Whether filing for Dissolution (divorce), Legal Separation or a Nullity Proceeding, the process is essentially the same. The minimum document requirements are:
Additional Forms: Income and Expense Declaration (FL-150) (external site pdf ), Schedule of Assets and Debts (FL-142) (external site pdf ), and Property Declaration – Separate and Community (FL-160) (external site pdf ). The “Additional Forms” are called “Declarations of Disclosure.” These documents are required by law within 60 days of filing a Dissolution (divorce), Legal Separation or Nullity Proceeding. Updated Disclosures may also be required at the end of your case.
Form packets containing all of the forms necessary to begin a Dissolution (divorce) (pdf ), Legal Separation (pdf ) or Nullity (pdf ) case are available online or from a Family Law Court. Workshops explaining how to complete the forms are available at various locations. Check the calendars for a Family Law Workshop in your area:
No matter what your friends tell you, you will NOT BE SINGLE in 6 months. Finalizing your divorce does not happen automatically, it requires MORE PAPERWORK called a Judgment. The parties are responsible for taking the necessary steps to get the final Judgment. Therefore, the amount of time it takes to get the final judgment is up to the parties.
The soonest you can become single is 6 months and one day after service on the Respondent. So, if you properly complete your final documents (called the Judgment) and turn it in, provided the paperwork is timely and done correctly, you will receive your Judgment in the mail with the judicial officer’s signature. The Judgment will also have a termination date written on it. That date is found next to: “Date Marital or Domestic Partnership Status Terminates”.
Workshops explaining how to complete the forms are available at various locations.
Check the calendars for a Family Law Workshop in your area:
After service of the initial documents on the other side (the Respondent), what you are required to do next will depend upon what actions the Respondent takes. The Respondent has 30 days to file a written Response to your Petition.
Workshops explaining how to complete the forms are available at various locations.
Check the calendars for a Family Law Workshop in your area:
If you have been served with a summons and a petition, you are the respondent in a court case for divorce or legal separation. Once you are served, you have several options:
If you decide to file a response, you have 30 days from the date you were served with the Summons and Petition to respond. To file a Response, complete the Response - Marriage\Domestic Partnership (external site pdf ) and file it with the court.
Form packets containing all of the forms necessary to begin a Dissolution (divorce) (pdf ), Legal Separation (pdf ) or Nullity (pdf ) case are available online or from a Family Law Court. Workshops explaining how to complete the forms are available at various locations. Check the calendars for a Family Law Workshop in your area:
If thirty days have passed since the Summons/Petition was served and the Respondent has not filed a written Response, the Petitioner may request a default judgment. A default judgment permits the Petitioner to obtain the relief that was requested in the original paperwork. The forms required to request a Default Judgment include:
If there are minor children involved in the case, you will also need:
If you have questions, they can be addressed at a Family Law workshop specifically addressing Judgments. Some of the workshops are designed to accommodate parties who wish to complete their case by agreement. Check the calendars for a Family Law Workshop in your area:
The Respondent has 30 days from the date of service to respond. After the 30 days, the Petitioner may file a Request to Enter Default (FL-165) (external site pdf ).
Workshops explaining how to complete forms are available at various locations. Check the calendars for a Family Law Workshop in your area:
If you were not served with the original Summons/Petition for Dissolution you may file a motion to “set aside” the existing Judgment by Default. You may do this by filling out a Request for Order (FL-300) (external site pdf ). Under the ‘Other’ category, write the words ‘Set Aside Default Judgment’.
Establishing parentage, also called "paternity”, means obtaining a court order that says who the legal parents of a child are. Establishing parentage is necessary before custody, visitation, or child support will be ordered by a court.
The following forms can open a court case for paternity. The minimum document requirements are:
Form packets containing all of the forms necessary to begin a paternity case are available online or from a Family Law Court. Workshops explaining how to complete the forms are available at various locations. Check the calendars for a Family Law Workshop in your area:
After service of the initial documents on the other side (the Respondent), what you are required to do next will depend upon what actions the Respondent takes. The Respondent has 30 days to file a written Response to your Petition.
Workshops explaining how to complete default judgment forms, or to schedule a settlement conference, are available at various locations. Check the calendars for a Family Law Workshop in your area:
If you have been served with a Petition to Establish Parental Relationship by the other parent, you have 30 days from the date you were served to respond. If you do not respond within the 30 days, the court may establish the legal relationship requested in the petition. To file a Response, complete the Response to Petition to Establish Parental Relationship (FL-220) (external site pdf ) and file it with the court.
