Legal Question in Family Law in Georgia
my son and his wife have been seperated for 3 years and divorced for about 6 months. they did not have any kids but did have 2 pure bread boxers in which they both got one. my son recentaly bread his female with a champion bloodline and when we registered them we found out the mother was in my son & his ex wifes name so we could not well the pups with out her signature. She refuses to sign off on my sons boxer so we were forced to give the pups away which had a potential of bringing in $500-$1000.00. my question is, is there any thing we can do to make her sign off on my sons dog? she is his property now? thank you very much....Robin from GA
4 Answers from Attorneys
What you say "we," the question is what you have to do with the property of your son and his ex-wife? It is their issue. Further, no one here knows what the divorce documents say and you did not tell us. Your son, and his ex-spouse, should know the answer and they can discuss with their lawyers to resolve any issues.
The answer is in their divorce papers, which you for some strange reason did not want to tell us about. Assuming your son had a lawyer, his lawyer would have addressed this. If he was foolish and did not have one, he can't fix things now.
Property settlements cannot be changed after the case ends, so unless he had this matter addressed in the divorce, he simply loses. If he did have it addressed in the papers, he should call his lawyer.
The answer is in their divorce papers, which you for some strange reason did not want to tell us about. Assuming your son had a lawyer, his lawyer would have addressed this. If he was foolish and did not have one, he can't fix things now.
Property settlements cannot be changed after the case ends, so unless he had this matter addressed in the divorce, he simply loses. If he did have it addressed in the papers, he should call his lawyer.
The answer is in their divorce papers, which you for some strange reason did not want to tell us about. Assuming your son had a lawyer, his lawyer would have addressed this. If he was foolish and did not have one, he can't fix things now.
Property settlements cannot be changed after the case ends, so unless he had this matter addressed in the divorce, he simply loses. If he did have it addressed in the papers, he should call his lawyer.