On April 13, 2026, drummer Glendon 'Teddy' Campbell filed for divorce from Mary Mary singer Tina Campbell in California, ending a 25-year marriage and citing irreconcilable differences with a separation date of June 2024, according to TMZ. Under Cal. Fam. Code § 2310, irreconcilable differences are the most common ground for divorce in California, and the June 2024 separation date is legally significant because it fixes when community property accumulation ends under Cal. Fam. Code § 771.
Key Facts
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| What happened | Teddy Campbell filed for divorce from Tina Campbell |
| When filed | April 13, 2026 |
| Separation date claimed | June 2024 (22 months before filing) |
| Marriage length | 25+ years (married 2000) |
| Jurisdiction | California Superior Court |
| Grounds cited | Irreconcilable differences |
| Minor children | 2 (Santana, 13; Glendon II, 16) |
| Key statute | Cal. Fam. Code § 2310 (no-fault divorce) |
Why This Matters Legally
The gap between the claimed separation date and the filing date will shape nearly every financial issue in this case. California is a community property state, and Cal. Fam. Code § 760 provides that property acquired during marriage is presumptively owned 50/50 by both spouses. However, Cal. Fam. Code § 771 carves out a critical exception: earnings and accumulations of a spouse after the date of separation are that spouse's separate property.
For a working musician and a recording artist, this 22-month window matters enormously. Any royalties, touring income, session fees, or new investments acquired between June 2024 and April 2026 could be classified as separate property rather than community property if the separation date holds up. California courts apply the standard established in In re Marriage of Davis (2015) 61 Cal.4th 846, which requires both physical separation and a clear, objective demonstration that the marriage was over.
How California Law Handles This
California operates as a pure no-fault state. Under Cal. Fam. Code § 2310, a spouse need only allege irreconcilable differences — the 2014 cheating scandal Tina Campbell publicly disclosed has no direct legal bearing on the divorce grounds or property division. California courts do not punish marital misconduct in dividing assets, distinguishing it from fault-based states.
Several California-specific rules will govern this case:
Residency Requirement
Under Cal. Fam. Code § 2320, the petitioner must have been a California resident for 6 months and a resident of the filing county for 3 months before filing. A 25-year marriage with both spouses based in California easily satisfies this threshold.
Mandatory Waiting Period
Cal. Fam. Code § 2339 imposes a minimum 6-month waiting period from the date the respondent is served before a divorce can be finalized. Even if both parties agree on every issue, the earliest Tina and Teddy Campbell could be legally divorced is approximately October 2026.
Custody of Minor Children
With two minor children ages 13 and 16, California will apply the best-interest standard under Cal. Fam. Code § 3011. Teddy Campbell's reported request for visitation and parenting time triggers the court's obligation to evaluate health, safety, welfare, the nature and amount of contact with each parent, and any history of abuse. Under Cal. Fam. Code § 3042, courts must consider the preferences of a child 14 or older — meaning 16-year-old Glendon II's wishes will carry substantial legal weight.
Long-Term Marriage Spousal Support
A marriage lasting 25 years is classified as a long-duration marriage under Cal. Fam. Code § 4336, meaning the court retains jurisdiction over spousal support indefinitely. The general rule that support lasts half the length of the marriage does not apply to marriages of 10 years or longer. Both spouses worked throughout the marriage in the entertainment industry, so the court will apply the 14-factor analysis under Cal. Fam. Code § 4320, weighing earning capacity, marketable skills, and the standard of living established during the marriage.
Community Property Disclosure
California enforces strict financial disclosure obligations under Cal. Fam. Code § 2104 and § 2105. Both spouses must exchange preliminary and final declarations of disclosure listing every asset, debt, and income source. For celebrity divorces involving royalties, intellectual property, and touring income, these disclosures typically run hundreds of pages.
Practical Takeaways
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Document your separation date with precision. In California, the separation date determines whether income and new assets are community or separate property. Text messages, emails, separate living arrangements, and financial account changes all help establish the date under Cal. Fam. Code § 70.
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Do not assume fault helps or hurts you. California's no-fault system means infidelity, emotional abuse, or marital misconduct generally do not affect property division or spousal support amounts — only conduct involving domestic violence or breach of fiduciary duty triggers adjustments.
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For marriages over 10 years, assume indefinite spousal support jurisdiction. Courts can modify support years or decades after divorce unless the parties execute a clear written waiver.
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File preliminary disclosures early. The 60-day disclosure deadline under Cal. Fam. Code § 2104 is strict, and sanctions for non-compliance can be severe.
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Teenage children get a voice. If your children are 14 or older, expect the court to consider their custody preferences under Cal. Fam. Code § 3042, though the judge retains final decision-making authority.
Frequently Asked Questions
The Campbell case raises questions many California spouses face in long-term marriages.
Disclosure and Legal Help
If you are navigating a California divorce involving a long-term marriage, children, or complex assets, the separation date and disclosure rules can shift outcomes by hundreds of thousands of dollars. Divorce.law connects you with one exclusive family law attorney per county who handles these issues daily.
This article discusses recent news and provides general legal commentary. It does not constitute legal advice. Every case is unique. Consult a qualified family law attorney for advice specific to your situation.