Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Legal Eaze #80 Community Property and Divorce Jurisdiction/Insufficient Funds

Title: November 5, 2007

Q: My friend is contemplating a divorce from her husband of 10 years. They live in California. She owns a house in Arizona that she must sell soon. Her husband signed off on the house when it was purchased 5 years ago. She plans to file for divorce in Arizona. The proceeds from the sale of this house will be her only retirement security. Is this house community property according to the laws of California?

A: It depends on the nature of the funds she used to purchase the Arizona house. If she used separate property, such as an inheritance, or monies she saved before she got married, then it will be considered separate property. If she used her earnings to purchase the house, earnings are considered community property and the house would then be considered community property according to California law. By the way, she may not be able to file for divorce in Arizona unless she resides there for some time before she files, otherwise California has jurisdiction over the marriage. If she does not reside in Arizona before she files, even though she owns property there, her husband may force the case to be transferred to a California court. I just had a case similar to this where the husband, who had been residing in Nevada after he separated from his wife, filed for divorce in Nevada. Only he was married in California, lived with his wife in California, and the wife remained in California in the house they shared together. The man had to dismiss the case in Nevada while the wife filed a new case in California. The wife never submitted herself to Nevada’s jurisdiction, hence a California court ended up with the case.

Q: I own a business and at times, some customers pay with checks that come back for insufficient funds. What can I do to collect?

A: First you should call the customer and request payment in cash. Do not discuss the bad check with anyone else but the customer and only call at reasonable hours. Be polite and make no threats. Second, make the same demand via certified letter, return receipt requested. If the customer’s bank account is still active, wait a few days and call the bank to see if there are sufficient funds in the account to pay the check. Kern County has a “bad check” program available. They will contact the customer and give him/her a chance to avoid being prosecuted by making the check good. Otherwise, you can file a Small Claims Court claim and may be able to collect extra damages (two or three times the value of the check) or use a collection agency, despite their huge cut.

Maxine de Villefranche has been an attorney for 14 years and is practicing law in Tehachapi and Lancaster. Send your questions via fax at (661)825-8880 or e-mail at maxinedev@msn.com. She will answer your questions to the best of her abilities.

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