A provincial court in Pontevedra, Spain, recently ruled that a person must pay his ex-wife 88,025 euros ($95,898) in remuneration for her work as a housewife during their 26 years of marriage.
The unnamed couple married in 1996 and until their separation in 2022, the wife worked outside the family home for a complete of 205 days spread over several years, devoting herself to raising their only daughter and keeping order at home. After the separation, the husband remained within the family home, which had been paid off for a protracted time, and he or she had to depart and rent her own apartment. She had to instantly discover a job to support herself, but since she had spent 26 years of her life as a housewife, she would probably be entitled to a really small pension, unlike her husband, who had devoted his life to his skilled profession. Now the lady is demanding compensation for all her years of domestic work.
Photo: Marek Studzinski/Unsplash
Some preliminary ruling on this unusual case, he set the compensation to be paid by the accused to his ex-wife at 120,000 euros ($130,000), but this decision was appealed by each parties. The husband agreed to pay his ex-wife for all her work in the course of the marriage, but demanded a discount of the quantity by EUR 60,000. The ex-wife, nonetheless, demanded that the compensatory pension be increased to EUR 183,629.36 ($200,000), arguing that she had devoted herself entirely to running the home and raising her daughter.
The ex-wife claims that she worked from 1989 until a yr after marrying her ex-husband, when she became a housewife and he continued to work and support the family. This economic imbalance takes an enormous toll on her now that her marriage is over, as she is forced to seek out manual labor to support herself, leaving her little time for her profession aspirations.
The man disputes the economic imbalance cited by his ex, claiming that she now has a job that enables him to support herself, quite than the burden of child care, since their daughter is an adult and doesn’t live together with her mother. He further stated that each of them “contributed to bearing the burdens of the marriage” and that the necessity to pay one of them as a full-time worker was not justified.
The Pontevedra provincial court ruled that the initial compensation of 120,000 euros could be reduced to 88,025 euros and that the husband would also pay his ex-wife a pension of 350 euros ($381) per 30 days for three years, updated annually in accordance with national regulations. inflation. Either party may appeal against this decision to the Supreme Court.
Over the previous couple of years, such cases have grow to be increasingly common in Europe. Last yr, one other Spanish court ordered a person to pay his ex-wife €204,000 for 25 years of housework, and in 2021, a Portuguese man was ordered to pay his ex-spouse $72,000 for her unpaid work performed during 30 years of marriage.