Post by anik4700 on Feb 28, 2024 0:50:22 GMT -6
Paulo Caruso loved the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. He was 1 meter and 90 tall. More than 90 kilos of friendliness and charm. And he never stopped drawing. In interviews on Roda Viva, on TV Cultura, he captured the parade of vanities of the questioners who wanted to talk more than the interviewee. With his deep voice, he spoke slowly. He loved the bars in Vila Madalena, the neighborhood in which he lived. He was a passionate guy. His main external characteristic was that he looked over his glasses, like Professor Pardal. Paulão was a Renaissance man. A good person. It's a shame to lose him so soon." See some of Caruso's works:US court orders ex-husband to pay $7 million to wife for adultery João Ozorio de Melo March 4, 2023, 9:43 am Without category By August 31, the Superior Court of Maryland , in the USA, must decide whether to maintain first and second degree decisions, which order an ex-husband who committed adultery to pay US$7 million to his ex-wife, under a contract after -nuptial.
Victoriafly/FreepikA few years ago, that her then-husband Thomas Lloyd was cheating on her with another woman — and filed for divorce. Unsatisfied, Lloyd made a million-dollar proposal to his wife to save the marriage. The woman accepted and both, with their respective lawyers, negotiated the terms of a postnuptial contract. The cont Luxembourg Phone Number ract stipulated that Lloyd would pay Anna Niceta US$7 million if she had any type of extramarital relations, not only those involving sexual relations, but also those that were just romantic, such as kissing, hugging, caressing, cuddling and sending emails or text messages [to your object of desire]. In 2021, Lloyd gave in to temptation and had a new extramarital affair, which his wife discovered. She asked for a divorce and the execution of the million-dollar post-nuptial agreement, which a lower court judge granted her. Lloyd appealed, to no avail.
The Maryland Court of Appeals upheld the lower court ruling on the grounds that the financial compensation resulting from the contractual adultery provision is valid because compliance with the terms requiring fidelity in the marriage was entirely within Lloyd's control. Furthermore, the contractual provision on adultery, with multimillion-dollar compensation if violated, "creates stability and peace in the marriage, because the consequences of the couple's various actions are clearly explained", says the unanimous decision of the court's three-judge panel. "Generally speaking, public policy against penalties that coerce behavior in contracts does not apply with the same rigidity in the context of postnuptial agreements," wrote Judge J. Frederick Sharer, the case's rapporteur. "This is what happens when public policy generally frowns upon adultery and postnuptial agreements, by their very nature, can be seen as imposing a penalty because it can alter the financial arrangement between the parties.
Victoriafly/FreepikA few years ago, that her then-husband Thomas Lloyd was cheating on her with another woman — and filed for divorce. Unsatisfied, Lloyd made a million-dollar proposal to his wife to save the marriage. The woman accepted and both, with their respective lawyers, negotiated the terms of a postnuptial contract. The cont Luxembourg Phone Number ract stipulated that Lloyd would pay Anna Niceta US$7 million if she had any type of extramarital relations, not only those involving sexual relations, but also those that were just romantic, such as kissing, hugging, caressing, cuddling and sending emails or text messages [to your object of desire]. In 2021, Lloyd gave in to temptation and had a new extramarital affair, which his wife discovered. She asked for a divorce and the execution of the million-dollar post-nuptial agreement, which a lower court judge granted her. Lloyd appealed, to no avail.
The Maryland Court of Appeals upheld the lower court ruling on the grounds that the financial compensation resulting from the contractual adultery provision is valid because compliance with the terms requiring fidelity in the marriage was entirely within Lloyd's control. Furthermore, the contractual provision on adultery, with multimillion-dollar compensation if violated, "creates stability and peace in the marriage, because the consequences of the couple's various actions are clearly explained", says the unanimous decision of the court's three-judge panel. "Generally speaking, public policy against penalties that coerce behavior in contracts does not apply with the same rigidity in the context of postnuptial agreements," wrote Judge J. Frederick Sharer, the case's rapporteur. "This is what happens when public policy generally frowns upon adultery and postnuptial agreements, by their very nature, can be seen as imposing a penalty because it can alter the financial arrangement between the parties.