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- <text id=90TT2712>
- <title>
- Oct. 15, 1990: What Price Love? Read Carefully
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Oct. 15, 1990 High Anxiety
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- LIVING, Page 94
- What Price Love? Read Carefully
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Before tying the knot, couples are signing on the dotted line
- </p>
- <p>By JILL SMOLOWE--Reported by Barbara Dolan/Chicago and Andrea
- Sachs/New York
- </p>
- <p> When Keith, 31, first raised the issue of a prenuptial
- agreement with his fiancee Sarah, 32, she balked. For a month
- the Manhattan stockbroker danced around the subject, then he
- pressed hard. "I said if we don't sign a prenuptial, we can't
- get married," he recalls. Finally Sarah, an advertising
- executive, consented, and each hired a lawyer. Keith's attorney
- drafted the first version, largely to protect money the groom
- expects to inherit from his family, and Sarah "flipped out,"
- says Keith. "She was almost in tears." It took months before
- the couple hammered out an agreement that allowed them to keep
- their appointment at the altar.
- </p>
- <p> Before they say "I do," more and more American couples are
- following the same pattern: negotiating premarital contracts
- that spell out what they will and won't do, or share, or pay.
- Publicized and popularized by the rich and famous--most
- loudly of late by the feuding Donald and Ivana Trump--prenuptial agreements are increasingly in vogue among the
- middle and upwardly mobile classes. Such contracts are
- recognized in all 50 states, and matrimonial lawyers report that
- they are preparing two to five times as many as they did just
- five years ago, particularly among couples who make $50,000 and
- up. Many of the agreements not only spell out a division of
- financial assets if a marriage fails or a spouse dies, but also
- enumerate "life-style clauses," sometimes bizarre in their
- obsessive fine-tuning, that provide a blueprint for a marriage
- before it has begun.
- </p>
- <p> Many people say prenuptial agreements are unromantic. Others
- argue they are a handy vehicle for improving communication. The
- chief reasons for their growing popularity, however, are
- sociological. Men and women over age 30 account for 41% and
- 32%, respectively, of all new marriages. People coming later
- to marriage usually have more substantial assets in tow.
- Moreover, in 45% of all new marriages, one or both partners
- have been married before. Thus many people have property they
- want to protect for their children by prior marriages. Says
- Gail Koff, a founding partner of the law firm Jacoby & Meyers:
- "These couples understand that marriage is a business
- proposition."
- </p>
- <p> But business alone does not a marriage agreement make. The
- lingering sour taste of a failed previous marriage prompts many
- couples to try to anticipate all the obstacles ahead on the
- next try. Couples in interfaith marriages often predetermine
- the religious upbringing of their prospective children.
- Two-income couples spell out the conditions under which they
- will relocate for a spouse's career. For every sublime
- consideration, there is a matching ridiculousness. One New York
- City couple were so determined to divide expenses equally that
- their contract stipulated that they would split the $3 toll
- when crossing the George Washington Bridge. Another couple
- itemized the ownership of 207 items, down to a $1.98 vase given
- to the prospective bride by her grandmother.
- </p>
- <p> No matter seems too small--Who takes out the garbage? Who
- does the dishes?--or too weird. Matrimonial lawyer Steven
- Zerin steers clients away from such idiosyncratic life-style
- clauses, arguing, "A marriage is off to a poor start if you're
- unable to determine personal issues without a written
- contract." Los Angeles divorce lawyer Marvin Mitchelson, who
- has received requests from clients for clauses sanctioning
- infidelity, refuses to draw them up, noting that such
- understandings will not stand up in court.
- </p>
- <p> By contrast, the financial terms of prenuptial agreements
- generally hold up well in legal battles. But that does not stop
- angry ex-spouses from trying to challenge them. "The agreement
- may limit the issues, but it won't prevent litigation," warns
- Alvin Ashley, a Manhattan lawyer whose firm is handling six
- cases involving contested agreements. Thus while an agreement--which can range in price from $500 to $50,000--may seem
- a relative bargain at the time of signing, the subsequent
- challenge may prove every bit as expensive as any other messy
- divorce.
- </p>
- <p> On the other hand, some matrimonial lawyers endorse the
- deals as a declaration of honorable intent. "They're really
- legal valentines," says lawyer Jacalyn Barnett of Shea & Gould
- in Manhattan. "They get you to talk about the things that make
- a marriage work." Boosters cite communication, money, sex and
- in-laws as the most common issues behind divorce; prenuptial
- agreements compel couples to confront the first two of those
- openly. True, the very process may unhinge a couple's wedding
- plans. But Barnett, who has seen three couples break up during
- contract negotiations, argues, "I don't think I prevented a
- marriage. I think I prevented a divorce."
- </p>
- <p> If a couple decides to proceed with an agreement, lawyers
- advise that each partner should be represented by separate
- counsel and that several months' time should be allowed for
- negotiation. Most lawyers require full financial-disclosure
- statements on both sides. As further protection, some attorneys
- recommend that the signing of the agreement be videotaped;
- others suggest that a court reporter attend the signing to take
- down all questions and answers.
- </p>
- <p> Is there still hope for love amid the legalese? Certainly.
- Cynthia and Chester Janssens of Grosse Pointe, Mich., both
- previously married and with two children apiece, signed a
- typical agreement that kept their prenuptial assets separate
- and provided that everything else would be split evenly at
- divorce. Eight years later, the couple are still married, and
- they are planning to nullify part--or all--of their
- agreement.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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