Tax is often considered a family debt and should usually be borne
equally by spouses.
California is a community property state, which means the law presumes all property acquired during the marriage is owned
equally by both spouses.
Community property is owned jointly and shared
equally by both spouses.
In community property states, marital property is owned
equally by both spouses and courts will generally divide that property equally upon divorce.
Not exact matches
By comparison, 30 % of mothers who say they and their
spouse or partner are
equally focused on their careers say being a working parent has made it harder for them to advance in their job.
Kyle Bourassa, a UA doctoral student in clinical psychology and the paper's lead author, said husbands» and wives» quality of life appears to be
equally impacted
by their
spouse's physical health, with no differences across gender lines.
In community property states such as Arizona, all income earned
by either
spouse belongs
equally to both.
Your refund will be applied
equally among accounts owned
by you and, if filing jointly, your
spouse.
form of joint ownership of an asset
by spouses in which both own the asset
equally; upon death of one
spouse, ownership passes automatically to the surviving
spouse
States having community property rules consider everything earned
by either
spouse during the marriage as belonging to both
spouses equally.
Each
spouse contributes labor (and in some states, capital) for the benefit of the community, and shares
equally in the profits and income earned
by the community.
You and your future
spouse should be represented
by separate lawyers to ensure that your rights, property, and interests are being
equally protected.
Any assets and / or debts acquired
by spouses during marriage belong to both
spouses, and must be split
equally during divorce proceedings.
If no payment is required
by paragraph 1, an additional payment to the insured person's dependants and the persons, other than a former
spouse of the insured person, to whom the insured person had an obligation at the time of the accident to provide support under a domestic contract or court order, to be divided
equally among the persons entitled, of,
If no payment is required
by paragraph 1, an additional payment to the insured person's dependants and the persons, other than a former
spouse of the insured person, to whom the insured person had an obligation at the time of the accident to provide support under a domestic contract or court order, to be divided
equally among the persons entitled, in an amount equal to $ 25,000 if the accident occurred before October 1, 2003 or, if the accident occurred on or after October 1, 2003,
In summary, under Scots law, the wealth built up
by the couple in the course of the marriage will usually be divided more or less
equally, unless one of the
spouses can come up with a compelling argument as to why a fair share should be an unequal share in their favour.
The BC Family Law Act changed this rules and now states that regardless of whether
spouses have or do not have assets, debts are generally
equally shared
by spouses.
Further, might shared custody alleviate some economic disadvantages to one
spouse by sharing post separation child care more fairly freeing up both parents and not just one to work
equally hard on their careers?
The BC Family Law Act changed this rule and now states that regardless of whether
spouses have or do not have assets, debts and taxes are generally
equally shared
by spouses.
Not a lot of people think about making a legal Will drawn up
by family lawyers; they may just tell their
spouse or children that anything they have should be divided
equally between them.
Property acquired
by either
spouse before the marriage, or acquired individually during the marriage (such as a gift or inheritance), is separate property and goes to the owner; property acquired jointly during the marriage is marital property and is divided between the husband and wife, not
equally, but in a just and reasonable manner, meaning as the court deems fair.
If you live in a community property state — Arizona, California, Louisiana, New Mexico, Nevada, Idaho, Texas, Washington or Wisconsin — assets and debts you acquire during your marriage belong
equally to both
spouses, except in certain narrow circumstances, such as assets acquired
by inheritance or gift that you kept separate from your marital assets.
In general, all income earned
by either
spouse, and all property purchased with the income, belongs
equally to both
spouses.
As community property is
equally and jointly owned
by both
spouses, each has the right
by law to control community property.
In New Mexico, the law designates all property acquired
by either
spouse during the marriage as community property that must be divided
equally upon divorce according to value.
At the same time, your awareness of what your partner or
spouse is feeling, and how you respond to his or her needs are
equally influenced
by your earlier experiences.