Family law consent orders combine support obligations, disclosure requirements, and parenting conditions in a single document. This example shows how DueCounsel separates and structures each obligation.
BY CONSENT AND ON HEARING the submissions of counsel: 1. The parties shall have joint custody of the children. 2. The Respondent shall pay $2,200 per month in child support commencing June 1, 2026. 3. The parties shall exchange updated income disclosure and tax returns annually on or before June 30 of each year. 4. The Applicant shall provide the Respondent with 30 days written notice before any planned relocation.
This is a fictional document excerpt created for demonstration purposes only.
DueCounsel extraction output
| Extracted date | Deadline type | Action item | Responsible party | Confidence | Calendar export |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 1, 2026 (monthly) | Support obligation | Commence monthly child support payments of $2,200 | Respondent | High | ICS / CSV |
| Jun 30, 2026 (annually) | Disclosure deadline | Exchange income disclosure and tax returns | Both parties | High | ICS / CSV |
| Rolling — 30 days before relocation | Notice obligation | Provide 30-day written notice of relocation | Applicant | High | — |
Why this matters
Consent orders in family law matters often have long-running annual obligations that are easy to miss after the initial file is closed. Failure to exchange income disclosure can trigger variation proceedings.
Lawyer review required
Annual disclosure deadlines recur each year. Set a recurring calendar reminder after confirming the first year's obligation. Rolling relocation notice cannot be calendared until a specific date is known.
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