It's very complicated....the law never clearly answered that question....if married 5 years or less, no spousal support.....5-10 years thats around how long you pay....after that it's sorta foggy, I was married 11 years, I pay spousal support for life, at least till I retire and live on Canada Pension and then I can ask the courts to look at the finacial picture again, they will then either adjust or stop it, I have looked hard and long but find no other way out,,,,,lawyer did say if I wait 10 years [3 more LOL] I can go back and try to fight it,,,,,course lawyer costs 5 grand and if I win....might have to wait for the pension check to arrive
Yes....or unless she remarries...but why would they do that....when the ckecks in the mail...and the males in check...
Canada is regressive in this area of the law. In both the U.S. and in the U.K. (both England and Scotland) lifelong alimony is almost never the case this day and age.I was married 11 years, I pay spousal support for life, at least till I retire and live on Canada Pension and then I can ask the courts to look at the finacial picture again, they will then either adjust or stop it.
It wasn't me, but it very well could have been. Including your p.s.I know a lawyer who got divorced. Believe it or not, he didn't have a pre-nuptial agreement. He joked that if he amortized the cost of his divorce by the # of fucks during that marriage, it would've been cheaper to have had escorts.
p.s. Btw, I still believe in having a soul mate or a life partner.
There is a rule that deals with retirement age minus the number of years of marriage. Essentially, if she is older than 65 - x, x being the number of years of marriage, you might have to pay long term support endlessly.Duration and quantum can vary. In a long term marriage, she gets the much-despised "Lifetime Pension" because she is probably so fucked career-wise that she sinks without it.
all the horror stories i've heard about marriages falling apart (even when the woman commits the adultery) and the husbands get screwed makes me thankful that i never married.......
from what I understand of legalise is that just because you can ask for a review but that doesn't mean it will happen. As with prenupts signed in good faith and agreed to by both parties before the wedding, they can be overturned at the whim of a judge........My spousal support agreement clearly states that any it has to reviewed each year and if there is a substantial change in either party's income it can be adjusted. If the wife, who I'm paying, should remarry or cohabit with another person this will be considered a material change in the agreement entitling me the husband to seek a variation. I've offered to buy the ring for new boyfriend, I would be cheaper.
KG