Family Law (JDA One Sheet) Flashcards
Requirements to be able to be married
To be married each individual must (CARS):
(1) Capacity to consent
(2) Be of marital age (18 + or parental consent [14-18])
(3) Not be closely related (states split on first cousins)
(4) Be single (not already married)
Requirements for Valid Marriage
(1) Capacity
(2) License
(3) Ceremony
Which state determines validity of marriage?
Validity of marriage/recognition of CL marriages
State w/ most significant relationship to the spouses
A marriage that is valid where it was formed is valid everywhere unless it violates the strong public policy of another state that has the most significant relationship to the spouses and the marriage.
Thus, most states, even if they do not recognize CL marriage, will honor a CL marriage established in another state.
[however, may refuse to honor if the couple had limited contacts w/ the state where CL marriage allegedly established]
Common Law Marriage
(1) capacity;
(2) [present] agreement;
(3) cohabitation for spec period of time;
(4) holding out marital relationship (e.g., common last name, joint bank account, telling others married)
Bigamy
Marriage not valid
Can be saved under:
(a) equity doctrine (strong presumption most recent marriage = valid - but rebutted if 1st marriage not dissolved)
(b) UMDA → valid upon removal of impediment
Premarital Agreements - Jdxn
law of either
(a) where agreement executed
or
(b) state w/ most significant relationship to transaction and parties (where married, lived while married, currently living, assets located, and children born) [majority]
Premarital Agreement Requirements and Enforceability
Agreement - (1) in writing; (2) signed by both parties
Enforceability - Under UPAA, enforceable so long as
(1) voluntary (no fraud/duress/coercion)
(2) substantively fair (not unconscionable when executed)
and
(3) made with full disclosure of assets and obligations (look to see if waived disclosure of prop/financial obligations in writing or whether they had/could have had knowledge of that info)
Involuntary Factors = (1) presence of independent legal counsel; (2) length of time between agreement and wedding; (3) ability to understand the agreement; and (4) other reasons for proceeding with the marriage (i.e. pregnancy).
Premarital Agreements
Child Custody/Support Provisions & Spousal Support Provisions
Child Custody/Support Provisions - Not binding on a court. Unenforceable if not in the best interest of child/adversely affecting right to support
Spousal Support Provisions - some states say invalid against pub pol; UPAA says permitted but unenforceable if makes spouse eligible for welfare
Being Married
Mutual Support Obligation
All states recognize a marital duty of support between spouses
Spouse liable to creditors for necessities provided to spouse (food, clothing, shelter, and sometimes medical expenses to extent debtor spouse unable to pay)
Under doctrine of non-intervention, crts will not intervene in ongoing intact marriage to resolve disputes concerning family support, finances, and expenditures
Loss of consortium claims available to married couples only