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Generally, a lawyer will ask you the following questions in an uncontested divorce hearing: What is your name? How long have you been a resident of Florida? Is your marriage broken? Did you sign an agreement to say who gets custody and property? Do you believe the agreement is fair?
Most of Floridas 67 counties require a short final hearing. It lasts about 5 minutes and the lawyer or judge will ask about 7 routine questions (name, rank and serial number stuff) and, most importantly, whether your marriage is irretrievably broken and whether you want to be divorced.
A judge usually issues a divorce decree as the final order in a divorce case. The divorce decree, also known as the judgment of dissolution, addresses all of the issues in the divorce and returns the spouses to the legal status of single and unmarried.
Settlement or Trial The final step before your marriage is dissolved involves either negotiating a divorce settlement the court can sign off on or going to trial to decide how support, custody and division of assets will work.
It is up to the judge who drafts the final judgment in a contested case. Once the judge signs the final judgment of dissolution of marriage, the parties are divorced. Either party may file an appeal of the contested final judgment if they are not satisfied with it.
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Final decree (also called a final judgement) closes an adjudication, deciding all issues of fact and law on the rights of the parties. The only thing after a final decree to be settled usually is the execution of the decisions such as the amount of damages and whether to appeal the decision.
A divorce can take anywhere between 3 and 24 months depending on whether it is contested or uncontested. The average uncontested divorce takes 3 months. The average contested divorce takes 12 months. The amount of time varies ing to the judge, the county, and the will of the parties to speed things up or delay.
Final Hearing/Trial A divorce action with no complex issues and mutual agreement between the parties may be finalized in six to eight weeks. A complex case can be litigated for six to twelve months, sometimes longer.
You will have to be present in court for your divorce. In all Florida divorce cases, at least one of the spouses needs to appear in court, and in the majority of cases, both spouses need to be present.
Most of Floridas 67 counties require a short final hearing. It lasts about 5 minutes and the lawyer or judge will ask about 7 routine questions (name, rank and serial number stuff) and, most importantly, whether your marriage is irretrievably broken and whether you want to be divorced.

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