| James
Walsh
The famous football player Ray Parlour and Arsenal
had a long battle to have their divorce settlements. The couples
got married in the year 1998 and had three children. They had
differences of opinion, and so they decided to get divorce. Following
their divorce, Arsenal was granted with a capital award of £250,000.
She was also provided with two mortgage-free houses worth more
than £1,000,000. The court ordered Ray to pay £250,000
a year for maintenance. However, he was willing to pay only £120,000
per year. Arsenal was also not satisfied with the amount that
the court had ordered. They both appealed further to reconsider
the maintenance amount. This time the court ruled in favour Arsenal
by increasing the amount to £406,500 a year.
The Parlour’s case has set precedence to
all the divorce cases that deal with vast sums of money. Many
lawyers are using the argument of Parlour’s case. By and
large, an opinion has been created that if one spouse has greater
income than required his needs, his or her spouse can have a claim.
It could have a larger impact on any professionals with higher
income. The three senior judges in the Court of Appeal had granted
this kind of award, in order to extend the principle of equality
in the financial awards in the cases of persons having surplus
income also. Parlour’s case has provided an opportunity
to various other couples to put forth arguments in court based
on this line, to get a higher financial award from the court.
Another similar case was WPP Group Chief Executive
Martin Sorrell’s divorce with his wife Sandra after more
than 32 years of married life. He was ordered to pay around 30
million pounds in settlement. Of that, around £23.5 million
should be in cash and the remaining was the two underground parking
spaces at London’s Harrods departmental store.
Ally McCoist, a footballer, was also caught in
the court battle with his wife Allison. They both were fighting
for a £5 million divorce battle. Allison quoted unreasonable
behaviour of McCoist as a ground for divorce. The couples had
differences of opinion after 12 years of their married life. McCoist
had admitted to his wife that he had illegal affair with an actress.
Provoked by his affair, she filed a divorce litigation. McCoist
had been working as a football pundit in a television channel,
and was earning more than £150,000 for a year. When he was
playing football, he was earning around £18,000 a week.
Apart from this he was also earning around £100,000 per
year on BBC1’s A Question of Sport. When the hearing was
going on in the case in Edinburgh, McCoist failed to turn up to
the court. However, his solicitor later produced a medical certificate
stating that his client was ill. In the same manner, the football
player kept on dragging the issue by quoting many absurd reasons.
At last, the judge warned the celebrity couples to settle down
their financial issue, or else they would have to face their dirty
laundry aired in public.
Another popular case that was the talk of the
town, for a long period, was the divorce case of Princes Diana
and Charles. Diana, the most famous woman in the world, was accused
by her husband, as committing adultery. They got divorced on 28
August 1996. Though the divorce issue was initially suppressed,
later it was the point of focus, by the media that earned huge
money by publishing and telecasting the same issue over and again.
The speculations were that they both had a premarital affair.
Diana, the iconic presence on the world stage,
though noted for her charity work, her charitable deeds were overshadowed
by her marriage to Prince Charles. Various chapters of her private
life riveted the world, in 1990s through many books, tabloid newspapers
and other articles in almost all magazines, and even in television
movies. The rose of the England was a fashion icon and was admired
all over the world. Her divorce stories were published across
the nation and it kindled the interest of the people.
Article Directory: http://www.articlecube.com James Walsh is
a freelance writer and copy editor. If you want to find out more
about a solicitor managed divorce see www.managed-divorce.co.uk
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