Belinda Smith
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We offer an individualised client- focused service at competitive rates, to help with your divorce or separation and any problems involving children. Belinda is a fully trained collaborative lawyer and will promote this preferred approach to relationship breakdown wherever possible. Don't forget if you are living with a partner and not married you can plan for your future with a Cohabitation Agreement - especially important if you have children.

You can also plan for your marriage with a Prenuptual Agreement. Belinda is a long-standing member of the national organisation for family lawyers, Resolution. Belinda Smith & Co applies the Resolution code of good practice which advocates a fair and conciliatory approach in all family cases. The practice also provides advice and representation at court for clients with road traffic cases, such as speeding, penalty points disqualification and drink driving.
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Belinda Smith qualified in 1984, initially practicing as a Crown Prosecutor returning to private practice in Peterborough as a defence solicitor in criminal law.
For the past 25 years Belinda has grown an expertise in family law, specialising in public law cases and is a long standing member of the Law Society Children Panel.
Whilst a senior partner at Buckles Solicitors in Peterborough and head of the Family Department, Belinda developed specialisms in all aspects of family law.
She is a member of the national family solicitors association, Resolution and a fully trained collaborative lawyer.
If you have been married for more than a year, and you are sure your marriage has irretrievably broken down, you can start divorce proceedings at a Family Court (now regionally based).
Within the next 12 months it is expected that long-awaited reforms to divorce law will be brought into force by Parliament.
The new laws will remove the need for fault-finding in divorce proceedings - watch this space.
Online divorce is being trialled in a number of areas in England and Wales, so that all stages of a divorce application can be dealt with electronically.
If you had the choice between sitting round a table with your partner, each of you having your solicitor present to advise and support you, and reaching solutions together about the challenges of your separation, or arguing your case in front of a court, which would it be?
For many couples the collaborative option has provided a less confrontational, and therefore a less painful, route to arriving at a fair outcome, than the traditional process of divorce or cohabitation split.
It is especially effective where there are children who benefit so much more from their parents working together to prioritise their interests.
Despite numerous attempts to persuade Parliament to make legal reforms, an unmarried couple who live together, even with children, do not have the rights or protection they would have from a marriage (or a civil partnership).
This is certainly the case with cohabiting couples.
It may seem too business like to take precautions against future problems but having a Cohabitation Agreement in place can certainly provide peace of mind in a happy relationship.
This is especially so if your home is only owned by one of you, or one of you invested more into your property than the other.
A recent Supreme Court case has paved the way for family courts to treat nuptial agreements (both pre and post marriage) as properly binding provided certain principles are followed.
There may be good reasons for reaching a formal understanding with your fianc(e), for example if you have been married before, by way of a written agreement which will carry weight in any future division of assets, if the worst happens.
Prenuptial agreements need to be drawn up and executed several months in advance of the marriage date, in order to carry the maximum weight before the court according to current guidelines.
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