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Separate property is property you owned before marriage. It could also include property that you received during marriage like a gift or an inheritance, among other things. All of the marital property must be divided. The court may include separate property too, if thats the just and proper thing to do.
Oregon is an equitable distribution state and will divide all marital assets in a fair and equitable way. This does not necessarily mean that assets will be divided equally on a 50/50 basis. Before this happens, the determination must be made as to what constitutes marital property and constitutes separate property.
There are times when separate property no longer remains separate property. If a spouse puts money he or she inherited in a joint bank account, it could be considered marital property. The same rule may apply if a spouse adds the other spouse to the title of property that was purchased prior to the marriage.
The answer to this question in most cases is, yes, if it has been at any time the family home. The relevance of this is that, as a marital asset, it is subject to the sharing principle (see Financial Provision in Divorce Cases).
While the division of assets including real and personal property in Oregon divorce cases can vary depending on the length of the marriage and other specific facts from the case, Oregon is not a community property state.

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Oregon is known as a common-law state where each spouse has separate property that must be probated or have another mechanism to pass the property along. Commonly spouses own property as tenants by the entirety or joint tenants with right of survivorship.
The Cost of Filing Fees As of 2020, the cost of filing for separation, annulment, or divorce is $301. You will pay this amount to the court when you file your forms with the court clerk. This fee simply allows the divorce process to begin; it does not cover any attorney fees or other expenses associated with divorce.
Legal separation protects a spouse financially because the separate property remains with the spouse who owns it, including property owned before marriage, received as a gift, or acquired through a will or intestacy.
But if you dont want to end up like those couples, then here are the things which you should not do during a separation. First, what to do. Dont Deny your Partner some Time with your Kids. Never Rush into a New Relationship. Never Publicize your Separation. Never Badmouth your Ex. Ending it With Bad Blood.
How to Financially Protect Yourself in a Divorce Legally establish the separation/divorce. Get a copy of your credit report and monitor activity. Separate debt to financially protect your assets. Move half of joint bank balances to a separate account. Comb through your assets. Conduct a cash flow analysis.

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