Family law consent orders impose support obligations, disclosure deadlines, and court attendance requirements. This example shows how DueCounsel structures those obligations from a consent order.
BY CONSENT: 1. The Respondent shall pay interim child support of $1,875 per month commencing May 1, 2026. 2. The parties shall exchange updated financial statements and income documents no later than May 15, 2026. 3. The matter shall be returned before the court on June 10, 2026 for a case conference. 4. The Applicant shall provide 30 days written notice before any planned relocation.
This is a fictional document excerpt created for demonstration purposes only.
DueCounsel extraction output
| Extracted date | Deadline type | Action item | Responsible party | Confidence | Calendar export |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| May 1, 2026 (monthly) | Support payment | Pay interim child support of $1,875/month | Respondent | High | ICS / CSV |
| May 15, 2026 | Disclosure deadline | Exchange financial statements and income documents | Both parties | High | ICS / CSV |
| Jun 10, 2026 | Court attendance | Attend case conference | Both counsel | High | ICS / CSV |
| Rolling — 30 days before relocation | Notice obligation | Provide 30-day relocation notice | Applicant | High | — |
Why this matters
Family law orders often contain ongoing financial obligations alongside one-time deadlines. A missed disclosure deadline can block the next step in the proceeding.
Lawyer review required
Recurring obligations like monthly support are extracted with their start date. Set up recurring calendar entries manually after confirming the first payment date.
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