T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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75.1 | | MROA::MAHONEY | | Tue Aug 02 1994 17:31 | 6 |
| I think I read in the files somewhere that there is a form in the court
house that can be obtained (for about $25, not sure), is filed out and
processed, it takes several weeks, or months, and when final, is mailed
back to you. I believe the whole procedure takes not much time or money...
I hope this helps... Ana
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75.2 | | BIGQ::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Tue Aug 02 1994 17:36 | 7 |
|
The spouse in MA gets 1/2 her husband's retirement if the marriage
was over 10 years. They might want to do some checking on this and
some other things that might affect their retirement options.
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75.3 | | TFH::TOMAO | | Tue Aug 02 1994 18:22 | 9 |
| I believe they wantthe "1A" divorce. In 1984 it cost $110.00 to file
and all we needed was a notarized copy of how we were going to split
things and a general statement that it was a mutual decision.
We filed for the divorce, soon after that we appeared before the judge
and after a few simple questions we were granted our divorce and it
became final 6 months after that.
Jt
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75.4 | | WMOIS::DICASTRO | | Tue Aug 02 1994 22:45 | 5 |
| 75.2... Not to sound completely naive, but I assume that the husband
would also get 1/2 of the wife's retirement? Does anyone no if this
is from the time the divorce is filed vs granted?
JD
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75.5 | Look at the financial implications longterm | MR4DEC::JONES | | Tue Aug 02 1994 23:17 | 66 |
| It could be from the date of the Divorce being logged at the court
house, but doesn't have to be. For example, if one spouse moved out
and therefore was not contributing in any way to the support of the
breadearner(of course it could be mutual if they were both employed
and living apart), then a mediator and or good lawyer for the person
with the most to lose-i.e. largest retirment nest egg, could rightly
argue that the date be selected based on when that other person left.
In many cases, there is a third option-which in the case of Digital,
I think is followed. In this case, Digital evaluates the paperwork
from the court-QUADRO-and determines which date they will honor.
The can elect to select either of the two dates.
There is a period of Nisi that follows the court hearing(whether
you are there or not) of 30 days, during which, if you change your
mind, you can reinstate your lives and it will be as if there never
was a set of papers filed. After 90 days, it becomes final.
The speed at which the paperwork works its way through the system
is immaterial to the court. What is important to the court is that
you don't change anything after the paperwork has been submitted...
unless the court requests it.
The papers filed from the court usually include the QUADRO...stands
for Qualified Domestic Relations Order. What that covers is
a statement to the employer(s) regarding the court requesting
that 1/2 of retirement funds...in the amount available on the date
of the court/couple agree upon. This assumes that the divorce
paperwork is in order, etc., and the amount to be assigned to the other
spouse is usually equal to 1/2 of the accrued retirement of the total
on the date selected..
What has not been mentioned yet is the 401ks and IRAs. Technically,
there can be claim against half of these based on the time the two
were together for a payout of 1/2 of the accrued amount(no interest
amount over the accrued amount) at such time as the spouse requesting
it reaches a chosen age. This can get sticky particularly if:
-the payee does not agree to payment over time-either monthly or
in yearly payments.
-that spouse requests pay out at 62 rather than 65...and
-they reach 62 before the other person either retires or reaches
62/65....and
-they require the full amount due at 62.(The pain here is that the
payor spouse gets hit with both early withdrawal penalties and tax
on that amount.....remember they may want to begin withdrawal of
money for themselves and to take out their share and a huge amount...or
even incremental amounts, puts you in a much different tax situation.
What you have to consider going into this is whether
the spouse who is supposed to get the money writes up the order
such that they get the total lump sum distribution based on the total
due, or the net after the payor pays penalties and taxes. Could
be a major difference in expense to the payor.)
The fact that these two have lived apart for sometime, will actually
make it easier to distribute "stuff" because they have probably
developed and purchased identical sets of subsistence material
things. The company retirement and personal retirement accrued while
they were together is usually not too negotiable on amount, but working
through the math can be far more equitable downstream if all the
implications are shared rather than put on the person with the most
to pay out.(of course in nasty situations, equity rarely is the goal.)
Hopefully, in this case, they have been far enough away from this to
think clearly.
...my thoughts
Jim
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75.6 | | BIGQ::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Wed Aug 03 1994 10:16 | 8 |
|
And, remember, if there is a family abode being put on the market,
realize that if one partner is over 55 that the one-time $125,000
capital gains rebate kicks in. This means that BOTH partners will
not be able to make use of this feature in the future.
justme....jacqui
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75.7 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Aug 03 1994 11:43 | 14 |
| Re: .6
It's not a rebate, it's an exclusion. And it doesn't HAVE to be used. But
if it is used by either partner, neither can use it again in the future.
Re: .0
I would not attempt any kind of divorce without the advice of a competent
lawyer. Lots of people have paid many times over what they "saved" because
they didn't understand all of the consequences of what they agreed to.
A simple uncontested divorce, especially with no minor children involved, is
not expensive.
Steve
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75.8 | Best of luck | CONSLT::MCBRIDE | Flick of my BIC Scarecrow? | Wed Aug 03 1994 14:43 | 14 |
| re: .7
Steve has good advice on having a competent lawyer at least look over the
separation agreement. The whole deal with retirement benefits etc. can
be sticky and it is not automatic. My agreement waived claims to
alimony, current assets, and retirement benefits. It will go much
smoother is you can talk about the division of property before hand and
either divy the stuff up now or at a specified time in the future.
There is no 1,2,3 method that I know of. Unfortunately there were
complications in my proceedings so it is costing me some fees
because of a lack of ability to communicate on the issues. Have your
laywer talk to my lawyer and they'll bill us. :-(.
Brian
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75.9 | | 43GMC::KEITH | Real men double clutch | Fri Aug 05 1994 09:20 | 15 |
| I agree with .7 and .8
Also, start the bargining with 'anything you buy/charge which increases
the family debt from the moment you started the divorce is the
responsibility of that party.' My ex got her car totaled and used the
VISA to help pay for another. She is responsible for that expense.
You may also want to look into having one person own the house with the
other having financial gain when it is sold or within 6 mo of the other
dying. My ex and I did this too. We have a formula that divides the
income from the house based upon the value at the time of the divorce
minus the mortgage balance and the equity loan. This way, my boys
do not live in poverty from the (forced) sale of the house.
Steve
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