Family Law Flashcards
What is a prenuptial agreement?
A contract between fiances about economic or other adjustments to be made if the marriage fails
What are the grounds for challenging a prenuptial agreement?
- Statute of frauds
- No marriage
- Uniform premarital agreement act
- Non-voluntary (i.e., time pressure, surprise)
- Unconscionability
- When executed
- Without disclosure of financial data
- Without waiver of disclosure
How do you get married in Virginia?
Marriage must be ceremonial
- Requirements
-
License
- __Requires capacity
- Requires payment
- Expires after 60 days
-
Ceremony
- Requires celebrant (e.g., clergy, minister, etc.)
- Requires exchange of solemn promises
-
License
What is the rule regarding common law marriage in Virginia?
Not permissible in Virginia
But Virginia honors common law marriages from other states (e.g., DC)
How do you terminate a marriage?
- Annulment
- Based on grounds that pre-date the marriage
- Divorce
- Based on grounds that take place after the marriage
What are the grounds for annulment that make marriage void?
The following grounds make a marriage void
They cannot be waived
- Bigamy
- Already married
- Also a crime
- Subject to defense of good faith belief that former spouse died
- Incest
- Includes:
- Nephews, neices, ancestors, descendants, etc.
- Excludes:
- Cousins
- Includes:
- Underage
- Age requirements:
- 18 generally
- 16 with consent of one parent
- Under 16 if:
- Female pregnant
- Parents of underage party consent
- Age requirements:
If the grounds for annulment that make the marriage void can be established, is it necessary to get an annulment?
No. The marriage is void. But the parties should still get an annulment in order to:
- Clarify the record (and ease burden of proof in future)
- Get judicial assistance in resolving collateral issues
- E.g., division of property, custody of children, etc.
What are the grounds for annulment that make marriage voidable?
- Mental incapacity
- Mental illness
- Developmental disability
- Intoxication
- Duress
- E.g., shotgun wedding
- Incurable impotency
- Inability to have sex, not conceive
- Must be incurable (i.e., Cialis won’t work)
- Couple must have abstained before marriage
- Fraud
- Must have gone to an essential aspect of marriage
- Essential aspects include concealment of:
- Previous felony conviction
- Carrying another’s child
- Having a child with another
- Prostitution
- Religious beliefs
- Sexual predilections
- Essential aspects exclude concealment of:
- Money
- Property
- Social status
- Essential aspects include concealment of:
- Must have gone to an essential aspect of marriage
For purposes of the voidable grounds for annulment, how are each of them waived?
Generally, by sticking with the marriage and continuing to have sex (unless impotence grounds) either:
- After impediment is removed (incapacity)
- After marriage entered into (duress)
- After disclosure of impotency
- After disclosure of fraud
What is the statute of limitations for pursuing an annulment?
Two years after marriage
What court do you go to for a divorce?
Circuit court (i.e., chancery)
(not juvenile and domestic relations)
What is required for a Virginia court to have subject matter jurisdiction in a divorce proceeding?
- 1 spouse domiciled in Virginia
- For at least 6 months prior to filing
What is required for a Virginia court to have jurisdiction in a case requesting something other than a divorce decree (e.g., money)?
Virginia court must have personal jurisdiction, based on normal rules of civil procedure
What are the venue rules in Virginia for a divorce proceeding?
Can file in any county within the Commonwealth
If you file in a non-preferred venue, the court can transfer to a preferred venue, or the other party can move for transfer
Preferred venues include:
- County where parties last lived together
- County where D resides, if in state
- If D resides out of state, county where P resides
What are the different types of divorce proceedings?
- Legal separation
- Divorce a mensa et thoro
- Absolute divorce
- Divorce a vinculo matrimonii
- Fault-based
- No-fault
- Divorce a vinculo matrimonii
What are the fault-based grounds for absolute divorce?
- Adultery and sodomy or buggery outside the marriage
- Spouse convicted of felony, sentenced to a year or more
- Cruelty or desertion
- Includes:
- Permanent refusal of sex
- Domestic abuse (physical or verbal)
- Constructive desertion (i.e., changing of locks)
- Only grounds after 1 year of behavior
- Includes:
What are the affirmative defenses to fault-based divorce?
- Connivance
- Similar to entrapment
- Condonation
- Similar to waiver
- Requires:
- Knowledge
- Forgiveness (based on commitment to stop)
- Resumption of sexual relations
- Recrimination
- Similar to unclean hands (i.e., offsetting conduct)
- Other states have abolished this because it does not make sense to keep the spouses together
- Statute of limitations
- 5 years for adultery grounds
What is the evidentiary requirement for testimony evidence in a divorce proceeding?
Testimony must be corroborated (but only slight corroboration)
What are the no-fault grounds for absolute divorce?
Requirements:
- If no kids and separation agreement
- No cohabitation for 6 months
- If kids or no separation agreement
- No cohabitation for 1 year
What is the effect of legal separation?
- All collateral rights are adjudicated
- Marriage still intact (neither party can marry while alive)
- Personal and property rights are protected
- E.g., tax benefits
- E.g., health benefits
What are the grounds for legal separation?
- Cruelty and reasonably apprehension of bodily harm
- Abandonment and desertion
Note: no statutorily required period of time before you can file for separation, so you can get a separation, wait a year, and then get an absolute divorce
What is the process called for dividing property in a divorce?
What are the steps?
Equitable division
Steps:
- Classify every asset
- Distribute the assets
Under equitable division, what are the different classifications of assets?
What do they include?
- Spousal assets (i.e., Spouse A, Spouse B)
- Anything owned by spouse prior to marriage
- Anything obtained by spouse as gift or inheritance
- Anything obtained by spouse after separation
- Pain and suffering recoveries in tort
- Passive appreciation on the above items
- Marital assets
- Anything obtained during marriage not listed above
- Regardless of who earned it
- Reglardless of who has title
- Anything obtained during marriage not listed above