Form packets containing all of the forms necessary to respond to a paternity case (pdf ) are available online or from a Family Law Court. Workshops explaining how to complete the forms are available at various locations. Check the calendars for a Family Law Workshop in your area:
If thirty days have passed since the Summons/Petition was served and the Respondent has not filed a written Response, the Petitioner may request a default judgment. A default judgment permits the Petitioner to obtain the relief that was requested in the original paperwork. The forms required to request a Default Judgment include:
If you have questions, they can be addressed at a Family Law workshop specifically addressing paternity judgments. Check the calendars for a Family Law Workshop in your area:
The Respondent has 30 days from the date of service to respond. After the 30 days, the Petitioner may file a Request to Enter Default (FL-165) (external site pdf ).
Workshops explaining how to complete the forms are available at various locations. Check the calendars for a Family Law Workshop in your area:
When a court has already determined that someone is the legal parent of a child, it is often too late to dispute paternity. Trying to have a parentage judgment set aside or canceled can be very difficult, depending on the laws that apply in the particular case and the time that has passed since the case was filed.
If you find out that there is a judgment of paternity, or a judgment for child support against you, you should seek the advice of an attorney or come to the Self Help/Family Law Assistance Center for further direction.
Service is the procedure used to give notice to a person (such as a respondent) of the papers you filed with the court. This notifies the other party of the action and allows the other party to respond to the proceeding if they so choose. Service is completed by delivering a set of court documents to the person to be served.
You are NOT allowed to personally serve papers in your own case. Any person 18 years or older may serve papers, except the petitioner or respondent in your case. The person can be a friend, relative, or anyone else. You can also hire a professional to serve the papers for you. They are listed in the phone book under Process Servers.
Serving the paperwork (Summons & Petition) when the party resides in another state can be accomplished in various ways:
Once the Certified Mail Return Receipt Requested card is signed and returned it must be attached to Proof of Service of Summons (FL-115) (external site pdf ) form and filed with the Court.
Once the Notice and Acknowledgment of Receipt is signed and returned it must be attached to Proof of Service of Summons (FL-115) (external site pdf ) form and filed with the Court.
Next, the server must fill out a “Declaration of Due Diligence”. This is a document that describes all the attempts that were made to serve the Respondent personally. The Declaration is usually attached to the Proof of Service of Summons (FL-115) (external site pdf ) form .
Once service is complete, the person who performed the service will have to fill out a Proof of Personal Service and that will have to be filed with the court.Before you can ask to serve by Publication or Posting you must make a good faith attempt to find the other party. This includes mailing a letter to the last known address to see if it comes back, talking to old neighbors, checking with relatives, going to the last known employer, checking the internet, checking with family and friends, checking to see if the person owns real property in the area by going to the County Recorder’s office and any other thing you think might help you find the person.
You must state, in a Declaration, under penalty of perjury, what you did to try and find the Respondent. The packet for Service by Publication and the packet for Service by Posting and Mailing are available at the Court. If the court is satisfied that you did all you could to find the Respondent the judicial officer will give you permission to serve by Publication or Posting.
If approved for Service by Publication, you will place a legal advertisement in a Court-Approved Newspaper (external site ). Remember – You must be approved (have a court order) to serve by Publication. Do not place the notice in a newspaper until the court approves your request.
If approved for Service by Posting and Mailing, the court clerk will provide additional instructions.
Certain international treaties and agreements with foreign countries will determine how you must serve an individual residing a foreign country, including Mexico. The methods recognized as valid within the United States may not be valid in foreign countries. If you need to serve someone who is not in the United States, you may have to use the process set out under the Hague Convention, the Inter-American Convention, or another method allowed by the laws of the foreign country. This process is complicated. You may need to talk to a lawyer to help you.
Information about international service under the Hague Convention can be found at the following websites:
Information about international service under the Inter-American Convention can be found at the following websites:
For the model forms for each convention, please visit:
An active duty member of the military can generally be found by contacting their command. Please note that due to privacy and security concerns you may not be successful in finding the individual you need to serve. You may also contact the locator service for each branch of the military.
Further online information can be found at The Official United States Marine Corps FAQ - Personnel Locator
Additional resources include:
Army Worldwide Locator
8899 East 56th Street
Fort Benjamin Harrison, IN 46249-5301
1-866-771-6357
Navy Locater: Navy Personnel Command (PERS 312)
5720 Integrity Drive
Millington, TN 38055-3120
901-874-3388,
Fax: 901-874-2000
Commandant of the Marine Corps Headquarter, USMC Code MMSB-17
2008 Elliot Road, Room 203
Quantico, VA 22134
1-210-652-5775
United States Air Force HQ/AFBCDPDXIDL
550 C Street, West, Suite 50
Randolph AFB, TX 78150-4752.
