Ending your marriage can be an incredibly emotional process. Handling the legal process which ends a relationship originally meant to last a lifetime can be exhausting, especially if the process is contested by a party, as this can lead to additional complexities.
Even when it’s over, and you’ve been issued a Decree of Divorce by a court to signify that your marriage is officially in the past, there are still probably going to be terms of the agreement or court order that need to be satisfied by either you or your former spouse. Even when your marriage is over, the divorce process still runs in the background, ensuring that all of the terms of the divorce are carried out.
A common term included in divorce agreements is spousal maintenance. Some states call this “alimony,” while others call it “spousal support.” In Texas, it’s called “spousal maintenance.” Different terminology aside, the issue is the same – one spouse will have to provide the other financial support for a certain amount of time after the divorce has completed.
If you and your spouse can reach an agreement regarding spousal maintenance, then it will be considered contractual alimony. If you and your spouse cannot agree on spousal maintenance, then it will have to be determined by a court order. Contractual alimony can have more flexible terms that more closely fit the needs of the parties because it doesn’t have to comply with the requirements of court-ordered spousal maintenance.
While it might be difficult to come to an agreement on the highly contested issue of post-divorce financial support, being able to sort it out with your ex-spouse in the agreement, rather than taking it before the judge, can lead to a better outcome for you.
Spousal Support can get complicated
If you and your ex-spouse are not able to come to a decision on post-divorce financial support, it will be up to the judge of your divorce proceedings to reach a decision. This decision will be made in a court order, and will set out the whether there will be spousal maintenance, how much it will be, and how long it will last.
The first thing that the judge will have to determine is if someone is eligible for spousal maintenance. In Texas, there’s a presumption that there will not be any spousal maintenance – someone has to bring up the topic and then convince the court that they should be awarded spousal maintenance, in order for this to be awarded.
Qualifications for alimony
Once the issue of spousal maintenance is raised, the court will have to determine if the person making the claim is eligible to receive it. According to the Texas family code, there are two situations which make someone eligible to receive spousal maintenance:
The other spouse has been convicted, or received a deferred adjudication, for a crime of family violence that occurred either within two years before the date that the
divorce was filed, or while the divorce was pending, or
The spouse seeking spousal maintenance can’t earn enough to meet their basic needs because either
Only if the person claiming spousal maintenance can prove themselves eligible will their claim move onward.
Once eligibility is established, the court would look to a variety of factors to determine how much spousal maintenance is due. These factors include:
There are also rules that the court has to abide by, when it sets how long spousal maintenance payments will last after a divorce. The maximum duration depends on why the spouse is eligible for maintenance payments:
If the marriage lasted more than 10 years, then the length of the marriage will determine how long the spousal maintenance payments can last:
Married between 10-20 years | Maximum duration of 5 years |
---|---|
Married between 20-30 years | Maximum duration of 7 years |
Married 30 years or more | Maximum duration of 10 years |
If one spouse is eligible for spousal maintenance because of family violence, then the maximum duration of maintenance.
If the spouse is eligible for maintenance due to their own physical or mental inability or that of the child they’re caring for, then there’s no maximum duration for payments.
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