| Pre-nuptials: reasons to be careful part 2
Pre-nuptial agreements harmful or essential? Couples share their experiences Despite the fact that pre-nuptial agreements are becoming more common in this country, most couples seem to prefer to walk down the aisle before they think about getting divorce. Gillian Richardson, a 25-year-old student from Newcastle is planning to marry her boyfriend Rob when she graduates in medicine in July. Rob owns a successful dot.com business but hasnt asked Gillian to sign a pre-nuptial. I know most people have a sceptical view of relationships nowadays but I think when you choose to marry someone you should do so with the belief that its going to last forever, says Gillian. If you start off by signing a document that prepares you for divorce its as good as saying, Ill probably fall out of love with you a few years down the line. It may be necessary if one partner is very rich but I imagine it would cause a strain in the relationship. I think its a very American, movie star, thing to do. Our friends would think we were mad if we got a pre-nuptial agreement. Jill, 27, from Fife, Scotland, had no idea how much her fiancée, Glen, was worth until he asked her to sign a pre-nuptial agreement a fortnight before their wedding. He wanted her to sign away her rights to the home they were going to live in and his future earnings if they divorced. I couldnt believe he didnt trust me. It was like being stabbed in the back. Here was my soon-to-be husband telling me that I had no right to anything if we broke up, even though I had agreed to give up my job and take care of the running of the house. I didnt care about money so much but the thought of getting turfed out of our home when I wasnt even working scared me a little. He told me most of the women he had met were gold diggers and it was better not to involve them in financial matters at all. I didnt know he was as rich as he was and I certainly didnt take that into consideration when I fell in love with him. Jill felt humiliated by her fiancées demands and they split up just days before the wedding. She continued in her job as a computer consultant and now earns a six-figure salary. Her current boyfriend Jack earns considerably less but Jill says she would never ask him to sign a pre-nuptial if they decide to get married. After the hurt I experienced with Glen I couldnt imagine Id want to go through the same thing with Jack. We are thinking about buying a house together next year and it will be in both our names even though Im likely to be in a position to make a bigger contribution to the mortgage. At the end of the day, money is no substitute for love. Jack agrees: I dont think Id want to be in a relationship that was based around a set of legal and financial conditions. However, people with failed marriages behind them are more likely to be cautious in future relationships. I think its a case of once bitten twice shy, says David Benedict, an American banker who works in London. I didnt have a pre-nuptial for my first marriage because we were very young and idealistic when we got married. I think my ex-wife was unreasonable in her demands for the divorce settlement and I wouldnt risk that happening a second time. Read the legal perspective on pre-nuptial agreements in part one. |