From 4984a215314d72d2f3be49c5a77ae22599fcb936 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: rajkumaran Date: Thu, 26 Oct 2023 12:01:39 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Update 'divorce in virginia who gets the house' --- divorce-in-virginia-who-gets-the-house.md | 5 +++++ 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+) diff --git a/divorce-in-virginia-who-gets-the-house.md b/divorce-in-virginia-who-gets-the-house.md index 640b649..aa75662 100644 --- a/divorce-in-virginia-who-gets-the-house.md +++ b/divorce-in-virginia-who-gets-the-house.md @@ -12,6 +12,11 @@ While you may have to wait for the expiration of the separation period if you ar Has your spouse been convicted of a felony and you no longer want to cohabit with him/her? No one wants to be known as the spouse of a convicted felon. The good news is the law permits parties to file for divorce in Virginia based on a spouse’s felony conviction. It is essential to speak to an adept lawyer before proceeding to file for divorce in Virginia based on a felony conviction. The law specifically states that the spouse should be convicted of a felony to be a valid ground for divorce in Virginia. The Virginia lawyer will explain that conviction does not mean being charged. Merely because your spouse has been charged, you cannot file for divorce in Virginia based on the felony conviction ground. Only if your spouse’s felony case has been finally disposed of by a final conviction, you will have a legally valid ground for divorce in Virginia. For all questions related to filing for divorce in Virginia based on a spouse’s felony conviction, discuss the scenario with our lawyers. Our Virginia lawyers can provide you with quick explanations. Fix an appointment with our Virginia lawyers at once!! +Click Here: Lawyers in Fairfax VA +Click Here: Divorce Lawyers Northern VA + + +