Can You Hide to Stop Your Divorce in Minnesota?

November 14, 2013  |  Elizabeth A. Schading

If you know that your spouse will be sending divorce papers, can you hide from the process server to keep the divorce from happening? You may be tempted to try it, but in Minnesota, this tactic simply won’t work. In fact, attempting it could even make things worse for you. If your spouse makes every reasonable effort to locate you, then he or she may use an “alternative method” for serving you the divorce papers. It will take a little longer because he or she will need a court order to do so, but eventually you could find yourself being “served by publication,” which means the petition will simply be published in a local paper. If you’re busy hiding you might not even realize this has happened. This means you could run out of time to file an Answer to the Summons and Complaint. You may lose your chance at having any say in the major issues of your divorce, issues such as child custody, child support, parenting time, spousal support, and the division of assets. Once a default judgment of divorce is entered, the court will typically determine the major issues of divorce exactly as your spouse requested, because you took no part in the decision. Hiding won’t help you reconcile with…

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More Couples Divorcing After 50

November 13, 2013  |  Elizabeth A. Schading

According to The New York Times, more couples are starting to divorce after the age of 50. A half-century ago, only 2.8 percent of Americans older than 50 were divorced. By 2000, 11.8 percent were. In 2011, according to the Census Bureau’s American Community Survey, 15.4 percent were divorced and another 2.1 percent were separated. Some 13.5 percent were widowed. While divorce rates all over have stabilized and even inched downward, the divorce rate among people 50 and older has doubled since 1990, according to an analysis of census data by professors at Bowling Green State University in Bowling Green, Ohio. That’s especially significant because half the married population is older than 50. In 1990, 1 in 10 persons who divorced was 50 and older. By 2011, according to the census’ American Community Survey, more than 28 percent (more than 1 in 4) who said they divorced in the previous months were 50 and older. Divorcing after 50 can bring some special considerations. While child custody is usually no longer an issue, an older couple will typically be either retired or rapidly approaching retirement. An older couple will also typically have more marital property to account for. There are also usually some special estate planning considerations that must be tackled during the divorce…

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Killers and Con Artists Among Your Job Applicants? You Won’t Find Out Until You Decide to Interview Them In Minnesota.

November 6, 2013  |  Scott M. Lepak

Looking for a good bookkeeper? Want to make sure Tom Petters and Bernie Madoff don’t apply? In Minnesota starting next year, the answer may be too bad for the employer. Effective January 1, 2014, employers in Minnesota may not inquire into, consider or require disclosure of the criminal record or criminal history of any applicant for employment until the applicant has been selected for an interview by the employer. In the event that the employer does not interview applicants, the employer may not require disclosure before a conditional offer of employment is made to the applicant. This “ban the box” legislation prohibits the common employment application form from including a question asking an individual to identify if they have ever been convicted of a crime, have a criminal record or history. Given this change to the law in Minnesota, employers should review current job application and remove this question. While this law represents an expansion of an existing state law that applies to public employers into private business, there remain differences between what private and public employers may find out about and consider. Interestingly, there is a section of the law that prohibits the State and political subdivisions from using, distributing or disseminating records of arrests not followed by a valid conviction, annulled…

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