Legal Question in Family Law in California

I suspect that my husband is cheating. We are currently living in different states so I have no way of checking. If he is, I would like to proceed with a divorce. Would it be worth the money to get a pi to investigate and if he is, would it be good to use for evidence for a divorce proceeding? We have a 5 month old who I've been soley responsible for since he was 6 weeks old and if I do choose divorce I would like to retain sole custody. He did not move with us because he was arrested on drug charges.


Asked on 6/18/10, 1:55 pm

3 Answers from Attorneys

Anthony Roach Law Office of Anthony A. Roach

California is a "no fault" state. California has been a no fault state since 1975. Evidence of extra-marital affairs is irrelevant. The only thing a party needs to tell the court is that they don't want to be married anymore - that there has been an irremediable breakdown of the marriage. I'm not sure what state he is in, but the cheating may be relevant if that state is a fault state. If he has never been to this state, you are going to have problems establishing jurisdiction. I suggest saving the money to hire a decent family law attorney.

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Answered on 6/18/10, 5:26 pm

If you and the child have resided in California for six months or more, Mr. Roach is just wrong that you will have any trouble establishing jurisdiction. If he doesn't know basic family law jurisdiction, he should stop answering family law questions. He is correct, however, that cheating is meaningless in California divorce cases. In fact, you can be fined by the judge for trying to bring it up in a divorce case. So the only reason to get a PI, is if you want to base your decision whether to divorce him or not on whether he is cheating or not.

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Answered on 6/21/10, 12:05 pm
Anthony Roach Law Office of Anthony A. Roach

The jurisdiction that I refer to is personal jurisdiction. If you husband has never resided in California, you are going to have problems with personal jurisdiction. The case that is on point is Burnham v. Superior Court (1990) 495 U.S. 604.

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Answered on 6/21/10, 2:10 pm


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