What is the name of your state? Arkansas
(I am writing this for a friend at work... I'll let him type it.)
My ex-wife and I have joint physical and legal custody of our 7 year old son. He spends a week with mom and then a week with me. He attends school at a private school at my church. He has attended there since pre-K and will soon be completing the first grade. Our divorce decree states that we must agree on the school that he attends. That hasn't been an issue until now. She wants to move him to a more expensive private school for the fall 2007 school term. I don't have a problem with the move but I explained to her that I would need her financial assistance to offset the difference. In an email that she sent today, she said that she would pay half of the tuition and fees and I would be responsible for half. I asked her to sign a notarized agreement stating this. She refused and said that there is no reason to sign a binding agreement since she agreed to it by email. Does the email protect me if she doesn't hold up to her end of the agreement or do I need to have a notarized agreement?
(I am writing this for a friend at work... I'll let him type it.)
My ex-wife and I have joint physical and legal custody of our 7 year old son. He spends a week with mom and then a week with me. He attends school at a private school at my church. He has attended there since pre-K and will soon be completing the first grade. Our divorce decree states that we must agree on the school that he attends. That hasn't been an issue until now. She wants to move him to a more expensive private school for the fall 2007 school term. I don't have a problem with the move but I explained to her that I would need her financial assistance to offset the difference. In an email that she sent today, she said that she would pay half of the tuition and fees and I would be responsible for half. I asked her to sign a notarized agreement stating this. She refused and said that there is no reason to sign a binding agreement since she agreed to it by email. Does the email protect me if she doesn't hold up to her end of the agreement or do I need to have a notarized agreement?