Power of Attorney in Minnesota: What It Does and Why You Might Need One
A Power of Attorney (POA) lets you name a trusted person (your agent or attorney-in-fact) to handle financial and property matters for you. It’s one
A Power of Attorney (POA) lets you name a trusted person (your agent or attorney-in-fact) to handle financial and property matters for you. It’s one
Sports, music, robotics, theater—activities are where kids learn, grow, and build friendships. After parents separate, questions pop up fast: Who decides which activities the child
Divorce after 50—often called “gray divorce”—tends to look different from a split in your 20s or 30s. Kids are (mostly) grown, careers are mature, and
When engagements end—or when spouses later divorce—few questions create more heat (and headlines) than who keeps the engagement ring. In Minnesota, the answer turns on
If you’re headed into a custody dispute in Minnesota, there’s a good chance the court may order a custody (now often called a parenting plan)
Dream trip on the horizon—but you share custody? International travel with kids is absolutely doable with the right prep. This guide covers passports and consent,
What happens to support if a parent passes away? When a parent who pays child support dies, the obligation does not automatically vanish in Minnesota.
What to know about property, support, taxes, insurance, and retirement accounts Divorce is as much a financial process as it is a legal one. In
In Minnesota, “emancipation” isn’t a form you file or a standard court process. There’s no statute that lays out a one-size-fits-all path to emancipation. Instead,
What surviving parents and families should know Losing a parent is devastating. When the parent who provided most day-to-day care dies, families often ask: Who