About Kathy Dailey
Kathy Dailey Hubbard practices family law across two state lines. She is admitted to practice in South Carolina and Colorado and maintains memberships in the Colorado State Bar, the American Bar Association, and another professional organization.
Hubbard built her career handling family law matters in a mix of courtroom and settlement settings. She began taking on cases that ranged from contested divorces to complex custody disputes. Over time she added cases involving financial issues in dissolution proceedings and post-judgment modifications. Her work has required both trial preparation and negotiating negotiated resolutions.
Her practice covers the core areas most families face. She handles divorce filings, child custody and visitation arrangements, child and spousal support, property division, and enforcement or modification of existing orders. She also works on parenting plans and temporary relief matters. In cases that allow for an alternative to trial, she pursues negotiated settlements and other dispute resolution options.
Colleagues describe Hubbard as steady in court and deliberate at the negotiating table. She maintains an active professional presence through the Colorado State Bar and the American Bar Association, and she retains an additional current membership in another bar-related group. Those connections keep her current on procedural and substantive developments in family law across the two states where she holds licensure.
Her approach blends preparation with pragmatism. She prepares discovery and motions, but she also assesses when settlement will produce a better result for a client. When cases go to hearing, she handles advocacy and evidentiary matters. When parties seek less adversarial paths, she assists in mediations and negotiated agreements.
Hubbard is based at Crossroads Family Law. There she continues to represent individuals and families in family court matters, balancing litigation and negotiated resolutions. Her current practice focuses on divorce, child custody, support issues, and related family law disputes.