| The laws of each state specify the grounds - the legal reasons - for which a
        divorce can be granted. Until 20 or 30 years ago, the only legal reason for obtaining a
        divorce was that the other spouse was guilty of some variety of marital misconduct and
        was at fault for the marriage not working. Many states have retained their fault-type
        grounds for obtaining a divorce, but all states now allow divorces to be granted
        regardless of who is at fault. Some states have only no-fault grounds. No-fault divorces
        are usually granted for reasons such as the existence of an irretrievable breakdown,
        irreconcilable differences, or incompatibility. In the states where fault grounds are still
        used, a spouse may be able to gain a better property division or alimony result by
        proving that the other party was at fault or guilty of marital misconduct. In no-fault states,
        property is divided regardless of fault by either party.  Please see specific state for details and/or
        differences. 
 ALABAMA
        | ALASKA | ARIZONA | ARKANSAS
        | CALIFORNIA | COLORADO
        | CONNECTICUT | DELAWARE
        | FLORIDA GEORGIA | HAWAII | IDAHO
        | ILLINOIS | INDIANA | IOWA
        | KANSAS | KENTUCKY | LOUISIANA
        | MAINE | MARYLAND
 MASSACHUSETTS | MICHIGAN
        | MINNESOTA | MISSISSIPPI
        | MISSOURI | MONTANA | NEBRASKA
        | NEVADA
 NEW HAMPSHIRE | NEW
        JERSEY | NEW MEXICO | NEW
        YORK | NORTH CAROLINA | NORTH
        DAKOTA | OHIO
 OKLAHOMA | OREGON | PENNSYLVANIA
        | RHODE ISLAND | SOUTH
        CAROLINA | SOUTH DAKOTA | TENNESSEE
 TEXAS | UTAH | VERMONT
        | VIRGINIA | WASHINGTON
        | WEST VIRGINIA | WISCONSIN
        | WYOMING
 ALABAMAAlabama has both fault and no-fault grounds for divorce. Under Alabama law,
        fault is a factor to be used by the court in dividing property. The misconduct of a party
        could be used to reduce the share of property being awarded to that party. 
        Alabama Code 30-2- 52.
 The circuit court has the power to divorce persons for the following reasons: 1) a
        party was at the time of the marriage physically and incurably incapacitated from entering
        into the marriage state; 2) adultery; 3) voluntary abandonment for one year preceding the
        filing of the complaint; 4) imprisonment in the penitentiary in Alabama or in any other
        state for two years, the sentence being for seven years or longer; 5) the commission of a
        crime against nature whether with mankind or with beast either before or after the
        marriage; 6) becoming addicted after the marriage to habitual drunkenness or to habitual
        use of opium, morphine, cocaine, or another drug; 7) a complete incompatibility so that
        the parties can no longer live together; 8) when a party has been confined in a mental
        hospital for five successive years, if such party is hopelessly and incurably insane at the
        time of the filing of the complaint, providing that the superintendent of the mental hospital
        provides a certified statement that it is his opinion that such person is hopelessly and
        incurably insane; 9) an irretrievable breakdown of the marriage, and that further attempts
        at reconciliation are futile and not in the best interest of the family; 10) in favor of the
        husband, when the wife was pregnant at the time of marriage without his knowledge or
        agency; 11) when one party has committed violence against the other or when, from a
        party� s conduct, there is reasonable comprehension of violence; or 12) in favor of the
        wife when the wife has lived separate and apart from the support of the husband for two
        years prior to the filing of the complaint, and she has resided in Alabama during the two
        years.
 Alabama Code 30-2-1.
 ALASKAAlaska has both fault and no-fault grounds. If even fault grounds are the basis
        for a dissolution action, marital fault is not relevant to the division of property. 
        AS 25.24.160(4).
 A divorce may be granted for any of the following fault grounds: 1) failure to
        consummate the marriage at the time of the marriage and continuing to the time of the
        commencement of the action; 2) adultery; 3) conviction of a felony; 4) willful desertion for
        a period of one year; 5) cruel and inhuman treatment or personal indignities or
        incapability of temperament; 6) habitual gross drunkenness continuing for one year prior
        to the commencement of the action; 7) incurable mental illness when the spouse has
        been confined to an institution for at least eight months preceding commencement of the
        action; or 8) addiction of either party, subsequent to the marriage, to the habitual use of
        opium, cocaine, or a similar drug. AS 25.24.050.
 A no-fault ground for divorce may be used if the parties are able to utilize the
        expedited dissolution procedure. The statute requires the parties, at the time of filing the
        Petition, to have already agreed as to the distribution of property, award of custody,
        payment of child support, and all other issues. Assuming they qualify for this type of
        dissolution procedure, the Petitioner may allege the following as ground for dissolution:
        incapability of temperament has caused the irremediable breakdown of the marriage.
 AS 25.24.200.
 ARIZONAIn Arizona, the only reason for obtaining a dissolution of marriage is on the
        grounds that the marriage is irretrievably broken. The court does not use fault as a
        factor in determining how property is to be divided.
 ARS �25-312 and 25-318.
