Law Articles
To search for a particular term please use the following search box.
Click on a Topic to see available articles for that topic.
- Accidents
- Administrative Law
- Admiralty Law
- Articles
- Banking
- Bankruptcy Law
- Canon Law
- Case Law
- Civil Law
- Civil Rights
- Class Action Lawsuits
- Commercial Law
- Common Law
- Comparative Law
- Constitutional Law
- Consumer Law
- Contracts
- Corporate Law
- Courts
- Criminal Law
- Cyber Law
- Dispute Resolution
- Employment Law
- Equity
- Evidence
- Family Law
- Fiduciary Law
- General Practice
- Government
- Health Law
- Immigration Law
- Insurance Law
- Intellectual Property
- International Law
- Jurisprudence
- Labor Law
- Law and Economics
- Maritime Law
- Military Law
- Natural Law
- Personal Injury Law
- Philosophy of Law
- Property Law
- Public Law
- Real Estate Law
- Social Security
- Space Law
- Statutory Law
- Tax Law
- Traffic Law
- Trusts and Estates
- Water Law
Return to Law Dictionary Index
South Dakota Divorce Laws, Child Support, and Attorneys
South Dakota Divorce Residency Requirements
To file for divorce in South Dakota, the party filing for the divorce must be a resident of South Dakota or a member of the Armed Forces stationed in South Dakota at the time of the filing and must remain a resident until the divorce is final.
South Dakota Divorce Filing Requirements
The divorce may be filed for in the county where either spouse resides, but the non-filing party has the right to have the action transferred to his or her county of residence if desired.
South Dakota Divorce Grounds
The grounds for divorce in South Dakota are:
-
(1) Irreconcilable differences which have caused the irretrievable breakdown of the marriage;
-
(2) adultery;
-
(3) confinement for incurable insanity for 5 years;
-
(4) conviction of a felony;
-
(5) willful desertion;
-
(6) cruel and inhuman treatment;
-
(7) willful neglect;
-
(8) habitual intemperance (drunkenness); and
-
(9) separation caused by misconduct.
Expedited South Dakota Divorce Procedure
If both spouses consent to the use of "irreconcilable differences" as the grounds for divorce, the court may grant the divorce based entirely on affidavits of the spouses which establish the required residency and grounds for the divorce.