HOW TO DIVIDE MARITAL PROPERTY IN A TEXAS DIVORCE

Getting a divorce can leave you with a lot of issues and questions to sort through. One of the most pressing issues is how your marital assets will be divided.

Each state handles divorce differently, so you must understand your state’s unique laws on divorce. Whether your state is a community property or common law state can drastically change how the court divides your marital property.

Texas is a community property state

Texas is one of a few states that use community property laws to split up marital assets. This means that the court will divide possessions that each spouse obtained during the marriage equally between spouses.

How is separate and community property determined?

Texas uses the inception of title rule to make the distinction between community and separate property. This law takes a look at the status of the property at the time you acquired it. Using this rule, some examples of separate property would be:

-A business you purchased before the marriage
-Birthday gifts received during the marriage
-Inheritances.

Outside of the inception of title rule, Texas labels all possessions as community property unless you have evidence showing otherwise.

CategoryUncategorized

Copyright © 2019 Mat Rueda Law Firm

logo-footer

STAY CONNECTED WITH US: