Marital Property Agreements Sample Clauses

Marital Property Agreements. Subchapter B of Chapter 4 of the Texas Family Code authorizes a ―marital property agreement‖ between spouses. For the purposes of a marital property agreement under Subchapter B, ―property‖ is defined in the same broad manner as it was in Subchapter A, for premarital agreements. TEX. FAM. CODE §4.101. Under the Texas Family Code, marital property agreements between spouses accomplish one of two ends. Spouses may partition or exchange between themselves, at any time, any part of their community property, then existing or to be acquired, as the spouses may desire, and such property or property interest transferred to a spouse by a partition or exchange agreement becomes that spouse’s separate property. TEX. FAM. CODE §4.102. Spouses may also agree, at any time, that the income or property arising from the separate property that is then owned by one of them, or that may thereafter be acquired, shall be the separate property of the owner. TEX. FAM. CODE §4.103; see also, Xxxxxx x. Xxxxxx, 824 S.W.2d 195, 197-198 (Tex.App.-El Paso 1991, writ denied) (by entering into trust indenture shortly after their marriage, the parties created a ―postnuptial agreement,‖ in which the parties agreed that the separate property of the husband would remain his separate property, and that all increases and income from the husband’s separate property would constitute part of his separate estate); cf., Xxxxxxx x. Xxxxxxx, 725 S.W.2d 503, 504 (Tex.App.-Corpus Christi 1987, no writ) (where the parties’ premarital agreement provided that ―...on or before the 15th day of April of each year during the existence of this marriage, [the parties] will fairly and reasonably partition (and/or exchange) in writing all of the community estate of the parties on hand that will have accumulated since January 1 of the preceding year...,‖ the agreement did not itself effect a partition and exchange of the parties’ respective community interests in each other's personal earnings, but rather merely evidenced an intent to do so in the future).
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Related to Marital Property Agreements

  • Intellectual Property Matters A. Definitions

  • Intellectual Property Protection The Group Companies shall establish and maintain appropriate intellectual inspection system to protect the Proprietary Rights of the Group Companies. The Group Companies shall, and the Founders shall cause the Group Companies to fully comply with the laws and regulations in respect of the protection of the Proprietary Rights and refrain from infringing the Proprietary Rights of other parties. Ecommerce Company shall, and the other Warrantors shall procure Ecommerce Company to, use its best efforts to obtain as soon as possible and maintain the registration of the core trademarks used in the Business (including without limitation, the marks of “perfect diary”, “完美日记” and the combination of the foregoing) in the appropriate goods and services (including without limitation, cosmetics, cosmetics tools and advertisement). The Group Companies shall take all necessary or desirable actions to protect their trademarks, including initiating trademark petitions against any trademark applications filed by any third party for a trademark identical or similar to the Group Companies’ trademarks.

  • Student Data Property of LEA All Student Data transmitted to the Provider pursuant to the Service Agreement is and will continue to be the property of and under the control of the LEA. The Provider further acknowledges and agrees that all copies of such Student Data transmitted to the Provider, including any modifications or additions or any portion thereof from any source, are subject to the provisions of this DPA in the same manner as the original Student Data. The Parties agree that as between them, all rights, including all intellectual property rights in and to Student Data contemplated per the Service Agreement, shall remain the exclusive property of the LEA. For the purposes of FERPA, the Provider shall be considered a School Official, under the control and direction of the LEA as it pertains to the use of Student Data, notwithstanding the above.

  • PROPERTY IMPROVEMENTS Improvements placed on National Forest System land at the direction of either of the parties, shall thereupon become property of the United States, and shall be subject to the same regulations and administration of the Forest Service as other National Forest improvements of a similar nature. No part of this instrument shall entitle the cooperator to any share or interest in the project other than the right to use and enjoy the same under the existing regulations of the Forest Service.

  • Intellectual Property Ownership We, our affiliates and our licensors will own all right, title and interest in and to all Products. You will be and remain the owner of all rights, title and interest in and to Customer Content. Each party will own and retain all rights in its trademarks, logos and other brand elements (collectively, “Trademarks”). To the extent a party grants any rights or licenses to its Trademarks to the other party in connection with this Agreement, the other party’s use of such Trademarks will be subject to the reasonable trademark guidelines provided in writing by the party that owns the Trademarks.

