Why should I have to pay half in a divorce?
In many circumstances (and please remember, I'm talking about a situation where there are no children, where neither party has been hit with a terminal illness or is unable to work), each spouse has already earned 50% of the marital assets. The earning spouse also likely contributed to the marital assets by paying expenses and supporting his or her own career growth during the marriage. These contributions are not considered when determining alimony, but they should be considered when splitting assets. This means that in many cases, each party really should get what he or she has earned—the 50% of the marital assets earned by each spouse—plus any other additional contributions made by the non-earning spouse. Of course, there are cases where one spouse did all the earning during a marriage and the other did very little—in those cases, it might make more sense for the non-earning spouse to receive only 25% or 30% of his or her "half." But even in those cases, it makes sense for both parties to receive an equal share of what was earned during the marriage.
Divorce is one of the most stressful and difficult experiences anyone can go through, and you may be wondering, "Why should I have to pay half of the cost of this?" But here's the thing: divorce is a mutual decision. You are both leaving; one does not leave and the other remains. So it's only fair that both parties share the cost.
Ascent Law LLC
8833 South Redwood Road Suite C West Jordan Utah 84088
(801) 676-5506
https://www.ascentlawfirm.com/alimony/
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