<p>The name(s) that you provide will appear on the final
<spanclass="tooltip-link"data-toggle="tooltip"data-placement="right"data-html="true"title="<b>Court Orders</b><br/><br/>A record of a decision made by a judge or master that
tells you or your spouse what you must do (or not do). For example: The court has made an order that
your spouse must pay you $250 on a monthly basis to help pay off your combined debt">court order(s)<iclass="fa fa-question-circle"aria-hidden="true"></i></span> . Any names you provide will be used on the final court order for the purposes of executing
or following up on the orders. For example, if you and your spouse will be dividing property, the Land Titles will likely want to see the name in the court order match what is on the title. This would also apply to pensions, RRSPs, etc. The
order for divorce is also used to create linkages between names.</p>
<p>You may want to take a look at the names that you have used on any legal and business agreements/contracts to ensure you are providing the courts with all variations of your name.</p>
<p>The name(s) that you provide will appear on the final {% include "partials/tooltips/court_order.html" with text="court order(s)" %}.
Any names you provide will be used on the final court order for the purposes of executing or following up on the orders.
For example, if you and your spouse will be dividing property, the Land Titles will likely want to see the name in the
court order match what is on the title. This would also apply to pensions, RRSPs, etc.
The order for divorce is also used to create linkages between names.</p>
<p>You may want to take a look at the names that you have used on any legal and business agreements/contracts to ensure you are providing
the courts with all variations of your name.</p>
</div>
</div>
@ -160,13 +160,7 @@
<divclass="radio"><label>{% input_field type="radio" class="radio-with-other" name="lived_in_bc_you" value="Do not live in B.C." %}Do not live in B.C.</label></div>
<p>In order to apply for a divorce in B.C., you or your spouse must have been a regular resident in B.C (the legal term is
Ordinarily Resident<ul><li>the place where a person resides in the ordinary course of his or her day to day</li>
<li>you do not lose your ordinary resident in a place when you leave for a temporary purpose (e.g. go to school in
another province)</li></ul><br/>Not an Ordinarily Resident<ul><li>If you have travelled to another place to live and work indefinitely
(even though you ultimately intend to return to the prior home)</li></ul><p>A detailed explanation of the
<ahref='http://www.justice.gc.ca/eng/rp-pr/fl-lf/divorce/rhro_cl/p4.html'target='_blank'>meaning of ordinarily resident</a> can be found on the Department of Justice website.</p>">
ordinarily resident<iclass="fa fa-question-circle"aria-hidden="true"></i></span>) for at least one year immediately before starting the proceeding.
{% include "partials/tooltips/ordinary_residence.html" %}) for at least one year immediately before starting the proceeding.
title="<b>Court Orders</b><br/><br/>A record of a decision made by a judge or master that tells you or your spouse what you must do (or not do).
For example: The court has made an order that your spouse must pay you $250 on a monthly basis to help pay off your combined debt" >
court order (s)<iclass="fa fa-question-circle"aria-hidden="true"></i></span>. Any names you provide will be
used on the final court order for the purposes of executing or following up on the orders. For example,
if you and your spouse will be dividing property, Land Titles will likely want to see the name in
<p>The name(s) that you provide will appear on the final {% include "partials/tooltips/court_order.html" with text="court order(s)" %}.
Any names you provide will be used on the final court order for the purposes of executing or following up on the orders.
For example, if you and your spouse will be dividing property, Land Titles will likely want to see the name in
the court order match what is on the title. This would also apply to pensions, RRSPs, etc.
The order for divorce is also used to create linkages between names.</p>
<p>You may want to take a look at the names that you have used on any legal and business
@ -170,15 +166,8 @@
</label></div>
<divclass="radio"><label>{% input_field type="radio" class="radio-with-other" name="lived_in_bc_spouse" value="Does not live in B.C." %}Does not live in B.C.</label></div>
<p>In order to apply for a divorce in B.C., you or your spouse must have been a regular resident in B.C (the legal term is ordinarily resident
Ordinarily Resident<ul><li>the place where a person resides in the ordinary course of his or her day to day</li>
<li>you do not lose your ordinary resident in a place when you leave for a temporary purpose (e.g. go to school in
another province)</li></ul><br/>Not an Ordinarily Resident<ul><li>If you have travelled to another place to live and work indefinitely
(even though you ultimately intend to return to the prior home)</li></ul><p>A detailed explanation of the
<ahref='http://www.justice.gc.ca/eng/rp-pr/fl-lf/divorce/rhro_cl/p4.html'target='_blank'>meaning of ordinarily resident</a> can be found on the Department of Justice website.</p>">
<pclass="intro">It is very important that you enter the information below as it appears on your <spanclass="tooltip-link"data-toggle="tooltip"data-placement="right"data-html="true"
title="<b>Original Marriage Certificate</b><br/><br/>The marriage certificate you received at the church —
or any other place where you were married — isn't acceptable in court. You can get a marriage certificate
or a certified copy of the registration of marriage from
are asking for an {% include "partials/tooltips/order.html" %}
for spousal support as follows:{% if spouse_support_details_error %}{% include 'partials/required.html' %}{% endif %}
</h3>
{% input_field type="textarea" name="spouse_support_details" rows="8" cols="65" class="response-textarea" placeholder="Please enter the spousal support details that you want to appear in the order issued by the court." %}