Spotlight
Court of Protection Practice 2024
'Court of Protection Practice goes from strength to strength, having...
Jackson's Matrimonial Finance Tenth Edition
Jackson's Matrimonial Finance is an authoritative specialist text...
Spotlight
Latest articlesrss feeds
Now is the time to reassess presumption f parental involvement in cases involving domestic abuse
Lea Levine, Paralegal at Stewarts and former independent domestic violence advisorIn this article, paralegal and former independent domestic violence advisor (“IDVA”) Lea Levine...
Hadkinson orders – applicability in financial remedy proceedings
Hassan Sarwar, Cornwall Street BarristersHassan Sarwar considers the development and usage of Hadkinson Orders in financial remedy proceedings.  The article provides a helpful overview of a...
Pension apportionment: resisting the straight-line orthodoxy
Fiona Hay, 2 Harcourt BuildingsDavid Lockett, Senior Actuary, Actuaries for Lawyers LtdPension Apportionment – resisting the Straight-Line Orthodoxy. In non-needs cases it is often critical to...
Equality roulette: assessing the legality of the Department of Education’s guidance on gender questioning students in schools ( Part 2)
Dr Bianca Jackson, Family law barrister, Coram ChambersThis is Part 2 of a three-part article exploring the possible legal difficulties for schools and colleges that adopt the Department for...
Now is the time to reassess presumption of parental involvement in cases involving domestic abuse
Lea Levine, Paralegal at Stewarts and former independent domestic violence advisorIn this article, paralegal and former independent domestic violence advisor (“IDVA”) Lea Levine...
View all articles
Authors

Top 10 reasons for returning divorce petitions

Sep 29, 2018, 18:30 PM
family law, divorce petitions, divorce centres, Tony Roe, Resolution
Title : Top 10 reasons for returning divorce petitions
Slug : top-10-reasons-for-returning-divorce-petitions
Meta Keywords : family law, divorce petitions, divorce centres, Tony Roe, Resolution
Canonical URL :
Trending Article : Yes
Prioritise In Trending Articles : No
Check Copyright Text : No
Date : Jun 1, 2016, 02:56 AM
Article ID : 112427
The most common reasons for divorce petitions being returned by divorce centres have been revealed by Resolution. 

In May last year HMCTS said that the movement of work from courts to Divorce Centres highlighted significant issues with errors in the completion of applications for divorce petitions; nationally, broadly 40% of petitions had to be returned for correction. The HMCTS checklist issued at the time (14 April 2015) is available to download below.

The information, circulated to Resolution members, does not include numbers or what proportions of each are from solicitors but it does provide some useful guidance on potential pitfalls to be avoided when drafting petitions. Details of the information release are listed below:

Divorce Unit – April 2016 

Top 10 reasons for returning Divorce Petitions

1. No fee enclosed

2. Part 2 - Details of marriage, incorrect

  • Names do not match marriage certificate
  • Place of marriage
  • Date of marriage

3. Part 3 - Jurisdiction page, incomplete and incorrect

4. Part 4 - Other proceedings or arrangements, incomplete

5. Part 5 -The facts

  • Grounds at part 5 do not match statement of case at part 6
  • Two grounds selected

6. Part 6 - Statement of case, insufficient detail or incomplete

7. No marriage certificate received

  • No original marriage certificate enclosed
  • No translation of marriage certificate
  • Only photocopy of marriage certificate enclosed

8. No certificate of reconciliation received from solicitor

9. No fee remission contribution received

10. Part 9 – Service details

  • Not complete
  • No address for service for all parties
Divorce solicitor and family law arbitrator, Tony Roe, of Berkshire-based Tony Roe Solicitors comments:

'The bare statistics do not reveal the numbers involved, nor how many petitions were submitted by law firms as opposed to litigants in person. I have asked for breakdowns. However, previous information I have been given suggests that a significant proportion are indeed from solicitors.

These sort of errors cause delays to clients’ matters. Whilst drafting petitions is not rocket science, law firms should ensure that any less qualified and paralegal staff preparing petitions are properly supervised and have their work thoroughly checked.'

The HMCTS checklist is available to download here.

To receive the latest developments subscribe to our weekly email alerter, follow us on Twitter @JordansFamLaw or join our LinkedIn Group. 
Categories :
  • News
Tags :
news_blocks
Provider :
Product Bucket :
Related Articles
Load more comments
Comment by from