Month: May 2025

The Risks of a Divorce Without a Prenuptial Agreement

Prominent Hollywood entertainment executive, David Geffen, may learn if there are risks in a divorce without a prenuptial agreement. Geffen is currently married to his husband of two years, David Armstrong, a 32-year old dancer. A California court will apply community property and other laws to determine what risks, if any, Geffen faces if he is not able to resolve his divorce amicably.

Divorce Prenup

Risky Business

Geffen rose from modest beginnings in Brooklyn to become one of the world’s best film producers and record executives. In rock and roll, Geffen is a founder of Asylum Records and Geffen Records. He has worked with Elton John, Cher, Weezer, Blink 182, Guns N’ Roses, and Nirvana.

As a film producer, Geffen’s credits include “Risky Business” and “Beetlejuice before forming DreamWorks SKG with Steven Spielberg and Jeffrey Katzenberg. DreamWorks won Best Picture for the films American Beauty, Gladiator, and A Beautiful Mind, and was later sold to Paramount for $1.6 billion.

Then in 2008, at ate 65, he mostly stayed away from the business. Citing “irreconcilable differences,” Geffen intends to pay alimony — generally for a duration of about half the length of the two-year marriage – which could be sizeable given Geffen has an estimate net worth of more than $8 billion. Most interesting though, the divorce petition indicates that the couple did not sign a prenuptial agreement.

Florida Prenuptial Agreements

I’ve written about prenuptial agreements before. Prenuptial agreements are about more than just resolving uncertainty in a marriage.

When a spouse is a major shareholder of company, such as a movie studio, the stock price can be subject to wide price swings. For example, when the head of Continental Resources was getting divorced, shares of his company dropped 2.9%.

Conversely, when Rupert Murdoch announced his divorce, shares of News Corp gained 1.4%. Why? Because in Rupert Murdoch’s case, the divorce announcement stressed his prenuptial agreement, and a divorce would have “zero impact” on the company.

A prenuptial agreement (or “prenup” for short) is a contract between people intending to marry. A prenup determines spousal rights when the marriage ends by death or divorce. This can be especially important in second marriages.

If you divorce without a prenup, your property rights are determined under state law, and a spouse may have a claim to alimony while the suit for divorce is pending and after entry of a judgment.

That’s where prenups come in. Prospective spouses may limit or expand state laws by an agreement. Prenups are also used to protect the interests of children from a prior marriage, and to avoid a contested divorce. Prenups can be a reliable guide down rough rivers if they’re done right.

Little Shop of Horrors?

Marrying without a prenuptial agreement may not have to be a horror show, but will likely be more expensive than marrying without one for Geffen. He has many things in his favor going into settlement negotiations.

Geffen and Armstrong have a short-term marriage of two-years. Armstrong is 32 years old, and at age 82, Geffen is rumored to have slowed down in business. These facts may work out in Geffen’s favor financially.

It’s not clear why Geffen, a highly successful businessman, did not have a prenup. Early indications are that the divorce is amicable so far, which could suit everyone well.

The New York Times article is here.

Divorce, Dissipation and an $1,800 Scotch

The dissipation of marital assets in divorce is always something to watch for, especially when the marital asset is a $1,800 bottle of 1976 The Glenrothes Single Cask Single Malt Scotch Whisky. An Ohio court recently had to decide what to do when an expensive bottle of Scotch turned up missing.

Dissipation Divorce

The Shot

If, as they say, ‘all happy families are alike, and each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way’ the case of the missing scotch is proof. In the recent Ohio matter the Mother and Father had been married over twenty years. Together, they raised three children, two now-adult children and one minor child. The Mother, Father, and child lived together in a house located in Blue Ash, Ohio outside of Cincinnati.

Then in April 2022, ongoing marital problems caused the couple to separate, and the Father moved out of their Blue Ash home. Following their separation, the relationship between the parties continued to deteriorate. Father eventually asked for an received a domestic violence injunction against Mother.

During the final hearing in their dissolution of the marriage, among the many claims, the Father argued that the Mother had denied him the opportunity to retrieve his personal items from the Blue Ash home. During the trial, the Father testified he had left behind his family memorabilia, some religious heirlooms, and most importantly, a bottle of 1976 Glenrothes Single Malt Scotch before he had moved out of the marital home.

The Father explained to the court that while he was given a brief opportunity to collect a few of his personal items from the home, the Mother never gave him a sufficient opportunity to meaningfully collect his belongings. He testified the Mother told him that she put the items he had left behind in storage and that he would be able to retrieve them the next time she was in Ohio.

Despite the Mother’s telling him that his personal possessions were in storage, and that he would be able to retrieve them, it was just not so. In fact, the Mother would later testify that she called a trash service and had all of the Father’s personal property (his heirlooms, religious mementos, and of course, the Scotch) destroyed. She also admitted that she did not tell the Father before tossing his personal belongings in the municipal dump.

At the trial, the court ruled that because of the Mother’s destruction of Father’s bottle of 1976 Glenrothes Single Malt Scotch and his other personal effects, she was to pay him $5,000. The Mother appealed.

Florida Dissipation

I’ve written about dissipation of marital assets before. In a proceeding for dissolution of marriage, when distributing the marital assets between spouses, a family court must begin with the premise that the distribution should be equal, unless there is a justification for an unequal distribution based on all relevant factors.

Some of the factors to justify an unequal distribution of the property include things like the financial situation the parties, the length of the marriage, whether someone has interrupted their career or an educational opportunity, or how much one spouse contributed to the other’s career or education.

Another important factor is whether one of the parties intentionally dissipated, wasted, depleted, or destroyed any of the marital assets after the filing of the petition or within two years prior to the filing of the petition.

Dissipation of marital assets, such as spending marital funds on extramarital relationships, excessive gambling, and drug use, are examples which happens a lot. Less common is gifting your husband’s $1,800 bottle of scotch whiskey to trash collectors. Misconduct may serve as a basis for assigning the dissipated asset to the spending spouse when calculating equitable distribution.

When considering whether the dissipation of an asset resulted from misconduct, courts look to see if a spouse used marital funds for his or her own benefit and for a purpose unrelated to the marriage at a time when the marriage is undergoing an irreconcilable breakdown. Merely mismanaging or simple squandering of marital assets is not enough. There has to be evidence of intentional dissipation or destruction.

The Chaser

On appeal, the Mother took issue with the court’s $5,000 contempt penalty for having Father’s items destroyed. The appellate court found that the penalty constituted an equitable offset because the Mother had denied Father the opportunity to collect his equitable distribution of household goods and furnishings.

This offset included all “remaining household goods, keepsakes, and furnishings,” which would include the bottle of 1976 Glenrothes Single Malt Scotch.  Accordingly, the appellate court rule the Mother’s claim that the family court failed to include the value of the bottle of scotch in the marital assets was without merit.

The Ohio Court of Appeal opinion is here.