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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To refuse to write legal letters for DH as he's too tight to pay a solicitor?

137 replies

Momentumista · 25/11/2016 09:26

Dh has been having letters from his ex-wife’s solicitor relating to the payments he’s making her. He has expected me to respond to these letters. I have no legal training and they advised him to get his own legal advice. He then consulted a parent of DS friend who is a solicitor. He agreed to help draft a response, and DH gave me to understand said parent had agreed to help him for free – I was sceptical as I wondered what he (the parent ) was getting form it, but accepted what DH said on face value. I duly wrote a letter based on scribbled notes DH received from this solicitor parent.

When I bumped into said parent I thanked him for helping and he looked surprised and said – oh no, I’m not taking on free advice & assistance, I just said I will have a look at the letter (and any reply DH gets) and advise him if he has a case.

Massive shock for me as I realise DH is up to his old tricks of (a) conning me and (b) expecting something for nothing – I.e. Refusing to pay for proper legal advice. I talked to DH and said I don not want to be responsible for writing his letters.

He promised me he would get an appt with a solicitor and hand the whole thing over to them to take the stress and worry away from me. He duly told me he had an appt. However….. This turned out to be a free family law surgery organised by his union, and he has now come back to me saying that I need to write a letter for him based on what they told him at this free clinic. He claimed they said it would cost £500 if they wrote the letter.

I was so angry. I re-iterated he needs to get his own legal advice and I can’t be writing letters for him. He has money he could use for this, why not use it, or at least give me something for writing the letters (this will be the 3rd I have written for him based on cheap scribbled notes). He then had the cheek to tell me that I was going to New York in January – as if it was some kind of treat he had paid for – when in fact I am funding myself from my savings.

I feel so frustrated he is trying to do the whole thing 'on the cheap', using me and my writing skills - although I know nothing about the subject matter or his legal rights and I have repeatedly told him I don’t want to do it.

I am at a loss as to how to proceed. He is completely inarticulate and unable to convey information on his own in written form.

If I leave him to muddle his own way through it will be a car crash, and potentially impact our family finances if his ex wife gets more than she might if he got proper advice. On the other hand I really don’t want to get involved as writing these letters causes he huge stress and anxiety.

Sorry for long post.

WWYD?

OP posts:
Flisspaps · 25/11/2016 15:36

If it's not to do with immigration, I'd pack my bags then. Being bullied isn't convenient.

And seeing as he can't be bothered to get proper legal advice, you'd probably come out of a divorce quite well.

InsultingTheAlligator · 25/11/2016 15:39

I agree with Fliss.

Particularly the last sentence. And I'd say you deserve to be rid of the fucker.

galaxygirl45 · 25/11/2016 15:46

I had fairly similar with DH when one of his employees was being a PITA and trying his luck with a constructive dismissal claim. DH literally passed the whole thing onto me to sort out with ACAS just because I could write a good letter but he soon got a reality check when they sent the paperwork over, and I rang an employment solicitor a bit quick. It ended up costing over £3k as it got so complicated, but saved him a £35k payout that the person was claiming for - so in the end he saw the sense in it. Can you point out to him that long term, it could save thousands in payments to his ex?? I'd say you refuse to get involved with it but say will help him find a solicitor and double check all the paperwork etc if he's not very articulate. (DH is dyslexic so that's why he dumps a lot of paperwork on me).

Momentumista · 25/11/2016 17:20

Can you point out to him that long term, it could save thousands in payments to his ex??
I have tried, believe me!

OP posts:
Manumission · 25/11/2016 20:36

Oh blimey. So there was a power imbalance in the way you met and marrying him was a pragmatic choice when you were in tough circumstances.

So what? It was a choice for him too. You don't owe him anything and you don't have to put up with living miserably.

Momentumista · 25/11/2016 20:42

Manumission - and others who seem to understand / believe me- thank you so much. It's a massive secret/ burden to carry around though.No one knows - obviously- apart from me, DH and one therapist. It is the unspoken underlying root cause of a lot of my problems. It's so hard when you simply can't talk about something without being judged (even on MN) :-(

OP posts:
Manumission · 25/11/2016 20:54

That must be lonely. Of course if you got rid of him, you'd get rid of the daily secret around your neck too, which is a nice side bonus.

PacificDogwod · 25/11/2016 20:57

Ok, never mind legal advice - how about seeking some counselling for yourself to clear in your own mind whatever baggage you might be carrying around?
Feel 'grateful' or indebted to your H is not a good basis for a mutually respectful partnership of equals, is it? Convenience or not.

LauraMipsum · 25/11/2016 21:57

If you met in Pretty Woman circumstances the only one with anything to be ashamed of is him.

Absolutely no judgement here. Flowers

HelenaDove · 25/11/2016 23:42

OP I believe you.

He is financially abusive. Could he be wanting to squirrel money away so he can/could continue with the same "dalliances" he did before.

The kind of man who does this has no respect for women Which has revealed itself in him having no respect for yours or your DS safety re the electrical wiring .

And id be reporting that "heating engineer"

CheshireChat · 26/11/2016 03:29

Momentumista I know someone who made a similar deal so to speak, at least in her case it ends heart breakingly bad so keep in mind that you don't owe him anything. You made a deal, that ends when you want out of the relationship.

I'd be looking for a way out, you do owe that to your son. It doesn't have to be now or tomorrow or the day after, but think about it and start arranging things so you can leave when you decide it's time.

On a more light-hearted note, I write out virtually all letters as DP is dyslexic and has a way of phrasing things that's an absolute killer so it all falls on me. I'm not even native English so it's even worse when I think about it. My DP is good in bed so it makes up for it Wink.

EnormousTiger · 26/11/2016 08:01

Yes the £500 would cover those things WouldHave says for the solicitors' time.

Sometimes family members have no problem writing letters for others if they have a bit more time or are better at it but here he cannot force you and it sounds like it is not something you want to get involved with and could be blamed later for getting it wrong.

A solicitor would start by asking on his first divorce did he have a final court sealed financial consent order? If he did did it provide for a clean break or did he pay any even just £1 a year spousal support to his ex wife? Did it provide for child support if there were children?

If you tell us what the lettesr are your other half has received from his ex wife's solicitors about the payments he makes to her we might be able to give a general view.

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