Civil, Police, Divorce, Criminal and Behavior Laws

Virginia divorce law

Do you need a Virginia divorce lawyer? For married couples that have made the decision to get a divorce, the days, months and possibly years to follow can be extremely emotionally and physically turbulent.

The substance of a marriage and a family is not property, financial assets, and financial liabilities. The substance of a marriage is the interpersonal relationships between husband, wife, and children. Divorce doesn’t change the substantive issues from the people and their relationships to those of property and finances, but Virginia divorce litigation tries to do just that.

The emotional impact of a divorce can be intense, and has lots of highs and lows – and upside down and sideways turns as well. Like a roller coaster ride that you didn’t buy a ticket for, the emotions that emerge during divorce can come and go unpredictably.
In Virginia, you can base your divorce on either no-fault or fault grounds. The reason you might want to use fault grounds is to gain an advantage in a contested child custody case or a dispute about the division of marital property or the appropriateness or amount of alimony.

Under Virginia divorce law, premarital assets (including a business started before the marriage, a house, a retirement plan or an investment portfolio) lose their “separate” categorization if they are commingled with monies earned during the marriage, if asset-related debt is paid during the marriage, or if there is active involvement of the other spouse in the appreciation of the asset.

For a confidential consultation with a Virginia divorce attorney, you may use Google as most firms do have an online presence.