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Law Notes Family Law Notes

Divorce Notes

Updated Divorce Notes

Family Law Notes

Family Law

Approximately 416 pages

Family law notes fully updated for recent exams at Oxford, UK. These notes covers all the major LLB family law cases and so are perfect for anyone doing an LLB in the UK or a great supplement for those doing LLBs abroad, whether that be in Ireland, Canada, Hong Kong or Malaysia (University of London).

These notes are formed directly from a reading of the cases and main texts and are vigorous and concise.

Every major topic is dealt with in three ways:

A) One page summaries of important c...

The following is a more accessible plain text extract of the PDF sample above, taken from our Family Law Notes. Due to the challenges of extracting text from PDFs, it will have odd formatting:

Divorce

What aims should Divorce Law have?

  • To support the institution of marriage

    • As per S.1(1)(a) FLA 1996

      • Herring:

        • Divorce is a tragedy for the couple and for the state – loses about 5p per 1 of income tax

        • Can also be said to shake social stability by challenging the image of the family as comforting, secure and enduring

    • Does divorce law affect the divorce rate?

      • Deech:

        • Every successive attempt to bring statute law into line with reality causes an increase in the divorce rate owing to greater familiarity with divorce as a solution to marital problems

        • With greater willingness to use it, there is a resultant pressure on the family courts, so leading to a relaxation

          • And then another call for a change in the law in order to bring it “into line” with reality..

      • Mansfield, Reynolds, Arai (1999): Divorce rates haven’t increased that much when law has been changed

        • Legislation might be a response to divorce stats rather than the cause of them

      • Herring: obviously divorce law linked to divorce rate

        • If we did not allow divorce in law, then divorce rate becomes nil – although no guarantee that people would stay together

        • However, perception that divorce is difficult might delay the parties from seeking it until they really feel they have a case

          • Perhaps divorce rate could be lowered by making marriage harder? E.g. increase minimum age – stats show that younger brides more likely to divorce than older ones.

  • To save marriage if possible

    • As stated by FLA 1996 s.1(1)(b) – legal proceedings should persuade parties to be reconciled and not to turn back from divorce

    • BUT Hassan (2004): People do not consult a lawyer when their marriage is one the rocks, but when it is irreparable

      • Walker and McCarthy (2004): some marriages should not be saved – e.g. those involving domestic violence or is harming children

        • Some appalling marriages found two years after when couples persuaded from divorce having started the process.

  • Avoid exacerbating bitterness of the process

    • As stated by s.1(1)(c)(i)

    • Divorce is a hellish procedure for most couples where there is a dispute

      • It is questionable to what extent a couple with a dispute will not be bitter – court does not often lay blame clearly at one party or the other

  • Promote a continuing relationship between the spouses, particularly where children

    • As stated by s.1(1)(c)(ii)

    • Beck and Beck-Gernsheim: Only someone equating marriage with sex and living together would make the mistake that divorce is the end of marriage

      • It one concentrates on problems of material support, on children, and on a long common biography,

        • Then divorce is not even the legal end of marriage, but a post-divorce “separation marriage”

  • Should not lead to unnecessary expenditure for the state or the parties

    • At started by s.1(1)(c)(iii)

    • But what is “unnecessary”?

      • One partner may want lawyers to dispute everything that the other partner says, down to the smallest fact

      • Lawyers are expensive, but only because the parties often misuse their time to negotiate about matters which aren’t worth the money involved

  • Law should help sort out the emotional turmoil of the parties

    • Richards:

Any family lawyer can provide numerous examples of what has to be regarded as typical behaviour:

  • He broke into her house and tipped rubbish into her bed where she now sleeps with her new partner

  • She went through the family photographs cutting him out of each one

  • He slashed her tyres etc.

  • This is emphasised by the parties being given an arena to bring their irrationality and validated by professionals who get drawn in

    • Until we sort out feelings of the participants at divorce, we can’t expect them to make sensible decisions about the long term interests of their children

  • Herring: Questionable whether legal process can do this – probs best to try and co-ordinate other services though

    • Particular concern re: children – Dunn (2001): only had been talked to about the separation, only 5% felt they had got a full explanation and could ask questions.


The present law on divorce: The Matrimonial Causes Act 1973

The Special Procedure

  • Prior to 1973, each divorce would have to be presented in open court in a hearing

    • This was embarrassing and stressful for the parties

    • And involved a great heat-sink on judicial resources as well as being very expensive

  • In 1977, a special procedure was introduced where the divorce is undefended

    • The petitioner simply needs to lodge some documents outlining the grounds for divorce and swearing that the facts stated are true

      • If no-one defends it, the district judge reads the documents and then if satisfied, declares a decree nisi

  • This works on the assumption that if no-one turns up to defend the divorce, the facts contained must be true

    • Herring: this is a false assumption;

      • If a defendant receives a document full of falsehoods, he needs to decide whether to defend it

        • He’ll have trouble finding a lawyer

        • And it will be very expensive to do so

        • And even where they do defend, few defences are successful, thus increasing the bitterness between the parties

Divorce Procedure:

  • First you get the decree nisi

  • After 6 weeks, the decree absolute can be petitioned for

    • If the petitioner fails to do so, then the respondent can petition after three months instead.

The ONE GROUND (singular) for Divorce:

  • S.1(1): MCA 1973: The marriage has irretrievably broken down

  • S.1(2) This must be proved by one of five facts:

    • (a) R’s adultery

      • R must have committed adultery and P finds its intolerable to live with R

        • P cannot rely on their own adultery

        • Not enough just that R committed adultery – must also show that intolerable to live with (but only for this P, not for a reasonable P)

          • (s.2(1) = if R and P live together for 6 months after act of adultery, can’t rely on this act)

        • Cleary v Cleary – no need to show that adultery is reason why P cannot live with R

      • Herring: adultery a symptom of breakdown, but not in itself...

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