This article provides information on what a family law facilitator
(herein after referred to as "facilitator") is and can and cannot do in
terms of providing you assistance with your family legal situation. Each
California Superior Court should have an attorney or facilitator office
(sometimes called the family court clinic) that can provide free help
with your family legal related matters. These attorneys work at the
court facilitator's office. Some facilitator office's have both
attorneys and paralegals on staff to provide non-legal assistance to
consumers seeking help with their family legal issues.
What a Family Law Facilitator Can Do
- The services provided at the California Superior Court by each
facilitator office at can vary. In some counties the family law
facilitator can show you how to fill out court forms, help you with your
dissolution or divorce or child custody issues while others do not.
Some counties limit the facilitator's services to only child support
issues, spousal support issues and protracted health insurance cases. In
some counties a facilitator can meet with you individually and provide
you information and options but cannot act as your attorney, represent
you or provide you with legal advice.
What a Family Law Facilitator Office Cannot Do
- A facilitator cannot be your attorney and represent you on your case.
Also, a family law facilitator does not provide you with legal advice.
You'll need to hire your own attorney for legal advice about your
situation and strategy for your case. As a result, there is no
attorney-client relationship between you and the court facilitator. The
facilitator is available to the public and can therefore typically help
you and the other party. Notably, your communication with the
facilitator may not be private or confidential. If that's the case, if
the facilitator office is subpoenaed to court there may not be an
attorney-client privilege that would protect your conversation and make
it confidential.
For local family law facilitator rules and
information you would do well to consult your local California Superior
Court facilitator office. For legal advice about your situation however,
you'll want to consult with an attorney in your area to find out where
you stand legally on this matter, how the law applies to your situation
and what your legal options are.
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