Family Law Flashcards

1
Q

What is a prenuptial agreement?

A

A contract between fiances about economic or other adjustments to be made if the marriage fails

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2
Q

What are the grounds for challenging a prenuptial agreement?

A
  1. Statute of frauds
  2. No marriage
  3. Uniform premarital agreement act
    • Non-voluntary (i.e., time pressure, surprise)
    • Unconscionability
      • When executed
      • Without disclosure of financial data
      • Without waiver of disclosure
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3
Q

How do you get married in Virginia?

A

Marriage must be ceremonial

  • Requirements
    • License
      • _​_Requires capacity
      • Requires payment
      • Expires after 60 days
    • Ceremony
      • Requires celebrant (e.g., clergy, minister, etc.)
      • Requires exchange of solemn promises
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4
Q

What is the rule regarding common law marriage in Virginia?

A

Not permissible in Virginia

But Virginia honors common law marriages from other states (e.g., DC)

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5
Q

How do you terminate a marriage?

A
  1. Annulment
    • Based on grounds that pre-date the marriage
  2. Divorce
    • Based on grounds that take place after the marriage
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6
Q

What are the grounds for annulment that make marriage void?

A

The following grounds make a marriage void

They cannot be waived

  1. Bigamy
    • Already married
    • Also a crime
      • Subject to defense of good faith belief that former spouse died
  2. Incest
    • Includes:
      • Nephews, neices, ancestors, descendants, etc.
    • Excludes:
      • Cousins
  3. Underage
    • Age requirements:
      • 18 generally
      • 16 with consent of one parent
      • Under 16 if:
        • Female pregnant
        • Parents of underage party consent
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7
Q

If the grounds for annulment that make the marriage void can be established, is it necessary to get an annulment?

A

No. The marriage is void. But the parties should still get an annulment in order to:

  • Clarify the record (and ease burden of proof in future)
  • Get judicial assistance in resolving collateral issues
    • E.g., division of property, custody of children, etc.
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8
Q

What are the grounds for annulment that make marriage voidable?

A
  1. Mental incapacity
    • Mental illness
    • Developmental disability
    • Intoxication
  2. Duress
    • E.g., shotgun wedding
  3. Incurable impotency
    • Inability to have sex, not conceive
    • Must be incurable (i.e., Cialis won’t work)
    • Couple must have abstained before marriage
  4. Fraud
    • Must have gone to an essential aspect of marriage
      • Essential aspects include concealment of:
        • Previous felony conviction
        • Carrying another’s child
        • Having a child with another
        • Prostitution
        • Religious beliefs
        • Sexual predilections
      • Essential aspects exclude concealment of:
        • Money
        • Property
        • Social status
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9
Q

For purposes of the voidable grounds for annulment, how are each of them waived?

A

Generally, by sticking with the marriage and continuing to have sex (unless impotence grounds) either:

  • After impediment is removed (incapacity)
  • After marriage entered into (duress)
  • After disclosure of impotency
  • After disclosure of fraud
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10
Q

What is the statute of limitations for pursuing an annulment?

A

Two years after marriage

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11
Q

What court do you go to for a divorce?

A

Circuit court (i.e., chancery)

(not juvenile and domestic relations)

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12
Q

What is required for a Virginia court to have subject matter jurisdiction in a divorce proceeding?

A
  • 1 spouse domiciled in Virginia
  • For at least 6 months prior to filing
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13
Q

What is required for a Virginia court to have jurisdiction in a case requesting something other than a divorce decree (e.g., money)?

A

Virginia court must have personal jurisdiction, based on normal rules of civil procedure

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14
Q

What are the venue rules in Virginia for a divorce proceeding?

A

Can file in any county within the Commonwealth

If you file in a non-preferred venue, the court can transfer to a preferred venue, or the other party can move for transfer

Preferred venues include:

  • County where parties last lived together
  • County where D resides, if in state
  • If D resides out of state, county where P resides
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15
Q

What are the different types of divorce proceedings?

A
  1. Legal separation
    • Divorce a mensa et thoro
  2. Absolute divorce
    • Divorce a vinculo matrimonii
      1. Fault-based
      2. No-fault
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16
Q

What are the fault-based grounds for absolute divorce?

A
  1. Adultery and sodomy or buggery outside the marriage
  2. Spouse convicted of felony, sentenced to a year or more
  3. Cruelty or desertion
    • Includes:
      • Permanent refusal of sex
      • Domestic abuse (physical or verbal)
      • Constructive desertion (i.e., changing of locks)
    • Only grounds after 1 year of behavior
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17
Q

What are the affirmative defenses to fault-based divorce?