If you have information regarding the general location and branch of the Respondent, then you can contact the base Judge Advocate General (JAG) (external site ) for assistance. Call the main base operator and ask for the Judge Advocate.
Federal law, the Service members Civil Relief Act, prohibits entry of a default judgment against an active duty member of the military. You may seek legal assistance at the Family Law Facilitator’s office or through a private attorney for more information regarding the requirements and limitations of federal law.
In order to obtain a custody/visitation or support orders, you must file a Request for Order (FL-300). The Riverside Self Help/Family Law Assistance Center has clinics available to review completed paperwork to ensure that it is filled out properly. Once your paperwork is complete:
To change existing orders, for instance those concerning child custody/visitation, or child support, you will also use the Request for Order form. Please note, however, that in order to modify an existing order it is necessary to show the court that the current orders are no longer effective, because of a significant change in circumstances. For instance, if you have a visitation plan that allows you to see the children three days per week and the other parent is moving to another school district, it could affect your ability to have the kids for those three days. If you are paying child support and you just got laid off, your ability to pay support has changed. These are “changes in circumstances”.
Workshops explaining how to complete the forms are available at various locations. Check the calendars for a Family Law Workshop in your area:
If a person can show that there is a risk that the child will be harmed or removed from the State of California if the court does not do something that day or within a few days, he or she can ask the court to make temporary custody orders on an emergency basis.
These temporary emergency orders are also called “ex parte orders”, and they will only be in place for a short time. After making emergency orders, the court will schedule a regular hearing to consider whether the orders should be extended beyond the temporary period. You can request temporary emergency orders by completing the following forms:
The judicial officer cannot consider your request for temporary emergency orders unless you have given notice. You must give notice to all parties or their attorneys no later than 10:00 a.m. on the court day before the emergency hearing. After providing notice, you must serve your documents requesting emergency orders on all parties or their attorneys at the first reasonable opportunity.
Completed forms need to be provided to the court clerk for review. Keep in mind that requests for temporary emergency orders need to be reviewed by a judicial officer before they are filed.
See Riverside Superior Court Local Rule 5165 (pdf ) for more information on requesting temporary emergency orders. You may also seek legal assistance at the Self Help/Family Law Assistance Center.
Note: If you or a family member needs domestic violence or child abuse protection, please use the Domestic Violence Protection Act forms (external site ).
If the other party is not following court orders you may:
NOTE: A Contempt proceeding is very difficult, time consuming, and is less likely to give you the relief you seek. Furthermore, a judicial officer must review your documents before allowing them to be filed by the Clerk. Your facts must be good, clear, and demonstrate an ongoing pattern of refusal to share your children with you.
You need to open a case in order to get Court orders. This means you will have to file a Petition for Dissolution, Legal Separation or Nullity (pdf ); Petition to Establish Paternity (pdf ) or Petition for Custody and Visitation (FL-260) (external site pdf ). At the same time the Petition is filed, submit a Request for Order (pdf ) seeking custody and visitation orders.
If you believe that your child is at risk of immediate and irreparable harm, you may seek emergency orders. Further information on temporary emergency orders may be obtained from an attorney or the Self Help/Family Law Assistance Center. The Request to Temporary Emergency Order procedure involves several steps and additional forms.
There is little a grandparent can to do obtain visitation rights. Such rights can only be ordered by the court in very limited circumstances. Before coming to court to request grandparent visitation (external site ), try to work something out with the parent with primary custody. This is your BEST option. Most grandparents find themselves asking for visitation because: their child, the parent of the grandchild, is deceased, incarcerated, or has disappeared due to a problem with drugs, alcohol or some other unknown reason. If the parents of the child are still living together, the Court cannot intervene to give you visitation rights.
If the parent who has custody will not allow you to see your grandchild, you should seek the advice of an attorney or come to the Self Help/Family Law Assistance Center for further direction. Grandparent visitation is very case specific – your facts may or may not be sufficient to convince a court you should see your grandchild. You must prove that not seeing you, the grandparent, will actually harm the grandchild. In other words, it’s not what you want or are longing for, the question really is: how will a visitation plan benefit the child.
