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Divorce & Separation

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Family Law Appeals

Family Law Appeals Attorney in Illinois

A bad outcome at trial isn't necessarily final. If the trial court made a legal error in your divorce or custody case, an appeal to the Illinois Appellate Court may be the right path — but the window closes fast.

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Family Law Appeals in Illinois

An appeal is not
a second trial.

When most people hear "appeal," they imagine getting another chance to present their case — new evidence, new arguments, a fresh start before a different judge. That's not what an appeal is. The Illinois Appellate Court does not retry cases. It reviews the record that was created at the trial court level to determine whether a legal error occurred — whether the trial judge applied the wrong legal standard, made findings that weren't supported by the evidence, or abused their discretion in a way that materially affected the outcome.

This distinction matters enormously. A client who lost a difficult custody battle because the trial judge weighed the evidence differently than expected — but correctly applied the law — has a very different appellate posture than a client whose case involved a clear misapplication of Illinois statutory standards or a failure to make required factual findings. Understanding which situation you're in is the first question an appellate analysis must answer.

We handle family law appeals in Illinois — identifying where the reversible error occurred, building the strongest possible argument from the trial court record, and presenting it effectively to the reviewing court. We advise quickly and honestly on whether a viable appeal exists, because pursuing a weak appeal wastes time, money, and the window that could have been spent on other remedies.

Critical — Appellate Deadlines

Under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 303(a), a notice of appeal from a final judgment in a family law case must generally be filed within 30 days of the entry of the final order. This is a jurisdictional deadline — missing it typically extinguishes your right to appeal entirely, regardless of how strong the underlying legal argument is. If you believe the trial court made a reversible error, contact us immediately. Time is the first constraint we work against.

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Grounds for Appeal

What the Appellate Court
actually reviews.

Illinois Appellate Courts review trial court decisions for specific categories of legal error. The standard of review varies depending on the type of error alleged — which affects both how the argument is framed and the likelihood of success. Not every unfavorable outcome is reversible error. Here are the most common grounds in family law appeals.

Abuse of Discretion

When the Trial Court's Decision Was Unreasonable

Many family law decisions — including maintenance awards, property division, and parenting arrangements — are reviewed for abuse of discretion under the standard articulated in In re Marriage of Heroy, 2017 IL 120205. The Appellate Court will reverse when the trial court's decision was arbitrary, fanciful, or unreasonable to the point that no reasonable person would agree with it. This is the most common standard in family law appeals, and it requires showing more than that the reviewing court would have decided differently.

Error of Law

When the Wrong Legal Standard Was Applied

When a trial court applies the wrong legal standard — misinterpreting a statute, applying an outdated case, or failing to follow binding precedent — that is a question of law reviewed de novo by the Appellate Court. De novo review means the Appellate Court gives no deference to the trial court's interpretation. Legal errors are often the strongest appellate arguments in family law because the standard of review is more favorable..

Against the Manifest Weight of the Evidence

When the Findings Weren't Supported by the Record

Factual findings made by a trial court — including credibility determinations and findings about the best interest of a child — are reviewed under the manifest weight standard. A finding is against the manifest weight of the evidence when the opposite conclusion is clearly evident or when the finding is unreasonable, arbitrary, or not based on the evidence. This is a high bar to meet, but it's achievable when the trial record is carefully analyzed.

Insufficient Findings

When the Court Failed to Make Required Findings

Illinois courts in family law proceedings are required to make specific written factual findings in certain circumstances — particularly in parenting cases under 750 ILCS 5/602.7 and maintenance determinations under 750 ILCS 5/504. When a trial court enters a judgment without making the findings that Illinois law requires, that procedural failure can be a basis for appeal or remand. Building the trial record to preserve these issues is part of good trial-level representation — and failing to preserve an issue at trial typically waives it on appeal.

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The Appellate Process

How an Illinois family law
appeal actually works.

Appellate practice follows a defined procedural sequence that is substantially different from trial court litigation. Understanding the process helps clients make informed decisions about whether and how to proceed.

01

Notice of Appeal

Filed within 30 days of the final order under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 303(a). This is a jurisdictional deadline — missing it forfeits the right to appeal. The notice is filed in the trial court and transferred to the Appellate Court.

02

Record Preparation

The trial court record — transcripts, exhibits, pleadings, orders — is compiled and certified. The quality of the trial court record determines what arguments are available. Issues not raised at trial are generally waived on appeal.

03

Appellant's Brief

The party appealing files an opening brief identifying the issues, the standard of review, the legal argument, and the relief requested. Appellate briefs are formal, highly structured documents that require substantial research and drafting.

04

Appellee's Brief & Reply

The responding party files an answering brief defending the trial court's decision. The appellant then files a reply brief responding to the arguments raised. The briefing schedule spans several months.

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Decision

The Appellate Court may affirm, reverse, or remand with instructions. Oral argument is discretionary — the court may decide on the briefs alone. Decisions are issued in written opinions that become part of Illinois case law if published.

