
How Not To Suck At Divorce 187. Divorce Help. When the Other Side Won’t Respond: Motions to Compel, Subpoenas, and Strategy
When your divorce is dragging because the other side won’t respond, it can feel like psychological warfare—especially when kids and money are on the line. In this episode, Morgan Stogsdill and Andrea Rappaport break down what’s actually happening when a divorce case stalls, how to tell the difference between normal delays and strategic stalling, and what to do next.
You’ll learn the practical legal steps attorneys use to create structure—like mediation deadlines, motions to compel, subpoenas, depositions, and discovery strategies—plus the mindset shifts that keep you from spiraling and spending thousands of dollars reacting emotionally. Bottom line: when the time is right, get aggressive—because talk is cheap.
Stalling is one of the most common (and most infuriating) divorce experiences, and it happens for a few big reasons:
- They don’t have their shit together (missing documents, incomplete financials, no affidavit, disorganized life)
- They think you’ll panic and settle cheap just to end the pain
- It’s a power play (silence = control, especially with high-conflict people)
- Their attorney is overwhelmed, under-resourced, or occasionally strategic (timing money events like bonuses, etc.)
The good news: stalling isn’t a dead end. It’s a problem that can be solved with structure, strategy, and sometimes court pressure.
The First Question to Ask Your Lawyer
Before you go scorched earth, ask this exact question:
“Is this delay normal… or is this strategic stalling?”
Morgan explains that a good attorney can often tell you:
- whether the other lawyer is just chronically slow/unorganized, or
- whether the other side is intentionally dragging things out to wear you down.
These two scenarios require totally different responses.
What Judges Respond To: Structure + Deadlines
Stalled cases usually move when there’s something real on the calendar:
- court dates
- motion hearings
- trial dates
- mediations with firm deadlines
Morgan’s most practical advice:
If nothing is moving, push for a trial date. Even if the first date doesn’t “stick,” a real end date creates pressure—and pressure creates movement.
Action Steps: What You Can Do When the Other Side Won’t Respond
1) Stop guessing. Get clarity.
Tell your attorney you’re frustrated and ask:
- Is this normal?
- What’s the standard timeline in this jurisdiction?
- What steps do we take in order if they don’t comply?
- At what point do we file something?
This helps you avoid spending money “going aggressive” too early… only for the judge to give them another two weeks anyway.
2) Use mediation for structure (when appropriate)
If both parties will participate, mediation can impose deadlines and create structure outside the court’s slow pacing.
But if the other side is truly non-cooperative, Morgan’s blunt truth is:
“The only road it all leads to is the courthouse.”
3) File the motion when it matters
When someone repeatedly ignores deadlines, attorneys can file motions that force compliance (example: motion to compel for missing financials or discovery).
Morgan’s mantra:
“When the time is right, get aggressive. File that motion. Put your money where your mouth is—because talk is cheap.”
4) Use discovery to shake them awake
Depending on your state/country, your attorney may be able to use tools like:
- Subpoenas (banks, employers, third parties)
- Requests to admit (miss the deadline → deemed admitted in some places)
- Depositions (sometimes the notice alone changes behavior)
- Other discovery strategies tailored to what the other side is hiding/protecting
Key idea: if they think non-response prevents you from finding things, they’re wrong. You have legal tools.
The Mindset Shift That Saves You Thousands
Andrea nails why stalling feels so brutal: silence makes our brain fill in the worst story.
But spiraling leads to:
- emotional प्रतिक्रtions
- late-night lawyer texts
- expensive back-and-forth
- more stress (and less strategy)
Their advice:
- treat it like an office problem: warnings → structure → consequences
- don’t “manage” your ex—you can’t
- focus on what you control: your strategy + your next move
Unpopular (but important) truth: Sometimes it’s your lawyer.
Andrea and Morgan both acknowledge that sometimes the delay is happening because your attorney isn’t assertive enough.
What to do:
- Tell your lawyer clearly what you expect and ask for a plan
- If it doesn’t improve, consider switching attorneys or adding support from someone else at the firm
You’re allowed to advocate for yourself.
Key Takeaways
- Find out if the delay is normal vs. strategic
- Structure moves stalled cases: deadlines, hearings, trial dates
- Aggression works only when timed correctly
- Discovery tools can force the truth out (even when they stall)
- Don’t let silence bait you into expensive emotional reactions
- Sometimes the fix is a better plan—or a stronger attorney
What can I do if my spouse won’t respond in a divorce?
Talk to your attorney about whether it’s normal delay or stalling. If it’s repeated, attorneys can use mediation deadlines, motions to compel, subpoenas, and setting court/trial dates to force progress.
When should I file a motion in divorce?
Not every delay requires court action. But repeated missed deadlines and noncompliance often require filing a motion—because court pressure creates structure.
Can a divorce be delayed on purpose?
Yes. Some people stall as a strategy to wear you down emotionally or financially, or to maintain control.
What’s the best way to stop stalling tactics?
Structure. Deadlines. And if necessary, court dates and motions.
Our Divorce Crash Course was designed to hold your hand through the process and help you avoid major and expensive mistakes. Learn more here: https://www.hownottosuckatdivorce.com/divorce-crash-course
Our Family Wizard is another fantasitc resource for those who need help navigating the "fun" world of coparenting. Head to this landing page to see how we work closely with them to support our listeners! http://www.ourfamilywizard.com/notsuck
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