A
  1. Connivance
    • Similar to entrapment
  2. Condonation
    • Similar to waiver
    • Requires:
      • Knowledge
      • Forgiveness (based on commitment to stop)
      • Resumption of sexual relations
  3. Recrimination
    • Similar to unclean hands (i.e., offsetting conduct)
    • Other states have abolished this because it does not make sense to keep the spouses together
  4. Statute of limitations
    • 5 years for adultery grounds
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18
Q

What is the evidentiary requirement for testimony evidence in a divorce proceeding?

A

Testimony must be corroborated (but only slight corroboration)

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19
Q

What are the no-fault grounds for absolute divorce?

A

Requirements:

  • If no kids and separation agreement
    • No cohabitation for 6 months
  • If kids or no separation agreement
    • No cohabitation for 1 year
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20
Q

What is the effect of legal separation?

A
  • All collateral rights are adjudicated
  • Marriage still intact (neither party can marry while alive)
  • Personal and property rights are protected
    • E.g., tax benefits
    • E.g., health benefits
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21
Q

What are the grounds for legal separation?

A
  1. Cruelty and reasonably apprehension of bodily harm
  2. Abandonment and desertion

Note: no statutorily required period of time before you can file for separation, so you can get a separation, wait a year, and then get an absolute divorce

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22
Q

What is the process called for dividing property in a divorce?

What are the steps?

A

Equitable division

Steps:

  1. Classify every asset
  2. Distribute the assets
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23
Q

Under equitable division, what are the different classifications of assets?

What do they include?

A
  1. Spousal assets (i.e., Spouse A, Spouse B)
    • Anything owned by spouse prior to marriage
    • Anything obtained by spouse as gift or inheritance
    • Anything obtained by spouse after separation
    • Pain and suffering recoveries in tort
    • Passive appreciation on the above items
  2. Marital assets
    • Anything obtained during marriage not listed above
      • Regardless of who earned it
      • Reglardless of who has title
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24
Q

Under equitable division, how do you distribute assets?

A
  • Spousal assets
    • Go to the respective spouses
  • Marital assets
    • Court considers:
      • Age and health of spouses
      • Duration of marriage and contribution of each
      • Circumstances giving rise to marriage termination, including fault (even if no fault divorce)
      • Liquidity of assets
      • Tax consequences
      • Anything just or appropriate
25
Q

Under equitable distribution, in what form does the court distribute assets?

A

Either in kind or through an order to pay money

26
Q

Under equitable distribution, what should the court not consider?

A

Whether there would be alimony

27
Q

What are the different types of alimony?

A
  1. Temporary alimony
  2. Post-judgment alimony
28
Q

What is temporary alimony?

What is the other name for it?

A

An order of alimony while the case is pending, designed to preserve the status quo

Alimony pendente lite (APL)

29
Q

What types of post-judgment alimony can a spouse get?

A
  • Periodic and perpetual
  • Periodic for a limited time
  • Lump sum
30
Q

What type of marriage termination can give rise to alimony?

A

Both absolute divorce and legal separation

31
Q

When is alimony not available?

A
  • If the marriage was void
  • If grounds for termination was adultery
    • Unless denial of alimony would be manifest injustice
32
Q

Can a court give alimony when there aren’t grounds for divorce?

A

Yes

33
Q

How does a court determine the alimony amount?

A
  • Financial circumstances of spouses
  • Age, health, education, and employment prospects of spouses (i.e., ability to earn a living)
  • Contributions by spouses to well-being of family
  • Duration of marriage and standard of living of spouses
  • Wealth of spouses after divorce
  • Tax consequences
  • Forms of fault for divorce
34
Q

When can an alimony award be modified?

A

When there was a bona fide change in circumstances

E.g., loss of job by either party (but not voluntary job change)

35
Q

Can inflation be grounds for modification of an alimony award?

A

Yes. The judge cannot simply add a cost of living adjustment to an award. The parties must seek modification each time.

36
Q

When is alimony automatically terminated?

A
  • Death of either party
  • Remarriage of recipient
37
Q

Is alimony automatically terminated when the recipient cohabitates?

A

No, not automatically. But if it lasts for more than one year, the court has discretion to terminate alimony

38
Q

What can the court do to enforce alimony payments?

A
  • Initiate wage reduction order
  • Seize assets
  • Hold party in contempt
39
Q

What is the general rule with respect to paternity?