Why appellate practice is a distinct skill set.

Not all family law attorneys handle appeals — and there are good reasons why. The skills and preparation required for effective appellate advocacy are meaningfully different from trial work. Most importantly, the issues that can be raised on appeal are largely determined by how the trial was conducted. We handle both — which means when we try a case, we're already thinking about what the record needs to look like if an appeal becomes necessary.

Trial Practice

Building the Record

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    Presenting evidence and examining witnesses before the trial judge
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    Making timely objections to preserve issues for appeal
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    Requesting specific findings of fact from the court
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    Creating the record that appellate counsel will work from
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    Oral advocacy and courtroom presence are central

Appellate Practice

Working the Record

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    No new evidence — the appeal is decided on the existing trial record
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    Identifying reversible error from the transcript and orders
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    Mastery of standards of review and Illinois precedent
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    Formal brief-writing that structures complex legal arguments precisely
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    Written advocacy is the primary — often only — mode of persuasion

What clients ask about family law appeals.

These are the questions prospective clients most often raise before their first consultation. We've answered them honestly — because informed clients make better decisions, and that's better for everyone.

How do I know if I have grounds to appeal?

The starting point is a careful review of the trial court record — the transcripts, the exhibits, and the written orders. We look for specific categories of error: misapplication of a legal standard, factual findings that aren't supported by the evidence, required findings that were never made, or procedural errors that prejudiced the outcome. Not every unfavorable result is reversible error. Some trial courts get the outcome right even when the process felt unfair to the losing party. The honest answer to whether you have grounds to appeal requires reviewing the record — which is why we advise promptly, because time is the binding constraint.

Can I introduce new evidence on appeal?

No — with very narrow exceptions. The Illinois Appellate Court reviews the record created at the trial court level. Evidence that wasn't introduced at trial generally cannot be considered on appeal. This is one of the reasons trial preparation matters so much for appellate viability — a case where important evidence was never introduced or where critical objections were never made is a much harder appeal. If new evidence has emerged that wasn't available at trial, the appropriate remedy may be a post-judgment motion or petition in the trial court, not an appeal.

Does filing an appeal stop enforcement of the trial court's order?

Not automatically. Filing a notice of appeal does not stay enforcement of the trial court's order unless the Appellate Court grants a specific stay pending appeal. For some orders — particularly those involving financial obligations — the appealing party must move for a stay in the trial court first, and then in the Appellate Court if denied. For parenting orders, courts are particularly reluctant to stay enforcement during an appeal because of the impact on the child. The ability to obtain a stay is a practical consideration we assess as part of the initial appellate analysis.

How long does a family law appeal take in Illinois?

Illinois family law appeals typically take twelve to twenty-four months from the filing of the notice of appeal to a decision from the Appellate Court. The timeline depends on the length of the trial record, the briefing schedule, whether oral argument is granted, and the court's caseload. In cases involving minor children, parties can sometimes request expedited briefing schedules given the time-sensitive nature of parenting matters — though courts have broad discretion over scheduling. We provide realistic timeline projections at the outset of every appeal.

Can I use a different attorney for the appeal than I used at trial?

Yes — and in some cases it may be advisable. Appellate advocacy requires a different skill set than trial advocacy, and fresh eyes on the record sometimes identify arguments that trial counsel, who was immersed in the litigation, may have missed. It can also be strategically useful to have appellate counsel who isn't defending the trial strategy itself. That said, continuity has advantages too — trial counsel knows the case deeply and can identify what was preserved for appeal. We discuss these considerations with every client who comes to us post-trial.

What happens if the Appellate Court rules in my favor?

It depends on what error the Appellate Court found and what relief it ordered. The court may reverse the trial court's order outright — which is relatively rare — or more commonly, remand the case back to the trial court with instructions to correct the error. A remand might require the trial court to reconsider its decision under the correct legal standard, make specific findings that were missing, or conduct a new hearing on specific issues. A successful appeal is often not the end of the litigation — it sends the case back to the starting point on the issues that were reversed.

"A bad outcome at trial isn't necessarily final. But the window to challenge it closes in 30 days."

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Family Law Appeals Attorney Serving Chicagoland

O'Brien Family Law handles family law appeals arising from circuit court proceedings across Cook, DuPage, Kane, Kendall, Lake, and Will counties. Appeals from these counties are heard by three different reviewing courts: the First District (Cook), Second District (Kane, Kendall, Lake), and Third District (DuPage, Will) Illinois Appellate Courts. Joe has presented oral argument before both the Second and Third District Appellate Courts — bringing direct familiarity with the practice standards, local rules, and procedural expectations of each.

If your trial court judgment came from Wheaton, Geneva, Joliet, Waukegan, or Yorkville, contact us promptly to discuss your appellate options before the deadline passes.

Don't assume a bad outcome is final.

We assess appellate viability quickly and honestly — and we'll tell you directly if the appeal isn't likely to succeed. The 30-day window doesn't wait, and neither should you.

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(630) 755-3442