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#1
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If you are in a traditional marriage and also have relationships on the side, including sex, I assume that legally this would be adultery.
Now obviously it is not a moral issue if the partner approves. And adultery itself is not illegal, so no crime is being committed. However...if the marriage ever falls apart and there is an unfriendly divorce, the commission of adultery by one partner only could affect the divorce settlement. What are the legal ramifications here? What do those of you who have regular marriage combined with poly do about this? Would a signed and notarized document giving permission for extra-marital sex be worth anything in court? (Of course, it would have to be recorded in some way or stored somewhere that the spouse could not destroy it.) I assume that if both of the partners are involved in extra-marital relationships, this becomes a non-issue, since both are committing adultery and neither would gain an advantage in court. I did a search for "polyamory legal issues" but all of the stuff I found was for setting up equivalents to marriage, not working within one.
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#2
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Most states only do "no fault divorce" meaning there does not need to be a cause for divorce, and settlements are strictly economic.
In other words - none of this matters. |
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#4
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Also, I found the following in wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Divorce...ited_States%29 Quote:
on the other hand: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Condonation Quote:
So I dunno. Seems to me there might still be danger.
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blog Last edited by jackrabbit; 03-17-2010 at 05:25 AM. |
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#5
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While it's legally irrelevant as a cause for divorce, adultery is definitely a factor in divorce settlements and custody cases. My guess is that any document to the contrary would be ignored by most middle-aged conservative judges, which makes up most of the justice system. At the end of the day, having the best lawyer matters a lot more than any actual facts anyway. People who have flat-out cheated have walked away with half of their spouse's net worth just by having a better lawyer.
I don't know whether a document would have any weight in court. For one thing, you can't sign contracts that violate legislation, and I'm not sure what the exact legislation is on adultery. I would imagine that such a thing would have to be signed prior to saying your vows to have any real weight. I've never remotely understood people who get married with an "in case of divorce" plan... what the hell are you getting married for if you think you MIGHT EVER get divorced?? If you're going into it with that attitude, you're setting yourself up for failure because if you're already reneging on your commitment when the going is good and you're all lovey-dovey, where are you going to be when life throws you its curveballs? Religious convictions aside, our society full endorses common-law partnerships with, in most jurisdictions, the same rights and responsibilities as marriages. In Canada, if you live with someone that has a kid and you do one single "parent-like act" (make them dinner one day, take them to the doctor, anything that a parent would do) then instead of waiting a year, you become common-law the moment you move in together (at least as far as Revenue Canada is concerned, i.e. our IRS). My solution to this conundrum was simple: Don't marry the sort of person who's likely to stab you in the back if things don't work out. I think this is a lot more of an issue for the people who get married before realizing they're poly, and then the spouse "goes along" with it but is never really emotionally on-board. I could definitely see that coming up in a court battle and being a big issue.
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I am who I am. I don't need labels to define me. They're sticky, and I hate the glue they leave behind.
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#6
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It's just being a realist. Divorce courts are full of people who never, ever thought that they would wind up in divorce court. Really, wouldn't that be the majority of the cases?
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blog Last edited by jackrabbit; 03-17-2010 at 02:07 PM. |
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#7
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Hey Cat
(hope you don't mind the nick)Just a couple comments here Quote:
I'm very much an advocate of REQUIRING prenup agreements ! Doing otherwise is to unwisely ignore a number of aspects of being human and how that plays out in a societal framework. Fact is - things change. People change. The world changes. Some of those changes have the potential to impact relationships- i.e. marriages. Many people in the states get married partially for the financial and security benefits such a legal arrangement confers. In reality it's often as much of a legal contract as it is any emotional bond. Things like health insurance, tax ramifications etc have a major impact on people and decisions are made accordingly. Especially when children are or may be involved. So it is a legit reason to marry for many in absence of what we've often discussed about more enlightened options (and people). Quote:
I can for example state that in the past (can't say whether it's changed but don't believe so) the U.S. Federal govt absolutely does NOT recognize common law status - especially for tax purposes. I learned this lesson the hard way (several hundred dollars worth of hard way) after living together (unmarried) for 3 years and having 2 children. Not "married" - tough shit - pay up ! Don't care if you are living together and are are sole source of support ! This being on the federal level - and even that varies state/state. So we have to be careful when talking about such things. As much as many of us can all see a simpler, better way to handle the whole mess, the conservative, religious leaning masses still have the control strings. Only choice is to outsmart them (usually not that difficult) ![]() GS |
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