Monday, December 23, 2013

REPOST: Divorce for Catholics?

Pope Francis has stated that the Catholic Church needs to reach out soundly to the divorced and civilly remarried. This generated speculations that he will rethink the Church’s orthodox practice of forbidding divorced or remarried people to receive the Holy Communion.


Image source: Boston Globe

FAILED MARRIAGES are a fact of modern life, yet the suffering that accompanies every divorce is compounded for Roman Catholics. Because the sacrament of matrimony, according to church doctrine, establishes a bond that is indissoluble, Catholics who have divorced and remarried are forbidden to receive communion at Mass.

That stricture has become, for many, a demeaning symbol of exclusion; it has driven many others away from the church. But the promise of Catholic reform under Pope Francis is so far-reaching that the church is poised to rethink its view of divorce — a view that has defined Catholicism for 500 years.

In modern times, church leaders, especially in the United States, have worked around the Vatican’s punitive doctrine by stretching the bounds of the annulment process, extending to average people what once was available mostly to royals. By searching out “impediments” that, after the fact, kept prior marriages from being “valid,” Catholics in subsequent marriages are restored to good standing, and welcomed at the communion rail. By declaring the earlier marriage null and void — it never happened — the principle of indissolubility is upheld.

Never mind that this usually involves gross insult to former spouses, distortions of marital history, and the de-legitimation of children. Annulment is divorce Catholic-style. However mercifully intended, the annulment process is corrupt and corrupting. It points to the drastic need for reform.

Many parishes now welcome “Divorced Catholics” groups, which offer mutual support, while quietly pressing for fuller church acceptance of divorced and remarried people. But priests and bishops have decried the policy, too. In 1993, some German bishops proposed that “the general rule” should take into account the “concrete circumstances” of twice-married couples, perhaps leaving room for a pastoral decision to readmit them to communion. Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, then the Vatican’s doctrinal head, slapped the suggestion down. And that was that.

Then, this October, the German diocese of Freiburg issued guidelines for admitting the divorced and remarried to communion. The first marriage might be deemed as irrevocably failed, the second marriage as having been entered into seriously and with full commitment, and so on. Again, the Vatican doctrinal head said a strong no, and ordered the diocese to stop issuing the guidelines.

This time, the German bishops pushed back. Stuttgart Bishop Gebhard Fuerts said last month that the German bishops as a whole would take up the subject in a meeting next March. Munich Cardinal Reinhard Marx said that the bishops “cannot end the discussion.” Indeed, he said it would proceed “on a broad scale.”

Normally, the Vatican doctrinal office can be assumed to be speaking for the pope. But Cardinal Marx is one of Pope Francis’ Council of Eight — the pope’s hand-chosen, intimate advisers, who are specially tasked with keeping Rome connected with the lived experience of the faithful. Francis, while affirming the annulment procedure, has said that the church’s handling of the question of divorce and remarriage must be taken up at the synod — a representative meeting of bishops — that will take place next year. When asked about the divorced and remarried, Francis said, “This is a time of mercy.”

The synod bishops will surely affirm the principle that marriage is for life. But they will be looking for a way of doing so without ignoring the realities of people’s lives. For centuries, Roman Catholicism has defined itself against Protestants and the Orthodox by the absolute prohibition of divorce. (History buffs will recall that St. Thomas More, lord chancellor under Henry VIII, accepted beheading rather than approve his king’s second marriage.) Even more problematic, Jesus explicitly condemned divorce (“What God has joined together, let no one separate.” Matthew 19:6).

The church has already relativized the Lord’s commandment indirectly, by stretching the bounds of annulment. To do so directly, the church must adjust the way it reads scripture — accepting that while Jesus spoke in one cultural context, we live in another. So if the church does reform its practice on divorce, other questions will follow — and may be less difficult. That Jesus chose only males for his apostles, for instance, would not necessarily mean women are ineligible for priesthood now.

Principles are at stake in these debates, but last month, in his “apostolic exhortation,” Francis upheld the most basic one: “The Eucharist, although it is the fullness of sacramental life,” he said, “is not a prize for the perfect but a powerful medicine and nourishment for the weak. These convictions have pastoral consequences that we are called to consider with prudence and boldness . . . The church is not a tollhouse; it is the house of the Father, where there is a place for everyone, with all their problems.”


Best California Attorney award winner Michael Kelly has almost 40 years of experience practicing family law. Visit this website for more information on his work.

Monday, December 16, 2013

Michael Kelly is one of the most seasoned lawyers in California. He has been practicing family law since 1969 and has received numerous awards and recognitions such as the Best California Attorney award given by Best Lawyers Magazine.

Friday, December 13, 2013

YouTube: Want a Divorce? Wait 'til After Xmas

The holidays are the time when divorce rates rise but recently many couples have postponed the divorce because they can't afford to do otherwise.


Friday, November 22, 2013

"Why I'm taking back Christmas"

"The biggest, bestest gift I'm giving my kids is the gift of a happy mom. A mom who will no longer cringe when someone says Merry Christmas. A mom who may not be able to get them the coolest things but can definitely give them something priceless: love. Love, and a lesson.

Read the full blog on The Huffington Post.

Monday, November 18, 2013

REPOST: Updating family law for the needs of the 21st century

In Ireland, a new bill is being proposed to meet the demands of the increasingly changing modern family structures. The bill involves same-sex couples and cohabitants, children born outside marriages, surrogacy, and guardianship.


