Not exact matches
If you are contemplating
filing for divorce or you have already been served with a
divorce complaint, you probably have legitimate concerns about whether the emotions that often accompany a marital breakup, such as anger, frustration, anxiety and bitterness, will color your judgment, impact your behavior and
result in unintended consequences on your future and that
of your children.
This would lead to absurd
results: a person telling a
divorcing friend to ask
for alimony, another telling his neighbour to
file for the annulment
of the sale
of a house due to hidden defects, or a professor giving concrete examples in class could then all be in violation
of the Act.
Marriages can be saved as a
result of this trial period, which is not possible
for couples who immediately
file for divorce.
If you haven't
filed for divorce yet, however, the
resulting order will be open - ended because the court has no way
of knowing whether you will actually initiate
divorce proceedings in the future.
Although
filing for bankruptcy does not remove you from a deed or car title, stopping payments on these debts might create financial liability
for your ex-spouse on the property you received as a
result of the
divorce.
Most couples in Georgia who
file for a
divorce use the no - fault ground since it minimizes the duration
of the
divorce proceedings and eliminates the emotional efforts involved when publicizing the intimacies
of your marriage and the
resulting adultery to the court.
However, if adultery is the cause
of your
divorce, you have the option
of filing for divorce based on adultery or on no - fault grounds; the
results of your
divorce will likely be similar, either way.
When people speak
of being legally separated in New Jersey, they may be referring to the fact that they have entered into a written separation agreement governing custody and a parenting plan and support (and maybe even division
of property and debt); or where, instead
of having the marriage dissolved, the spouses
filed for separate maintenance (a type
of support proceeding in New Jersey that
results in the entry
of a support order but not dissolution
of the marriage) or
for divorce a mensa et thoro (
divorce from bed and board) that allows the parties to live separately while still remaining married (which some spouses wish to do
for religious reasons or, where the insurance plan allows it, to continue with health coverage through the other spouse).