Originally posted by PrincessFiona
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A neurosurgeon marries a teacher...
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Last edited by WolfpackWife; 01-07-2015, 02:33 PM.Wife, support system, and partner-in-crime to PGY-3 (IM) and spoiler of our 11 y/o yellow lab
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I have to agree with the 50/50 - he married her, after training, he knew what he was making, he knew what he was doing, he didn't ask or get a pre-nup. Keep your pants on and you won't have that issue. Alimony, no probably not she's gainfully employed and they have no kids to support. People crack me up!Wife to NSG out of training, mom to 2, 10 & 8, and a beagle with wings.
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Family Court outcomes are anyone's guess. Seriously, I'm still surprised sometimes and I worked in it every day for 7 years. It's a squishy area.
If I *had* to guess based on the facts presented here, I would wager that Petitioner will not win an award of temporary spousal maintenance. She is working full time in a career, able bodied, sound mind, and can not demonstrate that she made career sacrificing decisions to SAH, raise kids, work part -time to take care of their lives so he could advance his career, forgo career opportunities to follow him, etc. She may *ask* for it in the petition as a bargaining point to show good will later on that she is willing to give up things too. That is more of a strategic decision.
I will say that he's fucking delusional if he thinks he's going to get out of this marriage with offering her only the assets her teacher's salary would afford. *Fucking delusional* is the complex latin term that legally translates to mean the self important bastard is grievously mistaken if he thinks he's walking away with the lion's share of the assets accumulated during the term of their marriage. In Minnesota the statute provides for "equitable distribution" of marital assets. In a case like this where incomes are incredibly disparate between spouses, I'd be surprised if she doesn't walk away with more than 50% of the marital assets. Of course all of this hinges on premarital assets and debts they each brought into the marriage, prenups, etc. In fact, a "fair and equitable distribution" may mean he will have to "buy her out" with a payout that looks like rehabilitative maintenance over a period of several years because I am assuming the bulk of the estate is not liquid assets.
I see the lawyers making out the most on this one, honestly.
I was surprised to hear that a degree is considered a marital asset in NY. This standard is very much a minority stance.Last edited by houseelf; 01-07-2015, 04:31 PM.In my dreams I run with the Kenyans.
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Originally posted by TulipsAndSunscreen View PostI love when people who put their dicks in other people feel entitled...Tara
Married 20 years to MD/PhD in year 3 of MFM fellowship. SAHM to five wonderful children (#6 due in August), a sweet GSD named Bella, a black lab named Toby, and 1 guinea pig.
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Originally posted by PrincessFiona View PostThe basic legality here is that it will be 50/50. There's an actual mini-uproar over it though with the docs believing he's being taken to the cleaners and she only "deserves" to take the percentage out of the marriage that she contributed. The big issue settles around retirement and my understanding is that she is entitled to 50% of what they put away during the time of the marriage. The argument is that she should only get the percentage that she was able to put in. The other big thing is property. Because he earned more, they bought bigger homes. The idea is she isn't entitled to half.
They met after training, but I'm not sure that matters in my eyes.
Kris
Imagine that!
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Originally posted by houseelf View Post
I was surprised to hear that a degree is considered a marital asset in NY. This standard is very much a minority stance.
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Originally posted by Mrs. MD, Esq. View PostNY is the only wonky state with this...pretty sure the court felt bad for this one woman that would be uber screwed otherwise (just finished training, no assets). Unfortunately, it set a precedent that can be very screwy...
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Originally posted by JustRightKelly View PostVery interesting! Does this only apply if the divorce occurs in New York, or does the marriage have to take place there as well?
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