Image source: irishtimes.com

The modern Irish family comes in many forms. Not that you’d know that by examining the law in this area. Legislators have proved slow in the past to draw up policies relating to anything outside the traditional family unit based on marriage.

Unmarried parents, same-sex couples and cohabitants have often felt either invisible or discriminated against in the eyes of the law.

The current law relating to guardianship, custody and access to children dates back to the 1960s, for example.

Our laws on paternity and children born outside marriages were drawn up in the mid-1980s.

As for children born as a result of assisted human reproduction or surrogacy? Well, there are no specific laws whatsoever. The new Children and Family Relationships Bill 2013 aimed to change this by bringing a diverse range of family types in from the cold.

For Minister for Justice and former family law practitioner Alan Shatter, this is territory he is intimately familiar with. In fact, he is understood to have drafted most of the legislation single-handedly over the summer months.

The new Bill will provide for what he describes as “contemporary legal architecture” on guardianship, custody, access and the upbringing of children in diverse family forms.

This includes married families, families that rely on the care of children by members of the extended family, families based on cohabiting couples and civil partnerships.

Children’s rights

The legislation will also reflect the new enhanced position of children’s rights in the Constitution – following last year’s referendum.

Some of the biggest gaps in family law relate to guardianship and put many families in a difficult legal position. For example, many Irish domestic adoptions today are so-called step-parent adoptions. This is where a mother – who had a child outside marriage – is now married to a man who is not the father of the child, and wants her husband to have a legal link with her child.

As a result of a gap in the law, mothers have to go through the artificial procedure of adopting their own child.

The new Bill will change this by facilitating husbands to become joint guardians of children in such relationships – where it is in the best interests of the child – without going through the adoption process. In addition, it will allow for same-sex civil partners or those cohabiting with the biological or adoptive parent to apply for guardianship of a child, subject to certain conditions.

Access provisions will also be simplified. It will remove the two-stage process for a person other than a parent – such as a grandparent or former step-parent – who is seeking access to a child.

Adoption by same-sex couples will also be legislated for, either in this proposed law or in a related piece of legislation.

The current law relating to adoption provides for the adoption of children by married couples, by single persons (irrespective of their sexual orientation), but not by cohabiting couples or by civil partners.

As Shatter has observed, a law which permits the adoption of a child by an individual who is gay but excludes the adoption of a child by a same-sex couple makes little sense and can properly be regarded as discriminatory.

In all of these proceedings, the voice of the child will remain central. For example, a child over the age of 12 must be consulted in relation to applications for guardianship, custody and access orders, and may be entitled to refuse her or his consent.

The proposed laws in the area of assisted human reproduction will also give legal certainty to thousands of families who have had children using donor eggs or sperm. This is an area that has been riven with uncertainty. A recent High Court ruling recently effectively concluded that parentage was based on genetics: so if a mother gives birth to a child using a donor egg, the biological mother would be the donor, not the birth mother.

The new laws will seek to clarify this by stating that in cases of where donor material is used, the parents are the birth mother and her consenting spouse or partner.

In the area of surrogacy, the law will say parentage may be assigned by the court on the basis of genetic connection to one of the intending parents and the spouse or partner of that person.

The proposed laws may not be to everyone’s liking. And they may not go far enough for others. But few are likely to disagree they are an attempt to catch up with the reality that is the changing face of the Irish family.


A renowned family lawyer, Michael Kelly has been in the industry for over 40 years. More about him can be read here.

Sunday, November 3, 2013

YouTube: Jenna McCarthy: What you don't know about marriage

In this funny, casual talk from TEDx, writer Jenna McCarthy shares surprising research on how marriages (especially happy marriages) really work. One tip: Do not try to win an Oscar for best actress.

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

REPOST: Prenuptial Agreements Are on the Rise, And More Women Are Requesting Them

With people's financial capacities continuously improving, the risk of sharing them in a divorce also escalates. Hence, more and more people are now marrying with a prenup to protect their assets.


Image source: huffingtonpost.com

If you think prenups are just for celebrities or the super wealthy, think again.

According to a new survey of the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers (AAML), 63 percent of divorce attorneys say they've seen an increase in prenuptial agreements during the past three years. What's more, 46 percent noted an increase in the number of women initiating requests for prenups.

Alton Abramowitz, the president of the AAML and a HuffPost Divorce blogger, said the trend may reflect the current state of the economy.

“As the financial and real estate markets continue to improve, there is a greater awareness of risk to possibly sharing these gains in a divorce,” Abramowitz said in a press release. “The trend of divorcing spouses fighting over which one has to take possession of a devalued home and other depreciated assets appears to be coming to an end.”

The lawyers polled said the top three items most commonly covered in prenups over the last three years are the protection of separate property, alimony/spousal maintenance and division of property.

It's not the first time a survey has indicated that Americans are increasingly accepting of prenuptial agreements. A 2010 Harris Interactive poll revealed that 44 percent of singles and 49 percent of divorced people said they thought having a prenup was a good idea. Meanwhile, 15 percent of divorced people said they regretted not having one.


Recognized as the oldest and largest family law firm in Santa Monica, California, Kelly, Fernandez & Karney houses more than 20 staff members and six attorneys, and has over 100 years of collective experience in family law. For inquiries, visit this website.

