Evolved Law is a modern, fully remote Colorado law firm providing strategic representation, mediation, divorce coaching, and litigation support in family law, divorce, allocation of parental responsibilities, and animal law matters.
Founded by attorney and mediator Tia M. Zavaras, Evolved Law was created for clients who want thoughtful legal guidance, practical strategy, and a path forward that does not default to unnecessary conflict. The firm serves clients throughout Colorado with a focus on helping individuals and families make informed decisions during difficult and often emotional transitions.
Evolved Law represents clients in divorce, child custody, post-decree disputes, mediation, litigation strategy, and trial-level family law matters. The firm’s approach is collaborative by nature and strategic by design. Its attorneys understand that litigation is sometimes necessary, but they also believe that court should be used intentionally and with a clear purpose.
In addition to its family law practice, Evolved Law provides specialized animal law representation. The firm assists clients with pet custody disputes, animal ownership and possession issues, replevin matters involving companion animals, service animal and emotional support animal concerns, animal control matters, dangerous dog allegations, and dog bite defense. Evolved Law’s animal law division is led by attorney Cerridwyn Nordstrom, whose practice includes dog bite defense, pet custody, and animal-related litigation.
Evolved Law is particularly well suited for clients who want more than a traditional litigation model. The firm combines legal analysis, negotiation strategy, mediation experience, and courtroom readiness to help clients understand their options and protect what matters most.
Whether guiding clients through divorce, helping parents resolve custody disputes, defending clients in dog bite or animal control matters, or addressing disputes involving beloved pets, Evolved Law provides clear advice, steady advocacy, and practical solutions grounded in Colorado law.