Adultery & Divorce
Adultery - Affair -Extramarital Relationship: Divorce,
in recent times more and more of our clients are having to deal with this issue
through their divorce. This page and its' daughter pages were placed within
this site
in order to get you the information that you need with regards to adulterous
affairs during a divorce.
Myths and Facts on Divorce and Adultery
1) Adultery, pursuant to the Texas Family
Code, is a cause and basis for divorce in Texas.
2) Adultery is not illegal in the sense that
it is not a crime against the laws of the State of Texas. Neither you nor your
spouse goes to jail because one of you had an extramarital affair.
3) Adultery is an act of betrayal against a
spouse. As such, it will cause untold hurt, pain and anger. Anger will cause the
innocent spouse to do all that she or he can do to inflict pain upon the adulterer
in a divorce proceeding.
4) Each Court's approach to adultery is
completely different depending upon the temperament of the judge, and the county
in which the divorce is proceeding. The following bullet points describe
possible scenarios - Judge Apple, Judge Ball and Judge Candy are
fictitious.
In our experience, most judges fall into the Judge Candy category.
That is, if marital discord and conflict was the status quo prior to the affair,
then not a whole lot of weight will be given to it - especially, if the parties
are separated and living apart prior to initiation of divorce proceedings. If all was well with the
marriage but the adultery caused the marital discord and
conflict, the judge will give great weight to it. They will protect the innocent
spouse.
5) Children and an adulterous parent. If in a
custody case where adultery is an issue, you are in jeopardy. If a parent brings
their nonmarital partner into the lives of the children such that they know and
are aware that one parent and a third party are lovers then that parent has
risked possession and custody of the children. If you have a third party
relationship, don't bring that person into the children's lives until your
relationship is well established and the divorce is concluded.
Adultery Offense and Defense in a Divorce
Innocent Spouse: Get all the information that you can from
e-mails, correspondence, credit card statements, long-distance bills, mobile
phone, and voice mail. Be aware of criminal penalties associated with
Wiretapping, including unlawful interception of e-mail, and breach of computer
security.
Clear here for more information.
Adulterer Spouse: Protect your communications. Spouses will get
passwords, will view accounts electronically, will find out all that they need
to know. Don't be stupid. Don't assume anything. See above and below.
1) E-Mails. If you are an innocent spouse, get
all the e-mails (print them out) that you can between your spouse and the
paramour. Conversely, if you are the adulterer, change e-mail accounts
immediately. Your spouse will find them. Furthermore, do not save e-mails on the
hard-drive of your work or personal PC. They can and will be subpoenaed. Case in
point, spouse knew social security number and credit card number, she was able
to con America Online into providing her the password to husbands account.
2) Voice Mail. If you are the innocent spouse,
save and record all voice mail between the lovers. Do not intercept electronic
communications. Conversely, if you are the
adulterer do not leave voice messages. Spouse will find them.
3) Credit Card Statements. If you are the
innocent spouse, examine and obtain all credit card statements. Look for gift
items (Victoria's Secrete), motel rooms, travel, and floral shops. One spouse
sends to the paramour the "I love you more than anything" message with
roses. Spouse got a copy, had it, used it. Conversely, if you are the innocent
spouse, don't use the credit cards including company credit cards to make
purchases for the girl or boyfriend.
More Divorce & Adultery Information
Affairs & Divorce: Types of
Affairs
Affairs & Divorce: Possible
Good From an Affair?
Affairs & Divorce: How to
Manage Your Partners Affair
Affairs & Divorce: Uncovering
Deception
Acting Responsibly In the Face of Desire
by
Daniel Linder