Family Law
Family Law News 2018, Issue 2, Volume 40, No. 2
Content
- An Evidence Code Primer for Family Law Attorneys Part I: An Overview and GeneraL Approach
- Blended Families
- Business Tax Returns: What is the Difference Between the Various Types?
- Consideration of Fault In Divorce Proceedings After the #MeToo Movement
- Family Law News Editorial Team
- Family Law Section Executive Committee
- Legislative Liaisons and Designated Recipients of Legislation
- Message from the Chair
- Message from the Editor
- NeverLand Practice: Representing Minor Children
- Reboot Your Law Practice: Boost Profits, Restore Work-Life Balance and Make Clients Happy in a Changing Legal Landscape
- Say What You Mean; Mean What You Say
- Sometimes, We Just Have to Say No: Warning Signs That Should Make You Think Before Taking On a Potential Client
- Table of Contents
- Technology Corner
- Guardians Ad Litem—What Are They and When Are They Necessary in a Family Law Case?
Guardians Ad LitemâWhat Are They and When Are They Necessary in a Family Law Case?
Rhoda A. Chandler
Rhoda A. Chandler, managing attorney for RC LAW, A.P.C., is a Certified Family Law Specialist and has been practicing law for close to 15 years. She also practices in the areas of estate planning, elder abuse, guardianships, and conservatorships, which have made her keenly aware of the complexity of the intersection of legal capacity and the law.
We are all familiar with the legal concept of "standing" to sue, the threshold requirement that a party must have a sufficient interest in the claim at issue in a lawsuit (a legal injury) to maintain the suit. A closely related concept, but a distinct one, is the legal requirement that a party must also have the "capacity" to sue. The policy behind the rules regarding capacity is that courts like finality in judgments. A judgment should be binding on the parties involved and resolve the litigation. While closely related, standing and capacity are procedurally very different. Lack of capacity is not a jurisdictional defect and must be properly raised or the objection may be waived.1 Lack of standing, however, is not waived by failure to object; it can even be raised for the first time on appeal.2
Persons without legal capacity do not have the ability to bring or defend legal actions on their own. Some examples of parties lacking legal capacity to sue include minor children (who, with limited exceptions, are considered to lack legal decision-making ability and are deemed to need the protection of the state in legal cases), mentally ill persons, and persons adjudicated to be mentally incompetent, such as conservatees. There are, however, instances in which it is necessary for persons lacking capacity to be parties in legal cases. In such cases, the litigation may be conducted through a representative for the party such as a guardian or a conservator, or through a guardian ad litem ("GAL").3