Attorney Andy Cook is at the helm of our practice. He has a long career of diligently helping people through divorce and other related issues in areas throughout San Diego County. In fact, he has practiced law since 1994 and is a certified Southern California family law specialist. When it comes to sensitive legal matters like divorce, there is no substitute for experience. This is why our entire firm leans on Attorney Cook’s wealth of insights and know-how.
If you want to learn more about our team, visit the bio page for Attorney Cook. You can also check out our about us page for information about our firm’s approach to serving clients. Our family law firm was also featured in a coverage story in the Los Angeles Daily Journal.
Andy Cook handles family law cases, which are cases that involve child custody, child support, dissolution of domestic partnerships, divorce, domestic violence, legal separation, nullity of marriage, paternity, property division, spousal support (i.e., alimony), and visitation.
For people who live in downtown, Carmel Valley, Coronado, Del Mar, La Jolla, Mission Hills, Poway, Pt. Loma, Rancho Bernardo, Rancho Penasquitos, Scripps Ranch and the rest of the City of San Diego (except Otay Mesa and San Ysidro, which are served by Chula Vista), the courthouse is in downtown San Diego at 1100 Union St., just 1.1 miles from the Law Offices of Andy Cook. This courthouse opened up on December 18, 2017, replacing facilities that were at 1501 Sixth Ave. and 1409 Fourth Ave.From Solana Beach, Rancho Santa Fe and north up to the Orange County border, cases are usually filed in Vista. In the East County, cases are filed in El Cajon, and in the South Bay, the filing location is Chula Vista. Still have questions about where to file? Click here and look up the zip code where you or the other party lives. If one party lives in one region and the other party lives in another region, the party who files first gets to choose where to file among the two regions. Once a case is opened, it usually, though not always, stays at the same courthouse even if one or both parties move.