ALIMONY (SPOUSAL SUPPORT OR MAINTENANCE) Flashcards
1
Q
GENERAL PRINCIPLES
A
- Alimony (also known as spousal support/ maintenance) is paid to an economically dependent spouse.
- It may be awarded while parties are still married, during divorce proceeding, or as part of divorce decree.
- Some states consider marital fault in awarding spousal support, but other states do not.
- Trial ct has great discretion in awarding alimony.
2
Q
TYPES OF ALIMONY
A
- 4 types of alimony, & cts can award more than one type in a single award
3
Q
Permanent Periodic Spousal Support
A
- Permanent periodic spousal support is paid regularly (ex. monthly) to support a spouse who has neither the resources nor ability to be self-sustaining.
- Ex: Periodic alimony of $2,000 per month to one former spouse until death/ remarriage.
- Duration: Indefinite.
- Modification: Can be increased, decreased, or terminated upon proof of substantial change of circumstances.
4
Q
Lump Sum
A
- A lump sum payment is a fixed amount payable either all at once/via a series of payments.
- This is often the present value of permanent periodic support.
- Ex: The sum of $36,000 paid at a rate of $1,000 per month for 36 months.
- Duration: For specified time period; can be payable in installments/lump sum.
- Modification: None. This is treated like a K right & is binding on payor’s estate
5
Q
Rehabilitative Spousal Support
A
- Rehabilitative spousal support: periodic payments for a limited time to allow a spouse to gain skills to become self-supporting.
- It can be ordered along w/ permanent periodic/lump sum alimony.
- Ex: Rehabilitative alimony to one former spouse
of $1,000 per month for 36 months to gain education/ skills. - Duration: For specified time period, unless modified by ct.
- Modification: Can be increased, decreased, or terminated upon proof of substantial change of circumstances.
6
Q
Reimbursement Spousal Support
A
- Reimbursement spousal support is occasionally awarded to a spouse who supported the other spouse while the latter obtained a professional license/degree.
- It can be ordered along w/ permanent periodic/lump sum alimony.
- Ex: Sum of $20,000 as repayment for supporting spouse’s contribution to increased education provided to other spouse.
- Duration: For specified period of time; can be payable in installments/lump sum.
- Modification: None. It is treated as a K right & can be awarded even if supporting spouse is not otherwise eligible for spousal support.
- Note: This is a fixed sum award based on the amount of supporting spouse’s contribution, not value of professional license/degree.
7
Q
Tip
A
- Permanent periodic & rehabilitative spousal support awards are prospectively modifiable upon substantial change of circumstances, including death/remarriage.
- Lump sum payments & reimbursement spousal support are nonmodifiable.
8
Q
Tip
A
- On exam, to determine type of support, look carefully at language used in facts.
- Lump sum support is specified as a total amount (ex.“$30,000” or “$30,000, payable in $500 monthly installments”).
- Periodic/rehabilitative support is set out in periodic payments w/ no grand total (ex. “$500 per month” or even “$500 per month for 60 months”).
9
Q
FACTORS TO BE CONSIDERED WHEN
AWARDING ALIMONY
A
- Ct has great discretion in awarding as much spousal
support as necessary for maintenance of the requesting spouse. - Factors considered include:
- Standard of living established during marriage
- Duration of marriage
- Age & physical & emotional condition of parties
- Financial resources of parties
- Contribution of each party to marriage
- Time needed for party seeking support to obtain training necessary to find appropriate employment
- Ability of payor spouse to meet their needs
while paying spousal support - Marital fault (considered in most states for alimony but generally not considered for property division)
- More broadly, the 2 primary considerations are needs of claimant & ability of other spouse to pay.
10
Q
MODIFICATION OF SPOUSAL SUPPORT
A
- Only periodic spousal support (permanent/ rehabilitative alimony) may be modified.
- Periodic spousal support may be modified if there is a substantial change in circumstances regarding needs of recipient spouse/ability of payor spouse to pay.
- Legal obligations to a new spouse/children (but not stepchildren) may be a sufficient change in circumstances if change is unanticipated.
- If a spouse intended to remarry upon divorce, change is not unanticipated & will not constitute a sufficient change in circumstances.
11
Q
Tip
A
Note that a self-induced reduction in income by payor spouse is not sufficient to have spousal
support reduced. Be alert to this issue if a fact
pattern involves a payor spouse who quits their job.
12
Q
TERMINATION OF SPOUSAL SUPPORT
A
- Periodic spousal support terminates upon remarriage of recipient spouse/death of either spouse.
- Most jurisdictions would also terminate spousal support if recipient spouse begins cohabiting w/ someone in a marriage-like relationship.
- Lump sum & reimbursement support is not modifiable & survives death of either spouse
13
Q
TAX CONSEQUENCES OF SPOUSAL
SUPPORT
A
- Under current law, spousal support is not a taxable event.
- For divorce/separation instruments executed before 2019, spousal support payments are deductible by payor & are income to recipient unless instrument is modified to follow current rule.