English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

she has never worked and i was commited to the marriage. it doesnt seem fair that she and her new man should get half my estate

2006-10-18 10:13:17 · 55 answers · asked by ellen s 1 in Family & Relationships Marriage & Divorce

55 answers

Leagally - Yes. Morally - No. Good luck!

2006-10-18 10:15:00 · answer #1 · answered by Nicole 2 · 0 0

She is legally entitled to half of everything because she got up and cooked your breakfast, made your lunch, made your dinner, raised your kids (if you had some), baked you birthday cakes, cleaned your house, nursed you when you were sick, ran your errands, and more..she is legally and morally entitled to half of everything because she worked hard inside the home for 30 years.
I feel your sadness and anger and frustration. It is not about the possessions though. Isn't the pain because someone you loved for so long is withdrawing their love? Do not seek to control her with money. Split the household items fairly. You did have a lot of history together but now is not the time to argue over the salt and pepper shakers you got as a wedding present..that is only a symptom of wanting to hold on to her and it will allienate her even more.
None of us on here know the circumstances of your breakup so cannot comment whether it was a good or bad decision she made. Please seek some counselling though..it is a long hard road to walk by yourself otherwise.
I hope you can find peace somewhere down the road.

2006-10-18 10:35:37 · answer #2 · answered by anything_my_child 3 · 0 0

Presumably she looked after you and the house, also any children you may have had. What kind of heartless individual are you to want to leave her with nothing? If she didn't work, she could not have saved up anything to buy herself a house. Why didn't she work? Are you some kind of chauvinist who thinks women should stay at home? The ultimate question is, why did she leave you after 30 years? Seems to me that a marriage that is happy is not one where a wife suddenly ups and leaves after all that time!

2006-10-18 11:33:53 · answer #3 · answered by Sylvia L 1 · 0 0

There are steps you can take to actually build a strong, stable marriage and avoid divorce. Read here https://tr.im/5lSk6

Here are some key steps to apply to your marriage:

- Start by understanding and being informed.

You can never be too informed about tools, methods and studies about building successful marriages. Understand the risk factors like your age and maturity at marriage can determine how successful it will be, the anatomy of an affair and what you can do after infidelity. Understand the success factors like the personal and psychological circumstances that will influence your marriage, what are the tools and approaches available to you in dealing with conflict, and numerous other relevant data. All this information is readily available to you whether through self-help material, through a counselor, support group or other venues. In fact, we have made it our commitment to provide these to you in different formats to help you make the best marriage you can.

The thing is, remember, this is information is not available for you to begin hyper-psychoanalyzing your relationship, yourself and your partner. It's not a matter of spewing trivia for the sake of conversation ' information is there for you to ponder over and internalize to help you transform yourself and your marriage. That includes maturing to such a point that you become more competent in your knowledge but more prudent in approach.

2016-04-22 17:52:39 · answer #4 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

If you live in a community property state like California, and didn't sign a pre-nuptual argeement, then yes, legally she is entitled to half your property (including money, not just the physical house). I think in some states if you can prove she was unfaithful during the marriage, then you would get to keep everything, but in most states just claiming "irreconcible differences" is all it takes to get a divorce and you still have to split everything.

If you thought it was unfair during your marriage that she didn't work, you should have addressed it then.

But yes, morally/ethically it is unfair that she should profit from your misery and faithfulness. Make a case to the judge and maybe he/she can angle things in your favor.

2006-10-18 10:20:37 · answer #5 · answered by teresathegreat 7 · 0 0

Sometimes, letting go seems like the easiest thing to do. But think about this: you've invested so much of your time and energy into another person; you've made a solemn promise; and you still know there's love, even if it's hiding underneath the surface. This website will show you how to save a marriage and avoid divorce, even if you're the only one trying https://tr.im/CjR6l

2015-01-28 12:37:07 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I agree, it isn't fair but the law states that she gets half. Unfortunately they do not rule on why the marriage was disolved. My friend in San Diego was married for 20 some years and his wife was cheating on him. He remarried and she didn't. He worked and she didn't. She got half the assets and is still being paid alimoney. Typically they get allimoney for half the amount of years you were married. Also, she is entitled to your retirement benefits if she doesn't remarry. Life is so unfair....

2006-10-18 10:17:04 · answer #7 · answered by roxy 5 · 0 0

Yes she is entitled to half of everything. The 30 years don't mean nothing, if you had been together for just 6 months she would be entitled to half of everything.

2006-10-18 10:16:30 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

if the house was bought together then she is intitled to half of it even if she left you for what ever reason and the fact she didnt work doesnt matter either it was both your responsibility to pay for it how ever it was done although she is entitled to 50% of the net equity at the time of her leaving thats not nesercreally what she will end up with that is what her solicitor will advise her to go for but it is all down to negotiation on both sides but in a round about way yes she is intitled to 50% of the property or there abouts and will also be intitled to any pensions you may have and like wise with yourself and anything she has
good luck

2006-10-19 02:52:49 · answer #9 · answered by ag 3 · 0 1

If she never worked, does that mean she helped raise the kids and helped them with the homework and washed every ones laundry and cooked the family dinner in the evening and kept that house clean and decorated it for you? Because staying home is a big job also and much unappreciated too by many.
I am in California, she'd get half, point blank.

2006-10-18 10:18:43 · answer #10 · answered by Mt ~^^~~^^~ 5 · 1 0

It depends did you pay her a salary for all the years of staying home and taking care of the house and family. If not she is entitled to 1/2 of everything.

2006-10-18 10:15:58 · answer #11 · answered by lovepat5808 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers