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LegalWiseNC is a Virtual Law Office powered by the Law Office of Zachary B. Setzer, PLLC, a Charlotte and Monroe NC Estate Planning Attorney. Our innovative client portal technology allows us to engage in a lawyer-client relationship online without our clients ever having to meet with us face-to-face in our physical office.

Communications between lawyer and client are mediated primarily through the ultra-secure client portal's messaging system. We encourage use of this method of communication because it is far superior to email in terms of security and protecting confidential communications. We also communicate with clients via telephone and Skype video chat.
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Mr. Setzer is licensed to practice law in North Carolina. If you would like to verify our credentials, please feel free to find us in the NC State Bar directories. Zack graduated with honors from Washington and Lee University School of Law, where he was Lead Articles Editor of the Washington and Lee Law Review and received the James C.C. Treadway Law Scholarship.
We are not just a document preparation website or a paralegal document preparation site, like LegalZoom. We are a North Carolina law firm offering legal services in business law, family law, estate planning, and real estate matters to North Carolina residents. We offer legal services online because we recognize that in today's world, different people want to do business in different ways.
There are two types of divorce in North Carolina. Absolute divorce is a final dissolution of all of the ties of marriage between the spouses. Absolute divorce is what you generally think of as a divorce. Divorce from Bed and Board is not a true divorce, but rather a judicial proceeding in which the parties become legally separated.
Divorce from bed and board is not a divorce in the way we usually think about divorce because it does not end the marriage. A divorce from bed and board does not entitle either party to remarry. Divorce from bed and board is a judicial separation of the parties. The parties remain husband and wife but have the right to refuse to live together.
To qualify for an absolute divorce in North Carolina you must be legally separated for at least one year and a day. Legal separation occurs on the date when one or both spouses move into a separate residence with the intention of living apart permanently. You do not need a separation agreement nor do you have to file any papers or documents to be separated in North Carolina.
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