Frieza_Prexus |
06-30-2013 09:02 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Littlegyno 9.0
(Post 1013420)
Judges can completely negate any prenuptial agreement under almost any circumstances,. i.e the spouse signing the agreement was under coercion or duress." This coercion or duress could mean anything including something as silly as a spouse demanding the other spouse sign it or they aren't getting married.
That's how fucking retarded courts are.
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Duress and coercion are extremely high standards to meet in most cases for many, but not all, states. For example, Texas has not invalidated a prenup on involuntary grounds in over 27 years. The last time California did so, to my knowledge, was in 1993 when a very very sick old man was told "sign the prenup or I'll leave you to die." The only other groups to invalidate a prenup are essentially fraud or a defect in formation such as you didn't sign it. Most of the "stupid" prenup cases you hear about are because someone had a crappy lawyer or they lied/defrauded the other party.
A well written prenup is rock solid in most states. So no, a judge cannot invalidate them "under almost any circumstances."
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