Siani wrote:sandman67 wrote:Start asset stripping and selling on the quiet as well mate. Every baht shifted is one less she can get her 50% of.
This is sound advice from SM. What you haven't got she can't have a share of.
I was of this opinion to 10 mins ago but just read the following while digging out bits of the law relevant to what I was gonna post about. 'IF' anything you flog off later adjudged 'marital property', (Sin Somros), then there's several laws that would have been broken and presumably damaging to your moral high-ground advantage. Not to mention having to pay it back, so to speak...
Section 1534: Where either spouse has made disposal of the Sin Somros for his or her exclusive benefit, or has made disposal thereof with an intention to cause injury to the other, or has made disposal thereof without the consent of the other in the case where such disposal is required by law to have consent of the other, or has wilfully destroyed it, it shall, for the purpose of division of the Sin Somros under Section 1533, be regarded as if such property had still remained. If the share of the Sin Somros that the other will receive is not complete to what he or she should have received, the party at fault is required to make up for the arrears from his or her share of the Sin Somros or his or her Sin Suan Tua.
Start flogging 'her' gear off tomorrow and you may well end up solving the '
grounds for divorce' issue by this time next week
Mr. Dumb wrote:From what I understand the law is 50/50 split for all assets from the date of marriage, however does this include all assets I personally have purchased with money I brought in from overseas? My business ventures, property, cars etc, if so then I will be better off settling rather than go the 50/50 way.
Leaving aside the more fundamental possessions a family has become accustomed to, (family home, furniture, car/bike etc), when it comes to additional investments/businesses that were wholly funded by one spouse the law seems fairly clear IMO, the investment is personal property and the fruits/profits are communal property. And having a papertrail seems to be the critical factor in determining whether or not you have to give 50% of it away...
Section 1472 - As regards to Sin Suan Tua (personal property), if it has been exchanged to other property, other property has been bought or money has been acquired from selling it, such other property or money acquired shall be Sin Suan Tua. Where the Sin Suan Tua has been totally or partly destroyed but replaced by other property, or money, such other property shall be Sin Suan Tua.
Section 1473 - Each spouse is manager of his or her Sin Suan Tua.
And having the right to manage your personal property as you see fit plays a vital role because you can choose to employ your wife and her whole family to run it for you without relinquishing any (official legal anyway) control or ownership rights. So for example you invest 10m Baht into a business and leave your wife to work there and manage it 7 days a week as a salaried employee and it is now valued at 12m Baht. If you can demonstrate the initial 10m investment were from your personal account overseas then the split should be 11m to you and 1m to her... but say you worked there 24/7 while she sat on the sofa and you could not demonstrate you funded it... then the wife will be entitled to 6m Baht. Apparently, according to all the legal articles I've come accross on the subject.
ESTABLISH AS MUCH OF A PAPER TRAIL AS YOU CAN... I think would be sound advice to those yet to ship over
And remember WHAT IT IS YOU HAVE when you start to dredge a river and find two lawyers buried under your feet. A good start
SJ