Related Articles: Litigation
Tenancy by the Entirety: Another Reason to Say "I Do"
The ancient Common Law considered a husband and wife to be
one person for purposes of property ownership. Both husband
and wife were held to have a "tenancy by the entirety" in
all the property that they jointly owned. Modern Virginia
law has largely abandoned this characterization of a married
couple as a single legal entity, but the peculiar legal arrangement
of tenancy by the entirety still exists.
If husband and wife hold property in a tenancy by the entirety,
the joint property is completely immune to the claims of a
creditor of one spouse alone. Only a creditor of both husband
and wife may subject the property to a lien or judgment. Virginia
law allows virtually any kind of property to be held as a
tenancy by the entirety, not just real estate. In the case
of Pitts v. U.S., the U.S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeals
held that the proceeds of a sale of real estate which was
held by a tenancy by the entireties are likewise considered
to be held by the entireties, even if the proceeds are in
some form other than cash, such as deed of trust note.
Joint bank accounts are governed by special rules that do
not recognize a tenancy by the entirety per se but do afford
some protection to married couples. Virginia law presumes
that joint bank accounts are divided equally between husband
and wife, even if one spouse has deposited a substantially
greater amount than the other. This means that a creditor
of a single spouse generally can only assert a claim against
one half of the amount in the joint account, even if the other
spouse has deposited much more in the account.
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