Legal Question in Family Law in Virginia

separation during pregnancy

I am 5 months pregnant and my husband is asking for separation and then eventually divorce on ''no-fault'' basis. I really feel cheated as he got permanent residency via me, I paid off his huge loan, he sponsored his parents based on my financial status and now he wants to leave me when I need him for the first time. What are my options? Can I take any legal action on him? What are my rights as woman in this situation? As far as I know he doesn't have any other woman. Upon asking him why he wants separation, he says he just doesn't think anymore that we can be together.


Asked on 7/17/06, 11:15 am

2 Answers from Attorneys

Michael Hendrickson Law Office Michael E. Hendrickson

Re: separation during pregnancy

If your marriage to this person was a sham and

demonstrably on his part for immigration purposes, the Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services which presumably reviewed and approved your sponsoring application in his behalf, may wish to hear about it.

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Answered on 7/17/06, 11:39 am
James Wilson James H. Wilson, Jr., Attorney & Counsellor at Law

Re: separation during pregnancy

You should consult with a Virginia attorney concerning the applicability of the law to the facts of your situation. You should consider marital or family counseling to preserve your marriage. If you find that you and your spouse cannot preserve your marriage, you should consider alternative dispute resolution (ADR) methods such as mediation, which may be faster, less costly and less adversarial than a contested divorce suit. The following is general legal information on the grounds for divorce in Virginia.

A circuit court judge in Virginia may grant a decree of divorce from the bond of matrimony or a final divorce based on fault or no-fault grounds. The fault grounds for a divorce from the bond of matrimony include the following:

1. Adultery, or sodomy or buggery outside the marriage;

2. Conviction, sentenced to confinement for more than a year, and confinement for a felony offense (with no condonation); and

3. Cruelty or reasonable apprehension of bodily hurt (one year waiting period),

4. Desertion or abandonment (one year waiting period).

Defenses to a divorce based on a fault ground include condonation, recrimination, justification for leaving and connivance.

A no-fault divorce may be granted after the husband and wife have lived separate and apart without any cohabitation and without interruption for a year. If the parties have a property settlement agreement and there are no minor children of the marriage, or born by either and adopted by the other, or adopted by both, then a no-fault divorce may be granted after the parties have lived separate and apart without any cohabitation and without interruption for six (6) months.

A party may immediately file for a divorce from bed and board on the grounds of cruelty, reasonable apprehension of bodily hurt, willful desertion or abandonment with no waiting period. A divorce from bed and board does not allow the parties to remarry, but the parties are declared to be perpetually separated and protected in their persons and property. If you are considering the dissolution of your marriage which cannot be saved through counseling or settled through ADR, you should discuss with your attorney the advantages and disadvantages of immediately seeking a divorce from bed and board rather than waiting for a final divorce.

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Answered on 7/17/06, 12:36 pm


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