In some, less common situations, a divorce can be granted because one spouse is at fault for
engaging in adultery, domestic abuse, abandonment, imprisonment for more than 18 months, or substance abuse.
However, just as with premarital sex, there are lots of long - term and destructive consequences for
engaging in adultery.
Engaging in adultery in a society where adulterers are punished by death is big time risky behavior and should be discouraged out of love for the would - be adulterer, not just the betrayed spouse.
The fault category alleges one of the spouses
engaged in adultery, was criminally convicted or incarcerated, behaved with cruelty, abandoned the marriage or is an alcoholic.
If enacted into state law, the bill would allow the possibility of an alimony modification or denial if a spouse could prove the other party
engaged in adultery that led to the birth of a child.
Not exact matches
All until they divorce again, commit
adultery again or
engage in homosexual behavior again.
While it may look at first sight like a cynical activity to
engage in,
adultery in fact betrays an absurdly hopeful conviction that one can somehow magically rearrange the difficulties and shortcomings of marriage through a lie.
Most experts define
adultery as an event or condition that occurs when a person who is legally married
engages in a voluntary sexual encounter or relationship with someone other than the person's legal spouse.
Moreover, a State might conclude that
adultery is likely to injure third persons,
in particular, spouses and children of persons who
engage in extramarital affairs.
The grounds are:
Adultery — Obviously, pictures of two people
engaged in relations are extremely hard to acquire.
In particular, spouses who are being divorced against their will, and who have not engaged in egregious misbehavior such as abuse, adultery, or abandonment, should be given preferential treatment by family court
In particular, spouses who are being divorced against their will, and who have not
engaged in egregious misbehavior such as abuse, adultery, or abandonment, should be given preferential treatment by family court
in egregious misbehavior such as abuse,
adultery, or abandonment, should be given preferential treatment by family courts.