Money and marriage
Posted by on December 19, 2009 at 9:53 pm in Health & Lifestyle, MarriagesArticle By: Jillian Kipling (acsis financial planning coach)
Question:
I am emailing on behalf of my aunt who is living in South Africa. She is married with an ante-nuptial contract. Her husband is in debt due to gambling and she is worried that the bank will repossess the house which is in her name.
What is her legal standpoint?
Answer:
There are two different versions of the ante-nuptial contract and it depends on what type of agreement a couple decide on when they get married, as to the level of protection they have from each others’ finances.
Firstly, there is the ante-nuptial contract without accrual. This basically means that they never share their finances, so any property or debt belonging to one party remains theirs alone. Their partner has no claim to any assets on divorce or death in terms of the agreement (obviously if assets are left to them in terms of a will then they’ll benefit that way instead) and no creditor can claim the one spouse’s debt from the other.
Hopefully this is the type of contract your aunt entered into with her husband. In this case, as long as the house is legally owned by the one party the debts of the other cannot be claimed against it provided that the owner never put it up as security on any of the other party’s loans.
Then there is the ante-nuptial contract with accrual. Accrual means that every asset or debt a couple incur after marriage is shared equally. Most marriages are entered into with this agreement. This means that whatever they accumulate before marriage remains theirs individually, but whatever a couple accumulate together they will share.
Under normal circumstances this contract seems extremely fair. Legally it means that if one party incurs large debts and the other party accumulates assets (in other words if one party is responsible and the other is not) then only the net situation is shared.
Yes, the responsible partner loses half of their wealth that was built after they were married and the spendthrift is acquitted of half of their debts incurred during that period.
So, even though two people are married with an ante-nuptial contract and can legally do their own thing financially, within a marriage partnership they should always discuss their spending habits with one another because they will have an impact on both of them.
In your aunt’s case, even if she bought the house before marriage she would still be responsible for 50 percent of her husband’s debt incurred after marriage and if the only way she could pay for her share was to sell the house (or take out a bond on it) then, yes, her home could be under threat.
If at the start of the marriage both parties feel that they haven’t accumulated many assets, their respective values could be set at nil.





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