 ARKANSASAll of the grounds for obtaining a divorce in Arkansas are fault grounds. The
        Chancery Court shall have power to grant a divorce for the following causes: 1) where
        either party was impotent at the time of the marriage and still is; 2) where either party
        was convicted of a felony or other infamous crime; 3) where either party is addicted to
        habitual drunkenness for one year, is guilty of cruel and barbarous treatment, or commits
        such indignity to the other person as shall render his or her condition intolerable; 4)
        where either party has committed adultery subsequent to the marriage; 5) where the
        husband and wife have lived separate and apart from each other for at least 18
        continuous months, without cohabitation, whether the separation was the voluntary act of
        one party or by mutual consent, or due to the fault of either party or both; 6) where
        husband and wife have lived separate and apart for three consecutive years without
        cohabitation because of the incurable insanity of one of them, based on proof that the
        insane spouse has been committed to an institution for care and treatment of the insane
        for 3 or more years prior to filing of the suit, has been adjudged to be of unsound mind
        by a court of competent jurisdiction, and the proof of insanity is supported by the
        evidence of two reputable physicians familiar with the person�s mental condition; 7)
        where either spouse, having the financial ability to do so, willfully fails to support the
        other.
 Fault is a factor used by the court to determine division of assets.
 Ark. stat. Ann. 9-12-301, and 9-12-3115.
 CALIFORNIACalifornia has only no-fault grounds for a dissolution of marriage. California law
        provides that dissolution of marriage may be based on either of the following grounds:
        1) irreconcilable differences which have caused the irremediable breakdown of the
        marriage; or 2) incurable insanity. Misconduct of a party is not a relevant factor for the
        court to consider in making a division of property.
        Cal. Fam. Code �2310.
 COLORADOThe only ground for dissolution in Colorado is that the marriage is irretrievably
        broken. Fault is not a factor to be considered by the court when dividing the property.
        CRSA �14-10-107 and 14-10-113.
 CONNECTICUTConnecticut has both no-fault and fault grounds. If a divorce is granted on a fault
        ground, the court has the discretion to reduce the property award going to the spouse
        who has committed fault. A decree of dissolution of marriage shall be granted upon the
        court finding that one of the following causes has occurred: 1) the marriage has broken
        down irretrievably; 2) the parties have lived apart by reason of incompatibility for a
        continuous period of at least 18 months prior to service of the Complaint, and there is no
        reasonable prospect they will be reconciled; 3) adultery; 4) fraudulent conduct; 5) willful
        desertion for one year with total neglect of duty; 6) seven years� absence during all of
        which period the absent party has not been heard from; 7) habitual intemperance; 8)
        intolerable cruelty; 9) sentencing of one party to imprisonment for life or the commission
        of any infamous crime punishable by imprisonment for a period in excess of one year; or
        10) legal confinement in a hospital or other institution because of psychiatric disabilities
        for at least an accumulated period totaling five years within the six years preceding the
        date of the Complaint.  C.G.S.A. �46b-40.
 DELAWAREThe only ground for requesting a divorce decree in Delaware is that the marriage
        is irretrievably broken and that reconciliation is improbable. A marriage is irretrievably
        broken where it is characterized by 1) voluntary separation; 2) separation caused by
        Respondent�s misconduct; 3) separation caused by Respondent�s mental
        illness; or 4)
        separation caused by incompatibility. Whether either party is at fault is not a relevant
        factor to be used by the court in division of property.
        13 DCA �1505 and 1513.
 FLORIDAThe primary ground for requesting a dissolution of marriage in Florida is that the
        marriage is irretrievably broken, a no-fault ground. The only other ground for a
        dissolution of marriage is the mental incapacity of one of the parties when such
        incapacity has been determined by court according to Florida law for a preceding period
        of at least three years. Fault or misconduct of a party is not a basis for making an
        unequal division of assets. However, marital misconduct in the form of intentional
        depletion of marital assets can be a valid reason for an award of alimony or unequal
        distribution of assets.
        FSA �61.052 and 61.075.
 GEORGIAA total divorce can be granted upon any of the following grounds: 1) if the parties
        are related to one another within the prohibited decrees of relationship under Georgia
        law; 2) mental incapacity at the time of marriage; 3) impotency at the time of marriage; 4)
        force, duress or fraud in obtaining the marriage; 5) pregnancy of the wife by a man other
        than the husband, at the time of marriage, if unknown to the husband; 6) adultery after
        the marriage; 7) willful and continued desertion by either of the parties for the term of
        one year; 8) the conviction of either party for an offense involving moral turpitude under
        which the party is sentenced to imprisonment in a penal institution for at least two years;
        9) habitual intoxication; 10) cruel treatment; 11) incurable mental illness -- and the party
        has been confined in an institution for the mentally ill or has been under continuous
        treatment for mental illness for at least two years preceding commencement of the action
        and that the party cannot be expected to recover his mental health; 12) habitual drug
        addiction to any controlled substance; or 13) the marriage is irretrievably broken -- the
        court shall not grant a divorce on this ground until at least 30 days have passed from the
        date of service of the Summons and Complaint on the Respondent.  GC �19-5-3.
 HAWAIIHawaii has only no-fault grounds for granting a divorce. A Family Court shall
        decree a divorce when the court finds that the marriage is irretrievably broken. The court
        may also decree divorce when the court finds: 1) the parties have lived separate and
        apart under a decree of separation, and the term of separation has expired without
        reconciliation; 2) the parties have lived separate and apart for a period of two years or
        more under a decree of separation, and there has been no reconciliation; or 3) the
        parties have lived separate and apart for a continuous period of two years or more, and
        there is no reasonable likelihood that cohabitation will be resumed. The conduct of the
        parties during the marriage is one of the factors used by the court to determine how to
        divide property.  HRS �580-41 and 580-47.
