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1 minute read
Should I get divorced in Spain?
Consular Matters
THE other day I was driving back from the office, and I was listening to a well known radio station and there was an advert saying something like get divorced in the UK, not Spain, as it’s easier.
Well as a lawyer this made me think. Well, yes if you both consent and you’re from the United Kingdom then why not?
The only caveat I would put on this is remember that now the United Kingdom has left the EU post Brexit it is much more difficult to enforce an order made by a UK court in Spain. If you have a good relationship with your soon to be ex, then choose this route.
Now on to the messy contested divorcees and I’ve seen a huge number in the last 34 years.
Depending on whom I represent and what assets they have and where they are located it could be much better to get divorced in Spain. Why is that? Well Spanish legal fees are cheaper and in some circumstances one party could be awarded significantly less than they would be awarded by a UK court.
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So if you’re considering getting divorced or you find yourself on the receiving end of a divorce petition here in Spain, get in touch with one of our English speaking Spanish qualified lawyers.
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Marisa Moreno Castillo Consul for Denmark and Senior Lawyer at Just Law Solicitors. www.justlawsolicitors.com • contact@justlawsolicitors.com
Sally Underwood Political Animal
LAST week Matt Hancock was filmed being pushed and harassed by an angry member of the public.
Now while I think most people would probably admit to having some fairly dark thoughts about politicians some days, very few would agree that this behaviour came anywhere near to being acceptable.
Apart from anything else, by resorting to violence, Geza Tarjanyi, the man who shoved Hancock at a tube station, he ended up inciting sympathy for the former health secretary; something which he surely can’t have been trying to achieve.
Engaging in debate in some sort of meaningful way at a local event might have been a better way to go if what Tarjanyi really wanted was a chance of in some way holding Hancock to account.
When I first worked in parliament, I shared an office with a Liberal Democrat lord whose researcher had died saving him from a knife attacker.
Later, in the Commons, I worked in the office next to an MP who still had scars on his hands from when a woman