Showing posts with label “family law”. Show all posts
Showing posts with label “family law”. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

March Break Fun Without Me!

Sitting at her window, Jill is looking at the snowflakes falling slowly in her backyard.  With sadness, she is reminiscing on all the fun in the sun her family used to have during the March school break. Unfortunately, the end of her marriage also brought with it the end of the “family’s” fun in the sun vacation.  This year, Jack is leaving alone with the children on a boat cruise in the Caribbean while Jill stays home shovelling her laneway!

Most parents are exhausted as they try to keep up with their work, the children’s activities, their homework and the daily family routines.  One would think that a single parent would rejoice at having some time alone without the children.  Strangely enough, most parents, especially in the first few years after their separation, feel such a void when the children are visiting with the other parent that they spend their time alone mopping around the house and being – mostly – miserable.  What is important to remember is that you are not alone and you should see this as the perfect opportunity to do something you enjoy and that will lift your mood and feed your spirit.  It is your time to be good to yourself.  You have gone through a lot and you deserve some R and R.  Planning ahead the fun things that you will do during your time alone is as important as making sure that the children have all they need when they are away from home. 

Here are a few tips to help you make the most of this free time and regain your energy. 

1. Cut loose, let your hair down and put your feet up with a tea (or a beer)… every day!  Simply enjoy the peace and quiet in your home.  It may feel strange at first but after a couple of days you may actually enjoy hearing the humming of your  fridge.

2. Call your friends or your family and have a good laugh.  Talk about your most embarrassing moments.  Talking about your ex will only add clouds to your sunny time of relaxation.

3. Buy yourself something you’ve been wanting, such as a book, a new tool, or flowers.  Just choose something that is important to you, even if your budget won’t allow for something extravagant.

4. Treat yourself to a nap, if that’s something you’ve missed and makes you feel better. 

5. Complete a scrapbooking or a renovation project that you never had time to finish and that you can share with your children upon their return.

6. Don’t plan too much and stick to the plan!  Remember, this week is just for you.

Taking care of yourself doesn’t have to be complicated and you don’t have to break the bank to become a happier and more fulfilled single parent.  In fact, most people feel much better about their lives when they take the time to sit down and create their own fun in the sun.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Who needs a lawyer? Let’s settle this between us!

Jack is ready to officially move out of the home as he wants to get on with his life.  Since he expects to have significant parenting time with the children, he rented a home which he now needs to furnish.  For that reason, he had a discussion with Jill this morning and gave her a list of things he wants to take with him including furniture, electronics, tools and other household contents.  He also proposed to Jill a way of dividing equally between them their debts, car payments, home expenses and other monthly liabilities.  Jack was told by his best friend Mark that everything needs to be divided 50-50, so that’s how he suggested that he and Jill divide their debts and expenses.  Jill seemed satisfied with the proposal and Jack started drafting a brief separation agreement confirming the parties’ decisions.  After all, Mark and his ex-wife did it this way, they had no problems and they saved a lot of money. In addition, Jack has a copy of Mark’s separation agreement and so it should be relatively easy to just copy the relevant provisions.

For many good reasons, resolving the issues between you and your ex as quickly and cheaply as possible should be your ultimate goal during the separation process.   However, there are a few caveats you should be aware of when you decide to put a family settlement in writing without the assistance of a qualified family lawyer, or at least some guidance from such a professional. Too often, what appeared to have been a simple issue can turn out to be a very complex and expensive one.   When it comes to resolving family law matters, the agreement or the piece of paper signed by both parties may not be a binding contract recognized by the legal system.   In fact, it can be challenged on various grounds and the judge hearing your case may later decide that your “agreement” is null and void.

