Date: 4/9/20 06:17 am (UTC)From: [personal profile] joreth
joreth: (Default)
:-) I assumed they would be less ... credible? than a pre-nup, but if done with the assistance of a lawyer, I would bet that they could still be upheld. It's probably in the DIY cases, I'd imagine, where this is a problem. I'd also suspect that showing a history of updating things like wills and post-nups and other changes-of-life documents could also affect a court's decision.

I just don't want people to think it's too late to start talking about this and writing shit down if they already got married. We update our wills all the time. I'd like to change the cultural conversation about property division entirely, and I think that starts by convincing even already-married people to be more deliberate about their decisions.
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