Postnuptial agreements
When an agreement is challenged (it never gets challenged by the court, only by a party), there is always a concern about the possibility of unequal bargaining power in a marriage situation. Here is the difference why postnuptial agreements may be subject to higher level of scrutiny. Marital relations often produce situations with unequal bargaining power. When it comes to postnuptial agreements a wife is usually more invested in marriage than a bride who can easily walk away from it (unless she is about to marry Tom Cruiz or Alec Baldwin).
Who generally wants a postnuptial agreement? A postnuptial agreement is often used by a successful businessman who wants to protect his investments and business from the volatility of divorce proceedings. Alternatively, a postnuptial agreement may be used by a wife who is unhappy about her prenuptial agreement and wants to modify that agreement.
The courts scrutinize the agreement by using the standard how much an agreement deviates from an equal split. In a leading case on the issue, Pacelli v Pacelli, a husband offered his wife of ten years far less than she would have received under New Jersey’s equitable distribution rules. He refused to negotiate, presented the offer as a take-it-or-leave-it deal, and “moved out of the marital bedroom.” New Jersey court set aside that agreement. A New Jersey Supreme Court decision to invalidate a postnuptial agreement stemmed from its observation that a wife“faced a more difficult choice than the bride who is presented with a demand for a pre-... Read More »
