A divorce formally dissolves a legal marriage.
Here are rules of and grounds for divorce. To ensure
that a particular divorce serves public policy interests, some states
require a "cooling-off period," which prescribes a time period after legal
separation that spouses must bear before they can initiate divorce
proceedings.
Courts in the United States currently recognize two types
of divorces: absolute divorce and limited divorce. To obtain an absolute
divorce, courts require some type of evidence of misconduct or wrongdoing on
one spouse's part. An absolute divorce is a judicial termination of a legal
marriage. An absolute divorce results in the changing back of both parties'
statuses to single. Limited divorces are typically referred to as separation
decrees. Limited divorces result in termination of the right to cohabitate
but the court refrains from officially dissolving the marriage and the
parties' statuses remain unchanged. Some states permit conversion divorce.
Conversion divorce transforms a legal separation into a legal divorce after
both parties have been separated for a statutorily-prescribed period of
time.
Many states have enacted no-fault divorce statutes. No
fault divorce statutes do not require showing spousal misconduct and are a
response to outdated divorce statutes that require proof of adultery or some
other unsavory act in a court of law by the divorcing party. Nevertheless,
even today, not all states have enacted no fault divorce statutes. Instead,
the court must only find that the relationship is no longer viable, that
irreconcilable differences have caused an irremediable breakdown of the
marriage, that discord or conflict of personalities have destroyed the
marital relationship and prevents any reasonable possibility of
reconciliation, or that the marriage is irretrievably broken.
Look at the various
state laws to determine the divorce law within a particular
jurisdiction.
The Uniform Marriage and Divorce Act
may provide further information.
Property Division
Following a divorce, the court must divide the property
between the spouses. Before legislatures equalized property allocation
between both spouses, many divorce statutes substantially favored property
allocation to the wage-earning spouse. These statutes greatly disadvantaged
women disproportionately because during the 18th, 19th, and early-20th
centuries, the participation of women in the workplace was much less than it
has become during the latter-half of the 20th century and early part of the
21st century. The statutes failed to account for the contributions of the
spouse as homemaker and child-raiser.
Modern courts recognize two different types of property
during property division proceedings - marital property and separate
property. Marital property constitutes any property that the spouses acquire
individually or jointly during the course of marriage. Separate property
constitutes any property that one spouse purchased and possessed prior to
the marriage and that did not substantially change in value during the
course of the marriage because of the efforts of one or both spouses. If the
separate property-owning spouse trades the property for other property or
sells the property, the newly-acquired property or funds in consideration of
the sale remain separate property.
Modern division of property statutes strive for an
equitable division of the marital assets. An equitable division does not
necessarily involve an equal division but rather an allocation that comports
with fairness and justice after a consideration of the totality of the
circumstances. By dividing the assets equitably, a judge endeavors to effect
the final separation of the parties and to enable both parties to start
their post-marital lives with some degree of financial self-sufficiency.
While various jurisdictions permit recognition of different factors, most
courts at least recognize the following factors: contribution to the
accumulation of marital property, the respective parties' liabilities,
whether one spouse received income-producing property while the other did
not, the duration of the marriage, the age and health of the respective
parties, the earning capacity and employability of the respective parties,
the value of each party's separate property, the pension and retirement
rights of each party, whether one party will receive custodial and child
support provisions, the respective contributions of the spouses as a
homemaker and as a parent, the tax consequences of the allocations, and
whether one spouse's marital misconduct caused the divorce. Most
jurisdictions also give the family court judge broad jurisdiction by
providing judges with the right to consider any other just and proper
factor.
When assigning property, judges cannot transfer the
separate property of one spouse to another spouse without the legislature
having previously passed an enabling statute. Whether such an enabling
statute exists varies between jurisdictions.
Alimony
Alimony refers to payments from one spouse to the other. A
court can order one spouse to pay three different types of alimony -
permanent alimony, temporary alimony, and rehabilitative alimony. Permanent
alimony requires the payer to continue paying either for the rest of the
payer's life or until the spouse receiving payments remarries. Temporary
alimony requires payments over a short interval of time so that the payment
recipient can stand alone once again. The period of time covers the length
of the property division litigation. Similar to temporary alimony,
rehabilitative alimony requires the payer to give the recipient short-term
alimony after the property division proceedings have concluded.
Rehabilitative alimony endeavors to help a spouse with lesser employability
or earning capacity become adjusted to a new post-marital life.
Courts allocate alimony with the intention of permitting a
spouse to maintain the standard of living to which the spouse has become
accustomed. Factors affecting whether the court awards alimony include the
marriage's length, the length of separation before divorce, the parties'
ages, the parties' respective incomes, the parties' future financial
prospects, the health of the parties, and the parties' respective faults in
causing the marriage's demise.
If a couple had children together while married, a court
may require one spouse to pay child support to the spouse with custody, but
one should note that alimony and
child support
differ.
A good source of information for grounds for divorce is
Divorce Law.
Also, go to
DivorceSupport.com for
more information.
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