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Quick question before I speak to my solicitor....

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    #41
    Quick question when reading your initial post though. You say you are paying her £700 for half the mortgage. I assume from this you are giving her £700 cash or DD and she pays the £1400. No direct paper trail from you to the mortgage?

    Do you have a legal agreement? I would be worried about this situation if I was you. Sorry if it is mentioned and I have missed it.
    'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!

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      #42
      So by "amicable" we mean "amicable until the cash stops"?
      Originally posted by MaryPoppins
      I'd still not breastfeed a nazi
      Originally posted by vetran
      Urine is quite nourishing

      Comment


        #43
        Originally posted by russell View Post
        I've heard stories of people making an "amicable" agreement between each other, the guy paying for 10 years then the ex saying he never paid a penny or taking him to CSA and him having to back pay etc. If you get it all legal at the start no one can cause problems later.
        what are you burbling about now ?

        I would keep the CSA or any other agency out of it whether it was amicable, or pistols at dawn. I was around when that shower of sh!t started up and I remember well the decent guys jumping off bridges and climbing large structures wearing batman suits.

        In my humble opinion, get control, sort it yourself, and do whats best for your kids in your opinion. not somebody elses opinion. your opinion.
        every situation is different, trying a beauracratic blanket approach is madness.
        If the CSA got it right, why did it go belly up and have to change all the rules ??

        fck em.

        and to the op, ilovehr, you are in the excellent position of having an understanding and tolerant ex. capitalise on it now, flog her your share if its possible, or get the guy to buy you out.

        all in my very humble opinion



        (\__/)
        (>'.'<)
        ("")("") Born to Drink. Forced to Work

        Comment


          #44
          My humble opinion is ask your lawyer. Even though some of on here (me included) have experience of divorce, every case really is different. You can ask your lawyer what your rights are without him sending a letter, can't you.

          Bear in mind that local knowledge counts, too. My ex choose to issue the divorce in London, where neither of us has ever lived or had any connection with, because on average, payouts are higher for women divorcing there. I didn't realise it was a postcode lottery, but it is. We didn't have any kids thankfully.

          Comment


            #45
            Originally posted by russell View Post
            The original post came over as someone wanting to worm out of paying for their child's keep. Once the Op revealed more of the backstory..well then it all looked different and he seems like a stand up bloke.
            no it didn't, read it again
            sufficiently advanced stupidity is indistinguishable from malice - Asimov (sort of)

            there is no art in a factory, not even in an art factory - Mixerman

            everyone is stupid some of the time - trad.

            Comment


              #46
              I'm lucky so far as a divorce virgin so my sympathies

              Its probably a good time to draw a line under the property and any other assets. You have access and have been what looks like more than fair, however the game has changed/ is changing.

              She is moving on, the new guy is moving in. Until now its been 2 adults with no agenda but the child (which is great). Once they get to be a full couple its natural for them to exclude you and change their attitude to what seem reasonable arrangements.

              Depends on the equity in the home how much you & her are entwined.If there is none get your name off it don't try to cut the money, if there is work out a way to transfer it sensibly and with proper legal process be generous if need be.

              Could she + him afford to buy you out if you continue to pay what you pay now? You get a lump sum to clear your debts / invest, she gets you out of the way on the property so you can't sell it from under her, just in case you go bankrupt/become a drug addict etc (you get this protection as well against both of them if they get married that is a real problem so its good for you).

              As someone else said swap the equity for any pension if it makes sense if he runs off with the cash or they blow it all in 20 years she may well be after your pension.

              It is amicable now but if the money stops or they need more it WILL get nasty. So separate your financial arrangements as much as possible. You are only a few days away from the bench if you are a contractor. Sell it as the best for both of you.If you have to cut your payments because you are sick she has less reason to stop you seeing the kids if her home is not at risk.

              It also will keep their relationship separate, he won't be living in YOUR house, boning her in YOUR bedroom , bathroom, kitchen etc. If they want to paint every room in the house a funny colour that's their prerogative! However a good a man you are it will rankle, even if it doesn't they will think it will and either be embarrassed or get off on it.

              Make sure you have a decent paper trail the CSA seem totally incompetent and once they latch on they won't believe anything unless its legally provable (I have friends & relatives that have suffered greatly at their hands) but they exist for a reason - couples that separate with kids regularly fall out and then the CSA get involved.

              Comment


                #47
                Originally posted by russell
                Love the sig, sums you up a treat

                Comment


                  #48
                  Originally posted by Platypus View Post
                  Love the sig, sums you up a treat
                  I think this one suits me better

                  For all the divorced fathers out there (including myself) some right relief from a fellow divorced father.

                  Last edited by russell; 15 April 2011, 22:38.

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