Arthritic Toe
Well-known member
If there is any way at all, try to sort it out without solicitors. Solicitors will drain your liquid assets fast. They are not working for you, they are working for themselves. They are in business to maximise their own profit. They will do this by:
- At the outset, give each party an unrealistic expectation of what a final settlement will be like.
- Create conflict at every opportunity to maximize their involvement
My ex mrs and I started down this road. At the initial meetings with our respective solicitors, she was told she could expect to end up with a settlement of approx. 90% in her favour. I was told by mine to expect more like 50-55%.
A small amount of research into typical settlements (and there are thousands and thousands of precedents out there), made it pretty obvious to me that the solicitors were following their own agenda.
Its really hard, but if you can try and arrive at that 'typical settlement' on your own and convince your ex that this is what she would be likely to end up with, you will save yourselves thousands, possibly tens of thousands. Its made especially hard because your wife's solicitor will be a constant voice in her ear trying to convince her that she will be better off fighting through the courts. You could try mediation - this may help to arrive at that common ground. My main problem with mediation however is that they will not offer an opinion if one or other party is making unreasonable demands - that is not in their remit.
If and when you can agree that settlement, you can use one of the online services to prepare a consent order, which is the legal document that gets set in stone by the court. The online consent order service (including court fees) will cost you about £150. A solicitor will charge about £800 for the same thing.
All the best - good luck with it.
- At the outset, give each party an unrealistic expectation of what a final settlement will be like.
- Create conflict at every opportunity to maximize their involvement
My ex mrs and I started down this road. At the initial meetings with our respective solicitors, she was told she could expect to end up with a settlement of approx. 90% in her favour. I was told by mine to expect more like 50-55%.
A small amount of research into typical settlements (and there are thousands and thousands of precedents out there), made it pretty obvious to me that the solicitors were following their own agenda.
Its really hard, but if you can try and arrive at that 'typical settlement' on your own and convince your ex that this is what she would be likely to end up with, you will save yourselves thousands, possibly tens of thousands. Its made especially hard because your wife's solicitor will be a constant voice in her ear trying to convince her that she will be better off fighting through the courts. You could try mediation - this may help to arrive at that common ground. My main problem with mediation however is that they will not offer an opinion if one or other party is making unreasonable demands - that is not in their remit.
If and when you can agree that settlement, you can use one of the online services to prepare a consent order, which is the legal document that gets set in stone by the court. The online consent order service (including court fees) will cost you about £150. A solicitor will charge about £800 for the same thing.
All the best - good luck with it.