Monday, September 23, 2013

REPOST: Same-sex marriage needs same-sex divorce

With an increasing number of states legalizing same-sex marriage, it almost seems like that natural next step would be same-sex divorce.  This post on Salon.com features an excerpt from the Margaret Klaw book, "Keeping It Civil: The Case of the Pre-nup and the Porsche & Other True Accounts from the Files of a Family Lawyer," which gives insight into the relationship between marriage and the law.

Same-sex marriage needs same-sex divorce
Image source: Salon.com via Shutterstock
The other day, a woman who wants a divorce called me. Which initially sounded fine, since that’s what I do. But upon further discussion, it turned out not to be fine. It turned out that I can’t get her divorced, and neither can anyone else. She’s stuck in a marriage that she and her spouse both want to end, with no feasible way out.
Sound like the eighteenth century? Or Saudi Arabia, perhaps? To the contrary, this woman suffers from a thoroughly modern problem. The problem is that her spouse is a wife, not a husband. This woman married her partner in Vermont—picture the quaint inn, the rolling green hills dotted with black-and-white cows, the wedding package so appealing to same-sex couples in that most progressive state of all—and after the wedding, they packed up and drove back home to Philly. Therein lies the problem. Pennsylvania does not recognize their marriage as valid, thanks to our state’s version of the federal Defense of Marriage Act. Not only does this law, passed by a group of homophobic legislators in Harrisburg back in 1996, prohibit same-sex marriage here, it also provides that such a marriage entered into in another state is “void in this Commonwealth.” And if Pennsylvania doesn’t recognize you as being married in the first place, its courts have no authority to divorce you.
You’d think I would just tell my would-be client to go back to Vermont to get divorced. But she can’t. Because although Vermont welcomes nonresidents into the state to marry, the opposite is true when it comes to divorce: You have to live there. And this is not unique to Vermont; it’s the case across the country. There is no state that requires residency as a prerequisite for a marriage license. You can drive to Vegas from anywhere at all and get married in the Elvis Chapel. Which is why gay and lesbian couples have flooded into Vermont and Massachusetts and New Hampshire and the rest of the states where they can legally marry—for the weekend, that is. Like Vermont, however, all states currently require that at least one spouse be a resident in order to file for divorce. While “residency” is defined differently by different states, it always means that at least one of the spouses has to live there for some defined period of time (in the case of Vermont, for six months) before a divorce complaint can be filed. I assume that the rationale behind these divorce residency requirements is that states don’t want to tie up their court systems adjudicating divorces for people who don’t actually live (or pay taxes) there.
What’s my would-be client to do? She’s stuck, unless she or her wife (a) move to a state that will recognize their marriage and (b) live there long enough to satisfy the residency requirement so they can file for divorce. And if they don’t do this and one of them wants to marry someone else? She can’t. Because she’s still married. The irony is overwhelming. Gay people are fighting so hard for marriage equality, and now, when some of those marriages don’t work out (what a surprise; they’re no different from straight people!), they also need to fight for the right to divorce.
So my Vermont-married, would-be client, and all those in similar circumstances, have no access to the courts to get divorced. The related, and far more common, would-be client is the unmarried gay person whose long-term, marriage-like relationship ends. Can he avail himself of the remedies available to married people under our divorce laws? Is she entitled to any assets or support from her ex?
That’s the question I was asked by Eddie, who’d been in a relationship for twenty-two years when his partner dumped him for another man. Older, educated, and successful, Marco, the ex, owned a house, investments, and a pension. Eddie had none of those. He was a high school graduate who essentially hadn’t worked since he moved in with Marco at the age of twenty-one. He dabbled in various artistic pursuits, none of them profitable. But that was okay, because Marco supported him and, according to Eddie, specifically, explicitly, told him that he always would. So Eddie enjoyed their comfortable, middle-class life together, and never took any measures to ensure his own financial security. When Marco ended the relationship, Eddie was faced with the hard reality that here he was, forty-three years old, with no money in the bank and no ability to earn much more than minimum wage. He came to me to find out if the promises Marco made could be enforced.
I looked into it and saw that the answer was a resounding maybe. It’s fairly uncharted territory in Pennsylvania. In addition to same-sex couples not having the protection of our divorce code, since they can neither marry here nor have their out-of-state marriages recognized, we have no civil-union or domestic-partnership laws either. Which is why my client Jorani was better off marrying her boyfriend, even with a restrictive prenuptial agreement, than simply continuing to live with him. What we’re left with is the common law, those basic legal principles brought over from England centuries ago. For Eddie, the common law principle on which we could hang our hat was the law of contracts. We would have to convince a judge that Eddie and Marco had made a contract that Marco breached, and as a result, Eddie was entitled to compensation. This would not be an easy task, since there was no written agreement. Our argument would be that the existence of a contract could be implied from Eddie’s and Marco’s words and actions.
Not surprisingly, Marco denied that he made any such promises to Eddie, and he downplayed the seriousness of the relationship, emphasizing both men’s admission to having had other sexual partners during the decades they lived together. At trial, Eddie testified about specific instances in which Marco told him he would provide for Eddie financially for the rest of his life, and we presented evidence of actions taken by Marco that would support that testimony, such as naming Eddie the beneficiary of his pension and his life insurance and providing for Eddie in his will.