  • ENVIRONMENTAL DOCUMENTATION Each environmental service provided by the Engineer shall have a deliverable. Deliverables shall summarize the methods used for the environmental services, and shall summarize the results achieved. The summary of results shall be sufficiently detailed to provide satisfactory basis for thorough review by the State, The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), and (where applicable) agencies with regulatory oversight. All deliverables shall meet regulatory requirements for legal sufficiency, and shall adhere to the requirements for reports enumerated in the State’s NEPA MOU.

  • Access to Property, Property’s Management, Property Lender, and Property Tenants Potential Investor agrees to not seek to gain access to any non-public areas of the Property or communicate with Property’s management employees, the holder of any financing encumbering the Property, the Property’s tenants, and the Owner’s partners in the ownership of the Property, without the prior consent of Owner or HFF, which consent may be withheld in the Owner’s sole discretion.

  • Intangible Property CPA14 and the CPA14 Subsidiaries own, possess or have adequate rights to use all trademarks, trade names, patents, service marks, brand marks, brand names, computer programs, databases, industrial designs and copyrights necessary for the operation of the businesses of each of CPA14 and the CPA14 Subsidiaries (collectively, the “CPA14 Intangible Property”), except where the failure to possess or have adequate rights to use such properties, individually or in the aggregate, would not reasonably be expected to have a CPA14 Material Adverse Effect. All of the CPA14 Intangible Property is owned or licensed by CPA14 or the CPA14 Subsidiaries free and clear of any and all Liens, except those that, individually or in the aggregate, would not reasonably be expected to have a CPA14 Material Adverse Effect, and neither CPA14 nor any such CPA14 Subsidiary has forfeited or otherwise relinquished any CPA14 Intangible Property which forfeiture has resulted in, individually or in the aggregate, or would reasonably be expected to result in a CPA14 Material Adverse Effect. To the Knowledge of CPA14, the use of CPA14 Intangible Property by CPA14 or the CPA14 Subsidiaries does not, in any material respect, conflict with, infringe upon, violate or interfere with or constitute an appropriation of any right, title, interest or goodwill, including, without limitation, any intellectual property right, trademark, trade name, patent, service xxxx, brand xxxx, brand name, computer program, database, industrial design, copyright or any pending application therefor, of any other Person, and there have been no claims made, and neither CPA14 nor any of the CPA14 Subsidiaries has received any notice of any claims or otherwise has Knowledge of any claims that any of the CPA14 Intangible Property is invalid or conflicts with the asserted rights of any other Person or has not been used or enforced or has failed to have been used or enforced in a manner that would result in the abandonment, cancellation or unenforceability of any of the CPA14 Intangible Property, except for any such conflict, infringement, violation, interference, claim, invalidity, abandonment, cancellation or unenforceability that, individually or in the aggregate, would not reasonably be expected to have a CPA14 Material Adverse Effect.

  • Intellectual and Industrial Property Rights (a) Except to the extent expressly provided herein, each party shall continue to own its intellectual and industrial property rights without conferring any interests therein on the other party and neither the Supplier nor any third party shall acquire any right, title or interest in any intellectual or industrial property rights of any company within the ASSA ABLOY Group.

  • Intellectual Property Indemnity To the fullest extent permitted by law, Contractor shall defend, indemnify, and hold Enterprise Services and any Purchaser and their employees and agents harmless from against any and all Claims resulting from allegations of infringement of any patents, copyrights, trade secret, or similar intellectual property rights covering the Goods or Services provided, or the use of the Goods or Services under this Master Contract. If Purchaser’s use of Goods or Services provided by Contractor is enjoined based on an intellectual property infringement Claim, Contractor shall, at its own expense, either procure for Purchaser the right to continue using the Goods or Services or, after consulting with Purchaser and obtaining Purchaser’s consent, replace or modify the Goods or Services with substantially similar and functionally equivalent non-infringing Goods or Services.

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