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October 8, 2012 by Aaron Tress

Am I common law married in Texas?

Q: Does Texas have common law marriage?

A: Yes. Rather than use the term “common law marriage,” Texas uses the term “informal marriage.”

Q: What is an informal marriage?

A: An informal marriage is a marriage that the State legally recognizes without the couple having acquired a marriage license or performed a marriage ceremony.

Q: Why do common law marriages exist?

A: The justification for informal marriage harkens back to the natural law era when individuals did not need government permission to marry.

Q: Can I informally marry in any State?

A: No. Currently, only a minority of States allow for common law marriages.

Q: What if I informally marry in a State that permits informal marriages but later move to a State that does not permit informal marriages?

A: All States recognize common law marriages established in States that permit common law marriages. The exception to this is same-sex marriages. Not all States recognize same-sex marriages.

Q: If I am living with my partner, am I informally married?

A: Maybe. Living together is one requirement for a common law marriage, but merely living together is not enough to establish a common law marriage.

Q: How do I establish a common law marriage in Texas?

A: The Texas Family Code specifies two ways in which a couple may establish an informal marriage. The first way a couple may establish an informal marriage is through a signed declaration. The second way a couple may establish an informal marriage is through the three-prong test:

  1. the man and woman must agree to marry,
  2. the man and woman must live together after they agree to marry, and
  3. the man and the woman must hold themselves out as husband and wife.
  • Russell v. Russell, 865 S.W. 2d 929, 931 (Tex. 1993) (“fil[ing] a declaration of informal marriage with the county clerk . . . constitutes prima facie proof of the parties [sic] informal marriage”).

Q: Why is establishing a common law marriage important?

A: Establishing an informal marriage may be important for a variety of reasons. For instance, after a couple separates one party may file for divorce to collect some of the property and money the couple gained while cohabiting. Because the parties often have not signed a declaration of informal marriage, the party wishing to establish the marriage looks to the three-prong test.

  • If a couple is not married, the couple does not have spousal privilege. Under spousal privilege a defendant can prevent confidential communications to the other spouse from being used against the defendant at court. In Jasper v. State, 61 S.W.3d 413, 418 (Tex. Crim. App. 2001) the court found that the couple was not informally married, so the girlfriend’s testimony was admissible.
  • If a couple is not married, the remaining partner cannot collect on a wrongful death claim. One element of a wrongful death claim is that the survivor of the decedent be an immediate family member. In Prince, 2010 WL 87334 (Or. A.G. Jan. 7, 2010) Rodrick Williams, Jr., died in a motor vehicle accident, and Tamara Lashae Prince brought a wrongful death claim against Foreman Contractors for his death. Because the jury found that Williams and Prince were not informally married, Prince could not collect damages for William’s death.

Q: How do I satisfy each prong of the three-prong test?

A: Each prong can be satisfied in multiple ways. Of the three prongs, the first prong—the man and woman agreed to marry—is the most difficult to establish. To establish that the man and woman agreed to marry, the court may consider facts like whether the couple raised a family together, whether the couple filed joint tax returns, or whether the couple opened a joint bank account. Additionally, if a party waits to establish an informal marriage until after the couple has separated for two years, the court rebuttably presumes that the couple did not agree to marry. The following does not represent a comprehensive list of all the possible ways to satisfy each prong.

  • All three of the prongs must be satisfied at the same time. Bolash v. Heid, 733 S.W.2d 698, 699 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 1987, no writ).

  • The couple must have already agreed to marry, not agree to marry at some future date. In Jasper v. State, 61 S.W.3d 413, 418-419 (Tex. Crim. App. 2001) although the woman lived with the man since she was 15 and although they had two children together, the trial judge found that the couple agreed to marry at some future date.
  • The agreement to marry requires that the parties intend to have a present, immediate, and permanent marital relationship. Eris v. Phares, 39 S.W.3d 708, 714 (Tex. App. 2001).
  • Occasional introductions as husband and wife is not enough to establish that the couple held themselves out as husband and wife; the couple needs to have a reputation in the community as being married. Eris v. Phares, 39 S.W.3d 708, 715 (Tex. App. 2001).
  • Agreeing to be married “in God’s eyes” was sufficient to establish an agreement to be married. Matter of Estate of Giessel, 734 S.W.2d 27, 32 (Tex. App. 1987).

Call my office for a consultation if you have created a common law marriage and need a divorce.

Filed Under: Marriage Tagged With: cohabitation, Common Law Marriage, Informal Marriage, Lubbock, Texas, three-prong test

October 3, 2012 by Aaron Tress

Alimony principles in Texas

Q: Does Texas permit alimony?

A: Yes. Rather than use the terms “alimony” or “spousal support,” Texas uses the term “spousal maintenance.”

Q: What is spousal maintenance?

A: Spousal maintenance is monthly payment from one person to that person’s ex-spouse.

Q: What is the purpose of spousal maintenance?

A: The justification for maintenance is to allow time for the receiving spouse to become financially independent. In a marriage, one spouse may earn more money than the other spouse. When the couple divorces, the judge may order the spouse who earns more money to make a monthly payment to the other spouse.

  • “The purpose of spousal maintenance is to provide temporary and rehabilitative support for a spouse whose ability to support herself has eroded over time while engaged in homemaking activities and whose capital assets are insufficient to provide support.” Tellez v. Tellez, 345 S.W.3d 689, 691 (Tex. App.–Dallas 2011, no pet.)

Q: What are the qualifications for spousal maintenance?