A contract requires an offer and an acceptance. We argued to the judge that Marco offered to Eddie, by his verbal promises and by his conduct, which was consistent with those promises, that he would take care of Eddie forever. Eddie, we said, in order to provide companionship and domestic services to Marco, accepted that offer by not pursuing education or career opportunities. The tricky thing about this argument is we had to show that “companionship and domestic services” was really that, rather than sexual services, as the courts won’t enforce such a contract. Just like you can’t sue to enforce a drug deal gone bad or to recoup the amount you were shorted in an extortion scheme, you can’t look to the courts to enforce a contract for, essentially, prostitution.
There was little case law to rely on in Pennsylvania, but we found some very helpful decisions coming from our sister state across the Delaware River. The New Jersey Supreme Court, in a case involving an unmarried heterosexual couple (actually, one party, Mr. Roccamonte, was married, but to someone else, but the claim for support was brought against his estate after his death by his girlfriend, with whom he had lived for twenty-five years), held that “a general promise of support for life, broadly expressed, made by one party to the other with some form of consideration given by the other will suffice to form a contract.”
“Consideration” refers to what is given in exchange for a promise. If there’s no consideration, a promise just becomes a gift, and you can’t force someone to give you a gift. But if Mr. Roccamonte promised his girlfriend financial support in exchange for housekeeping services, and the housekeeping services were in fact performed by her, then there is consideration for his promise of support—called by the wonderful name “palimony” in New Jersey and in many other courts around the country—and he can be required to provide it. That is, so long as the consideration is not sex.
In the Roccamonte case, the New Jersey Supreme Court found that the plaintiff’s “making a home for the defendant, cooking for him, and acting as his social companion” was ample consideration in exchange for Mr. Roccamonte’s promise to support her for life. The court stated that the law of New Jersey was that “unmarried adult partners, even those who may be married to others, have the right to choose to cohabit together in a marital-like relationship, and that if one of those partners is induced to do so by a promise of support given her by the other, that promise will be enforced by the court.”
We loved the Roccamonte case. We briefed it thoroughly for the judge. Unfortunately, what the New Jersey Supreme Court rules is not binding on the courts of Pennsylvania; it’s merely illustrative. Given the dearth of law on the subject in our state, we asked the judge to look to New Jersey for guidance about how she should rule. Although we knew going in that it was a long shot, we were cautiously optimistic by the end of the trial. We felt that the judge had paid close attention to the testimony and seemed sympathetic to our client’s plight. I made our pitch during closing arguments, asking her to award Eddie $300,000, which was the amount Marco received from the sale of the house where he and Eddie had lived for twenty-two years and Eddie had come to think of as his own. We argued that this was a reasonable amount to fulfill the promise of lifetime support, as it would enable Eddie to buy his own house. The judge nodded as she listened. My associate and I packed up our files and went back to the office, chewed our nails, and waited for her decision.
It came two weeks later. We lost. We never got out of the starting gate. The judge ruled that she could not find there was a contract. We had not convinced her, by a preponderance of the evidence, that Marco had in fact promised to provide for Eddie financially. So she never reached the legal issues, although her opinion indicates that had she done so, she actually would have been persuaded by our arguments. Had she found that a contract existed, she would have relied on Roccamonte and other cases we cited from New Jersey, and she would have awarded money damages to Eddie. That’s encouraging and useful in the long march forward to make good law for gay people in Pennsylvania, but it was of no help to Eddie. My whole firm was devastated, and Eddie just couldn’t understand the result. It was so hard for him to accept that the judge believed Marco’s version of events and not his.
We keep in touch. Eddie stops by the office now and then. He’s working really hard at rebuilding his life, one step at a time. I can’t help thinking, though, how much better off he’d be now if he and Marco had been able to marry. It would have been a garden variety divorce. By my calculation, Eddie would have walked away with at least half a million dollars in assets and he’d surely be receiving alimony, and there would have been no threshold legal hurdle to jump over; he would have been entitled to those remedies.
It’s a great civil rights victory that at least some states have legalized same-sex marriage. But part of the benefit of marriage should be the legal protection afforded by divorce laws, based on our societal consensus that marriage is an economic partnership and that when it ends, what’s been accumulated together should be fairly divided, regardless of title, and a spouse who was dependent on the other spouse’s income during the marriage should be supported for some period of time afterward while he gets back on his feet. These are general principles embodied, to a greater or lesser degree, in the divorce laws of all fifty states. And if you are gay and have the misfortune to live in a state where you can’t marry, or where your out-of-state marriage isn’t recognized, you don’t qualify for these basic protections. You could get lucky and win a case like Eddie’s based on common-law contract principles, but it’s an expensive, uphill battle. It’s not the solution. Marriage equality won’t be complete without divorce equality.