 IDAHODivorces may be granted in Idaho for any of the following causes: 1) adultery; 2)
        extreme cruelty; 3) willful desertion; 4) willful neglect; 5) habitual intemperance; 6)
        conviction of a felony; 7) when either the husband or wife has become permanently
        insane, and the insane person has been regularly in an insane asylum for at least three
        years preceding commencement for the action for divorce and it appears that the
        insanity is permanent and incurable; 8) irreconcilable differences--those grounds which
        are determined by the court to be substantial reasons for not continuing the marriage
        and which make it appear that the marriage should be dissolved. Fault is not one of the
        factors used by the court to divide the property of the parties.  IC �32-603 to 32-616.
 ILLINOISIllinois law has both fault and no-fault grounds for a dissolution of marriage. 
        However, property is divided in Illinois regardless of fault or misconduct of a party. 
        The grounds for obtaining a dissolution of marriage in Illinois are as follows: 1)
        the Respondent was, at the time of the marriage, and continues to be naturally impotent;
        2) the Respondent had a wife or husband living at the time of the marriage; 3) the
        Respondent committed adultery subsequent to the marriage; 4) the Respondent has
        willfully deserted or absented himself or herself from the Petitioner for at least one year,
        including any period of time during which the action for dissolution of marriage or
        separation has been pending; 5) the Respondent has been guilty of habitual
        drunkenness for two years; 6) the Respondent has used addictive drugs for two years,
        has attempted to take the life of the other by poison or other means, has been guilty of
        extreme physical or mental cruelty, or has been convicted of a felony or other infamous
        crime; or 7) the Respondent has infected the other with a communicable venereal
        disease; or 8) the spouses have lived separate and apart for a continuous period in
        excess of two years and irreconcilable differences have caused the irretrievable
        breakdown of the marriage and the court determines that efforts at reconciliation have
        failed or that future attempts at reconciliation would be impracticable and not in the best
        interest of the family; if the spouses have lived separate for a continuous period of at
        least six months prior to the entry of the divorce decree, then the requirement of living
        separate for two years may be waived upon written stipulation of both parties filed with
        the court.  750 ILCS 5/401.
 INDIANAA dissolution of marriage can be decreed by an Indiana court finding one of the
        following grounds to exist: 1) irretrievable breakdown of the marriage, 2) a conviction of
        either one of the parties of a felony subsequent to the marriage, 3) impotency existing at
        the time of the marriage, or 4) incurable insanity of either party lasting for a period of at
        least two years.
 AIC �31-1-11.5-3.
 IOWAIowa is a pure no-fault state. The only ground upon which a dissolution of
        marriage can be granted is if one of the parties alleges that there has been a breakdown
        of the marriage relationship to the extent that the legitimate objects of matrimony have
        been destroyed and there remains no reasonable likelihood that the marriage can be
        preserved.
 Iowa Code Annotated Section 598.5.
 KANSASThe District Court shall grant a decree of divorce for any of the following grounds:
        1) incompatibility, 2) failure to perform a material marital duty or obligation, or 3)
        incompatibility by reason of mental illness or mental incapacity.  KSA �60-1601.
 KENTUCKYThe only ground for obtaining a divorce in Kentucky is the no-fault ground that the
        marriage is irretrievably broken. This means that there is no reasonable prospect of
        reconciliation. Fault or marital misconduct is not a factor used by the courts in
        determining a division of property.
 K.R.S. �403.170 and K.R.S. �403.190.
 LOUISIANAA divorce shall be granted on the petition of either spouse upon proof that: 1)
        the spouses have been living separate and apart continuously for a period of at least six
        months prior to the date the Petition is filed; or 2) the other spouse has committed
        adultery; or 3) the other spouse has committed a felony and has been sentenced to
        death or imprisonment at hard labor. A divorce shall also be granted when either spouse
        has filed a Petition for Divorce and at least 180 days have elapsed from the time of
        service of the Petition, or from the execution of a written Waiver of Service by the
        Defendant, and the spouses have lived separate and apart continuously since the filing
        of the Petition.
        CC Art. 102 and 103.
 The cause of action for divorce is extinguished by the reconciliation of the parties.
        CC Art. 104.
 MAINEMaine has both fault and no-fault grounds. Fault is not a factor used by the court
        to divide property. A divorce can be granted for any of the following clauses: 1)
        adultery; 2) impotence; 3) extreme cruelty; 4) desertion for three consecutive years prior
        to the commencement of the action; 5) gross and confirmed habits of intoxication from
        the use of liquor or drugs; 6) willful failure to support even though the party has sufficient
        ability to provide for the other spouse; 7) cruel and abusive treatment;
        8) irreconcilable
        marital differences; and 9) mental illness requiring confinement in a mental institution for
        at least seven consecutive years prior to the commencement of the action. 
