Don’t be that lawyer who cites the statute that got repealed last year. Be the lawyer who knows what’s new, what’s changed, and what’s coming.
As we advocate for families every day, let’s pause to appreciate our own.
When shopping for toys, we often want to pick something fun. But can some of them also be dangerous?
What happens in a Tennessee divorce if you add your spouse’s name to the deed of a home you owned before the marriage?
What counts as a “material change” big enough to change custody in Tennessee?
In a Tennessee divorce, when do stern courtroom lectures cross the line into actual judicial prejudice?
How did a Tennessee court respond to a parent hiding a child’s location from the other parent?
Should a Tennessee judge step aside just for being neighbors with someone involved in a case?
Why did a Tennessee father get his attorney’s fees after the mother dismissed her appeal?
Family law is always changing. Attorneys must stay up to date. You could spend hours reading every new family-law opinion and statute. Or you could spend one hour with my annual review CLE and still have time to celebrate with something stronger than coffee.
Couples therapists were asked: What’s one piece of advice you find yourself repeating? What’s one relationship lesson you swear by? What’s one truism you wish more couples understood?
Does Tennessee’s grandparent visitation statute violate parents’ constitutional rights?
How can a divorce in progress or a spouse’s health issue affect an adoption in Tennessee?
Can a Tennessee judge ban both parents from getting passports for their kids? Are holiday schedules optional in Tennessee parenting plans?
What happens when Tennessee law changes mid-case?
