{3:48 minutes to read} Courts are now required to consider the following factor, among many others, in making a maintenance award or determining if the statutory amount was unjust: “. . . the existence and duration of a pre-marital joint household or a pre-divorce separate household.”
In English, this means that it is relevant to the Court if a couple lived together before they were married, or if they lived apart for a period of time before starting a divorce action.
In mediation, I’ve encountered these examples:
I’m glad to say that in mediation, couples thought about their time together before the marriage and their time apart after the marriage as meaningful because it was relevant to them, even if it was not relevant under the law.
In terms of sharing assets
The legal definition of marital property is property accumulated during the marriage. There is no similar factor for pre/post living arrangements as in the maintenance statue. This means that all of the time, money and effort invested into the other’s purchase of a house before you were married, doesn’t factor into the distribution of that house in divorce.
It has, however, had significance in mediation, because it made sense to the couple to give the “non-titled” spouse an equal share in an asset to which they both contributed, even though under a strict interpretation of the Equitable Distribution Law, it was irrelevant.
In terms of support
I have seen couples consider their pre/post living arrangements as relevant to support, even before the Courts did. Again, because it made sense to the couple to do so:
Sometimes, statutes do catch up with what has been going on in mediation for a long time. And sometimes, they don’t, but couples themselves tend to know what will be best for them.