Although California has had inconsistent laws regarding marriage equality, same-sex unions would benefit from the protection of a prenuptial agreement.  This Twitter account for Michael Kelly, one of the most seasoned divorce lawyers in the state, provides quick tips and more information about divorce-related matters.

Friday, August 30, 2013

Michael Kelly on YouTube

Michael Kelly is a lawyer at Kelly, Fernandez & Karney. He is a leading counsel on family law and divorce preparations, proceedings, and implications. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lsPtNT8vxY0



Youtube: Michael Kelly, Los Angeles Lawyer

Michael Kelly is a lawyer at Kelly, Fernandez & Karney. He is a leading counsel on family law and divorce preparations, proceedings, and implications.

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Women and divorce: By the numbers

It may be a surprise to some, but it seems women file for divorce more often than men. A recent study highlighted that only one percent of women found themselves divorced in the 1920s, compared to 15 percent today.

Image Source: www.myjewishlearning.com

As early as 1867, the numbers on divorce filing rates indicate that women are initiating divorce proceedings 62 percent of the time. This nationwide statistic peaked at 70 percent in the 60s. Smaller samples in 1969 showed that in Iowa, 80 percent of filers are women, and this trend of women as plaintiffs in divorce proceedings continues to hover over 60 percent until today.


Image Source: www.i.huffpost.com

In modern times, women’s desire to break away from their marriages may be psychologically rewarding, but not as practical. Although women are quicker than men in emotional recovery, they tend to suffer more from the economic strains of divorce. In fact, research indicates that divorced men enjoy income growth, while divorced women endure a significant drop in the cash flow at home. A woman's standard of living takes a 73 percent dip after divorce, while men take in a 42 percent increase.

Image Source: www.b-i.forbesimg.com

This financial disparity is traced to child custody norms, which favor women. Men who are mandated to contribute to child support sometimes neglect the obligation. Figures show that the court is not where battles are won, as only 61 percent of those ordered to pay up actually do. The problem of inconsistent child support is persistent, but with the improving standard of wages in the country, it seems the trend of women ending their marriages will not cease. Equal opportunities for women may even push up the numbers, as the fairer sex can now secure better living standards for their children with better pay.

Divorce is a difficult process for both parties, but may put one at a greater disadvantage. Michael Kelly is a lawyer specializing in divorce and family law. Women in the Santa Monica, CA area can visit this website for information about how he and his firm handle divorce cases.

Sunday, August 11, 2013

"Party planners and manufacturers of party supplies are raking it in selling everything from “decapitated groom” cake toppers to black “just divorced” sashes to nights on the town complete with VIP club entrance and limo transportation."
—  TIME, The Booming Business of “Divorce Parties”

Friday, July 26, 2013

REPOST: Breadwinning Wives and Nervous Husbands

Richard Thaler’s article discusses the links between traditional gender views and the risk for divorce:
 
Image Source: nytimes.com
 
GIRLS are generally outperforming boys in high school, and then proceeding in greater numbers to attend and graduate from college. And as women take the helm as chief executives of more major corporations, including Hewlett-Packard, I.B.M. and PepsiCo, there are hints that the glass ceiling may be at least cracking, if not breaking.

Such developments should encourage aspiring young women to believe that social norms are changing, and that barriers to success are dropping. But a new study reveals that women’s gains on the economic front may be contributing to a decline in the formation and stability of marriages.

One reason for this decline may be that women with greater earning power have greater economic security that allows them to leave bad marriages. Yet another possibility is that many men seem to be clinging to a social norm from the “Mad Men” days: that the husband should be the primary earner in a family.

There is an obvious disconnect here. Those men who spent their teenage years goofing off and their college years drinking beer shouldn’t be surprised that women who consistently received higher grades and continued further in school might now be earning more money as well. But the evidence suggests that while men tend to applaud their spouses when they help to bring home the bacon, husbands aren’t always as enthusiastic when women start bringing home the filet mignon. And it’s especially troubling that these old-fashioned social norms about gender identity appear to be adversely affecting family formation and stability.

This is the finding of an interesting new paper by Marianne Bertrand, Emir Kamenica and Jessica Pan, three economists who are colleagues of mine at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business. They found that traditional views of gender identity, particularly the view that the right and proper role of the husband is to make more money than the wife, are affecting choices of whom to marry, how much to work, and even whether to stay married.

Suppose that both men and women are happier — all else being equal — the more money their spouse makes. In such a world, couples wouldn’t care whether the man or woman earns more, so the population of couples would have what we call a “normal distribution,” and would be captured in a bell-shaped curve. But that’s not what we see in the real-world data.

Instead, there is a sharp drop in the number of male-female couples at exactly the point where the woman starts to earn more than half of household income.

This finding supports earlier research from speed-dating sessions, which found that while women prefer men to be intelligent and ambitious, men have these preferences for women only to the point where women threaten to earn more than they do. These preferences appear to be reflected in whom people choose to marry and in how much women choose to work outside the home.

Women’s earnings have been rising relative to men’s over the past 40 years — though, on average, women’s pay still lags behind. One sign of change is seen in a recent study from Pew Research, which finds that mothers are providing more than half the income in 15 percent of married households with children at home, up from 3.5 percent in 1960. Given such trends, it’s logical that problems would arise if men kept their desire to be the primary breadwinners.

This may be one of many reasons that the share of young adults in marriages decreased 30 to 50 percent across various racial and ethnic groups from 1970 to 2008. Clearly, a choice to marry later in life explains part of this decline, but Ms. Bertrand and her co-authors estimate that the trend in the percentage of women making more than men explains almost one-fourth of the marriage rate’s decline in the 40 years ended in 2010.

What happens when a man marries a woman who has the education and skills to earn more than him? The couple can avoid violating the “man earns more” social norm if the woman works part time or leaves the labor force altogether. The authors found evidence of both choices. But what if the woman stays in the labor force and does earn more than her spouse? How does this affect the marriage? The findings here are striking. In such couples, surveys show, both wife and husband generally report being less happy about the marriage.

Given these findings, it isn’t surprising that when a wife earns more than her husband, the risk of divorce rises, too. To study this, the authors used a survey conducted in two waves, 1987-88 and 1992-93. (There were no more recent data available for this particular test.) Then they investigated the likelihood of a divorce in the five-year interval. For this sample, some 12 percent of all couples were divorced during this period — a sobering fact about the stability of marriages in general. But the divorce rate rose by half, to about 18 percent, for couples in which the wife earned more than the husband.

