Ben, just a few points on your last post:
1. You don't know what a penalty clause is. My example at the bottom involves no penalties at all. Damages and penalties are not the same thing. If, for instance, you decide to break our contract, and I find a seller of comparable widgets at a lower price, I haven't been damaged by your breach and you won't owe me anything. A penalty would not rely on my damages.
2. That explains why you would state that penalty clause are perfectly fine, when they're not. Granted, it isn't an absolute rule, but it is the general rule. Of course, you're most likely thinking of liquidated damage type clauses, which aren't the same thing as penalty clauses, and are scrutinized by a court being asked to enforce them to make sure they don't cross that line.
3. Again, the point of contract enforcement and contract law is not to punish someone who breaches a contract. It's to ensure that, when one party breaches, the other can still get the benefit of the bargain.
4. Of course people filing for divorce actually benefit from it. If they didn't expect to benefit, they wouldn't be filing for divorce. That is exactly how contracts are supposed to work. When it's beneficial to end the contract, parties are not only allowed, but encouraged, to do so. There's even an entire doctrine built around this idea: "efficient breach." If our contract requires me to spend $1,000 to confer $300 worth of benefit on you and I breach by not performing, I only owe you the $300 you would have gained by my performance.
5. If the spouse can't force you to stay in the marriage, then divorce still only requires unilateral consent. You want it to require mutual consent, so by definition, it's about specific performance, not compensation.
6. You're only arguing about the amount of alimony, not the propriety of it, when you say A should pay B half. Of course, my point wasn't that alimony is a perfect system, merely that it arises out of the duty of spousal support that one takes on when one gets married. It's part of the "benefit of the bargain" that the other spouse expected upon the marriage. Child support has nothing to do with the marriage, and is entirely based on the parent's duty to support the child. One parent takes custody of the child, and the other parent shares the burden of supporting the child by writing a check.
7. It's simply a fact of life that an ongoing contractual relationship requires constant affirmation of consent, because the moment consent is withdrawn unilaterally, the relationship ends. That doesn't mean you and your wife have to repeat your vows over breakfast every morning. That you don't file for divorce on a given day is enough affirmation, but the fact remains that consent is not just given once, and then becomes a non-issue. That's what the point of the widget example was. All it took was one party withdrawing consent and the contract was finished. Whether you discourage that withdrawal by heaping penalties on it or not, that one withdrawal is still all it takes. Why is this so difficult for you?
8. Your point didn't start out as that, and still isn't that. It started out as "divorce should require mutual consent," and has morphed into "the government should discourage divorce by placing huge costs on its intiation." What I said with that example was "a contract which requires mutual consent ends when one party no longer consents." It's the direct opposite of your initial point, and irrelevant to the point that morphed into.
I'm sure I left out a few things, but the bottom line is that you have to overcome some pretty big misconceptions before we can even begin something approaching a productive exchange.
1. You don't know what a penalty clause is. My example at the bottom involves no penalties at all. Damages and penalties are not the same thing. If, for instance, you decide to break our contract, and I find a seller of comparable widgets at a lower price, I haven't been damaged by your breach and you won't owe me anything. A penalty would not rely on my damages.
2. That explains why you would state that penalty clause are perfectly fine, when they're not. Granted, it isn't an absolute rule, but it is the general rule. Of course, you're most likely thinking of liquidated damage type clauses, which aren't the same thing as penalty clauses, and are scrutinized by a court being asked to enforce them to make sure they don't cross that line.
3. Again, the point of contract enforcement and contract law is not to punish someone who breaches a contract. It's to ensure that, when one party breaches, the other can still get the benefit of the bargain.
4. Of course people filing for divorce actually benefit from it. If they didn't expect to benefit, they wouldn't be filing for divorce. That is exactly how contracts are supposed to work. When it's beneficial to end the contract, parties are not only allowed, but encouraged, to do so. There's even an entire doctrine built around this idea: "efficient breach." If our contract requires me to spend $1,000 to confer $300 worth of benefit on you and I breach by not performing, I only owe you the $300 you would have gained by my performance.
5. If the spouse can't force you to stay in the marriage, then divorce still only requires unilateral consent. You want it to require mutual consent, so by definition, it's about specific performance, not compensation.
6. You're only arguing about the amount of alimony, not the propriety of it, when you say A should pay B half. Of course, my point wasn't that alimony is a perfect system, merely that it arises out of the duty of spousal support that one takes on when one gets married. It's part of the "benefit of the bargain" that the other spouse expected upon the marriage. Child support has nothing to do with the marriage, and is entirely based on the parent's duty to support the child. One parent takes custody of the child, and the other parent shares the burden of supporting the child by writing a check.
7. It's simply a fact of life that an ongoing contractual relationship requires constant affirmation of consent, because the moment consent is withdrawn unilaterally, the relationship ends. That doesn't mean you and your wife have to repeat your vows over breakfast every morning. That you don't file for divorce on a given day is enough affirmation, but the fact remains that consent is not just given once, and then becomes a non-issue. That's what the point of the widget example was. All it took was one party withdrawing consent and the contract was finished. Whether you discourage that withdrawal by heaping penalties on it or not, that one withdrawal is still all it takes. Why is this so difficult for you?
8. Your point didn't start out as that, and still isn't that. It started out as "divorce should require mutual consent," and has morphed into "the government should discourage divorce by placing huge costs on its intiation." What I said with that example was "a contract which requires mutual consent ends when one party no longer consents." It's the direct opposite of your initial point, and irrelevant to the point that morphed into.
I'm sure I left out a few things, but the bottom line is that you have to overcome some pretty big misconceptions before we can even begin something approaching a productive exchange.
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