Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You should get what you contributed, that’s fair.
It doesn't work that way because marriage is a contract and marital property is owned jointly, no matter who worked for pay to accumulate it.
OP, you need a lawyer and you should walk away with half.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thank you. My career has definitely been dialed back, moreso by my own failings early on, not because his was so demanding. I do/did, however, do almost everything around the house because of how demanding his job was. But, it’s not much if i’m being honest. No kids, condo isn’t huge, etc.
All of our finances are combined, and we’re both on the mortgage/ deed. So we’re both contributing, but obviously very different amounts.
What I think is fair is a 70/30 split of our bank accounts. If we’re doing the math, I make 22% of what he makes, so in my mind, 22% of the savings/checking seems fair. I tacked on another 8% to round it out because of all the damn stress (I know that isn’t a good reason).
But then there’s also the large question of the condo. That could be another $200k coming in, but did I contribute to the down payment? Barely. Again, combined finances but it was mostly money that he had saved for a while.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You should get what you contributed, that’s fair.
It doesn't work that way because marriage is a contract and marital property is owned jointly, no matter who worked for pay to accumulate it.
OP, you need a lawyer and you should walk away with half.
Completely wrong legally. What was acquired individually PRIOR to the marriage stays with that individual.
What was jointly acquired after the marriage is up for 50% consideration.
Many greedy marriage partners think that they are unreasonably entitled to half and then they find out they are sadly mistaken..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You should get what you contributed, that’s fair.
It doesn't work that way because marriage is a contract and marital property is owned jointly, no matter who worked for pay to accumulate it.
OP, you need a lawyer and you should walk away with half.
Anonymous wrote:Please stop negotiating against yourself. Go pay to consult with a lawyer and find out what you are legally entitled to. Walk into medication with actual legal knowledge — not a bunch of advice from the internet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You should get what you contributed, that’s fair.
It doesn't work that way because marriage is a contract and marital property is owned jointly, no matter who worked for pay to accumulate it.
OP, you need a lawyer and you should walk away with half.
Anonymous wrote:You should get what you contributed, that’s fair.