When Sarah from Houston, told John Delony and Ken Coleman on The Ramsey Show that her husband had shut her out of their bank accounts and would not let her see the prenuptial agreement she signed, they heard alarm bells [1].
“You’re in a very abusive situation and you know this, right?” Delony said.
“You’re in a financial and emotional prison,” Coleman said.
Financial control is a hallmark of abuse, and unfortunately it is all too common.
Advocates report that financial abuse shows up in nearly every domestic violence case and it keeps many survivors trapped [2]. Whether or not you have a prenup, financial abuse is against the law. Many states now treat economic or financial control as a form of domestic abuse in civil protection order laws.
Sarah wants to “financially exit” her marriage, and the cohosts assure her she has it within her control to do so — even though it may not feel like it.
A prenuptial agreement is a contract signed before marriage that sets rules for property, debts, and, sometimes, spousal support during the marriage and at divorce or death. The American Bar Association notes that the enforceability of a prenup is based on legal concepts like voluntariness, fair disclosure, and they are only applicable if they do not violate public policy, for example, around the welfare of children [3].
Delony reminded Sarah that “a prenup will talk about preexisting assets. It won’t mean that you don’t get a big chunk of what he has earned while y’all are married.”
During a marriage, income made by either partner is sometimes considered community property, and in some states filing for divorce means splitting up assets acquired during the marriage in a manner deemed fair by the court (usually a 50/50 split) [4]. As in marriage, rights in divorce are governed and will differ by state.
Enforceability of a prenup also depends on timing, required disclosures and the parties’ understanding of the terms.
Some jurisdictions require independent counsel for certain terms such as spousal-support waivers. Courts may not honor prenups in cases where one party to the agreement lacked a lawyer, had limited English proficiency or was presented with an agreement too close to the wedding, and the agreement must pass the state’s fairness and procedure tests when it is enforced.
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