How to explain the jump? Some people might think that a wife who earns more will do fewer household chores than her tradition-bound mate expects. Regardless of your opinion about men who harbor such feelings, the facts rule out that explanation: women who earn more than their husbands actually do a greater share of household chores, compared with couples in which the wife works but earns less.

The paper’s findings support the anecdotal complaints of many highly educated, high-earning women who say they can’t find suitable husbands. And as women continue to outperform men in school, these problems are likely to grow. Perhaps over time, men will catch on to this new world and accept the fact that hard-working girls may well turn into highly paid women.

Until that realization sinks in, problems arising from tradition-bound notions of gender identity will keep taking a toll on our economy and our families. Employers, however, may have opportunities to help.
v For a variety of reasons, including the stubbornly persistent norm that women assume more than half the responsibility for raising children, many highly educated women would like to work part-time at a level commensurate with their skills. Businesses, however, have been slow to adapt, even as technology makes it much easier to do some or all of one’s work from home. I believe that there are substantial economic opportunities for companies that find ways to hire the millions of talented but underemployed mothers in our economy.

But now back to the notion of couples’ contentment: Is there any way to tell whether it’s the wife or the husband who becomes unhappy when the wife earns more? Does he think that she is threatening his manliness, or does she think that he’s a slacker?

That may be impossible to answer, partly because of something I learned long ago from Alvin E. Roth, a Nobel laureate in economics last year. I call it Roth’s rule: In equilibrium, it’s impossible for you to be happier than your spouse.

If you and your spouse both understand that rule, you’re both likely to be happier — regardless of how much money either of you make.
Atty. Michael Kelly is the current head of Kelly, Fernandez, and Karney, the oldest and largest family law firm in Santa Monica, California. Visit this website to learn how the firm manages clients’ divorce cases to ensure peaceable outcomes.

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Five of the most expensive celebrity divorces of all time

Divorce has become somewhat of a normal occurrence in Hollywood. Although the occasional split will shock audiences, celebrity break-ups are generally unsurprising – if not already expected. The real story comes when the settlement amounts are revealed. Here are some of Hollywood’s priciest splits so far:


Madonna and Guy Ritchie – $90 million

Image Source: brisbanetimes.com.au
 
















Madonna, then 53, and Guy Ritchie, who was 43, made headlines with their split after eight solid years of marriage– an eternity in modern Hollywood. Madonna opened up eventually, saying the relationship lost its flame and left her wondering if true love even existed.



Neil Diamond and Marcia Murphey – $150 million

Image Source: unterhaltung.de.msn.com


















The pair was wed long before Neil Diamond’s hit records were even produced. After a marriage that lasted a quarter of a century, Murphey walked away in 1995 with the rough equivalent of $6 million for each year the two spent together.


Arnold Schwarzenegger and Maria Shriver – $250-375 million

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This celebrity split requires no introduction, though it may not be on this list in a few months’ time. As of recent reports, the two are working on reconciling and are in "no rush" to finalize their divorce after Schwarzenegger was forced to admit he had an affair with the couple’s housekeeper, resulting in a public scandal and a half-brother for his four children.


 Mel and Robyn Gibson – $425 million

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After one daughter, six sons, and 31 years of marriage, the actor and filmmaker split his hard-earned $850 million in half to end a five-year settlement battle. The couple cited "irreconcilable differences," but Gibson admits the separation began after his arrests for alcohol-related behavior.


Rupert and Anna Murdoch – $1.7 billion

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Though not celebrities per se, this couple makes the list for breaking through the 10-figure ceiling with their gargantuan settlement. It was widely known that Anna wanted her husband to retire, but it seemed Rupert would sooner give the marriage up than his time with News Corp.



Even though they are highly publicized, celebrity divorce cases receive no special treatment under the law. Michael Kelly, an attorney, specializes in family law and litigation for clients across a range of industries and visibility levels. Read more about his work on this website.

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

REPOST: Australia's divorce rates: the real statistics

This article from The Guardian reveals the real deal on the current divorce rates in Australia.

New figures show a big increase in people divorcing after 20 years or more of marriage. But it's not as big as some would have you believe.

New figures from the Australian Institute of Family Studies have shown a big increase in people divorcing after 20 years or more of marriage. However, it's not exactly as big as some media outlets would lead you to believe as most publications got the numbers wrong.

'Rate of divorce after 20 years of marriage doubles', according to one story. And 'Parents wait until children go, then do the same thing' from another.

The headline statistic is that people are waiting longer to divorce. This is based on an analysis of the proportion of marriages lasting 20 years or over before ending in divorce. A media release from the AIFS put this figure at 13% in 1990 and 28% in 2011, which many people erroneously reported.

However, the actual report shows 20.2% in 1990 to 27.6% in 2011. The same figure for 'final separation' is 13% to 18.3%. They've mixed up the separation and divorce numbers. There's actually a much more mild 7.4% increase between 1990 and 2011. So we are seeing an increase in the duration of marriages that end in divorce, just not quite as much as all that.

Image Source: guardian.co.uk

So, what are the other trends coming out of this new report?

You're more likely to get divorced when you're younger.

Image Source: guardian.co.uk
And of younger people who are married, women are more likely to experience divorce than men. In fact the rates of divorce are higher for women than men up until the 40-44 age bracket, where men then have higher rates up to 65 and over, likely due to an overall tendency for men in marriages to be older, and women younger. The AIFS report also suggests older men have a higher tendency to remarry than older women.

