Legal Separation in Utah allows the parties to separate and define issues related to their family, but still stay married.
Dividing up property yourselves List your belongings. Working together, make a list of all of the items that you own jointly. Value the property. Try to agree on the value of anything worth more than a specific agreed amount, say $100 or $500. Decide on the logical owner. Get the judge's approval.
For long-term marriages, equitable may mean a 50-50 split, or the court may decide that it is fair to give one party more or less than 50% of the property. For short term marriages, the court may put the people back into the economic position they had before the marriage.
With that said, the general rule, even for short-term marriages, is 50/50 division. However, in some very short-term marriages, the courts may put spouses back into the financial position they were in before the marriage – that is, each spouse gets the asset that belonged to him/her at the beginning of the marriage.
So, the takeaway here is that the court has the discretion to determine what a short-term marriage is and whether to grant alimony, but the cut-off is somewhere around 5-8 years or so. Our experience is that a spouse in a marriage lasting less than five years will not typically be granted alimony at trial.
Utah uses the equitable distribution method. Courts divide marital property ing to what is fair to both parties. Parties in short-term marriages may not receive a 50/50 split during the division of property. Instead, the court may put the parties back where they were before the marriage.
The amount of time to get your Utah real estate sales agent license varies due to the number of steps involved. Most complete the requirements within a few months. These include completing education, submitting an application for the license, passing the background check, and taking the licensing exam.
Utah is one of the 41 majority states that observes the “common law” on the question of property division, meaning that it splits marital property “equitably” or fairly, but not necessarily equally, although the courts usually start with the presumption that marital property should be divided equally.
The Division of Real Estate (DRE) is one of seven agencies within the Utah Department of Commerce. The Mission of the Division of Real Estate is to protect the public and promote responsible business practices through education, licensure, and regulation of real estate, mortgage, and appraisal professionals.
For long-term marriages, equitable may mean a 50-50 split, or the court may decide that it is fair to give one party more or less than 50% of the property. For short term marriages, the court may put the people back into the economic position they had before the marriage.