CV-036 Acknowledgment of Receipt of Summons and Complaint or Post-Judgment Motion
Maine court form for acknowledging that you have received a Summons and Complaint or Post-Judgment Motion
FM-080 Divorce with Children: What to do with these Court Forms
This is not a form to fill out, it is an instruction sheet about how to fill out the Maine court forms for a divorce case with children
FM-004 Complaint for Divorce (with children)
The Maine court form for filing for divorce if you have children.
CV/CR/FM/PC-200 Social Security Number Confidential Disclosure Form
A form used to disclose Social Security Numbers for certain court cases, including family law cases, but keeping those SSNs confidential
FM-002 Confidential Family Matter Summary Sheet
Maine court form FM-002 - Confidential Family Matter Summary Sheet
Powers of Attorney in Maine
What is a Power of Attorney? Where can I learn more about Powers of Attorney in Maine?
Podcast: Familial Status Protections under Fair Housing laws
Many landlords or housing providers don't know their responsibilities when it comes to renting to families with children or don't even know that families with children enjoy a protected status under housing discrimination laws and that they can't make dwellings unavailable or deny dwellings just because families have children.
Rights of Maine Renters: Eviction
Can my landlord turn off my utilities or change the locks on my door or kick me out without going to court? No. It is illegal for your landlord to throw you out by force. Your landlord must get a court order before they evict you.
Rights of Maine Renters: Discrimination
Landlords may not discriminate against you because of your: race, color, sex, sexual orientation, physical or mental impairment, religion, ancestry or national origin, getting welfare, being a single parent, being pregnant or having children. This means that a landlord cannot refuse to rent to you, charge you extra, or evict you for any of these… More
Rights of Maine Renters: Unsafe or Unfit Housing
Maine law gives tenants an "implied warranty of habitability." This means that your landlord must promise that your home is safe and fit to live in.