        19 MRSA �691.
 MARYLANDThe Maryland court may grant a decree of divorce on the following grounds:
        1) adultery; 2) desertion, if it has continued for twelve months without interruption before
        the filing of the complaint for divorce--a desertion is deliberate and final, and there is no
        reasonable expectation of reconciliation; 3) voluntary separation if the parties have
        voluntarily lived separate without cohabitation for twelve months without interruption
        before the filing of the complaint, and there is no reasonable expectation for
        reconciliation; 4) conviction of a felony or misdemeanor in any state or court of the
        United States if, before the filing of the complaint, the defendant has been sentenced to
        serve at least three years in a penal institution and has served twelve months of the
        sentence; 5) two year separation when the parties have lived separate without
        cohabitation for at least two years without interruption before the filing of the complaint;
        or 6) insanity, if the insane spouse has been confined to a mental institution or other
        institution for at least three years before the filing of the complaint for divorce, the court
        determines from at least two physicians that the insanity is incurable, and one of the
        parties has been a resident of Maryland for at least two years before the filing of the
        complaint. Maryland does not have a no-fault ground for divorce. Fault is one of the
        factors considered by the court in determining how to divide the properties.
        ACM �7-103, and 8-205 (b) (4).
 MASSACHUSETTSMassachusetts has both fault and no-fault grounds for a divorce. A divorce can
        be granted for the following reasons: 1) adultery; 2) impotency; 3) desertion for at least
        one year prior to the filing of the Complaint; 4) confirmed habits of intoxication caused by
        excessive use of liquor or drugs; 5) cruel and abusive treatment; 6) if a spouse has
        sufficient ability, but wantonly and cruelly refuses or neglects to provide suitable support
        and maintenance for the other spouse; 7) there has been an irretrievable breakdown of
        the marriage; or 8) either party has been sentenced to confinement for life or to
        imprisonment for five years or more in a penal institution.  ALM 208 �1 and 2.
 MICHIGANThe sole ground for a divorce in Michigan is that there has been a breakdown of
        the marriage relationship to the extent that the objects of matrimony have been
        destroyed, and there remains no reasonable likelihood that the marriage can be
        preserved. In the Complaint, the Plaintiff shall make no other explanation of the grounds
        for divorce than by the use of this statutory language.  MCLA �552.6.
 MINNESOTAMinnesota is a pure no-fault state. A dissolution of marriage is granted when the
        court finds that there has been an irretrievable breakdown of the marriage relationship. 
        Minn. Stat. �518.06.
 MISSISSIPPIMississippi has both fault and no-fault grounds for a divorce. Fault is a factor
        which the court may consider when dividing property. A divorce may be granted for any
        of the following causes: 1) natural impotency; 2) adultery, unless it was committed by
        collusion of the parties for the purpose of obtaining a divorce, or unless the parties
        cohabited after both knew of the adultery; 3) being sentenced to any penitentiary; 4)
        willful and continuous desertion for at least one year; 5) habitual drunkenness; 6)
        habitual and excessive use of opium, morphine, or other drug; 7) habitual cruel and
        inhumane treatment; 8) insanity at the time of marriage if the party complaining did not
        know of such infirmity; 9) marriage to another person at the time of the pretended
        marriage between the parties; 10) pregnancy of the wife by another person at the time of
        the marriage, if the husband did not know of such pregnancy; 11) if the parties are
        related within the degrees of relationship between whom a marriage is prohibited by
        Mississippi law; and 12) incurable insanity, if the insane person has been confined in an
        institution for the insane for at least three years preceding commencement of the action,
        and if at least two physicians exam the person and testify in an Affidavit that the person
        is incurably insane. In addition to the foregoing grounds for a divorce, the parties can
        also be divorced on the ground of irreconcilable differences, but only if the divorce is
        based on a joint complaint of husband and wife or on Plaintiff�s Complaint where the
        Defendant has been personally served or where the Defendant has entered an
        appearance by a written waiver of being served with the Summons and Complaint. No
        divorce shall be granted on the ground of irreconcilable differences where the divorce is
        contested. However, a divorce may be granted on the grounds of irreconcilable
        differences if the divorce had been contested but then the contest was removed because
        the parties entered into a written agreement providing for custody, child support, and
        settlement of any property rights.
 MC 93-5-1 and 93-5-2.
 MISSOURIThe sole ground for obtaining a dissolution of marriage in Missouri is that the
        marriage is irretrievably broken. However, Missouri law allows the court to consider fault
        as one of the factors determining how the property is divided.  VAMS �452.310 and 452.330.
 MONTANAAlleging an irretrievable breakdown of the marriage relationship is the only ground
        for the Montana courts to grant a dissolution of marriage. The court does not consider
        fault in its division of property.
 MCA 40-4-101, and 40-4-202.
 NEBRASKAThe only ground for requesting dissolution of marriage in Nebraska is that the
        marriage is irretrievably broken. Fault of either party is not a relevant factor to be used
        by the court in dividing property.
 Reissued Revised Statutes 42-353 and 42-365.
 NEVADAA divorce can be granted in Nevada for any of the following causes: 1) insanity
        existing for two years prior to the commencement of the action; 2) if the husband and
        wife have lived separate and apart, without cohabitation, for at least one year; or 3)
        incompatibility. The fault of either party is not one of the factors used by the courts in
        determining how to divide property.
 NRS 125.010.
