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Wife’s Death Six Months After Divorce Settlement Triggers Guideline Ruling

Financial settlements reached by divorcing couples are binding – but what if they are based on assumptions that are fundamentally undermined by subsequent events? A judge addressed that issue in the case of a woman who succumbed to cancer just six months after coming to terms with her ex-husband.

Following their divorce, the couple finalised a settlement whereby their capital assets were split roughly equally. An agreed pension sharing order (PSO) was made under which she received just over half of his occupational pension, which was worth over £1 million. She was unaware at the time that she had terminal cancer.

By her will, she bequeathed death benefits arising from her share of the pension to her adult children, who were estranged from the husband. He applied to set aside the PSO in its entirety on the basis that the income with which it was designed to provide her was no longer required. The children, acting as executors of their mother’s estate, resisted the application.

Ruling on the matter, the judge found that the principal purpose of the PSO was to ensure that both husband and wife, who were in their sixties, had sufficient incomes during their retirement. That was their intention and, had it been known at the time that the wife had only months to live, the same pension share would not have been agreed. On that basis the PSO had to be set aside.

Her need for a pension income no longer existed. However, the judge ruled that the pension also represented a capital asset of which she had earned a share during the 38-year marriage. He directed that 25 per cent of the pension should pass into her estate for the benefit of the children. The remainder would meet the husband’s income needs. That, the judge found, represented a fair outcome.

Published
10 March 2023
Last Updated
14 June 2023