DIVORCE – UNCONTESTED
(NON-CONTESTED)
You can
obtain an uncontested divorce when both parties have agreed on all
divorce related issues such as spousal support, division of marital
assets, child custody and parenting time, child support, health
insurance and life insurance.
Even
though the divorce is uncontested it is best for the parties to
execute a Separation Agreement, which covers all of the terms of the
parties post divorce relationship.
You can
also obtain an uncontested divorce if your spouse does not appear in
the divorce action or does appear but does not oppose the divorce.
In order to use the New York courts for a divorce, contested or
uncontested, you must meet the residency requirements:
1. One of
the parties is and has been a resident of New York for the year
immediately before the action was started.
AND
a. the
parties were married in New York, or
b. the parties resided in New York as husband and wife, or
c. the grounds for divorce occurred in New York.
2. The
grounds for divorce occurred in New York and both are residents at
the time the action is commenced.
3. Either
party has been a resident for a continuous period of two years
before the action was started.
The spouse
seeking the divorce (the Plaintiff) must show that the other spouse
(the Defendant) meets the statutory requirements.
The divorce grounds are:
Incarceration. Confinement of the defendant in prison for a
period
of three or more consecutive years.
Adultery. The commission of a voluntary act of sexual or
deviant sexual intercourse by the defendant with a person other than
the plaintiff. Deviant sexual intercourse includes, but is not
limited to, anal intercourse, fellatio, cunnilingus, pedophilia,
zoophilia and necrophilia.
Abandonment. The desertion of the plaintiff by the
defendant for a period of one or more years without just cause or
consent and without intention to return.
Physical Abandonment is where one spouse moves out
of the marital home for a year or more and literally deserts the
family.
Constructive Abandonment (also known as
constructive sexual abandonment). The defendant has refused to have
sexual relations with the plaintiff for more than one year without
just cause or the consent of the plaintiff.
Cruel and Inhuman Treatment. Conduct by the defendant
toward the plaintiff that so endangers the physical or mental well
being of the plaintiff as to make it unsafe or improper for the
plaintiff to cohabit with the defendant.
Separation Decree. This is based on the same four grounds
of fault described previously. In addition, lack of child support
may be considered grounds for a separation decree, though not for a
divorce. Finally, abandonment may be considered sufficient grounds
for a Separation Decree, even if it is for less than one year.
Conversion Divorce. When a husband and wife mutually agree
to divorce, and both desire to do so without allegations of fault,
they can sign a detailed contract (a Separation
Agreement) that sets forth their rights and
obligations in terms of distribution of property, maintenance, child
support, custody, visitation, and all other legal matters that
pertain to the marriage.
After they have lived separate and apart, pursuant to the Separation
Agreement for more than one year, either one may sue the other for
“no-fault” divorce. The plaintiff must prove that
he/she have lived up to the terms of the Agreement.
NOTE: Although you must generally prove fault to obtain a
divorce, fault generally is not considered as a factor in settling
property division (Equitable Distribution)
or maintenance, unless the fault is “egregious” (i.e. trying to kill
your spouse).
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