Eveland & Foster Family Law
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Since no two family law cases are the same, our law firm's goal is to provide competent and effective legal advice that is tailored to each particular matter. We will strategize appropriately and provide our clients with options to settle their cases as expeditiously as possible. We will advocate zealously on behalf of our clients and seek what is in their best interests and the best interests of their children.

In divorce matters, there is no winner and no loser, despite popular opinion. The reality is that both parties will have to compromise somewhat in order to reach a global settlement of their case. Our mission is to provide clients with different options and help effectively navigate each client down the appropriate path toward resolution. Our attorneys are incredibly empathetic to our clients and their unique situations.

We understand that family matters are often complex, emotionally charged and that the ultimate resolution of each case will help determine how our clients begin the next chapter of their lives.
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Upon graduation from law school, Mr. Eveland served as a judicial law clerk for the Honorable James C. Heimlich, J.S.C. (Ret.), in Union County, Law Division.
Following his clerkship, he held associate positions at Budd Larner, PC in Short Hills, New Jersey (exclusively practicing family law) and Townsend, Tomaio & Newmark, LLC in Morristown, New Jersey (also exclusively practicing family law).
As an associate attorney at these prior law firms, Jason honed his legal research, advocacy and aggressive litigation skills.
The decision to pursue a divorce marks a critical and often emotional time in any person's life.
The end of a marriage represents the closing of one chapter and the beginning of a new one.
Further, a divorce can have far-reaching consequences for not only the individual litigants, but for their children and family as a whole.
At Eveland & Foster, LLC, our New Jersey divorce lawyers are not only experienced and knowledgeable in all facets of divorce, annulment and the dissolution of civil unions, we strive to provide each client with representation that is both zealous and compassionate, tailored to each individual's unique needs and goals for their future.
In New Jersey, the vast majority of divorce cases settle by way of agreement, consistent with New Jersey's long-held public policy to encourage the settlement of all litigation.
As set forth in the Appellate Division case of Tahan v. Duquette, 259 N.J.
Super 328, 336 App.
Div.
1992, "no stranger in a judicial robe, however able and well motivated he or she may be, is equipped to make a decision as valid" as the parties working together to reach a resolution.
A good marital settlement agreement will address all issues touching the parties' lives including, but not limited to, child custody and parenting time, financial support, and the division of assets and debts.
Alimony, or support paid by one spouse to another upon divorce, is often one of the most contentious issues in a divorce.
Four different forms of alimony exist in New Jersey: "open durational" (i.e., without a set end date); "limited duration" (for a specific term of years); "rehabilitative" (to afford a supported spouse time to gain financial independence) and "reimbursement" (to compensate a supported spouse for, by way of example, contributions made to the other party's education or career).
New Jersey law permits any person who is at least 18 years of age to become an adoptive parent, provided that they are at least 10 years older than the individual they seek to adopt and meet certain other requirements to establish that they are fit and suitable parents for a child.
A child may be adopted via private placement or through the assistance of an adoption agency.
The adoption process can differ significantly depending on whether the child is being adopted from within or without the State of New Jersey, or from a foreign country.
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