 NEW HAMPSHIREA divorce from the bonds of matrimony shall be granted in New Hampshire for
        any of the following causes: 1) impotency of either party; 2) adultery of either party; 3)
        extreme cruelty of either party to the other; 4) conviction of either party of a crime
        punishable with imprisonment for more than one year and actual imprisonment pursuant
        to such conviction; 5) when either party has so treated the other as to seriously injure
        health or endanger reason; 6) when either party has been absent for at least two years
        and has not been heard of; 7) when either party is a habitual drunkard and has been
        such for at least two years; 8) when either party has joined any religious sect which
        professes to believe the relation of husband and wife to be unlawful, and has refused to
        cohabit with the other for at least six months; 9) when either party, without sufficient
        cause and without the consent of the other, has abandoned and refused to cohabit with
        the other for at least two years; 10) when the husband has willingly separated from the
        wife for at least two years, without making suitable provision for her support and
        maintenance; 11) when the wife has willingly separated herself from her husband,
        without his consent, for at least two years; 12) when the wife has gone to reside outside
        of the state and has remained separated from her husband at least ten years without his
        consent and without returning to claim her marriage rights; 13) when the wife of any alien
        or citizen of another state, living separate, has resided in New Hampshire for at least two
        years, her husband having left the country with the intention of becoming a citizen of
        some foreign country, and not having made suitable provision for his wife�s support and
        maintenance; and 14) on the ground of irreconcilable differences which have caused the
        irremediable breakdown of the marriage (the no-fault ground for a divorce in New
        Hampshire).
 RSA 458:7 and 7-a.
 NEW JERSEYAn absolute divorce from the bond of matrimony may be decreed by the New
        Jersey Superior Court for the following causes: 1) adultery; 2) willful and continued
        desertion for at least 12 consecutive months, which is established by proof that the
        parties ceased to cohabit as husband and wife; 3) extreme cruelty, which is defined as
        including any physical or mental cruelty which endangers the safety or health of the
        Plaintiff or makes it improper or unreasonable to expect the Plaintiff to continue to
        cohabit with Defendant, provided that a Complaint for divorce based on this ground may
        not be filed until after three months from the date of the last act of cruelty complained of
        in the Complaint; 4) if the parties have been living separate and apart in different homes
        for at least 18 consecutive months and there is no reasonable prospect of reconciliation;
        5) addiction to any narcotic drug or habitual drunkenness for a period of 12 or more
        consecutive months prior to filing of the Complaint; 6) if either party has been
        institutionalized for mental illness for a period of 24 or more consecutive months prior to
        filing of the Complaint; 7) if Defendant has been imprisoned for 18 or more consecutive
        months at any time after the marriage, provided that the parties have not resumed
        cohabitation following the Defendant�s release from prison; and 8) deviant sexual
        conduct voluntarily performed by the Defendant without the consent of the Plaintiff.
 NJSA 2A:34-2.
 NEW MEXICOOn the petition of either party in a marriage, a New Mexico District Court may
        decree a dissolution of marriage on any of the following grounds: 1) incompatibility,
        which is defined to mean a conflict of personalities and that the legitimate ends of the
        marriage relationship are destroyed, preventing any reasonable expectation of
        reconciliation; 2) cruel and inhumane treatment; 3) adultery; or 4) abandonment. The
        fault of either parties is not a factor used by the courts in determining how to divide
 property.  �40-4-1 and �40-4-2, and �40-4-7 NMSA.
 NEW YORKA divorce can be granted in New York for any of the following grounds: 1) the
        cruel and inhuman treatment of the plaintiff by the defendant, such that the conduct of
        the defendant so endangers the physical or mental well-being of the plaintiff and renders
        it unsafe or improper for the plaintiff to cohabit with the defendant; 2) the abandonment
        of the plaintiff by the defendant for a period of one or more years; 3) the confinement of
        the defendant in prison for a period of three or more consecutive years after the
        marriage; 4) adultery; 5) the parties have lived apart pursuant to a decree of legal
        separation for a period of one or more years after the granting of the divorce; and 6) the
        parties have lived apart pursuant to a written agreement of separation for a period of at
        least one year.
        Domestic Relations Law � 170.
 New York also has a special proceeding to dissolve a marriage where a spouse
        has been absent for at least five years. A court can dissolve a marriage if the plaintiff
        has been a resident of New York for at least one year and the spouse of the petitioner
        has been absent for at least five successive years and the plaintiff does not believe the
        spouse to be alive. The plaintiff must allege specific facts showing the history of the
        parties and the circumstances of the disappearance or absence of the spouse.
 Domestic Relations Law �220 and 221.
 NORTH CAROLINAA divorce can be granted in North Carolina for the following reasons: 1) when the
        parties have lived separate and apart for three consecutive years, without cohabitation,
        and are still living separate and apart because of the incurable insanity of either party; 2)
        if the parties have lived separate and apart for at least one year and either party has
        resided in North Carolina for at least six months. The court may also grant divorces from
        bed and board (a legal separation) if either party: 1) abandons his or her family; 2)
        maliciously turns the other out of doors; 3) by cruel or barbarous treatment endangers
        the life of the other; 4) offers such indignities to the person of the other as to render his
        or her condition in life intolerable; 5) becomes an excessive user of alcohol or drugs, so
        as to render the condition of the other spouse intolerable and the life of that spouse
        burdensome; or 6) commits adultery.
