Marital Legal Separation and Property Settlement Agreement Minor Children no Joint Property or Debts where Divorce Action Filed - District of Columbia 2025

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The answer is that the divorce process and the final divorce decree DOES NOT change titles and deeds to real property. Deeds are separate legal documents with separate legal rules. As such, different actions must be taken to update and modify deeds based on what happened during the divorce.
A divorce decree is sometimes called a divorce judgment, a final judgment of divorce, or a marital settlement agreement. Regardless of the name, it refers to the official court document that ends a marriage and outlines the terms of the separation. However, a divorce decree is not the same as a divorce certificate.
You can think of the marital settlement agreement as the preliminary process required when getting divorced. On the other hand, a divorce decree legally mandates that you are divorced in the eyes of the law.
There are three grounds for divorce: Mutual consent - You and your spouse can agree to divorce and sign a written agreement (called a marital settlement agreement) that resolves all issues related to alimony, marital property, and the care, custody, and support of any minor or dependent children.
The terms alimony and property settlement (read: equitable division of property) are terms of art that are not one and the same. Alimony is an allowance out of one partys estate, made for the support of the other party, when living separately. O.C.G.A. 19-6-1(a).
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A settlement agreement differs from a separation agreement as it sets the terms for the divorce, not the separation. A settlement agreement should address all central issues of the divorce. This can include things like division of marital assets and debts, child custody, and child support, as well as spousal support.
A new DC law eliminates a waiting period before divorce, a change spurred by victim advocates who say it will particularly help domestic violence survivors seeking to separate from an abusive spouse.

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