My Photo

Contact Information

  • Dan Nunley, Attorney at Law
    717 S. Houston Avenue, Suite 300 Tulsa, OK 74127
  • Email:
    dan@nunleylaw.com
  • Phone:
    918-599-9090
  • Fax:
    918-592-0909

Disclaimer

  • Notice
    This blog is written and published by Dan Nunley for educational purposes only, i.e. to give information and a general understanding of Oklahoma family law, not to provide specific legal advice. The information provided by this blog should not be used as a substitute for legal advice from a licensed attorney in your state. Dan Nunley is licensed to practice law in the state of Oklahoma only. Your use of this blog does not establish an attorney-client relationship between you and Dan Nunley. Such an attorney-client relationship can only be established by execution of a contract for legal services between the Law Office of Daniel C. Nunley and a prospective client.

May 01, 2008

Court Denies Paternity Despite DNA Proof

A sharply divided Kentucky Supreme Court recently denied paternity to a man with DNA proof supporting his claim to be the child's biological father. The Kentucky high court based its decision on the marital presumption which bars any attack against a child's legitimacy. Read this Time article for more information. Oklahoma is one of the 33 states mentioned in the article that allow attacks to the marital presumption but only within the first two years of the child's life.

Source: Time.com.

April 17, 2008

It's Time To Bury The Billable Hour

William Wilson, author of the Indiana Family Law Blog, read yesterday's post regarding Scott Turow's article on hourly billing and was inspired to sit down and write concerning his perspective on the billable hour system. I highly recommend that you take the time to read Mr. Wilson's post in its entirety. 

April 16, 2008

Famous Lawyer Says The Billable Hour System Must Die

Attorney and best-selling author Scott Turow says in a recently-published article in the ABA Journal that the billable hour system is not merely bad for the lives of lawyers but is worse for clients, bad for the attorney-client relationship, and bad for the image of our profession. Read Mr. Turow's article in its entirety here

April 14, 2008

Billing By The Hour Seen As Corrupting To The Legal Profession

I have posted previously (here, here, here, here, and here) on the benefits of a flat or fixed fee billing system. Here is an article written by the President of the California Bar Association in which he says that the billable hour system is corrupting to the legal profession.

Source: ABA Journal.

April 11, 2008

Your Questions and Comments

First of all I want to say how much I appreciate you the reader of the Oklahoma Family Law Blog. I hope that you find the information interesting and educational. If you aren't yet a subscriber, consider becoming one today.

To those readers who go a step beyond and leave comments to my posts, know that while I may not publish all comments on my blog, I do read each and every one of them.

And to those readers who post questions asking me for advice, I suggest that instead of leaving a question as a comment to a post that you email me directly at dan@nunleylaw.com. That way you and I both know I will get your question and I can respond to you directly.

April 09, 2008

Women With Graduate Degrees Are More Likely to Divorce

A soon to be published study of more than 100,000 professionals reveals that women with MBAs, law degrees, and medical degrees are twice as likely to get divorced or separated as their male counterparts. The study also found that highly educated women abstain from marriage at double and sometimes nearly triple the rate of highly educated men.

Source: "For Women, Graduate Degrees Greater Marriage Test" by Anita Raghavan in the Wall Street Journal, April 1, 2008.   

April 07, 2008

More Men Are Receiving Alimony From Ex-Wives

Is it unmanly to receive alimony from your ex-wife?

While I don't have any male clients who receive temporary support or alimony, apparently this is a growing trend as more and more women move up the career ladder and earn big money.

The percentage of alimony recipients who are male rose to 3.6% during the five years ending in 2006, up from 2.4%, in the previous five-year period, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. That percentage is likely to rise as more and more marriages feature a primary earner who is female. In 2005, wives outearned their husbands in 33% of all families, up from 28.2% a decade earlier.

And while men in previous generations may have been embarrassed to  be a recipient of alimony, the stigma appears to be waning. You know the old saying "what's good for the goose is good for the gander."

For more information, read this article from the Wall Street Journal.   

March 27, 2008

Judge Vacates Divorce So Ex-Wife Can Become Widow

Last month an airman stationed at Tinker Air Force Base shot and killed his nine-year-old daughter and four-year-old son before turning the gun on himself. This tragedy occurred just eleven days after the airman and his wife were granted a divorce on Valentine's Day. The father had previously threatened to kill the children if his wife divorced him.

Yesterday the judge vacated the divorce saying "I'm doing what I believe is the right thing to do." The woman was represented at the hearing by attorneys from the Women & Children's Law Center. Her attorneys argued that vacating the divorce decree was the only way the long-time stay-at-home mom could get any monetary and health-care benefits from the military to help her start a new life.