Divorce is down, and has been for a while.

Image Source: guardian.co.uk

From 2007-2011 the rate per 1000 people has stayed around 2.2 and 2.3. This is down from 2.9 in 1996, and very far down from the biggest peak of 4.9 in 1976 after the Family Law Act 1975 came into effect.
The age that people get divorced has increased dramatically.

Image Source: guardian.co.uk

The median age of divorce for men is at the highest its been since 1970, with 44.5 in 2011. Women are similarly high at 41.7. This is up from a historical low of 35 and 33 for men and women respectively in 1980.

Divorces that involve children are decreasing too, which the AIFS suggests means people actually are staying together for the sake of the kids. This fits with the increase in the proportion of longer marriages ending in divorce we saw above.

Image Source: guardian.co.uk

The report also highlights the relative instability of people who are unmarried, but living together, versus married couples. Citing numbers from the Growing Up In Australia report - for infants who were living with married parents in 2004, 12% were with only one parent by 2010. The same figure for unmarried couples cohabiting is 27%, suggesting unmarried couples are more than twice as likely to break up.


Atty. Michael Kelly currently heads Kelly, Fernandez and Karney, the largest family law firm in Santa Monica, California. Visit this website to learn more about divorce.

Monday, May 6, 2013

Secret assets and divorce

Image source: telegraph.co.uk
Divorce can hurt one’s pockets in more ways than one. Although illegal, hiding the real value of one’s assets remains as one of the most utilized ways to save money. However, the practice can have serious repercussions, and may actually place the erring party in a worse financial situation.

Upon marriage, both husband and wife are required by law to reveal the extent and value of their properties, especially if they are combining their assets. But not everyone complies with the rules. In some instances, one or both parties use tricks to lie about the real value of their properties.

Image source: heartdoctorblog.com
Admittedly, this can pose certain advantages especially to men when their marriage does not fare well and ends up in divorce. Husbands typically shoulder child support and may even be required by the court to pay alimony. These can cause havoc to one’s financial resources. A husband who has not disclosed the entirety of his assets is entitled to resources that he is not mandated to give away post-divorce.

The practice breaks the oath represented by the Financial Affidavit signed during marriage. A person proved to have falsely disclosed assets may face punishment during the divorce. The punishment can range from being required to shoulder the other party’s legal fees to being incarcerated. Needless to say, the punishment will depend on which state the offence was committed.

Image source: eHowCDN.com

The adage that proclaims honesty as the best policy will never get old because of practices like this. Siding with the law is best, especially in matters involving finance, as illegal practices that promise gains may actually yield nothing but losses.


Michael Kelly is an attorney based in California. He heads Kelly, Fernandez & Karney, a firm composed of experts in divorce and family law. The firm’s official website offers information about how its lawyers can help you.

Friday, April 12, 2013

Why the world is hooked on American celebrity divorce

There’s a commonly cited statistic claiming that a third of all marriages end in divorce. While that may have been true at one period in the past, there are no actual studies that currently prove the claim. While America does see a significantly higher number of divorce cases per year than in most countries where such separation is legal, the figures must be put into perspective: America’s divorce rate is the sixth-highest in the world, but that actually only comes to three divorced couples per population of 1,000.

Image source: telegraph.co.uk

In the limelight

What puts the spotlight on American divorces is Hollywood. Through the global distribution of film rights and TV program franchises, America’s celebrities have undeniably become the most well-known personalities worldwide. Unfortunately, this makes them an unintentional reflection of the entire population. In Hollywood, the divorce rate is exceptionally high, and marriages are commonly short-lived, with some lasting a mere 72 days. While this does not represent majority of divorce cases, it significantly affects the reputation of marriage in America through the years.

Image source: usmagazine.com

The reality is that there is money to be made in divorce. Though the list of celebrities who lost all their money after divorce would beg to differ, it is evident from magazine sales that the “true story” behind each split sells for millions. Perhaps, it really does because celebrity divorce cases are so radical that they continue to retain such intrigue.

Image source: theupbeatdad.com

Even though they are highly publicized, celebrity divorce cases receive no special treatment under the law. Michael Kelly, an attorney, specializes in family law and litigation for clients across a range of industries and visibility levels. Read more about his work on this website.

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

REPOST: When a Divorce Makes a Better Dad

Divorce is hardly positive, or rather, it is hardly shown and seen in a positive light.  This article from the New York Times, written by a father, does otherwise, and is actually great for fathers who are uncertain about the possible impacts of divorce on their family.

Divorce stinks. Don’t get me wrong. The excruciating pain of leaving your child on Mom’s doorstep, of missing holidays and first steps, of having to schedule visitation are nothing to sign up for unless there is no other choice. My divorce involved the kind of pain that makes you think walking in front of a train would be a piece of cake if not for your responsibilities. But buried deep within that pain is a silver lining — a motivation, an aspiration, a hands-on learning — that “normal” dads don’t get.

My son was 6 months old and my daughter was 2 when I moved into a furnished rental with shag rugs, the permanent smell of Chinese food and a commanding view, through cracked Plexiglas, of Route 95 in Providence, R.I. My time with Kerry and Seamus was limited to trips to McDonald’s and a walk across the highway to Federal Hill for pizza a couple of times a week. But even that was progress. I had been an absent dad up until that point, working nonstop. And when I wasn’t working, I was drinking and getting into trouble. I was 31 going on about 14.

