What is pre-marital assets, for the purposes of a Rhode Iceland divorce?
Seems like a fairly straightforward question at Rhode Iceland in a divorce, is not it? You think that there is only property that either spouse owned before the marriage. Makes logical sense does not it?
I have often wondered whether the law needs to complicate things, or if the rules only give us a helping hand. But for whatever reason, it does. Maybe it's just that the law is to consider how many lives as possible the circumstances and the judge is a bit of a rest from all the emotions, which, of course, the high court in the family on a daily basis.
In any case, before the marriage is not always so easy. For example, if you have a premarital items, like a billiard table you owned before you got married, and you are in a marriage at home with all (man, woman and children) and everyone uses it for 15 years, there is still a pre - marital asset? Or could it be that by investing in the home as a family and that the owner of the object caused it to lose its "pre-marriage" "quality and converts it into a" marital asset "."
Consider this example and see what you think:
Jim and Cindy each property in their own name. They married in 1995 and in 1996 they bought a piece of property to live, while they let their separate houses that they owned before the marriage. Both Jim and Cindy separate bank accounts and the rental money from their homes into their own accounts. Jim, not that Cindy on his bank account and Cindy does not mean that Jim on their bank account. They agreed to their bank accounts separately.
While in her marital home money each of their weekly income and put it into a joint checking account to pay their bills on their marital home? In 2008 Cindy and Jim agree that an amicable divorce. Cindy files for divorce. Jim files his counter-claim for divorce.
To be on the safe side Jim HiRes a lawyer, its recommended by a friend to him advice on his divorce. Unbeknownst Jim, his lawyer focused his practice on commercial real estate closings. During the divorce, Cindy discovered that Jim is not quite true, for the last three years of their marriage and was an affair with her next door neighbor, Sharon.
Cindy is angry and wants to punish Jim for his infidelity. Cindy HiRes a full-time family attorney who discovers that Jim has to pay water ad sewer taxes, and his property for his buildings from their joint account.
Cindy's divorce lawyer people say that Jim's house is a marital asset because it is their joint account, and hence their funds were used to Jim's house. Cindy's lawyer checks into their finances and how to separate their house and notes that everything that appears, were separated and he, therefore, that Cindy's house is certainly prior marital status.
Since infidelity is usually only by the court if the division of marital property of the parties and not as a basis for the "punishment" "a defaulting party, what, if anything, one could argue that Jim's house separate from this chaos and send it to a pre-marital?
Is there anything that Jim could possibly into Cindy's separate building within the scope of the marital assets that the court has the power to distribute?
When Cindy was only half of what Jim has, with the joint bank account, Jim is entitled to that additional contribution to pay minor expenses to his separate house?
When Cindy was on disability for a time Cindy and Jim borrowed money to the mortgage payments on her separate house for several months, makes a difference?
When Cindy to a new addition to their separate house, but they did so with a credit program, said Jim, as a means of income to pay back the loan, this means that if Jim does not, the loan application?
These are just some of the many questions that deal with premarital property under Rhode Iceland divorce law.
There are at least 3 more direct questions relating to this scenario. Can you spot it?
If an item of considerable value in your life and you did not want to lose it right to appoint or to sell it by the court, it could be possibly worth the price of a divorce attorney Rhode Iceland to offer you the best chance to save the item?
Visit Rhode Iceland Divorce Lawyer article by Christopher Pearsall
Free information on divorce visit Iceland Rhode LawyersRi.com
Contact Attorney Christopher Pearsall at (401) 354-2369 now for your low-cost consultation from Rhode Iceland's Most Affordable Family Law Attorney.
This article is for information purposes only and is not legal advice. You should not take legal action without legal advice from a licensed doctor, about your specific circumstances.The Rhode Iceland Supreme Court licenses all lawyers in the general practice of law and has no procedure for recognition of specialties.
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