The first thing you must understand is that in family law, for a contract to be valid it must at least be dated and signed by the two parties before a witness.  Secondly, it is possible for the person who challenges the validity of the agreement to argue that the contract should not stand because he or she:
  • Did not understand the nature of the contract, its content or consequences
  • Was forced to sign the contract by some form of duress, pressure or undue influence
  • Signed the contract without financial disclosure, or
  • Feels that the contract is simply unconscionable (i.e. completely unacceptable in  the eyes of the law)
Finally, to make sure that the contract you signed will be enforced by a court if ever challenged by your ex-spouse in the future, you should always obtain independent legal advice (i.e. ask a family lawyer to review your agreement before you sign it).  Make sure that your ex-spouse ALSO gets legal advice but from a different lawyer (the same lawyer cannot give you both legal advice).  If you don’t, you may very well have to deal with the same issue all over again in the future, and at a much higher cost. When advising you on your separation agreement, your family lawyer will make sure that you fully understand the content of your agreement, that you are not signing the contract out of duress or some other form of pressure, and that the financial disclosure obtained from your former spouse allowed you to make informed decisions.

Who said you can keep the car and the investments too?

The Christmas holidays are over and Jill is very happy that things went much better than she anticipated with Jack and the children over the Holidays.  Since their separation in August, Jill has become more financially astute and received as a Christmas gift from her father a book entitled “The Wealthy Barber Returns” (click here to have a peak at that book) which she read while the children were visiting with Jack.  She truly enjoyed this book which explains in a simple and humorous way important financial concepts she needs to understand in order to move on with her life post-separation.  The new year has just begun and Jill feels it is now time for her and Jack to begin discussing how they will divide their family property (assets and debts).   Jack must have read her mind because he sent her an email this morning listing the items he wanted to keep including the new car, the plasma tv, the bedroom suite, and more of the “good stuff”.   That really upset Jill as she felt Jack was only thinking of himself, once again.  Out of exhaustion, she is thinking that it might be better to just let him have his way to finish this off quickly.

When anger is high and feelings are hurt, disputes over the division of household contents often turn into endless emotional battles during the separation process which fuel the litigation and can significantly increase costs to both parties’ detriment.  Remember that what you “feel” is yours may not necessarily be so in the eyes of the law.  Similarly, assuming that you are entitled to «half of everything » just because you were married is not necessarily true either.  To reach a quick settlement and to reduce the stress, some people are tempted to rush through the process of dividing their family property. Others mistakenly believe that dividing everything in half (splitting every asset and every debt in half) is the simplest and fairest way of dividing family property.  Thinking that the settlement was fair they then chose to sign a “kitchen table” agreement (i.e. one drafted by themselves without legal advice) to put the issue behind them.

In reality, dividing your assets and debts, while it does not have to be a complicated, requires a much deeper analysis in most circumstances and should never be accomplished without a deep understanding of the long-term consequences of any given property settlement.  Doing so could result in a settlement that is completely unfair to you and / or which may have very serious financial consequences in the future which you were not aware of.  A separation agreement should never, (and I repeat) never be signed unless you have spent at least one hour with a family lawyer who can explain to you what you are fully entitled to by the law, what you may be leaving on the table and what the long-term financial implications of your decisions will be. Experience has shown that settlements which seemed simple and fair at first glance do not necessarily stand the test of time and you would not want to be eating cat food just because of hasty decisions you made to settle your separation quickly. 

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Jill – I’m keeping the house!

After all of her attempts to convince Jack to give their 15-year marriage a chance, Jill realized that her marriage is really over.  Jill is hurt and angry.  She feels betrayed and Jack’s presence in the home is unbearable.  Jill is walking on eggshells and no one is talking.  To make it worst, Jack still pretends that everything is fine.  The atmosphere in the home is so tense that you could cut it with a knife.  Jill cannot take this anymore.  She barely sleeps at night and she feels sick.  Jack’s suggestion to just continue living together in the same home “for the sake of the kids” while they sort out the legal issues around their separation is complete nonsense.   Jill and the children cannot continue to live in limbo.  The children feel the tension in the home and they are starting to ask questions.  Jill is angry and wants Jack out of the home – the sooner the better.
 
