Protect Your Valuable Assets Before Walking Down the Aisle.Arizona Pre-Martial and Post-Marital Agreement Law FirmDo you have a substantial amount income and assets? Are you considering marriage and want to protect your highly valued assets? Are you already married and want to protect your highly valued assets? Does your potential or current spouse have a substantial amount of debt? If yes, you need to contact the divorce and family law attorneys at The Law Firm M. Paul Fischer, P.C. located in Mesa Arizona. A pre-marital agreement (also referred to as pre-nuptial or ante-nuptial agreement) is a contract between you and your potential spouse, entered into before a marriage, that specifies how property, income, assets, investments and debts will be divided in the event of a divorce. A post-marital agreement is a contract entered into after you and your spouse have already been married. How common are pre-nuptial and post-marital agreements? Pre-marital and post-marital agreements are common for individuals coming into a marriage with a substantial amount of income, property, assets, and/or debts. Pre-marital (pre-nuptial), post-marital, and martial settlement agreements can alter Arizona’s law regarding division of property and debts upon divorce. Our Arizona pre-nuptial agreement attorneys have drafted a myriad of pre-marital, post-marital, and marital termination agreements. Let us help you protect your valuable assets. Contact to one of the pre-nuptial attorneys at The Law Firm of M. Paul Fischer, P.C. today to discuss ways you can protect your valuable assets, or to protect yourself from incurring your spouse’s debt. We welcome calls from individuals with pre-marital, post-marital, and marital settlement agreement questions from Tucson, Mesa, Phoenix, Scottsdale, and Maricopa County and throughout Arizona. If you or your family need an Arizona attorney, please contact The Law Firm of M. Paul Fischer, P.C.The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice. You should consult an attorney for advice regarding your individual situation. We invite you to contact us and welcome your calls, letters and electronic mail. Contacting us does not create an attorney-client relationship. Please do not send any confidential information to us until such time as an attorney-client relationship has been established. |
