Usually no—your spouse can’t automatically read every draft your AI tool generated; discovery typically reaches what you retained and relied on, not every intermediate prompt or unused version. But AI chats, uploads, and draft histories may be discoverable if they’re relevant, shared with third parties, or not protected by attorney-client privilege or work-product rules. This […]
Read More
The Spousal Elective Share – Why You Can’t Actually Leave Your Spouse $0
In most states, a spouse can claim an elective share—often about one-third (and sometimes up to one-half) of the deceased spouse’s estate even if the will leaves them $0. The exact percentage and what assets count vary by state and whether probate/nonprobate property is included. This article explains elective share basics, common exceptions, and planning […]
Read More
The Military Divorce 10/10 Rule Every Spouse Should Know
The military divorce 10/10 rule lets a former spouse receive direct payments of a service member’s retired pay from DFAS only if the marriage lasted at least 10 years overlapping 10 years of creditable service. It’s a payment-processing rule—not an automatic entitlement to retirement benefits or a limit on what a court can award. This […]
Read More
The 5 Text Messages That Can Cost You Custody
Five types of texts can cost you custody: threats, abusive insults, harassment, admissions of substance use, and messages that undermine the other parent. Judges treat texts as time-stamped evidence and often view them as proof of judgment and co-parenting fitness. This article explains each risky message type and safer alternatives during a custody dispute. Why […]
Read More
Why Engagement Rings Are Sometimes Returnable — and Sometimes Not
In most states, an engagement ring is treated as a conditional gift, so it must be returned if the wedding does not happen. A few states use no-fault rules or look at who ended the engagement, which can change the outcome. This article explains the key legal tests, common exceptions, and how state law affects […]
Read More
The Custody Evaluator’s Secret Checklist — Parents Are Being Graded On These 12 Things
Custody evaluators commonly assess 12 key factors when recommending parenting time and decision-making, from stability and parenting skills to co-parenting and credibility. Knowing what’s scored helps you avoid red flags and present consistent, child-focused behavior throughout the evaluation. This article breaks down each factor and how parents are “graded” in real custody evaluations. If you’re […]
Read More
What Happens to Frozen Embryos in a Divorce? Three Different State Answers.
Frozen embryos in a divorce are decided under state law, and outcomes differ in at least three ways: contract-first, balancing tests, or no-procreation default. Courts often look to the IVF clinic agreement first, but some states weigh each spouse’s interests or bar forced genetic parenthood. This article compares three state approaches and what they mean […]
Read More
Cannabis and Child Custody – How a Legal Habit Can Still Cost You Visitation
Yes—legal cannabis use can still reduce custody or visitation if a judge finds it harms the child’s best interests. Courts look for impairment, unsafe storage, secondhand exposure, and any related arrests or neglect concerns. This article explains common red flags, evidence issues, and steps to protect parenting time. When Legal Isn’t the Same as Consequence-Free […]
Read More
Blended Family Estate Planning – The 3 Scenarios That Always Go to Court
Most blended-family inheritance fights come from 3 recurring scenarios that regularly end up in probate court. They usually involve unclear beneficiary designations, conflicts between a surviving spouse and stepchildren, or outdated wills and trusts after remarriage. This article breaks down the 3 scenarios and the estate planning steps that prevent litigation. Why Blended Families Face […]
Read More
What Unpaid Child Support Actually Does to Your Credit — and Your Passport
Unpaid child support can be reported to credit bureaus and can trigger U.S. passport denial or revocation when arrears total $2,500 or more. States also use wage garnishment, tax refund intercepts, and license suspensions to force payment. This article explains how enforcement works, what hits your credit, and how to fix arrears. The Real Consequences […]
Read More
How a Single Typo in a Will Invalidated a $12 Million Estate in 2026
A single typo can invalidate an entire will and force a multimillion-dollar estate—like a reported $12 million case in 2026—into costly probate litigation. Even minor errors in names, beneficiaries, or key dispositive clauses can create fatal ambiguity and trigger challenges, delays, and unintended distributions under state law. This article explains how typos can void or […]
Read More
Quitclaim Deeds – Why Grandma’s Well-Intentioned Signature Could Trigger Taxes
A quitclaim deed can trigger federal gift tax reporting once the value transferred exceeds the annual exclusion ($19,000 per recipient in 2025). Because it gives no title warranties, it can also create future title and capital gains problems when the home is sold. This article explains how quitclaim deeds work, the tax risks, and safer […]
Read More