A ‘Postnuptial’ Agreement Can Save a Marriage

by Randall Luebke RMA, RFC on October 4, 2011

By Nate Herpich
For better or worse, this document can help clients communicate about money.

Sure, it’s not the easiest topic to broach with your significant other, and
admittedly, it probably isn’t the most romantic idea in the world. But it might
be something to think about in your relationship, troubled or otherwise.

Arlene Dubin, a self-described matrimonial lawyer based in Manhattan, says
that she has seen a “tremendous uptick” in the amount of prenuptial and
postnuptial agreements being entered into by partnered Americans.

Dubin, a partner at Moses & Singer LLP, says that she believes in the
merit of these agreements given the realities of divorce rates, and the frequent
lack of communication between spouses on financial and other matters. Any couple
could benefit from the process of discussing what one brings to a marriage, she
says, including the full and open disclosure of your assets and estate planning.

Stuart S. Greenfeig, who practices family law in Maryland and the District of
Columbia, agrees that more Americans are entering into these types of contracts,
many of them with large assets . His clients are not necessarily those
encountering problems in budding marriages either: One couple that had been
married for 35 years came into his office looking to write a postnuptial
agreement. He says that in past years, when he may have drawn up one postnup per
year, now he can see as many as three to five.

Some reasons to enter into such a contract, according to Greenfeig:

  • Protection against a spouse that has wronged you in the
    past.
    This is for those who want to work on a relationship, but are
    afraid of having to start from scratch should things fall apart.
  • One partner is in the dark about finances. He or she can
    feel as an equal only by having full knowledge of the other’s assets.
  • Remarriage. Individuals entering their second or third
    marriages who have children from prior unions, who want to make sure that their
    assets go to their respective children or parents or another beneficiary can
    benefit from postnups. Even couples entering into their first marriages likely
    bring with them more worth than in the past, as the age of first-time brides and
    grooms continues to rise.
  • Didn’t get around to the prenup. Who wants to ruin the love
    and romance of the first wooing, and the run to the altar? Sometimes couples
    just don’t get around to it, or are unable to complete a prenup in the process.
    So a postnuptial agreement is the logical follow-up.

Gary O. Todd, a partner at Todd & Weld specializing in domestic relations
and probate litigation in Boston, adds that another time to consider postnuptial
agreements is when an interest in a family business is at stake.

Also, postnuptial agreements offer couples the option of trying to reconcile
a troubled marriage, instead of immediately, and perhaps rashly, filing for
divorce.

Todd says that he has “absolutely” seen postnups save marriages, alleviating
the pressure of worrying too much about money. They can provide security for a
non-working spouse, who knows what his or her rights will be should a marriage
come to an end.

Too, postnups can serve to alter, or update previous agreements that were set
in place.

According to James W. Hart, a family lawyer based in Orlando, Fla., they can
serve to renew prenups set in place, tackle a change in financial circumstances,
separate assets and debts for couples who don’t agree on every financial move,
or even replace older restrictive agreements as a couple moves to understand
that they will indeed spend the rest of their lives together.

But what of their legality? Do postnuptial agreements hold water in court,
should divorce ensue? Again, the answer is, more and more, that they do.

The Uniform Premarital Agreement Act says that states have to, for the most
part, accept premarital agreements, says Dubin. While this doesn’t extend to
postnups, Dubin says that they, too, are generally accepted.

While most courts don’t particularly like postnuptial agreements, Hart says,
they will likely honor them, as long as they don’t speak to custody of children
and the waiving of alimony. And in the long run, if a marriage hasn’t been
saved, they can save a ton of money later on, and streamline the often painful
divorce proceedings that ensue.

Some recommendations, for those who might investigate the prospect of a
postnup:

  • Ensure that each party has separate representation, in order to guarantee the
    mutuality of the agreement.
  • Children and alimony shouldn’t enter into the conversation.
  • Only full disclosure of assets can assure a chance at a better working
    marriage, and the legality of the contract should the relationship end in
    divorce.

Dubin says these contracts can even help heal broken marriages. One client,
she says, had a husband who had let his gambling debts get to such a point that
he was forced to take a lien on their apartment. The wife found out, but didn’t
want a divorce—just the assurance that she wouldn’t lose everything if her
husband found himself at the wrong end of a bad hand.

The contract helped to rid the couple of the lien, Dubin says, and ensured
her client that the apartment would always be hers, in the event of an
unfortunate recurrence of the husband’s gambling.

So while it isn’t exactly romantic, a postnup could help save a marriage.
Both you and your spouse may just be better off in the long
run.

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