A: The spouse seeking maintenance must show that he or she lacks sufficient property to satisfy his or her minimum reasonable needs and

  1. the spouse paying maintenance must have been criminally convicted on a charge stemming family violence against the other spouse or the other spouse’s child within two years of the divorce,
  2. the spouse seeking maintenance must have a disability keeping him or her from earning enough to satisfy his or her minimum reasonable needs,
  3. the spouse seeking maintenance must have been married for at least ten years and cannot earn enough to satisfy his or her minimum reasonable needs,* or
  4. the spouse seeking maintenance must have a disabled child whose care prevents the spouse from earning enough to satisfy his or her own minimum reasonable needs.

* The family code rebuttably presumes that maintenance is not needed under these circumstances.

Q: How long will spousal maintenance last?

A: For marriages lasting less than ten years, the Family Code requires that the length of maintenance last for the shortest time possible. Yet, for those marriages lasting ten years or more, the following applies:

  • For marriages lasting between ten and twenty years, maintenance is five years.
  • For marriages lasting between twenty and thirty years, maintenance is seven years.
  • For marriages lasting more than thirty years, maintenance is ten years.

Q: Will a judge modify or revoke spousal maintenance?

A: Yes. Grounds for modification of maintenance may include retirement, inheritance, loss of employment, and incapacitating physical or mental disability. Maintenance ceases, however, upon death of either spouse or if the receiving spouse remarries or cohabits.

Q: Will a judge extend spousal maintenance?

A: Judges do not generally extend spousal support.

  • In Hackenjos v. Hackenjos, 204 S.W.3d 906, 909 (Tex. App.–Dallas 2006, no pet.) the husband argued that his permanent disability justified extending maintenance longer than three years. The court stated the rule that “a party seeking to continue receiving spousal maintenance has the burden to prove by a preponderance of the evidence: (1) his incapacitating physical disability continues; and (2) that the incapacitating physical disability prevents him from supporting himself through appropriate employment.”
  • A “court may order spousal maintenance for an indefinite period when the spouse seeking maintenance has an incapacitating physical or mental disability.” In Tellez v. Tellez, 345 S.W.3d 689, 692 (Tex. App.–Dallas 2011, no pet.) the court ruled that the wife’s “significant health issues”–diabetes, asthma, nerve damage to her feet and fingers, hypertension, allergies, arthritis, and severe depression–did not constitute an incapacitating physical and mental disability. Spousal maintenance remained limited to three years at $800 per month.

Q: How much is maintenance?

A: The spouse paying maintenance cannot pay more than $5000 per month or more than 20% of the spouse’s income.

Q: What if someone is not paying maintenance?

A: The receiving spouse may hire an attorney to file a petition for enforcement of spousal maintenance and order to appear. The court will determine the arrearages. The receiving spouse is entitled to arrearages even after maintenance terminates at some future date.

  • Garnishing wages to pay spousal maintenance violates the Texas Constitution. Heller v. Heller, 359 S.W.3d 902, 905 (Tex. App.–Beaumont 2012, no pet.).

Filed Under: Alimony Tagged With: alimony, Lubbock, modification, spousal maintenance, spousal maintenance Texas, spousal support

January 4, 2012 by Bill McNamara

How Property is Divided in Divorce

Applying community property laws to a complex marital estate–including real estate, mineral interests, business entities, or retirement assets–requires an experienced attorney.  What happens when one spouse owns the marital residence at the start of a long marriage?  If the other spouse is demanding to just, “split the equity in the house” he or she might be getting much more or much less than they deserve.   What happens when the most significant asset is a jointly owned business, but that business has no value if it must be sold?  Divorcing spouses can destroy the value of their business if advised by an inexperienced attorney.

As a Board Certified family law attorney, I can discover the evidence and crunch the numbers so your assets are both protected and fairly divided. I can draft QDROs to divide retirement accounts so you get your fair share of community income.  I can help you to evaluate your business’ value and transition it into post-divorce management.  I can work with bank records and real property records to accurately characterize real estate as separate or community property.

You cannot afford to trust your financial future to a cheap lawyer.  Texas community property laws create complicated issues that require a specialized and experienced attorney.  Call me today so we can protect your financial future.

Filed Under: Divorce Tagged With: divorce, property

August 1, 2011 by Bill McNamara

Child Support

Child support in Texas is often determined by a simple formula where a percentage of income is paid depending on the number of children before the court and the number of children a parent must support. When all of a parent’s children are before the court, the percentages of income paid out as child support increase as follows.

  • One child – 20 percent
  • Two children – 25 percent
  • Three children – 30 percent
  • Four children – 35 percent
  • Five children – 40 percent

These percentages will be applied to the first $7500 of the obligor’s (parent who must pay child support) net monthly resources.  Net monthly resources are determined by averaging gross monthly income and deducting standard amounts as prescribed in the Texas Family Code. The final amount is usually referred to as “guidelines child support” and that amount is presumed to be in the best interest of the child; however, sometimes guidelines support is too much or to little based on the child’s and the parent’s circumstances.

When guidelines support is inappropriate, or when a parent is hiding money, you need an experienced attorney.  As a board certified family law attorney, I have the discovery and trial experience needed to track down hidden sources of income and bring them before the court.  Don’t get stuck with an unbearable child support burden.  Don’t let your children go without because their parent is not paying as much as they should.  Call me today for a consultation.

Filed Under: Children, Divorce Tagged With: child support, divorce, family law, Threaded Comments

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  • Special Appearances: Personal Jurisdiction in Divorce March 7, 2014

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