FAMILY LAWYER SHERWOOD PARK

Understanding Family Law in Alberta

Family law matters in Alberta are governed by a combination of federal and provincial legislation. These laws determine how parenting issues, support obligations, and property division are addressed when a relationship ends.

The Divorce Act applies to married spouses seeking a divorce and addresses parenting arrangements and support.

The Family Law Act addresses parenting and support issues, including matters involving unmarried parents.

The Family Property Act governs the division of property and debts between spouses and adult interdependent partners.

These legal frameworks shape how agreements are negotiated and how courts resolve disputes when no agreement is possible. Understanding which law applies to your situation is the foundation of any sound family law strategy.

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What a Family Lawyer Can Help With

A family lawyer helps establish clear legal terms around children, finances, property, and future obligations after a relationship changes. The goal is to replace uncertainty with enforceable structure.

Many family law matters involve more than one issue at the same time. Parenting, support, and property division often need to be resolved together, not in isolation.

Separation and divorce
Parenting applications, including parenting time and decision-making responsibility
Child support and spousal support
Division of property and debt
Prenuptial, cohabitation, and separation agreements
Independent legal advice for agreements
Enforcement and variations
Relocation and mobility matters
Grandparents’ access
Adoption
Adult guardianship

Family Law Services In Alberta Often Involve

Every family law matter has its own facts, but the legal process follows a clear progression.

How Family Law Matters Move Forward

Every family law matter has its own facts, but the legal process follows a clear progression.

1

Assess the situation

The first step is identifying the legal issues, the immediate risks, and the outcomes that need to be secured.

2

Review the available legal paths

This may involve negotiation, mediation, collaborative processes, or formal court action, depending on the circumstances.

3

Build a workable strategy

A sound legal strategy focuses on protecting parenting arrangements, financial stability, and long-term enforceability.

4

Take formal steps where needed

When agreements cannot be reached, court applications may be necessary to establish orders or move the matter forward.

Our role is to provide clear advice, structured planning, and practical legal action that matches the facts of the case.

When to Speak With a Family Lawyer

The right time to get legal advice is when family decisions start affecting your rights, your responsibilities, or your future position. Early legal advice creates leverage, clarity, and better decision-making. Waiting often narrows options and increases cost.

It is time to speak with a family lawyer when:

You are considering separation or divorce
Parenting arrangements are unclear or disputed
Child support or spousal support is being discussed
Property and debts need to be divided
You have been served with legal documents
You are being asked to sign an agreement
You are considering having an agreement drafted
An existing agreement needs to be enforced
An existing order needs to be changed
A parent is proposing relocation with a child

When to Speak With a Family Lawyer

Not every family law matter goes to court, but every family law matter needs a resolution strategy. The right resolution path depends on the level of conflict, the urgency of the issues, the willingness of the parties to cooperate, and the need for enforceable court orders.


Depending on the situation, resolution may involve:

Why Kurie Moore?

Practical Strategy-Driven Family Law Guidance

Family law decisions carry long-term consequences—whether it’s parenting arrangements, support obligations, or division of assets. Our approach is grounded in Alberta’s family law framework, with a focus on realistic outcomes, strong preparation, and clear strategy from day one. We work through each case methodically—reviewing financial disclosures, parenting dynamics, and legal options—so you understand exactly where you stand and what comes next.

Local Experience with Alberta Courts

Family law processes can vary depending on the court, the judge, and how matters are typically handled in the Edmonton region. Our familiarity with local procedures, filing requirements, and courtroom expectations allows us to move your case forward efficiently and avoid unnecessary delays.
Whether your matter is resolved in Edmonton, or other Alberta courts, through negotiation, mediation, or court, we understand how to navigate the system locally across the province.

Straightforward Advice When it Matters Most

Family law situations can escalate quickly, especially when dealing with custody disputes, emergency orders, or financial pressures. We provide direct, easy-to-understand advice so you can make informed decisions without confusion. You’ll know your options, the risks involved, and the most effective path forward, without unnecessary legal complexity.

