State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > Virginia > Title-64-1 > Chapter-9 > 64-1-198

§ 64.1-198. Presumptions.

In determining whether this chapter applies to specific property thefollowing rebuttable presumptions apply:

1. Property acquired during marriage by a spouse of that marriage whiledomiciled in a jurisdiction under whose laws property could then be acquiredas community property is presumed to have been acquired as, or to have becomeand remained, property to which this chapter applies; and

2. Real property situated in the Commonwealth and personal property whereversituated acquired by a married person while domiciled in a jurisdiction underwhose laws property could not then be acquired as community property, titleto which was taken in a form which created rights of survivorship, ispresumed not to be property to which this chapter applies.

(1982, c. 456.)

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > Virginia > Title-64-1 > Chapter-9 > 64-1-198

§ 64.1-198. Presumptions.

In determining whether this chapter applies to specific property thefollowing rebuttable presumptions apply:

1. Property acquired during marriage by a spouse of that marriage whiledomiciled in a jurisdiction under whose laws property could then be acquiredas community property is presumed to have been acquired as, or to have becomeand remained, property to which this chapter applies; and

2. Real property situated in the Commonwealth and personal property whereversituated acquired by a married person while domiciled in a jurisdiction underwhose laws property could not then be acquired as community property, titleto which was taken in a form which created rights of survivorship, ispresumed not to be property to which this chapter applies.

(1982, c. 456.)


State Codes and Statutes

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > Virginia > Title-64-1 > Chapter-9 > 64-1-198

§ 64.1-198. Presumptions.

In determining whether this chapter applies to specific property thefollowing rebuttable presumptions apply:

1. Property acquired during marriage by a spouse of that marriage whiledomiciled in a jurisdiction under whose laws property could then be acquiredas community property is presumed to have been acquired as, or to have becomeand remained, property to which this chapter applies; and

2. Real property situated in the Commonwealth and personal property whereversituated acquired by a married person while domiciled in a jurisdiction underwhose laws property could not then be acquired as community property, titleto which was taken in a form which created rights of survivorship, ispresumed not to be property to which this chapter applies.

(1982, c. 456.)