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DIVORCE MEDIATION

6 Things Clients Don't Know

What Clients Want

Cheating Spouses

All About Kids

What Is A Legal Separation?

Grounds For Divorce In Illinois

What Do You Need For
Mental Cruelty?

Adultery - Palimony - Desertion

Alimony How Much, And
How Long?

Who Gets The House?

Who Moves Out?

What is "No-Fault" Divorce?

Is "No-Fault" Quicker?

When does the "No-Fault"
Six Month period begin?

How To Protect Your
Inheritance


Antenuptial / Premarital / Prenuptial Agreements

Do You Gain by Filing First?

Can One Lawyer Handle
The Whole Thing?

Contested Vs. Uncontested
Cases

What is Abandonment?

Why Joint Custody Is
Overrated

The Real Test For
Who Gets Custody

What To Tell The Children

Marital Vs. Non-Marital
Property

How Child Support Is
Determined

Can Support Amounts be
Changed?

What Is A Common Law
Marriage?

What is a Deposition?

What is Illinois'
"Standard Visitation"?

Grandparent's Rights

How Does Annulment Work?

The List Of What Is
Split-up In Divorce
Out of State Parties
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What Is A
Common Law Marriage?

Common law marriages do not result from couples living together. Living together has nothing to do with it. In a common law marriage, the parties perform a specific act to marry one another.

In order for a common law marriage to occur, two individuals, whether they live together or not, must both be present in a state that recognizes common law marriages and they merely need to (preferably in the presence of witnesses) say to one another that they are then and there marrying the other, and that that is their intention. They are then officially married without any ceremony.; The marriage that I just described is just as valid and binding (with all the ramifications such as divorce, inheritance, etc.) as the ceremonial type marriage with which we are more familiar. Common law marriages were permitted in Illinois until the 1920's. Today there are only a few states that still allow common law marriages. Historically, common law marriages were the only type of marriages until the latter part of the 19th century.  Back then, the vast majority of the people lived in remote areas and rarely came in touch with judges or clergy.  As our population grew, a need to register marriages was apparently recognized which resulted in what we know today as ceremonial marriages.




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The Law Offices of J. Richard Kulerski, P.C.
1200 Harger Rd. Suite 320,
Oak Brook, IL 60523
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