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Your question is too broad. Arkansas is a separate property state so division of marital property is up to the court. You need to consult with an attorney who specializes in divorce law.
A criminal record has no bearing on the distribution of assets in Divorce proceedings.
The state divorce laws apply wherever you file for divorce. However, if you file in a separate property state and if you own property in another state that follows the law of community property, the property in the community property state will be divided as community property.You should consult with an attorney who can review your situation and explain your rights and options.The state divorce laws apply wherever you file for divorce. However, if you file in a separate property state and if you own property in another state that follows the law of community property, the property in the community property state will be divided as community property.You should consult with an attorney who can review your situation and explain your rights and options.The state divorce laws apply wherever you file for divorce. However, if you file in a separate property state and if you own property in another state that follows the law of community property, the property in the community property state will be divided as community property.You should consult with an attorney who can review your situation and explain your rights and options.The state divorce laws apply wherever you file for divorce. However, if you file in a separate property state and if you own property in another state that follows the law of community property, the property in the community property state will be divided as community property.You should consult with an attorney who can review your situation and explain your rights and options.
The answer depends on the divorce laws in the jurisdiction where the parties reside.All property that is acquired during the marriage, except certain types of assets such as inherited property, is usually considered marital property regardless of which spouse owns the property or how the property is titled. Marital property is divided according to state divorce laws in the United States.In community property states the property is divided equally. In separate property states the property is divided according to the equitable distribution method- fairly but not necessarily equally.You meed to consult with an attorney who specializes in divorce in your jurisdiction who can review your situation and explain your rights and options.
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The answer depends on such factors as the law where you live, what type of divorce (fault-no fault), whether it is contested, whether there is property to be divided and whether there are children.
The term community property state means that the community property in a marriage divided equally between the two parties when there is a divorce. This property usually does not include property owned before the marriage.
She has the right to file for divorce, end the legal marriage and have the marital property divided by the court.
No, after divorce what property you obtain is yours. If you come into a marriage with property that is yours as well when you divorce.
Normally the divorce laws of the state where you are getting the divorce are the laws that apply. It does not matter where you got married. There may or may not be an exception in the case of a prenuptial agreement.
Well over a year.It's 18 months in Arkansas
No. Divorce severs the legal relationship between the parties. Once a couple has been divorced there are no community property rights between them. Their community property should have been divided as part of the divorce and once the divorce was final each has no claim to the estate of the other.