Family Flashcards
Gifts in contemplation of marriage
If the marriage does not take place, gifts are conditioned on the marriage!
o The engagement ring must be returned!
Uniform Premarital Agreements Act (UPAA)
- Can agree to keep property separate
- Can waive spousal support
**Court is not bound by provisions regarding children
- Includes child custody and support = COURT IS NEVER BOUND!
Requirements for a Valid Premarital Agreement
- In writing and signed
- Entered into voluntarily
o Signed the night before the wedding without lawyers looking at it may be involuntary! - Full disclosure or independent knowledge of assets
Additional requirements?
o UPAA -> Courts look at if agreement was unconscionable
o Some courts consider whether the economic provisions are fair and reasonable
Pre-Marital Agreements
The court must consider each provision to ensure that it is fair and doe snot violate public policy
***If there is a pre-marital agreement, there must be an analysis for each provision!
Requirements for Valid Marriage
- License (failure to meet this will not invalidate the marriage)
- Ceremony with authorized officiant
- No legal impediment (Can’t marry your sister or married to someone else)
- Capacity to consent (Of age and not drunk!)
Common Law Marriage
- Consent to marry
- Cohabitation
- Holding themselves publicly as spouses
- common last name, joint bank accounts, telling others in community…
If a valid common law marriage is formed in one state, it will generally be regarded as valid even in those states that do not recognize common law marriage!
Alienation of affection - Tortious Interference with Marriage
3rd party is alienating affection of spouses
Requirements
1. Genuine love and affection between valid married spouses
2. Evidence that love and affection was destroyed
3. Defendant’s actions caused the loss of love and affection!
Damages can be awarded!
**Have been abolished in most states soooo
Criminal Conversation
Requirements
1. Valid marriage
2. Adultery with 3rd party
Damages can be awarded!
**Have been abolished in most states soooo
Annulment
Declares marriage invalid because an impediment that existed at the time of the marriage makes it legally void or voidable
Void Marriage
- Invalid because it failed to meet the essential requirements of legal marriage
- No legal action needed
- Can be attacked by third party
If the impediment causing the marriage to be void is removed (example, spouse from a prior valid marriage dies), the UMDA and some state’s provide that the marriage becomes valid if the parties continue to cohabit
- Other states do not allow validation and hold that the marriage remains void and the parties need to marry after the impediment is gone to have a valid marriage
Examples -> Bigamy and too closely related (marrying a family member)
o Bigamy = marrying someone when they are already married to someone else!
Voidable Marriage
Valid until declared null
- Because of an impediment that existed at the time of the marriage, one of the spouses may bring an action to have the marriage annulled
- No collateral attacks by third parties
- Can be remedied
Examples
- Non-age, capacity, duress, fraud
Effect of Annulment
- Marriage set aside as if it never existed
- Children remain being considered marital children
No-fault Divorce
Requires the showing of one of the following:
1. Irreconcilable differences – both spouses agree OR
- Simply cannot get along anymore
2. Living separate and apart for specified time OR
3. Incompatibility
Fault Grounds for Divorce
- Adultery
o Spouse presents circumstantial evidence of opportunity and inclination - Desertion (Abandonment)
- Cruelty
o Extreme physical or mental - Habitual drunkenness or drug abuse
- Insanity
Jurisdiction for Divorce
One spouse must be domiciled in state (be a bona-fide resident of the state)
Court’s jurisdiction to determine property rights for a divorce
Generally, a court cannot determine out-of-state property or award support unless the court has personal jurisdiction over both parties
In an ex-parte divorce (one where only the plaintiff is before the court), the court can grant divorce but it cannot award spousal support or divide out-of-state property
Exception
- Martial property located with the state
**Courts must have personal jurisdiction over both parties to distribute assets
**Courts generally cannot split property unless they were married or had cohabitation agreement/common law marriage
Defenses to Divorce
No-Fault
- Deny the existence of one of the grounds
Fault
Collusion
- Agreement between the spouses to simulate grounds for divorce or to forgo raising a valid defense
Connivance
- Willing consent to the other spouse’s misconduct
Condonation
- Forgiveness of marital offenses with full knowledge of the wrongs
Recrimination
- Arises when the party seeking the divorce is also guilty of misconduct for which a divorce may be granted
Community Property (Not common)
All property acquired during the marriage is deemed owned ½ by each spouse, and all property brought into the marriage or acquired by gift or bequest is separate property
Equitable division of all property (Not common)
The court divides all property owned by either spouse, whether acquired before or after the marriage
Equitable division of marital property (Most common and what we’ll follow!)
Each spouse takes their separate property, and the court only divides the property acquired during the marriage
Factors considered
- earning capacity of each party
- duration of marriage
- standard of living
- source of money used to purchase marital assets
- custody of minor children
Two-Step Process for division of property
Step One -> Classification of Property
- Determine what is marital property and what is separate property
Step Two -> Equitable Division of Property
- Make an equitable division of the marital estate no matter how the property is titled
**Equitable division does not necessarily mean equal!!!
**Property distribution decrees are not modifiable
Separate Property
- Property owned before marriage
- Property acquired by gift or inheritance
- Property acquired in exchange for separate property
- Income and appreciation of separate property
- Pain and suffering awards
- Personal damages
o Future medical expenses or future lost wages - Property acquired after legal separation
Marital Property
- Property acquired during marriage
- Earnings
- Employment benefits -> pensions and stock options
- Lost wages
- Reimbursements -> medical bills incurred and paid with marital property
- Recovery for damage to marital property
**All of these are subject to equitable distribution by the court
Property that Changes Character (Was separate but is considered marital now)
Commingling
- Separate property can become marital if inextricably intertwined
Transmutation of Separate Property
- Separate property becomes marital property based on intent of parties