 GS �50-5.1 to �50-7.
 NORTH DAKOTAIn North Dakota, a divorce may be granted on the grounds of both fault and
        no fault.  Fault or misconduct by a party may reduce that party�s share of the assets or
        award of alimony or other relief, in the discretion of the court. Divorces in North Dakota
        may be granted for any of the following causes: 1) adultery; 2) extreme cruelty; 3) willful
        desertion; 4) willful neglect; 5) habitual intemperance; 6) conviction of felony; 7) insanity
        for a period of five years, the insane person having been an inmate of an institution for
        such period and affected with any psychosis (No divorce may be granted on the ground
        of insanity until after a thorough examination of such insane person by three physicians
        as specified by statute.); and 8) irreconcilable differences - substantial reasons for not
        continuing the marriage and which make it appear that the marriage should be dissolved.
 NDCC �14-05-03, and 14-05-24.
 OHIOThe Ohio Court of Common Pleas may grant divorces for the following causes:
        1) either party had a husband or wife living at the time of the marriage; 2) willful absence
        of the adverse party for one year; 3) adultery; 4) extreme cruelty; 5) fraudulent contract;
        6) any gross neglect of duty; 7) habitual drunkenness; 8) imprisonment in a state or
        federal correctional institution at the time of filing the Complaint; 9) when the parties have
        continuously lived separate and apart for at least one year; and 10) incompatibility,
        unless denied by either party.  ORC 3105.01.
 OKLAHOMAThe District Court of Oklahoma may grant a divorce for any of the following
        reasons: 1) abandonment for at least one year; 2) adultery; 3) impotency; 4) when the
        wife, at the time of the marriage, was pregnant by someone other than her husband; 5)
        extreme cruelty; 6) fraudulent counter act; 7) incompatibility; 8) habitual drunkenness; 9)
        gross neglect of duty; 10) imprisonment of Defendant in a state or federal penal
        institution for conviction of a felony and Defendant is still incarcerated at the time Petition
        is filed; 11) either party obtains a final divorce decree in another state, but the parties
        were not released from the obligations of the marriage within Oklahoma; or 12) insanity
        for a period of at least five years.
 43 Okl.St.Ann. �101.
 OREGONDissolution of a marriage in Oregon may be ordered by the court for the following
        causes: 1) when irreconcilable differences between the parties have caused the
        irremediable breakdown of the marriage; or 2) any of the reasons for which an
        annulment could be granted. Fault of a party is not a relevant factor used by the court to
        determine how property should be divided or whether spousal maintenance should be
        awarded.
 ORS 107.015, 107.025, and 107.036.
 PENNSYLVANIAPennsylvania has both fault and no-fault grounds for divorce. Fault or marital
        misconduct by either party is not a factor used by the courts in determining how to divide
        property. A divorce may be granted for any of the following reasons: 1) Willful and
        malicious desertion, and absence from the home of the injured and innocent spouse,
        without a reasonable cause, for at least one year; 2) adultery; 3) cruel and barbarous
        treatment, endangering the health or life of the injured and innocent spouse; 4) if either
        party was already married at the time of the marriage; 5) if either party has been
        sentenced to imprisonment for a term of two or more years after conviction for a crime; 6)
        if either party has committed such indignities to the other spouse as to render that
        spouses condition intolerable and life burdensome; 7) if a spouse suffers from insanity or
        serious mental disorder which has resulted in confinement of a mental institution for at
        least 18 months immediately before the commencement of the action and there is no
        reasonable prospect of discharge from inpatient care during the 18 months subsequent
        to the commencement of the action; 8) if either party has alleged that the marriage is
        irretrievably broken and ninety days have elapsed from the date of commencement of
        the action and an affidavit has been filed by each of the parties stating that each consent
        to the divorce; and 9) if either party alleges in the complaint that the marriage is
        irretrievably broken and the party files and affidavit alleging that the parties have lived
        separate and apart for at least 2 years, and the defendant does not deny the allegations
        or the court determines, despite defendants denial, that the parties have lived separate
        for at least 2 years and the marriage is irretrievably broken.
 23 Pa.C.S.A. � 3301, and 3502.
 If the alleged ground for divorce is 1) irretrievable breakdown of the marriage, or
        2) indignities to the other spouse as to render that spouse�s condition intolerable, the
        court shall notify both parties of the availability of counseling and, upon request, provide
        the parties with a list of qualified professional counselors. Upon request by either party,
        the court shall require up to a maximum of three counseling sessions. If the ground is
        irretrievable breakdown of the marriage, and the parties have at least one child under 16 years of age, the court may require counseling. If the defendant denies plaintiff�s
        allegation that the marriage has been irretrievably broken, the court shall continue the
        case for a period not less than any days nor more than 120 days, and require counseling
        during this period of time. If the parties have not reconciled at the expiration of the time
        period and one party states under oath that the marriage is irretrievably broken, the court
        shall determine whether the marriage is irretrievably broken. If the court so determines,
        the court shall grant the divorce.  23 Pa.C.S.A. � 3301, and 3302.