For more information, read this article from the Daily Oklahoman.   

March 09, 2008

Oklahoma and California Are At Opposite Ends Of The Homeschooling Spectrum

Oklahoma is the friendliest state to home schooling parents because Oklahoma is the only state that has a constitutional provision guaranteeing parents the right to educate their children at home. Because of that, Oklahoma may see an influx of home schooling families from California in the near future if a California appellate court's recent ruling is not overturned. It would be The Grapes of Wrath in reverse. Instead of Okies traveling to California in search of employment, we'll see Californians making the trek to Oklahoma in search of educational freedom.

The California state appellate court held that California parents do not have a constitutional right to home school their children and further held that only parents who have state licensed teaching credentials for the specific grade being taught may home school their children.

Unlike Oklahoma, home schooling is not specifically addressed in California law. Under California's state education code, students must be enrolled in a public or private school, or can be taught at home by a credentialed tutor. The California Department of Education currently allows home schooling as long as parents file paperwork with the state establishing themselves as small private schools, hire credentialed tutors or enroll their children in independent study programs run by charter or private schools or public school districts while still teaching at home.

A Los Angeles Times' article reports "Glenn and Kathleen, a Sacramento-area couple who requested that their last name not be used for fear of prosecution, home school their 9-year-old son Hunter because their Christian beliefs would be contradicted in a public school setting, Glenn said. He is troubled by the idea that his son would be exposed to teachings about evolution, homosexuality, same-sex marriage and sex education ."I want to have control over what goes in my son's head, not what's put in there by people who might be on the far left who have their own ideas about indoctrinating kids," he said. If the ruling takes effect, Glenn vowed to move his family out of state. "If I can't home school my son in California, we're going to have to end up leaving California. That's how important it is to me."

This is a controversy that demands the attention of all California parents. And parents in other states including Oklahoma must not become complacent. After all, if parents have no constitutional right to educate their own children, what other aspects of the parent's choices for their own children lack protection? This question reaches far beyond educational decisions.

Following is some basic law regarding the right of Oklahoma parents to home school their children:

Oklahoma law does not require parents to have state teaching certificates, to use state-approved curriculum, to initiate contact with, to be registered with, or to seek approval from state or local education officials, to test their students, or to permit inspection of their homes by state or local education officials. If a parent is teaching a child the basic core subjects for at least 180 days per year, the law requires nothing more.

Article 13 Section 4's "other means of education" language is directly applicably to home schooling because that particular phrase was added to the Constitution for the specific purpose of protecting the rights of parents who choose to home school. In 1907 during the Oklahoma Constitutional Convention, a Mr. Buchanan, one of the delegates, proposed that the phrase "unless other means of education be provided" be added to Article 13 Section 4. Favorably responding to Mr. Buchanan's proposal, another delegate, Mr. Baker, said "I think Mr. Buchanan has suggested a solution. A man's own experience sometimes will teach him. I have two little fellows who are not attending a public school because it is too far for them to walk and their mother makes them study four hours a day." As a result of this discussion on home schooling, the "other means of education" language was added to the Oklahoma Constitution.

The Oklahoma Supreme Court in School Bd. Dist. No. 18 Garvin County v. Thompson upheld parental rights against the public school's authority. The Court held that "under our form of government ... the home is considered the key stone of the governmental structure. In this empire, parents rule supreme during the minority of their children ... they may ... withdraw them entirely from public schools and send them to private schools, or provide for them other means of education."

In Snyder v. Asbery (No. 78,045, Oklahoma Court of Appeals, Div. 2, May 18, 1993), the Oklahoma Court of Appeals ordered that two home schooled children be returned to the custody of their father, reversing a trial court's decision. The Court held that "the State Department of Education has no jurisdiction in home schooling."

February 28, 2008

DivorceCare Program Begins At Broken Arrow Church

DivorceCare is a Christ-centered, 13-week program offered across the nation as a support group for people who are divorced, going through a divorce, or separated. The Assembly at Broken Arrow just started a new DivorceCare class last night at its downtown campus located at 200 E. Broadway. The class will meet on upcoming Wednesdays at 7:00 p.m.

Each DivorceCare session has two distinct elements. During the first 30-40 minutes, the group watches a video featuring top experts on divorce and recovery. Participants then spend time discussing what was presented in the video and what is going on in the individual lives of group members. Topics addressed during the 13 weeks will include "The Road to Healing," "Facing Your Anger," "Facing Depression," "Financial Survival," "Forgiveness," "Reconcilation," and "Moving On."

For information, call The Assembly at 251-8591.