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Tycoon’s
divorce battle a warning to agri firms, says Mace & Jones
A leading law firm is warning business
owners to be alert to the implications of marital breakdown as yet
another high profile settlement battle highlights the damage divorce can
wreak on businesses.
Mace & Jones, an official adviser to small business lobby group the
Forum of Private Business (FPB), said the divorce case of insurance
multi millionaire John Charman will set an important precedent for
business owners. Charman and his wife are currently thrashing out a
settlement deal contesting his fortune worth an estimated £160m. (see
notes to editors)
Mace & Jones family law adviser Ros Bever said divorce settlements
are increasingly giving big pay outs to estranged spouses of business
owners, and that it is difficult to prevent all assets including
business assets and trust funds from being taken into account.
“The blunt truth is that a spouse may have never even set foot in
their partner’s business, but if a marriage breaks down they could
still claim against the firm’s assets or even force its sale,” she
said. “For this reason it really is imperative that business owners
pay close attention to the outcome of recent cases, including the
Charman appeal and ensure they take advice to protect their business.”
Ms Bever said the bad news for business owners is that recent legal
cases have shown that it is increasingly difficult to ring-fence or
conceal assets.
“The divorce courts are a lottery, and when businesses are involved
the stakes are higher and the odds even harder to call,’ she said.
“The final settlement depends on a series of factors, including the
length of the marriage, the contribution to the business, the presence
of children, future case law and the whim of a judge.
“However the starting point is that there must be a fair division of
the assets, including the business, whether your spouse has ever worked
in the business or not. A fair division may mean an equal split of the
assets, but that is not set in stone: it could even mean more than half.
In some cases, there aren’t sufficient assets, apart from the
business, to satisfy a spouse’s claims and it is in these cases that
the business is particularly vulnerable.”
Ms Bever said businesses should think about the possibility of entering
into a pre-nuptial agreement before marriage, or a post-nuptial
settlement if they are married.
Businesses wanting to know more about protecting themselves from divorce
can email Ros Bever at ros.bever@maceandjones.co.uk
or visit www.maceandjones.co.uk
Notes
Divorce Background
Charman case
John Charman is responsible for setting up Axis Capital with offices in
London
,
Dublin
and
New York
, and now lives in
Bermuda
. Mr Charman tried to strike a deal with his wife, following their
separation in 2003, when he was number 263 on the Sunday Times’ Rich
List, by offering to pay her a large capital sum without the
court’s intervention. On advice however, his wife was determined to
ascertain the full extent of his assets, including assets invested in a
Bermuda-based trust fund, which she regarded as a sham, designed to
reduce the court’s perception of his overall wealth. Mr Justice
Coleridge ordered the disclosure of documentation and information
relating to the fund. Mr Charman argued that the trust fund was
established with the specific intention of providing for future
generationsThe case is ongoing Mr Charman appealed the
decision of Mr Justice Coleridge, alleging that his wife was on a
“fishing expedition”, but the Court of Appeal dismissed his appeal,
in December. The final outcome of the Charman case is awaited.
Previous landmark cases
Entrepreneur Harry Lambert built up family wealth worth £20.2m from his
freesheet newspaper business Adscene. When he split from his wife Shan
Elizabeth after 23 years of marriage she claimed half of those assets,
even though Harry was the driving force behind the business.
In October 2001 a judge ruled that she should receive 37%, totalling a
cool £7.5m. But a year later the Court of Appeal overturned this and
ordered a straight split down the middle, declaring it was intrinsically
wrong to view the breadwinner as making a greater contribution than the
homemaker, because she may have sacrificed their own career.
Nevertheless, the case of Sorrell seems to suggest that the “special
contribution” argument is not dead, and this judgment stands as a
landmark in a landscape of recent judicial decisions which have been
perceived as “wife biased”.
The fortune amassed in the Sorrell case was considerable: circa £100
million gross. It was a long marriage lasting in excess of 32 years,
with three children. The parties had assumed traditional roles, the wife
as homemaker and the husband as breadwinner. He was the founder of the
highly successful advertising agency WPP. Despite the finding that the
wife has ‘done all she could be expected of her’, the Court refused
to award her fifty per cent as she had requested, and chose to award her
forty per cent, accepting the husband’s argument that his
contributions had been ‘stellar’
Divorce Factfile
Every year tens of thousands of married couples split, according to the
Office of National Statistics. There are now more than 5m divorced
people in the
UK
,
the highest number in
Europe
. Four out of 10 married couples will eventually part.
250,000 couples get married each year but as people marry later, the
average age for divorce has crept up to 42 years for men and 39 years
for women - with their marriages lasting an average 11 years. Advisory
service Relate says long working hours are a growing source of marital
discord, which is bad news for hard-working entrepreneurs.
Around seven out of 10 divorces are among first-time couples, but this
percentage is falling as the number of second and third marriages grows.
If you have been previously divorced, it is more likely any future
marriage will fail. Marrying young also makes divorce more likely.
One in six people now move in with their partner rather than marry. The
average couple cohabits for just over three years, with six out of 10
then getting married. People who live together are nine times more
likely to break up than married couples.
(8/4/06)
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