Agreeing on housing arrangements is normally the first thing that ex-partners will need to sort out following the announcement of the separation.  What do we do with the home?  Who goes and who stays?  Do the children remain in the family home or do they move into the departing parents’ new home?   Many issues need to be considered when making new living arrangements.   Here are a few pointers to help you consider your options:
  • Issues surrounding the care of the children need to be sorted out.  The best way to handle this is to make a temporary parenting plan for your children.  Abandoning the home with the kids and without notice to the other parent is NOT the way to proceed, unless you are faced with serious
    safety issues (such as domestic violence, in which case you should seek guidance before leaving with the children).  Agreeing to a temporary plan of care (even one that you may not feel is the best) will ensure that both parents’ rights towards their children are protected while they negotiate a final – and perhaps more appropriate – plan for their children. 
  • It is not uncommon for a family to have a tough time meeting their monthly expenses on their combined income.   The prospect of dividing this family income into two different households (thus, doubling the parties’ combined housing expenses) may not be an option.   If finances are an issue, you may have to negotiate temporary financial arrangements with your former spouse to meet monthly expenses, even if only for a short period of time, for example while the home is being sold or refinanced with a view to be transferred to the other spouse.  You may consider obtaining a joint line of credit to pay the extra monthly expenses with the understanding that when the home is sold or transferred, the line of credit will be paid off.  
  • If temporary financial arrangements cannot be made, you may have to consider whether your family members or a friend can provide you with temporary housing.   Perhaps the parents can rotate in and out of the home to care for the children (each of them having exclusive possession of the home while they care for the children) until things are settled.  Just remember that there are various alternatives that you may not think about, but that an experienced family lawyer, financial divorce specialist or financial advisor can help you craft. 
  • If financial considerations are not an issue, and the parties cannot agree on temporary living arrangements, the court can make an order giving one of the parties (with or without children) the exclusive use / possession of the home for a certain period of time (normally until the sale of the home or until some event occurs).  However, seeking the assistance of the court should be your last option.  In fact, this costly option should be used only in case of an emergency or if all other attempts to negotiate an acceptable agreement (temporary or final) have failed.

Monday, August 22, 2011

Do I leave or do I stay?

Jack had made his decision.  Unbeknownst to Jill, he had been through months of personal counselling to figure out whether or not his marriage was over.  It was now crystal clear to him that their long relationship (they started going out in University) was at an end.  After fifteen years of marriage, he was utterly unhappy and he felt that he and his wife had absolutely nothing in common anymore, except their two beautiful children Adam (age 10) and Eva (age 3), whom they both loved dearly.  After another endless evening of fighting over petty issues, Jack made an impulsive decision and announced to Jill that he wanted out.  He thought that she felt the same way as he did (she’s been so distant lately), but let’s just say that the announcement did not go as planned.  Jill stormed out of the home without saying where she was going.  She came back this morning before the children woke up, and has not spoken to him since.  Jack has tried to speak to her this morning after the children were gone to school and daycare.  He told her that he did not want to argue anymore, he just wanted a simple separation.  He was not leaving the home until both of them calmed down and figured out what would happen next.

Before Jack made his decision to leave, he consulted a family lawyer to find out what his rights and obligations were.  Jack wanted to make sure that his rights towards the children were protected, that he was not putting himself or the children at risk financially, and that he would not take any steps that might increase the conflict between him and Jill. His lawyer gave him the following advice:
  •  Make sure that your marriage is over.  If in doubt, try marriage counselling.  It is readily available and relatively inexpensive, and you want to make sure you don’t regret your decision later;
  • Don’t make hasty decisions.  Take the time to think this through with your partner.  Now is NOT the time to:
    • Cancel your life insurance policies or change the beneficiaries on your health plan
    • Sell the home or move out of the home (at least not before an agreement, even temporary, has been reached with respect to their care)
    • Take out all of the money in the joint bank account, close all your bank accounts, or cancel your spouse’s credit cards.  This is the best way to insure years of litigation
    • Create more debts (i.e. load your credit cards or buy yourself a new car with the joint line of credit)
    • Remove all of the furniture from the home
  • Protect yourself.  While you do not need to “rock the boat” the day after you announced your intention to separate, make sure that you are well informed and keep your eyes open.  Among other things:
  • Pay attention to joint credit and debts.   If you see unusual or large withdrawals on the line credit, react!
  • Put important belongings (family heirlooms, jewellery, insurance policies) in a safe place
  • Make photocopies of important documents (income tax returns, home purchase documents, insurance policies, bank statements, passports)
Separation is usually a long and painful journey, take the time you need to think it through carefully.