What are the grounds for divorce in Guam?
Grounds are legally acceptable reasons for divorce. In Guam, you can get a no-fault divorce or a fault-based divorce.
A no-fault divorce is when you file for divorce without saying that your spouse is responsible for the end of the marriage because there are “irreconcilable differences,” which means there are substantial reasons the marriage should not continue.1
A fault-based divorce is when you file for divorce, and you claim that your spouse was responsible for the end of the marriage. Please note that some of these reasons apply to husbands and/or wives specifically. You can file for a fault-based divorce in Guam if:
- your spouse willingly had sex with someone outside of the marriage (adultery);2
- your spouse wrongfully caused you severe physical injury or severe mental suffering (extreme cruelty);3
- your husband fails to provide for your common needs for at least one year, even though he has the ability to do so; or because of laziness (idleness), extravagant habits (profligacy), or wastefulness (dissipation). According to how the law is written, this situation appears to only apply to husbands failing to provide, not wives;4
- your spouse is under the influence of alcohol so often for at least one year that s/he can’t manage normal activities or so often that it causes you intense emotional distress;5
- your spouse left the marriage6 for at least one year,7 and either:
- never intended to return to the marriage at the time s/he left (willful desertion);6or
- decided not to return to the marriage after leaving (desertion).”7 Desertion also includes these situations:
- your spouse refuses to have sex with you, even though s/he has no health or physical conditions which reasonably require refusal;9
- your spouse refuses to live with you without good reason (without “just cause”);9
- your spouse tricks you into leaving the home, and leaves the marriage while you are not in the home;10
- you and your spouse agreed to separate, and one of you left. However, one of you attempts to return and fix the marriage in good faith, but the other person refuses. The person who refuses to fix the marriage has deserted the marriage;11
- your spouse comes back before the one-year period ends, and tries to repair the relationship, but you refuse. If you refuse his/her attempt to fix the marriage, you are now considered the person who is leaving the marriage (deserting the marriage);12
- if your husband chose a reasonable place to live and you (if you are the wife) refused to live there, you have deserted the marriage.13 According to how the law is written, this situation appears to only apply to husbands choosing the home and wives leaving the home, not the other way around; or
- your husband chose a place to live that was unreasonable and extremely (grossly) unfit, and you (if you are the wife) refused to live there. This is desertion on your husband’s part. According to how the law is written, this situation appears to only apply to husbands choosing the home and wives leaving the home, not the other way around.14
Note: Desertion does not include the following situations:
- you or your spouse left the home because of cruelty or threats of physical injury, from which someone would reasonably fear danger;15 or
- you or your spouse left the home with the understanding that one of you would file for divorce.16
1 19 G.C. § 8219
2 19 G.C. § 8204
3 19 G.C. § 8205
4 19 G.C. §§ 8216; 8218
5 19 G.C. §§ 8217; 8218
6 19 G.C. § 8206
7 19 G.C. § 8218
8 19 G.C. § 8211
9 19 G.C. § 8207
10 19 G.C. § 8208
11 19 G.C. § 8212
12 19 G.C. § 8213
13 19 G.C. § 8214
14 19 G.C. § 8215
15 19 G.C. § 8209
16 19 G.C. § 8210