Under certain circumstances, a non-biological parent may be ordered to pay support. For example, if you have been treating the child as your own, the child calls you dad or mom, you act exactly the way a biological parent is expected to act, the Court can make an order naming you as the parent and making orders for custody/visitation and support. There are certain other actions and timelines that will influence the Court regarding whether or not such an order is appropriate. You should seek legal guidance on this issue from an attorney or the Self Help/Family Law Assistance Center.
If your spouse is employed you may obtain an Earnings Assignment Order for Spousal or Partner Support (FL-435) (external site pdf ) from the court or online. Fill out the form, turn it into the Court clerk’s office with a self-addressed stamped envelope and when the order is returned to you by mail, serve a copy on the employer by certified mail. Employers are required by law to deduct the funds from the employee’s paycheck, although certain limits will apply.
So long as you have filed a case for Legal Separation (pdf ) then you may seek child custody, visitation and support orders.
If you have not filed a case, you will need to do so before the court can make orders. You can also request child support by going to Department of Child Support Services (external site ) and asking them to file on your behalf, or by filing your own case. Child and spousal support may also be requested as part of a Domestic Violence Restraining Order.
An earnings assignment can be modified or terminated once a child is 18 and has graduated from high school, or has reached the age of 19. To terminate the assignment you may file an Income Withholding for Support (pdf ) and an Ex Parte Application for Earnings Assignment Order (FL-430) (external site pdf ) requesting the modification and/or termination, and providing the facts that support the request.
You may apply for assistance in obtaining child support through the Department of Child Support Services in the County where you live; or, you may ask for support orders yourself by filing a case with the Court (Dissolution, Establish Parental Relationship, etc.) along with a Request for Order (pdf )seeking support orders
NOTE: If you are receiving cash aid (TANF/CalWorks), the Department of Child Support Services will file a case for child support on their own and without you asking.
Evidence is information a party can present in court to prove their case. Evidence can be in two main forms:
These are rules of evidence (laws) that everyone must follow. These rules exist to make sure that the judicial officer gets reliable, relevant, and accurate evidence to consider when making decisions about your case. Together, these laws are called the California Evidence Code (external site ) . You will have to follow these rules even if you are self-represented.
View a handout which explains getting your evidence for court (external site pdf ). For additional information regarding the Evidence Code, check with your local law librarian.
The judicial officer can limit the time parties have to speak at a hearing. Judicial Officers review the paperwork submitted by both parties before the hearing. Each side will have a little time to present new information, but typically only to the extent the information will assist the court in making a decision.
Your best insurance policy is to tell your side of the story in your written documentation (statements, photographs, invoices, etc.). If you do not file a written response to the other party’s documents, the judicial officer does not have to hear your side of the story. There are important time limits you must follow. Bottom Line - your response (your side of the story) MUST be submitted in writing to the other party and the court ON TIME or else the judicial officer does not have to consider it.
When filling out or completing forms, they should be neatly printed in blue or black ink, or typewritten. Prior to bringing the forms to the court for filing, you should make two copies. The court can make copies for you, but the cost is $0.50 cents per page.
When bringing your forms to the court for filing, you will provide the clerk with your originals and the copies. After the clerk processes the papers, the court will retain the originals and the clerk will give you back the copies; one for you to keep and the other to be provided to (served on) the other party.
If you are unable to pay fees and costs, you may ask the court to permit you to proceed without paying them. See the Information Sheet on Waiver of Superior Court Fees and Costs (FW-001-INFO) (external site pdf ) for additional information.
For most cases, yes. All court files, including any orders of the court, become public records, meaning they are not private. Any person can go to the clerk of the court and request to see any case file. There are some exceptions. When the type of case itself is confidential the general public does not have access to court records. There may also be portions of a family law file that are confidential and only certain people are allowed access (including parties and their lawyers).
If you are not sure if your court case, documents, or file are confidential, ask the court clerk.
To notify the court of your new address, you will need to complete Judicial Council form Notice of Change of Address or Other Contact Information (MC-040) (external site pdf ). Once completed, the form can be filed with the court clerk.
Court Reporter Transcripts can be requested online. Complete information regarding court reporter transcripts including ordering instructions and a request form is available on the court’s Request Transcripts Page.
At the time of filing any of your court documents, notify the clerk that you or the other party will need an interpreter for the hearing. The clerk will then notify the Interpreter Services Division of your request. While the Interpreter Services Division will make every effort to provide an interpreter for you, you may need to bring your own.
Please email the Interpreter Services Division if you have any questions about this service.