Six months into our divorce, the children’s mom moved back to Boston and I followed to be near my kids. I found a cocoon of an apartment, set way up high on the interior of a block away from noise and people, to transform myself. On the seventh floor, I looked through a bay window at the brownstones below and the gold dome of the Statehouse in the distance and tried to figure out what I had done to deserve so much suffering. In the morning I would meditate while the sun shined in my face. At night I would watch the orange sunset reflect off the Hancock tower.

It was in that apartment, on the corner of Massachusetts and Commonwealth Avenues, that I learned how to be a dad. Or I unlearned how not to be a dad. I believe that we all instinctively know how to love our children as fathers. But we just have to forget everything we have been told and allow intuition to take over.

The first time my kids spent the night with me was a pivotal moment in my life. I had bought bunk beds and a matching toy chest for them. But Seamus was still too small to sleep outside his crib, so I set up a Pack ‘n Play in my room. That night I rocked my boy to sleep feeding him a bottle. The smell of him stuck in my nostrils. His soft skin soothed my soul as he made his little gulps. Slowly his body went limp. I looked down and realized that everything I had ever wanted was right there in my arms.

For two years I didn’t have a job. I went from corporate titan to sitting on the floor with Seamus on my lap surrounded by mothers and toddlers singing silly songs. The S.A.H.D. (Stay at Home Dad) had yet to become commonplace, so the mothers on the playground initially looked at me with some skepticism. But when they saw how passionately I chased my kids around the play structures, they grudgingly accepted me as just another diaper-changing parent.

I pushed a big double stroller all over town. On some rainy days we would go to the top of the Prudential tower just to have something to do, even though we couldn’t see a darn thing. The kids would run laps and jump off the bright colored furniture while I kept clear of the windows, where my severe fear of heights would have kicked in. Gradually I learned to be a dad, and a good one at that.

For six years I was on my own with two little children for long stretches of time: wrestling, crying, laughing, cooking, cleaning, traveling to visit family, throwing up (a lot), and cuddling them into bed only to come back later and look in wonder at the angels who had transformed me.

Kerry is now a freshman in college and Seamus a junior in high school. I’ve been remarried for 10 years and have a 7-year-old, Cole, to fill out our brood. Divorce was the worst thing that ever happened to me. But it was also the best thing for me as a father

Kelly, Fernandez & Karney is composed of experts who can answer further questions about divorce and how it can affect the whole family.  This website contains more information about the firm's services.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Buying their love: Spoiling children post-divorce

Couples that decide to end their marriage will undoubtedly feel the physical, mental, and emotional stresses that ensue. However, there are also others who must live with the repercussions of the split: the children.

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Divorce has significant effects on children. A study shows that apart from the trauma caused by seeing their parents fight, conflicts between parents cause children to be emotionally insecure when they reach adolescence. Moreover, it is believed that people with divorced parents are more likely to get divorced in the future.

Because of these long-term effects on the children, it is natural for either parent to overcompensate by spoiling them with material things. Though it may seem reasonable, it could actually do more harm than good for both the parent and child.

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Take, for instance, this scenario: A recently divorced mother who has always been a smart spender suddenly becomes an impulsive shopper just to get her children’s approval. Eventually, she struggles to pay her bills and her children have gotten used to their mom buying them whatever they want.

When parents are faced with this kind of situation, Suzanna de Baca of The Huffington Post suggests they reduce their spending. There is nothing wrong with buying gifts for the kids as long as not everything is a splurge. Not doing so would only make the children expect more until there comes a point that parents can no longer meet their expectations.

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Reducing spending can also teach the children about financial responsibility. They will realize that they have to work hard to get what they want and that other people’s affections cannot be bought.

Michael Kelly is a family law attorney and heads Kelly, Fernandez & Karney, the oldest and largest family law firm in Santa Monica, California. This Facebook page provides more links to articles on divorce and family.

Sunday, January 20, 2013

Divorced and unbankable: Celebrities who went broke after divorce

Bankruptcy can happen to anyone at any time. For some people, insolvency could happen after an emotionally charged divorce as what these following celebrities have experienced:














Image Source: nydailynews.com


Dennis Hopper –While his daughter inherited almost $3 million dollars of his wealth, what came before that were a messy divorce with Victoria Duffy, a declaration of bankruptcy, and a sad battle with prostate cancer, which he lost in 2010 while still in the process of divorcing his wife. His liquid assets were estimated to be $300,280 plus the $10,900 from his corporations.













Image Source: purepeople.com


Brigitte Nielsen – Fans thought that she received a fortune out of her divorce from Sylvester Stallone, but fact is, she pocketed almost nothing. Now in her fifth marriage, the former Hollywood ‘glamazon’ had fallen into a downward spiral, photographed once in a Los Angeles park looking like a hopeless alcoholic.













Image Source: gossipbeast.com


Brandi Glanville – After splitting from Eddie Cibrian, the mother of two claimed that she had a measly income, barely enough to rent a car or lease a house. The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills star said that she was still building her credit during the split.


















Image Source: superiorpics.com


Mike Tyson – Uncontrolled spending habits had put the famous boxer in dire financial straits. He declared bankruptcy in 2003 after failing to pay Monica Turner, his ex-wife, the $10 million he owed her.

While divorce is an emotionally charged case, divorce attorneys like Michael Kelly and Steven Fernandez say that parties should never allow their emotions to get in the way of the proceedings. They must also consider their financial resources, think about the possibility of mediation, and understand their emotions, among others, because there’s too much at stake.

This website offers more information about family law.