Blog

Jersey, Channel Islands Case Favors Spouse with Offshore Trusts

The Royal Court in Jersey, Channel Islands has issued a key ruling in favor of a wealthy Indian jewelry magnate with substantial assets in offshore trusts, in a case known as Mubarak v Mubarak.The Court ruled that assets held in offshore trusts could be released to ex-spouses only if the trustees had the power to do so:

The Financial Times (article dated September 3, 2008) suggests that wealthy business people may now be more encouraged to exploit Jersey and other tax havens in an attempt to shield themselves from big money divorce payouts.

The Jersey case followed more than seven years of litigation in England – described by the English courts as “notorious” and “Titanic” — culminating in a decision of the Court of Appeal last year in which that Court vehemently criticized the husband’s conduct and upheld a large award against him. However the Jersey court has now allowed the husband to avoid many of the consequences of the English award

In recent years the courts in England have issued several judgments in favor of ex-spouses who were married to wealthy spouses with assets in offshore trusts. However the Jersey ruling shows that without the cooperation of the courts in the offshore jurisdictions the divorce rulings in favor of ex-spouses might not be worth all that much.

The Jersey case could lead more business people to put their money in so-called tax havens such as the Channel Islands, the Isle of Man and Britain’s Caribbean overseas territories in an attempt to ring-fence their wealth from divorce settlements.

Share

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

About the Author

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Country-by-Country Information About Child Abduction and Divorce
(Click to find your country)

Our Articles

Learn More

Contact Our Firm

IMPORTANT: WE REQUIRE SPECIFIC INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR SITUATION OR WE WILL NOT BE ABLE TO RESPOND.
POTENTIAL CLIENTS SHOULD NOT SEND ANY CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION UNTIL SUCH TIME AS AN ATTORNEY-CLIENT RELATIONSHIP HAS BEEN ESTABLISHED BY A WRITTEN RETAINER AGREEMENT SIGNED BY BOTH THE ATTORNEY AND THE CLIENT. SENDING AN EMAIL DOES NOT CREATE AN ATTORNEY-CLIENT RELATIONSHIP OR CONTRACTUALLY OBLIGATE THE LAW OFFICE OF JEREMY D. MORLEY TO REPRESENT YOU, REGARDLESS OF THE CONTENT OF SUCH INQUIRY.


Post Views: 23