Disclaimer: All facts gleaned from the filings stated hereafter are only as truthful as the petitioner. The tone of this article expresses a style of writing historically employed by America’s greatest writers and, as such, is for opinion purposes only. No intentional harm is due. Do not read if the topic of divorce (even your own) causes you emotional distress. Continue at your own risk.

On August 21, 2025, Mackay J. Miner made it official in the City of St. Louis: his five-year marriage to Tess A. Losada-Tindall is done. The Petition for Dissolution of Marriage, filed through his attorney Eleanore I. Palozola of Paule, Camazine & Blumenthal, P.C., wastes no time dressing things up. The filing is clear: there’s no saving this union. It is, as Missouri law requires the petitioner to declare, irretrievably broken.

The couple wed on July 18, 2020, in Orleans Parish, Louisiana—a date now locked in history as the prologue to a marriage that lasted just over five years. Their separation is recorded as July 3, 2025, a summer fracture that paved the way to this courtroom threshold. There were no children born of the marriage, and the petition notes no pregnancy at the time of filing.

Neither Miner nor Losada-Tindall seeks maintenance, and both are employed. The petition affirms they are not in the Armed Forces, further underscoring the ordinary, civilian unraveling of what began with vows in Louisiana. What remains is the matter of division: marital property and debts must be split, while each party’s separate property is to be set apart.

If divorce filings often strip away emotion in favor of legal shorthand, this one still reads like a quiet declaration of finality. Two people, once partners, are now reduced to columns of property, debts, and dates—a marriage unspooled into the language of law.

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