A Canadian couple with 4 kids split in 2005.
Amicably come to a legal agreement in 2008, where :
Mother gets the 1.2 million dollar, lakefront home (after paying out 168K to Dad)
Mother gets sole custody of kids.
Mother gets 2K/month rent from attached dwelling.
Mother gets 2.3K/month child support.
Mother gets 2.5K/month from government for disabled child.
Father gets 168K from his part of the family home.
The agreement includes the fact that the father has met all spousal support needs by giving up the home.
Thee years later, mother figures she needs more, and takes father to court to get the original contract modified.
Judge tears up contract, adds spousal support, *back-dates* the spousal support, and tells father to pay for both his and his ex-wife's legal bills.
At that point, father decides that at 51, he can't afford to save for retirement under such conditions, sells everything, cashes his pension, and takes off.
So, who's the deadbeat here?
Amicably come to a legal agreement in 2008, where :
Mother gets the 1.2 million dollar, lakefront home (after paying out 168K to Dad)
Mother gets sole custody of kids.
Mother gets 2K/month rent from attached dwelling.
Mother gets 2.3K/month child support.
Mother gets 2.5K/month from government for disabled child.
Father gets 168K from his part of the family home.
The agreement includes the fact that the father has met all spousal support needs by giving up the home.
Thee years later, mother figures she needs more, and takes father to court to get the original contract modified.
Judge tears up contract, adds spousal support, *back-dates* the spousal support, and tells father to pay for both his and his ex-wife's legal bills.
At that point, father decides that at 51, he can't afford to save for retirement under such conditions, sells everything, cashes his pension, and takes off.
So, who's the deadbeat here?
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