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Article 1449 of the French Civil Code

The separation of property pronounced by the court has the effect of placing the spouses under the regime of articles 1536 et seq. The court, in pronouncing the separation, may order that a spouse pay his or her contribution into the hands of his or her spouse, who will henceforth assume sole responsibility with regard to third parties for the settlement of all the expenses of the marriage.

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Article 1451 of the French Civil Code

Articles 265-2 are suspended, as regards their effects, until the divorce is granted; they may not be enforced, even as between spouses, until the judgment has become res judicata. One of the spouses may request that the divorce decree modify the agreement if the consequences of the divorce fixed by that decree call into question the bases of the liquidation and partition.

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Article 1467 of the French Civil Code

Once the community has been dissolved, each of the spouses takes back any property that had not entered the community, if it exists in kind, or property that has been subrogated to it. The joint estate, both active and passive, is then liquidated.

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Article 1468 of the French Civil Code

An account shall be drawn up, in the name of each spouse, of the rewards owed to him by the community and the rewards owed by him to the community, in accordance with the rules prescribed in the preceding sections.

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Article 1469 of the French Civil Code

The reward is, in general, equal to the lower of the two sums represented by the expenditure made and the profit remaining. It may not, however, be less than the expenditure made where this was necessary. It may not be less than the profit remaining, where the value borrowed has been used to acquire, conserve or improve an asset which is, on the day of the liquidation of the community,…

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Article 1470 of the French Civil Code

If, after balancing, the account shows a balance in favour of the community, the spouse reports the amount to the common estate. If it shows a balance in favour of the spouse, the spouse has the choice either to demand payment or to deduct from the common estate up to the amount due.

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Article 1471 of the French Civil Code

Withdrawals are made first from cash, then from movables, and secondarily from community property. The spouse making the deduction has the right to choose which movables and immovables he will deduct. He may not, however, by his choice prejudice the rights that his spouse may have to apply for the maintenance of indivision or the preferential allocation of certain property. If the spouses wish to draw on the same property,…

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Article 1472 of the French Civil Code

In the event of insufficiency of the community, the levies of each spouse are proportional to the amount of the rewards due to him or her. However, if the insufficiency of the community is attributable to the fault of one of the spouses, the other spouse may exercise his or her levies before him or her on all the community property; he or she may exercise them subsidiarily on the…

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Article 1473 of the French Civil Code

Rewards due from or to the community shall bear interest ipso jure from the day of dissolution. However, where the reward is equal to the remaining profit, interest shall accrue from the day of liquidation.

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Article 1474 of the French Civil Code

Withdrawals from community property constitute a partition transaction. They do not confer on the spouse exercising them any right to be preferred to community creditors, except for the preference resulting, where applicable, from the legal mortgage.

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