 RHODE ISLANDRhode Island has both fault and no-fault grounds for divorce. The relative fault of
        the parties is a factor to be considered by the court when dividing property. A divorce
        can be granted in Rhode Island for the following causes: 1) if the marriage is void or
        voidable for any reason under Rhode Island law - for example, if either party was already
        married or if the parties are related; 2) if there have been irreconcilable differences which
        have caused the irremediable breakdown of the marriage; 3) impotency; 4) adultery; 5)
        extreme cruelty; 6) willful desertion for five years of either of the parties, or for such
        desertion for a shorter period of time, in the discretion of the court; 7) for continued
        drunkenness or habitual and excessive use of opium or other drugs; 8) for the neglect
        and refusal for at least one year prior to the filing of the Petition, on the part of the
        husband to provide necessaries for the subsistence of his wife, if the husband has
        sufficient ability to provide; 9) for any other gross misbehavior and wickedness by either
        of the parties which is repugnant to, and in violation of, the marriage covenant; and 10) if
        the parties have been separate and apart continuously for at least three years.
        GLRI 15-5-1 to 15-5-3.1.  Minn. Stat. �518.06.
 SOUTH CAROLINANo divorce shall be granted by the South Carolina courts except upon one of the
        following grounds: 1) adultery; 2) desertion for a period of one year; 3) physical cruelty;
        4) habitual drunkenness, including the use of any narcotic drug; or 5) if the husband and
        wife have lived separate and apart without cohabitation for a period of one year. Fault
        by a party is a factor which can be used by the court in determining how to divide
        property.
 1976 Code �20-3-10 and �20-7-472(2).
 SOUTH DAKOTASouth Dakota has both fault and no-fault grounds. Divorces may be granted for
        any of the following causes: 1) adultery; 2) extreme cruelty; 3) willful desertion; 4) willful
        neglect; 5) habitual intemperance; 6) conviction of a felony; or 7) irreconcilable
        differences.
        S.D.C.L. 25-4-2.
 Fault shall not be taken into account with regard to the awarding of property,
        except as it may be relevant to the acquisition of property during the marriage.
        S.D.C.L. 25-4-45.1.
 TENNESSEETennessee has both fault and no-fault grounds for divorce. Whether a party is at
        fault is not a relevant factor used by the court in determining how to divide property. A
        divorce can be decreed by the courts in Tennessee for the following causes: 1) if either
        party was, at the time of the marriage and still is, naturally impotent and incapable of
        procreation; 2) if either party has knowingly entered into a second marriage, while the
        first marriage was still in effect; 3) either party has committed adultery; 4) willful or
        malicious desertion or absence of either party, without reasonable cause, for at least one
        year; 5) being convicted of any crime which, by the laws of Tennessee, renders the party
        infamous; 6) if either party has been convicted of a felony and sentenced to confinement
        in the penitentiary; 7) if either party has attempted to take the life of the other, by poison
        or any other means showing malice; 8) if either party refuses to accompany his or her
        spouse to reside in Tennessee, without a reasonable cause, and willfully is absent from
        the spouse residing in Tennessee for at least two years; 9) if the women was pregnant
        tat the time of the marriage, by another person, without the knowledge of the husband;
        10) habitual drunkenness or abuse of narcotic drugs, when the spouse has accrued the
        habit after marriage; 11) irreconcilable differences between the parties; and 12) if both
        parties have lived in separate residences for a continuous period of two or more years,
        without cohabitation, and there are no minor children of the parties. 
        The following causes for a divorce from bed and board can also constitute a
        cause for absolute divorce, in the discretion of the court: 1) inappropriate marital
        conduct - where either party has been guilty of such cruel and inhuman treatment or
        conduct towards the spouse as renders cohabitation unsafe and improper; 2) the
        husband has offered such indignities to the wife�s person as to render her condition
        intolerable, thereby forcing her to leave; or 3) the husband has abandoned the wife, or
        turned her out of the home, and refused or neglected to provide for her. The court also
        has the power to grant an absolute divorce to either party where there has already been
        a final decree of divorce from bed and board (a legal separation) for more than two
        years, and the parties have not become reconciled during the prior two years. 
        No divorce shall be granted on the ground of irreconcilable differences unless the
        court shall affirmatively find in its decree that the parties have made adequate and
        sufficient provision by written agreement for the custody and maintenance of any
        children of the marriage and for the equitable settlement of any property rights between
        the parties. No divorce shall be granted on the ground of irreconcilable differences
        unless the Petition for Divorce has been on file for at least 60 days if the parties have no
        children under 18 years of age, or on file for at least 90 days if the parties have children
        under age 18.
 TCA �36-4-101 to �36-4-103.
 TEXASTexas has both fault and no-fault grounds for divorce. Fault is one of the factors
        which the court can consider in determining how to divide property. A divorce can be
        decreed by the Texas courts for any  of the following reasons: 1) if the marriage has
        become insupportable because of discord or conflict of personalities that destroys the
        legitimate ends of the marriage relationship and prevents any reasonable expectation of
        reconciliation (no-fault ground); 2) if either spouse is guilty of cruel treatment toward the
        other spouse of a nature that renders further living together insupportable; 3) if either
        spouse has committed adultery; 4) if since the marriage either spouse has been
        convicted of a felony, has been in prison for at least one year in the penitentiary, and has
        not been pardoned; 5) if either spouse left the other spouse with the intention of
        abandonment and remained away for at least one year; 6) if the spouses have lived
        apart without cohabitation for at least three years; and 7) if either spouse has been
        confined in a mental hospital for at least three years and it appears that the spouse�s
        mental disorder is of such a degree and nature that he is not likely to be restored.
