Tag: annul marriage

The Scientific Causes of Divorce

Even though the numbers of divorce cases are increasing, the cause of divorces has avoided scientific examination. Most people look at who gets divorced: their age, financial status, parenthood, past divorces, and their emotional stability. But two researchers from Israel are examining the lesser known subject of why people get divorced.

Divorce cause

Divorce and Statistics

Divorce, the legal dissolution of marriage, can be driven by a variety of factors, ranging from changes in the economic status or health conditions of spouses to contrasting values. The end of a marriage can often be challenging to process. Divorce can impact your personal well-being and even your mental health.

Sari Mentser and Lilach Sagiv, two researchers at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, recently carried out a study specifically exploring the relationship between people’s values and divorce. Their findings, published in Communications Psychology, suggest that interaction between spouses’ cultural and personal values can predict divorce.

On average, the rates of divorce worldwide have increased over the past century. But it is difficult to obtain or analyze public data on divorces.

In order to compute divorce-to-marriage ratios, the researchers in Israel created an average of all divorce-to-marriage ratios available for a country over the years, and compared it to the most recent divorce-to-marriage ratio available for that country.

People all over the world have a variety of cultural and personal values, i.e. shared beliefs connected to societal norms, which can emphasize autonomy, or social stability and tradition for example. Personal values, on the other hand, are beliefs influencing the behavior of specific people. For example, one spouse could value their independence, or new experiences, or pleasure. While the other spouse could instead be more driven by a respect for traditions and social conformity.

The researchers crunched the data they collected which involved over 100,000 participants residing in more than 55 different countries worldwide.

Florida Divorce

I’ve written about the reasons for divorce before. The Israeli study is not the first study done about who has the highest divorce rates, or which jobs are the most likely to lead to a divorce. Although the statistics are interesting, from a legal perspective, the causes for a divorce are not always relevant in a court. For example, Florida is a no-fault state. No-fault laws are the result of trying to change the way divorces play out in court.

In Florida no fault laws have reduced the number of feuding couples who felt the need to resort to distorted facts, lies, and the need to focus the trial on who did what to whom.

Florida abolished fault as grounds for filing a divorce. Gone are the days when you had to prove adultery, desertion or unreasonable behavior. The only ground you need to file for divorce in Florida is to prove your marriage is “irretrievably broken.” Additionally, the mental incapacity of one of the parties, where the party was adjudged incapacitated for the prior three year, is another avenue.

Scientific Explanations

As a result of this study, the researchers found that divorce was more justifiable and likely in nations emphasizing autonomy values and among individuals ascribing importance to self-direction, stimulation, and hedonism values.

Divorce was less justifiable and likely in nations emphasizing embeddedness values, and among individuals ascribing importance to tradition and conformity values.

The results of the team’s analysis suggest that cultural and personal values interact to predict divorce. Specifically, they show that cultural values prioritizing autonomy (i.e., individual freedom) are linked to higher divorce rates, while those prioritizing social stability and tradition are linked to lower divorce rates.

They also found that people who placed a greater value on independence, new stimuli and pleasure were more likely to divorce while those who valued tradition and social harmony more were less likely to dissolve their marriage. Interestingly, the effect of these personal values on divorce appeared to be stronger in countries with a culture that emphasizes autonomy, which hints at an interaction between cultural and personal values.

The researchers conclude that divorce is sometimes the solution to an undesirable situation. Whether or not a spouse will file for divorce may depend on their personal and cultural values. Some people would rather avoid divorce at all costs while others who value change may be more open to considering divorce.

The Phys.Org article is here.

Divorce and Annulment in Florida

An annulment is more uncommon in Florida than a divorce. A recent appeal decided whether a court case should proceed as a divorce or an annulment. A Florida husband tried to avoid his obligation to divide his marital property and pay alimony to his wife by alleging in court that his marriage was a fraud because he never consummated it. How did the trial and appellate courts review his argument?

Annulment

A Case of Annulment?

In the Florida case, a Husband testified he met his wife in 2000 when he attended a retreat. Twenty years later, he was re-introduced to his wife by a colleague. They traveled to Colombia and shared a residence. He argued that he never proposed to his wife, they just mutually agreed to marry. He claimed that all he wanted a companion as he grew older.

At trial he also testified that he never consummated the marriage. He also claimed that he had never seen her naked, didn’t know her bra size or any intimate detail about her body. He testified that she only married him to obtain legal status.

Also during the trial, the wife admitted she never received an engagement ring, but said she signed a prenuptial agreement, that they had consummated the marriage, and had intercourse on several occasions, but only in the dark. Accordingly, she had never visually inspected his body.

The husband’s girlfriend testified he told her he was married and was in process of divorcing. Based on those facts testified to at the trial court found it was a real marriage, that they did have sex, and the case could not proceed as an annulment. The husband appealed.

Florida Annulments

I’ve written about divorce and annulment in Florida before. In Florida, the legal term for ending a marriage is “dissolution of marriage,” not “divorce.” The process is initiated by filing a petition for dissolution of marriage. The term “divorce” is not used in the Florida Statutes.

There are different types of dissolution of marriage in Florida, depending on the circumstances, such as whether there are children, marital property, or if the dissolution is simplified. A judgment of dissolution of marriage is how a spouse returns to “the status of being single and unmarried.”

Annulments are different. An annulment in Florida is a procedure that declares a marriage null and void, as if it never existed. The grounds for annulment in Florida include bigamy, fraud, duress, mental incapacity, and incestuous relationships.

Because Florida is one of the handful of states that has no annulment statute, annulments in Florida are purely a question of common law, decided pursuant to the inherent equitable powers of the circuit court.
The historical common law “impediments” to marriage traditionally fell into two general categories: lack of consent and lack of capacity.

Lack of consent would include, for example, people who are related within certain degrees, and minors without parental consent. Lack of capacity includes marriages involving fraud, mental illness, sham marriages, and shotgun weddings.

That is where consummating the marriage comes in. It is established law in Florida that someone who has become a party to a wedding ceremony by fraud of the other party can secure an annulment if the marriage has not been completed by sexual intercourse.

The Appeal

On appeal, it was found that the trial court record contained ample evidence supporting the holding that the parties consummated their marriage, and the wife did not enter the marriage to commit fraud.
Additionally, in this case no asserted ground or evidence justified a decree of annulment in favor of the husband.

Here the parties entered into a valid marriage contract. The evidence did not establish the existence of any of the grounds for annulment. So, the appellate court ruled the petition was properly denied.

The written decision is available here.