Help a family through divorce and gift them $1,000

Introduce someone to Brown Family Law who needs a divorce in Utah. If they hire us, we will gift them $1000 — subtracted from their overall bill. It’s that simple!

How It Works

  • Make a 3-way intro using the referral form below.
  • We ensure we can help the person that you refer. If we can help, we receive our consultation fee, schedule a consultation, and handle everything discreetly.
    • Note: We charge all potential clients a $400 consultation fee. That fee is applied to a client’s retainer when they hire us.
  • If they meet our qualifications and hire us, we will gift the $1000 to the person you refer.

Who Qualifies

  • Utah divorce cases (priority: with children, home, and meaningful assets)
  • New clients only — conflict checks and right fit analysis apply
  • No previous attorneys on the case

Payout Details

To the person you refer: Credit applied to referred’s monthly invoices until full $1000 credited

  • Tax
    • No W-9 required because client is receiving a discount on their bill, which is not income.
Responsive FAQ Section

Frequently Asked Questions

Anyone. Non-attorneys, attorneys, paralegals. Those who live in Utah and those who live outside Utah. Anyone.

No. You may refer as many people as you want. Each qualified hire will receive a gift of $1000.

You will receive $1000 off of your overall Brown Family Law bill. We do this by crediting your monthly invoices by $250 until the $1000 is fully credited.

Our team has created an advanced internal tracking system that tags all referred cases so we can shepherd them through the intake, qualification, and payout process.

Yes, unless there is some extraordinary circumstance involving confidentiality that precludes us from informing you.

No. Because of our attorney confidentiality rules, if someone does not hire us, we do not have authorization to communicate that information.

No. The work we do for our clients is confidential. We do not give updates to third-parties about what happens in a client’s case.

Utah divorce (preferably including children, real property, and retirement assets); new clients only — conflict checks and right fit analysis apply; no previous attorneys on the case.

No. Discounts on invoices are not considered income for tax purposes.

Yes. We reserve the privilege to choose our clients. Sometimes there are conflicts. Sometimes, there are case types we simply do not handle. Sometimes, people ask us to do things that are contrary to our ethics. Ultimately, we want to ensure we are the best law firm to help individuals, and if we determine another firm can help someone better than we can, we will decline representation and give them a referral to another law firm we believe will serve them better.