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Marjorie M. Neal

Marjorie M. Neal
Paralegal
phone (612) 877-5432
fax (612) 877-5999
email Email Me

Marjorie M. Neal is a paralegal at Moss & Barnett, practicing exclusively in the area of Family Law. Ms. Neal is a seasoned paralegal, having nearly 31 years of experience, initially in a small general practice including residential real estate and probate, then on to corporate, securities and collections, before spending the last 24 years exclusively in family law practice.

Ms. Neal joined Moss & Barnett in 1998. Her broad base in previous practice arenas enhances her ability to apply that acquired knowledge to family law, which touches in many of those areas. She assists the Moss & Barnett family law associates and shareholders with management of simple through complex cases, working directly with the clients, attorneys, experts and courts.

Ms. Neal was a volunteer in the early stages of the Hennepin County Family Court Pro Se Litigant program.

AREAS OF PRACTICE:

Family Law

EDUCATION:

St. Cloud State University, 1971
B.A. - Sociology, Psychology

PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS AND MEMBERSHIPS:

Minnesota Paralegal Association

  • Past Chair of Job Bank
  • Past Co-Chair of Family Law Section

Hennepin County Bar Association

RELATED FIRM NEWS AND ARTICLES

Galaxy of Stars
(February 2007)


Related

News Headlines


Case Summaries

Family Law

[02/02] Southerland v. City of New York
In a suit under 42 USC Section 1983 asserting that a New York City children's services caseworker entered the plaintiffs' home unlawfully and effected an unconstitutional removal of children into state custody, the district court's grant of summary judgment to the defendant caseworker is: 1) affirmed with respect to the dismissal of the father's substantive due process claim; but 2) vacated with respect to the father's and his children's Fourth Amendment unlawful-search and Fourteenth Amendment procedural due process claims and the children's unlawful-seizure claim, where the district court wrongfully concluded that the caseworker was entitled to qualified immunity with respect to all of the claims against him.

[02/02] Marriage of Walker
In a family court proceeding in which the recipient of a California State Teachers' Retirement System (CalSTRS) disability allowance challenged earlier family court orders awarding a community property interest in the allowance to his former spouse, the family court's denial of the appellant's motion to set aside the earlier orders is reversed, where the family court erred as a matter of law in concluding that the recipient had made "no mistake" in agreeing that his spouse had a community property interest in his disability allowance and thus should not have denied his motion on this basis.

[02/02] Marriage of Wahl
On appeal from an order requiring an ex-wife to pay to her former husband $552,153.28 in attorney's fees and costs as a sanction because of her conduct with respect to two post-dissolution orders, the order is affirmed, where the record disclosed no abuse of discretion in the trial court's award, and additional sanctions are imposed against the appellant and her appellate attorneys on a finding that the appeal is frivolous.

[01/31] T.W. v. Superior Court (San Diego County Health and Human Servs. Agency)
In proceedings in mandate to review an order designating the specific placement of a dependent child after termination of parental rights, the petition is granted with directions, where the district court abused its discretion by denying a petition by the San Diego County Health and Human Services Agency to remove the child from the home of his prospective adoptive parent, because the district court did not give appropriate weight to the legislature's goal of securing an adoptive home for a dependent child that is free from the influences of criminal activity and substance abuse.

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