Family Law Flashcards

1
Q

factors to consider when dividing marital property

A

— income of the parties;

— assets of the parties;

— length of marriage;

— standard of living during the marriage;

— age / health of the parties

— earning potential of the parties

— [some states] marital misconduct

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2
Q

what makes a premarital agreement enforceable

A

— fair and full disclosure of assets

— agreement is fair and reasonable (strong presumption toward enforcement if full disclosure of assets, even if terms seem unfair)

voluntary (consider things like time pressure, sophistication of parties, oppy to consult counsel)

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3
Q

best interests of the child

A

Mnemonic: FLIP DADS

F - financial ability of parents – who has the money?

L - lifestyle of parents – does one parent smoke crack or hang out with a shady crew?

I – Initial custody, courts will look at how custody was initially awarded

P – Primary caregiver (who has been the childs primary caregiver up until now).

D – Desires of the child (this one is pretty important if the child is older. Maybe a 6 year old can’t decide… but a 14 year old? That will be given way more weight).

A – Availability of parents and their respective living arrangements.

D – Domestic violence. Obviously prior incidents of domestic violence initiated by one parent will cut against them for custody.

S – Siblings should not be separated because one can find a lot of support and stability being with their sibling (unless you don’t like your siblings).

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4
Q

laws governing family law issues

A

UPAA = Uniform Premarital Agreement Act
A conflicts-resolving law; apply the law of the state w/ most significant relationship to the agreement & marriage

UIFSA = Uniform Interstate Family Support Act
A jurisdictional law; allows long-arm PJ over non-resident parent to establish or enforce child support

UCCJEA = Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction & Enforcement Act
A jurisdictional law; streamlines jurisdiction to avoid disputes and ease enforcement of child custody and visitation orders

PKPA = Parental Kidnapping Prevention Act
Similar to UCCJEA; also requires states to give full faith & credit to other states’ custody determinations

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5
Q

jurisdiction to determine child custody

A

home-state jurisdiction
State has jx to make custody determination in child’s home state:
— state where child has lived for past 6mo or since birth
— if child is now absent from the state, the state that was the child’s home state at some point within the past 6mo and 1 parent still lives there

significant-connection jx
applies if:
— no state has home state jx
— child & 1+ parent have significant connection w/ state
— substantial evidence in state regarding child

default jx
applies when no state has home state or significant connection jx

exclusive continuing jx
a state has exclusive jx until neither the child nor the parents live in that state, or the child no longer has a significant connection w/ that state

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6
Q

fault-based grounds for divorce

A

— adultery

— cruelty

— desertion/abandonment

— habitual drunkenness

— institutionalization

— indignity

— imprisonment

— bigamy

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