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The court shall consider all relevant factors in determining the amount and duration of final support, including: (1) The income and means of the parties, including the liquidity of such means. (2) The financial obligations of the parties, including any interim allowance or final child support obligation.
Property acquired during a marriage is presumed to be community property under Louisiana law, except for gifts or inheritances that were specifically given to just one spouse.
In Louisiana, any assets that you will acquire during the subsistence of marriage is considered community property unless otherwise classified as separate property. Under this system, both spouses are entitled to equal share(50-50) of the interest in all assets acquired during marriage.
What assets am I entitled to in a divorce in Louisiana? Generally speaking you are entitled to half of everything obtained or acquired during the existence of your marriage (except of course if a prenuptial exists stating otherwise).
Separate property is property belongs exclusively to one of two spouses. Under Louisiana law, assets acquired by a deceased person while unmarried, or acquired during the marriage by gift, is considered to be separate property.
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As a general rule, the fruits of separate property, such as an inheritance, are considered community property in Louisiana.
Infidelity or other bad behaviors do not affect the amount of community property one is entitled to. Also, one is not entitled to more spousal support, child support, or custody rights even if they can prove their spouse had an affair. Today in Louisiana, adultery actually plays a very minor role in a divorce.
Under Louisiana law, marital property, or property acquired during the marriage, is distributed equally (50-50) to each party unless the court finds such a division to be inequitable or parties agree to a different formula under which to divide property.
Theres a strong presumption under Louisiana law that all assets and debts a couple accumulates during marriage are community property. Separate property is property that one spouse owned alone before the marriage, acquired by gift or inheritance during the marriage, or property covered by a prenuptial agreement.
Louisianas community property law establishes a system of principles and rules governing the ownership and management of the property of married persons as between themselves and toward third parties.

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