 V.T.C.A., Family Code �3.01-3.07.
 UTAHUtah has both fault and no-fault grounds. A divorce may be granted for any of
        the following grounds: 1) impotency of the Defendant at the time of marriage; 2) adultery
        committed by the Defendant subsequent to marriage; 3) willful desertion of the Plaintiff
        by the Defendant for more than one year; 4) willful neglect of the Defendant to provide
        the common necessaries of life for the Plaintiff; 5) habitual drunkenness of the
        Defendant; 6) conviction of the Defendant for a felony; 7) cruel treatment of the Plaintiff
        to the extent of causing bodily injury or great mental distress; 8) irreconcilable
        differences of the marriage; 9) incurable insanity; or 10) when the husband and wife
        have lived separately, under a decree of separate maintenance of any state, for three
        consecutive years without cohabitation.
        UCA 30-3-1.
 VERMONTThe fault of a party can be a factor considered by the court in determining how to
        divide the property. A divorce can be granted in Vermont for the following reasons: 1)
        adultery; 2) if either party has been sentenced to confinement in prison for three years or
        more and is actually in prison at the time of commencement of the action; 3) for
        intolerable severity by either party; 4) for willful desertion or when either party has been
        absent for seven years and not heard of during that time; 5) where one party has
        sufficient means to provide maintenance but, without cause, persistently refuses or
        neglects to do so; 6) incurable insanity of either party; or 7) if the parties have been
        separated for at least six months and the resumption of marital relations is not
        reasonably probable.
        15 VSA 551.
 VIRGINIAA divorce from the bond of matrimony may be decreed in Virginia for the following
        causes: 1) adultery, or for sodomy or buggery committed outside the marriage; 2) where
        either of the parties, subsequent to the marriage, has been convicted of a felony,
        sentenced to confinement for more than one year, and has actually been confined for
        such felonies, subsequent to the conviction, and the parties have not cohabited after
        knowledge of the confinement for conviction of a felony; 3) where either party has been
        guilty of cruelty, caused reasonable apprehension of bodily hurt, or willfully deserted or
        abandoned the other for more than one year; 4) if the parties have lived separate and
        apart without any cohabitation and without interruption for at least one year; 5) if the
        parties have lived separately and apart without cohabitation and without interruption for
        six months, if the parties have entered into a written Termination Agreement and there
        are no minor children.  CV �20-91.
 WASHINGTONThe sole ground for obtaining a dissolution of marriage in Washington is that
        there has been an irretrievable breakdown of the marriage relationship. Fault is not a
        factor used by the courts to divide property.
 RCW �26.09.030 and 26.09.080.
 WEST VIRGINIAA divorce may be decreed by the West Virginia Circuit Court for the following
        causes: 1) adultery; 2) when either of the parties, subsequent to the marriage, has been
        convicted of a felony and the conviction is final; 3) when either party willfully abandons or
        deserts the other for at least six months; 4) for cruel or inhuman treatment by either party
        against the other, which includes reasonable apprehension of bodily harm, false
        acquisition of adultery or homosexuality, conduct or treatment which destroys or tends to
        destroy the mental or physical well-being, happiness, and welfare of the other and render
        continued cohabitation unsafe or unendurable; 5) for habitual drunkenness; 6) for the
        addiction to habitual use of any narcotic or dangerous drug; 7) when the parties have
        continuously lived separate and apart without cohabitation for at least one year; 8) for
        permanent and incurable insanity; 9) for abuse or neglect of a child of the parties or of
        one of the parties, with neglect meaning the willful failure to provide necessary support
        and other care; or 10) if one party alleges that irreconcilable differences have arisen
        between the parties, and the other party files a verified answer to the Complaint and
        admits that irreconcilable differences exist between the parties.  WV Code �48-2-4.
 WISCONSINWisconsin is a no-fault state. A dissolution of marriage is granted when the court
        finds that: 1) both parties by Petition or otherwise have stated under oath or affirmation
        that the marriage is irretrievably broken; or 2) if the parties have voluntarily lived apart
        continuously for twelve months or more immediately prior to commencement of the
        action and one of the parties states under oath that the marriage is irretrievably broken. 
        If the parties have not lived apart for at least twelve months and if only one party has
        stated that the marriage is irretrievably broken, then the court shall consider all relevant
        factors including the possibility of reconciliation. If the court finds no reasonable
        prospect of reconciliation, it shall then make a finding that the marriage is irretrievably
        broken. If the court finds that there is a reasonable prospect of reconciliation, the court
        shall continue the case for further hearing not fewer than 30 nor more than 60 days later
        and may suggest counseling to the parties. At the second hearing, if either party states
        under oath that the marriage is irretrievably broken, the court shall then make a finding
        as to whether the marriage is irretrievably broken.
 Wis. Stat. �767.12.
 WYOMINGThe primary ground for obtaining a divorce in Wyoming is on the grounds of
        irreconcilable differences in the marital relationship. However, a divorce may also be
        granted on the grounds that either party has become incurably insane and the insane
        person has been confined in a mental hospital for at least two years immediately
        preceding the commencement of the action.  W.S. 20-2-104 and 20-2-105.
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