jurisdiction over your spouse to be able to make certain types of orders. Washington generally will have personal jurisdiction over your spouse if one of these is true: Your spouse lives in Washington. Your spouse lived in Washington at some point during your marriage. One of your children was conceived in Washington. You still live, or are stationed in the armed forces, in Washington. You may still be able to file for divorce and serve your spouse by publication . You can still ask the court to end your marriage, divide any property and debts located in Washington, and (if Washington has jurisdiction over your children) enter a parenting plan. Use Service by Certified Mail or Publication. You may have to file your divorce in tribal court. Talk to a lawyer with expertise in Indian law. Before filing for divorce here, make sure Washington has jurisdiction over your children. If not, you cannot ask for a parenting plan or custody order here. You may need to file in another state. Jurisdiction is complicated. If you have questions about whether Washington has jurisdiction over your children, talk with a lawyer as soon as possible. If you have a low income and live outside King County, call CLEAR at 1-888-201-1014. You must wait at least 90 days after filing and serving the petition before entering final orders. If you and your spouse have an agreement, you can enter final orders right after the 90-day period. Divorces can take longer than 90 days if you cannot agree. If you cannot come to an agreement, your case will go to trial. *In most counties, you ask for a trial date after your spouse has filed a response. How long it takes to finalize also depends on your county and how complicated your case is. If are claims of domestic violence, child abuse, alcoholism, drug addiction, or other things that could be dangerous to the children, or you have complicated property issues, your case could take much longer. It is best to try to come to an agreement if possible. Trials can be complicated. You may need a lawyer. Part 3: I want child support or a parenting schedule now. What do I do? You may want Temporary Family Law Orders. The court enters these quickly. They can last until trial or the end of your case. Example 1 : You want a parenting plan before trial saying who has custody and how much visitation the other parent will have. Example 2 : You want an order keeping your spouse from cleaning out the bank accounts or selling things before trial. Are you happy with how things are right now without them? Do you need an order making your spouse do (or stop doing) something? Temporary orders can include: A parenting plan saying whom the children will live with until the divorce is final. Until you have an order, each parent has an equal right to custody. If your spouse will not let you see the children, a parenting plan can give you visitation. Restraining orders to keep one spouse from harassing or coming near the other. Restraining orders keeping a spouse from taking the children out of state. Restraining orders keeping a spouse from getting rid of property, taking out loans in both your names, or taking your name off insurance policies. Orders for temporary child support, maintenance (alimony), attorney’s fees, or use of your house or car. Order that one spouse can live in the house and the other cannot. Appointment of a guardian ad litem (GAL) or parenting evaluator. Read Guardian ad Litems in Family Law Cases. If there is an emergency, you may need an Immediate Restraining Order right away. The judge often enters this without giving the other spouse any notice, or very little notice. (The other spouse later can have a hearing. The judge decides there if the order will continue.) You may need this order if you cannot wait one to three weeks for a hearing to get help from the court. Examples : Your spouse. Is harassing or harming you. Has harmed the children OR poses a danger to them. Has threatened to take the children. Is taking a lot out of your accounts, or selling or hiding property. If you file for Immediate Restraining Orders, you do not need to file for Temporary Orders. Yes, any time before your divorce is final. To ask the court to change a temporary order, you file another Motion for Temporary Family Law Orders. If you are afraid that your spouse may hurt or threaten you or the children, the court can issue special orders to help protect you. If you have been a domestic violence victim, or your spouse has threatened you, you can ask for a Domestic Violence Protection Order anytime. You can also ask for a permanent protection order as part of the final divorce orders. A Domestic Violence Protection Order can: Give you custody. Set up visitation for your spouse, OR stop your spouse from seeing the children. Keep your spouse out of the home and away from your home, work, or school. Order your spouse not to threaten, assault, harass, or stalk you. Order your spouse to get domestic violence and/or alcohol or drug treatment. Order your spouse to turn their gun in to law enforcement. For more about Protection Orders, contact your court’s protection order advocates or local domestic violence program, or call the National Domestic Violence Hotline 1.800.799.7233. Protection order forms are available from the court clerk or your local domestic violence program.