Frequently Asked Questions

A family lawyer helps with separation, divorce, parenting arrangements, child support, spousal support, property division, family law agreements, enforcement, and variations. The job is to protect your legal position, structure the process correctly, and secure enforceable outcomes under the applicable laws. 

The first steps are to identify the immediate legal issues, gather financial information, determine parenting arrangements, and assess whether court orders or a negotiated agreement are needed.

Strong early action creates structure around parenting time, support, possession of the home, and financial decision-making. Waiting too long often allows confusion, conflict, and inconsistent arrangements to become harder to correct.

The first meeting focuses on facts, priorities, and legal exposure. A family lawyer reviews the relationship history, the children’s situation, financial circumstances, any urgent concerns, and what legal steps need to happen next. That meeting should leave the client with a clear understanding of process, strategy, and what must be done immediately.

In Alberta, family law matters can proceed in either the Alberta Court of Justice or the Court of King’s Bench of Alberta, depending on the issue and marital status. 

The Court of King’s Bench has sole jurisdiction over divorce and division of property in Alberta, and it also hears family matters involving support and parenting. The Alberta Court of Justice hears matters under the Family Law Act.

Yes, the Alberta Court of Justice in Sherwood Park has Family & Youth sittings every second and fourth Tuesday at 9:30 a.m. at the Sherwood Park courthouse on Chippewa Road. The Alberta Court of Justice in Sherwood Park handles parenting and support matters under the Family Law Act.

Delays can create instability and increase conflict. Informal parenting arrangements often lead to disagreements about support, parenting time, decision-making authority, holiday schedules, school issues, travel, and communication expectations.

Once a poor pattern is established, it becomes harder and more expensive to correct. Clear legal terms reduce conflict and protect children from ongoing uncertainty.

Improper child support arrangements create immediate and long-term problems. Arrears can accumulate, and enforcement issues can follow.

Informal agreements often fail because income is not properly disclosed, parenting schedules are unclear, and guideline calculations were never done correctly. Support needs to be handled with proper legal structure from the beginning.

Signing without legal advice creates serious risk. A person may give up rights related to support, parenting, or property without fully understanding the consequences. Poorly drafted agreements also create enforcement problems later. Independent legal advice helps ensure the agreement is understood, reviewed properly, and positioned to stand up if challenged.

A divorce in Alberta must proceed through the Court of King’s Bench, because that court has sole jurisdiction over divorce. Not every divorce requires a courtroom trial, but the legal process still needs to be completed through the correct court with the right documents and procedural steps.

The process begins with a consultation specifically with identifying the issues, choosing the correct court, preparing the required documents, and deciding whether the matter should proceed by agreement, negotiation, or formal application.

Strong case preparation includes financial disclosure, parenting details, existing agreements, and any urgent concerns. The right start affects timeline, cost, leverage, and outcome.

The timeline depends on the issues involved, the level of conflict, the need for disclosure, and whether the matter resolves by agreement or proceeds through court. Parenting disputes, support disputes, and property division all move at different speeds. Delay from either side usually increases cost and prolongs uncertainty.

Bring any court documents, agreements, financial information, income records, a timeline of major events, and notes about the children’s current schedule if parenting is in issue. The more organized the information, the faster a lawyer can identify the issues, explain the process, and recommend the right next step.

Serving Alberta Communities

Our office is located in Sherwood Park, and we serve clients throughout Alberta. 

We provide legal guidance for clients dealing with family law issues in Sherwood Park, Edmonton, and surrounding communities along with other locations in Alberta, with consultation options available in person, by phone, or by video.

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Speak With One of Our Family Lawyers Today

Family law decisions shape parenting arrangements, financial outcomes, and long-term stability. The right legal advice gives you clarity, protects your position, and helps you move forward with confidence.

If you are dealing with separation, parenting issues, support, property division, or a family law agreement, we can help you take the next step with a clear legal strategy.

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Contact Us

Phone

780-809-3545

Email

reception@kurielaw.ca

Office

168 Kaska Road, Sherwood Park, AB T8A 4G7

“We are here to help you navigate through this difficult time.”

Consultations are confidential and protected by solicitor-client privilege.