A

Presumption is that a child born to a married woman is a child of that woman’s husband

  • To rebut presumption:
    • Establish evidence that:
      • Husband did not have access to the wife at time of conception
      • Husband incapable of having children
      • DNA
40
Q

How do you establish the paternity of a non-marital child?

A
  • Acknowledgment of paternity
    • Mother and man both agree that he is the father
  • Paternity suit
    • Determined by clear and convincing evidence:
      • Blood test is usually conclusive
      • Otherwise, external factors:
        • Man let child use surname
        • Man had close relationship with child
41
Q

What state has jurisdiction to hear a child custody dispute?

A

Under UCCJEA:

  • First 6 months after move
    • Prior state
  • After 6 months
    • New state
  • Multiple moves
    • State with greatest connection to child
42
Q

What is the concept of exclusive, continuing jurisdiction?

A

Once a state court makes a custody determination, other state courts can’t get involved unless either the child or any parent leaves that state

43
Q

What standard is applied to determine child custody?

A

Best interests of the child (BIC) standard, considering:

  • Age and physical/mental condition of child and parents
  • Relationship of child with each parent
  • Whether either parent has a companion
  • Whether placement with one parent would split the child from siblings or other family members
  • Whether child expressed preference (if > 12 years old)
  • Whether one parent is more willing to accomodate visitation by other
  • Lifestyles of parents
  • Domestic violence
44
Q

What standard is applied to determine joint child custody?

A

Best interests of the child (BIC) standard, considering:

  • Whether parents will cooprate and get along
  • Whether parents live near eachother
45
Q

What standard is applied to determine custody claims by non-parents?

A

Best interests of the child (BIC) standard, but presumption is in favor of the biological parent

  • To rebut, must show significant benefit to child from being with non-parent (hard burden to meet)
46
Q

What does a custodial parent have to do if he wants to re-locate?

A
  1. Give the court 30-day notice
  2. Court holds a hearing
  3. If moving out of state, court makes BIC determination
47
Q

When can a custody determination be modified?

A

When there was a bona fide change in circumstances, considering the stability in the child’s circumstances (e.g., don’t want to move him from high school)

48
Q

If a non-custodial parent fails to pay child support, will he lose visitation rights?

A

No. Visitation is almost always given to the non-custodial parent

49
Q

Can non-parents get visitation rights?

A

Generally no. The US Supreme Court has ruled that the courts should not interfere with the parent’s ability to decide with whom their children should visit with.

Non-parent must show that the detriment from denying them visitation trumps the parent’s due process right to raise the child as he or she sees fit.

50
Q

Who is resonsible to provide child support?

A

All biological parents, but support orders are usually directed to non-custodial parents either:

  • After divorce
  • If there is a non-marital child
51
Q

How long does a child support order last?

A

Until the child turns 18 unless:

  • If still in high school:
    • The earlier of:
      • Graduation
      • The child turns 19
  • If child disabled, it doesn’t end
52
Q

How is the amount of child support determined?

A

Based on tables that are keyed to the parent’s income, but a judge can depart from this (either up or down) with a written justification

53
Q

If a non-custodial parent remarries and thus has a new family to support, can the child support be reduced?

A

No

54
Q

If non-custodial parent gets an increase in income, does the child support have to increase?

A

It might. The custodial parent can ask for an increase so that the kid can share in it, under the parental generosity rule

55
Q

If modifying child support, what can you modify? What cannot be modified?

A

You can modify future payments

You cannot modify past due payments

56
Q

What can the court do to enforce child support payments?

A

Same as alimony:

  • Initiate wage reduction order
  • Seize assets
  • Hold party in contempt

But also under UIFSA:

  • Revoke the parent’s professional license (e.g., CPA)
  • Enforce the order out of state
    • Mail VA order to out of state employer
    • Mail VA employer to out of state court
57
Q

Who must consent to an adoption?

A
  1. Both biological parents
    • Can be in advance
    • Not necessary if:
      • Parents are unknown
      • Parents do not object to notice
      • Parents parental rights are terminated
  2. Adoptee if 14 or older
58
Q

How might parental rights be terminated?

When will they not be terminated?

A

In a TPR proceeding, parental rights can be terminated for:

  1. Neglect or abuse that cannot be remedied
  2. Failure to maintain contact with child in foster care
  3. Inability to remedy conditions that put child in foster care
  4. Abandonment

Parental rights are not terminated when:

  • Child 14 or older objects to termination
59
Q

What are the procedural steps for adopting a child?

A
  1. Obtain the necessary consent
  2. Investigation of prospective adoptive parents
  3. Hearing to finalize adoption (using BIC standard)