The Uniformed Services Former Spouses\u27 Protection Act authorizes a division of military retirement pay in a divorce proceeding. The Act overturned a 1981 U.S. Supreme Court case, McCarty v. McCarty, which held that a state judge was preempted from treating a military member\u27s retirement pay as property in a community property division. Two kinds of concerns have arisen as a result of the USFSPA legislation. One concern is expressed by military personnel who feel that the legislation has gone too far and now unfairly penalizes the very persons who put their lives on the line for their country. A second concern, voiced by former spouses, is that they are not receiving the monies to which they believe they are entitled. They seem neither...
Texas courts have solidified the rule that retirement benefits are community property, subject to ju...
Your Court Review Editors asked Mark Sullivan, nationally known expert on the military divorce, to c...
In an era when attitudes toward marriage institutions are changing and it has become a truism that g...
The Uniformed Services Former Spouses\u27 Protection Act authorizes a division of military retiremen...
[Excerpt] This report provides a general discussion of legislative provisions and proposals relating...
The 2016 amendment to the Uniformed Services Former Spouses’ Protection Act dramatically changed the...
When the marriage mission fails and divorce is on the horizon, it is imperative that both parties, e...
The laws of individual states have historically controlled familial relationships and the rights and...
This Article examines whether the law forbidding division of certain federal pension benefits betwee...
Petitioner-wife and respondent-husband were married a year after he entered the military service, an...
In 1981, the Supreme Court rendered a decision prohibiting state courts from dividing, as marital pr...
The divorce rate in the United States is slightly more than one-half the marriage rate. Divorce is a...
This Comment presents an overview of procedures which the practitioner may employ to obtain spousal ...
[Excerpt] A former spouse of a federal employee may be entitled to a share of the employee’s retirem...
In light of the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Howell v. Howell, in May 2017, this articl...
Texas courts have solidified the rule that retirement benefits are community property, subject to ju...
Your Court Review Editors asked Mark Sullivan, nationally known expert on the military divorce, to c...
In an era when attitudes toward marriage institutions are changing and it has become a truism that g...
The Uniformed Services Former Spouses\u27 Protection Act authorizes a division of military retiremen...
[Excerpt] This report provides a general discussion of legislative provisions and proposals relating...
The 2016 amendment to the Uniformed Services Former Spouses’ Protection Act dramatically changed the...
When the marriage mission fails and divorce is on the horizon, it is imperative that both parties, e...
The laws of individual states have historically controlled familial relationships and the rights and...
This Article examines whether the law forbidding division of certain federal pension benefits betwee...
Petitioner-wife and respondent-husband were married a year after he entered the military service, an...
In 1981, the Supreme Court rendered a decision prohibiting state courts from dividing, as marital pr...
The divorce rate in the United States is slightly more than one-half the marriage rate. Divorce is a...
This Comment presents an overview of procedures which the practitioner may employ to obtain spousal ...
[Excerpt] A former spouse of a federal employee may be entitled to a share of the employee’s retirem...
In light of the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Howell v. Howell, in May 2017, this articl...
Texas courts have solidified the rule that retirement benefits are community property, subject to ju...
Your Court Review Editors asked Mark Sullivan, nationally known expert on the military divorce, to c...
In an era when attitudes toward marriage institutions are changing and it has become a truism that g...