Last updated on 07/26/2021 at 7:19 pm
West Virginia has a “family court” system. A Family Court Judge will decide your divorce. Most counties have at least one elected family court judge. Smaller, more rural regions may have one family court judge to cover several small counties. The judge you have depends on where you file for divorce.
You can find out which family court circuit will handle your case at the West Virginia Supreme Court’s Web site. Click here to see the Family Court map.
You can file your divorce case in West Virginia if you meet one of the following rules:
If you don’t meet one of these two rules, you cannot file your divorce case in West Virginia.
There are many complicated rules that say when and whether a WV Family Court Judge can decide child custody. In general, though, the children have to live in West Virginia for at least six months before the case is filed for the judge to decide a child custody dispute in the divorce case.
The six-month time period does not apply if:
There are rules that say which county.
You file for divorce in the circuit clerk’s office. The Circuit Clerk handles all the paperwork for the Family Court. The Circuit Clerk’s office is in the county courthouse or county judicial center.
There is no separation requirement before divorce EXCEPT for divorces on “One Year Separation.” However, every divorce petition must give the date the spouses “last lived together.” The “period of separation” can be important in a variety of ways.
The “period of separation” can affect:
Living together while filing for a fault-based divorce may cause some difficulties for your case (f or example, Adultery, Drug Abuse, Cruelty, etc. ).
Fault-based divorce cases. The court may assume that by continuing to live “as husband and wife” (having sexual activity) after the bad conduct was known, the bad conduct was “condoned” (forgiven). If it was condoned in this way , then the bad conduct cannot be the basis for a divorce. However, if the bad conduct is repeated and not condoned again, then it can be the basis for a divorce.
Two people can live together without “living as husband and wife.” However, this is not what most judges will assume.
If you did not separate before filing the fault-based divorce, the judge might ask:
No-fault divorces (“Irreconcilable Differences”). Living together until filing a no-fault divorce should not cause a problem. In a no-fault divorce both parties file papers saying they want the divorce. Once that happens, the court will not ask about when or how long you lived together unless it is important for some other issue in the case.
The judge can decide how to divide the things you both own that are considered martial property. Generally, m arital property refers to the property that both parties own together or purchased during the marriage . For more information on martial property, read Divorce: What Can You Ask the Court to Decide.
If your spouse lives in West Virginia, the judge may also be able to decide who will pay for a bill or a loan. If your spouse lives in another state, the Family Court Judge might not be able to decide this.
The person who files for the divorce is the “petitioner.”
If your husband or wife has filed for divorce first, then you are the “respondent.”
You must respond to your husband or wife’s divorce petition. You respond with an “answer.”
View the Divorce Toolkit for more information about divorce.