commingling
Commingling refers broadly to the mixing of funds belonging to one party with funds belonging to another party. It most often describes a fiduciary’s improper mixing of their personal funds with funds belonging to a client.
Commingling refers broadly to the mixing of funds belonging to one party with funds belonging to another party. It most often describes a fiduciary’s improper mixing of their personal funds with funds belonging to a client.
Common property refers to property owned by more than one entity. Because of this shared ownership, an individual party’s degree of control over common property is less than it would be if they owned that property alone. Common property is found in a variety of scenarios:
Comparable rectitude was a doctrine in divorce law where courts would evaluate the comparative fault of each spouse. Under the harsher doctrine of recrimination, a spouse who was accused of conduct constituting grounds for divorce could, as a defense, accuse the other spouse of similar misconduct. If both spouses were at fault, the court would not allow a divorce.
Condonation is commonly a defense argument made by a person (complainant), who had previously either forgiven or ignored an act about which he/she is now legally complaining. The law governing condonation may vary state to state, but generally it is an act to forgive one’s spouse who has committed an act of wrongdoing that would constitute grounds for divorce in a marriage. Condonation is often used as a defense to a divorce.
Connivance most commonly refers to a defense in divorce law in which a spouse accused of adultery, or another form of sexual misconduct, asserts that the other spouse consented to the adultery. The modern availability of no-fault divorce has likely made the defense less prevalent.
A consent divorce refers to a divorce granted where both parties agree to the divorce, and both go to a particular jurisdiction to obtain the divorce. This type of divorce is not valid if neither spouse is domiciled in the jurisdiction where the divorce was granted.
Consummation means the completion of a thing. Some common uses of the term “consummation” in a legal sense include:
Criminal conversation is a common law tort that allows a spouse to sue a third party for engaging in sexual intercourse with their spouse, it is the civil claim for adultery.