| The
Decision Of Getting a
Divorce |
After becoming situated, the first thing to do is to hire an
attorney who will draft and serve the divorce complaint. It makes no
difference, though, whether you serve your mate or he serves you. After an
answer is filed, the divorce usually proceeds like this: the couple spends
several months or years trying to figure out how their assets and/or
children can best be divided. Allegations fly back and forth. Children
travel back and forth. The couple eventually tires of each other enough to
allow for settlement. If they are really stubborn, they foolishly opt for
trial.
A better course of action is less adverstohama. While you may
legitimately be angry at your husband, some things are better left unsaid.
And they are left unsaid out of a desire to get the best possible result,
not out of any misguided sense of altruism. The best deals, be they in
business or divorce, are deals in which both parties get most of what they
want. A one-sided deal invites the other side to breach it. You will find
(possibly the hard way) that it is better to try to work with your spouse
than to fight over everything. Although fights are inevitable, cooperation
in the face of adversity is preferable.
Grounds for Divorce and Annulment
A divorce is different from an annulment. A divorce ends a
valid marriage, whereas an annulment means that the marriage was invalid
from its inception. Grounds for an annulment include being under age at
the time of marriage, bigamy, fraud, duress, and mental incompetence.
Annulling a marriage takes an act of court, and a decree of annulment
means that the marriage never occurred.
Traditionally, a divorce was granted only if one of the
partners was found to be at "fault"-if they did something wrong. This
fault-oriented divorce concept was prevalent until the 1970s, and is still
available today, albeit less often. Grounds for divorce because of fault
include matters such as criminal convictions, nonsupport, adultery,
imprisonment, insanity, impotence, violence, and alcoholism.
Every state now has some form of no-fault divorce (although
some states are considering revoking no-fault). No-fault means precisely
that: neither party needs to prove that the other did anything wrong in
order to get a divorce. All the person seeking the divorce has to do is
state at the outset of the proceedings that there are irreconcilable
differences or that the marriage is irretrievably broken (depending upon
the state).
Many states offer both fault and no-fault grounds for
divorce, either can be alleged in the complaint, and the decision as to
which way to go really depends upon your state laws. The main difference
between the two is in the proof required to get the divorce. No-fault
requires no proof, and fault requires proof of the fault alleged. If a
wife decides to sue on fault grounds alone, she has to be prepared to
prove that the husband did something wrong. If she cannot, the divorce
could ostensibly be denied, although that is rare. More often fault is
alleged in the complaint because the state's laws may grant some benefit
to the spouse found not at fault-custody, increased child support, higher
alimony.
In some states, an adulterous spouse will likely have a more
difficult time getting custody of the kids, and many states permit the
court to consider marital misdeeds when dividing property.
Defenses to Divorce
There is no defense to a no-fault divorce. If one partner
wants one, then there is little he other spouse can do about it. Defenses
to divorce are really only applicable in those thirty-five states that
continue to allow fault-oriented divorces.
In the case where the petitioner chooses to proceed with a
fault-oriented divorce, several defenses are available to bar the divorce
and remain married (for whatever reasons one may have). An attorney can
explain these defenses and clarify whether they might apply in a
particular case.
Foreign Divorces
Many people, indeed most people, understandably want to get
their divorce over with as quickly as possible. Rather than submit to the
jurisdiction and tedious process involved in their state's legal system,
some people opt to try to get divorced in a different state or country
that may have a reputation for fast divorce proceedings. Collectively,
divorces obtained in different countries or different states are called
"foreign divorces."
In order for a divorce in a different state to be valid,
generally, one of the spouses must be living in the state where the
divorce is sought. Both spouses must also agree to the jurisdiction
(authority) of that state to grant the divorce. Without both
requirements-residency of one spouse and consent of both spouses-a foreign
state's divorce will be invalid in the home state. It will have the same
legal effect as if no divorce proceedings ever occurred.
Divorces in other countries are often also called quickie
divorces. They can take place in Mexico, the Dominican Republic, or some
other country. They happen much faster there than in the United
States-often in a matter of a few days. Unfortunately, quickie divorces
are quite risky, as they too are often deemed to be invalid once the
couple gets back to the United States. Check with an attorney to see how
these divorces are received in your state.
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