When Revlon chairman Ronald Perelman and actress Ellen Barkin made headlines with their prenuptial agreement recently, it was familiar: another famous bazillionaire couple who, it appeared, put mon...
When Revlon chairman Ronald Perelman and actress Ellen Barkin made headlines with their prenuptial agreement recently, it was familiar: another famous bazillionaire couple who, it appeared, put money before love. But those pieces of paper are no longer the sole province of the rich and famous, nor are they just for people with no faith in their own marriages.
Any time you possess something that someone else wants, or vice versa, you have a golden opportunity. Whether you're buying a car or helping your neighbor see that it's his job to have overhanging ...
If you don't live in Missouri, you may not have heard of Josh Kroenke (above). The Mizzou basketball guard tears it up on the court, where he has also torn ligaments, sprained ankles, and had a con...
If there's one man who understands the business of breakups, it's Raoul Felder. In 38 years as a divorce lawyer he has represented big names such as Robin Givens, Rudolph Giuliani, and the wives (y...
Ever since no-fault divorce laws removed the need to gather dirt, matrimonial attorneys, as they are known, have enjoyed increased respectability. The best evidence is their sleek, skyscraper offic...
Prenuptial agreements were once used primarily by very rich individuals who wanted to protect their assets from their spouses if they ever divorced. But lately, premarital pacts have become more po...
''I don't want to paint a totally rosy picture,'' says 40-year-old Minnesotan Stephen Koch, ''but I feel we are very fortunate.'' ''We'' is Koch, the owner of a Minneapolis marketing and computer l...
When Revlon chairman Ronald Perelman and actress Ellen Barkin made headlines with their prenuptial agreement recently, it was familiar: another famous bazillionaire couple who, it appeared, put mon...
When Revlon chairman Ronald Perelman and actress Ellen Barkin made headlines with their prenuptial agreement recently, it was familiar: another famous bazillionaire couple who, it appeared, put money before love. But those pieces of paper are no longer the sole province of the rich and famous, nor are they just for people with no faith in their own marriages.
Any time you possess something that someone else wants, or vice versa, you have a golden opportunity. Whether you're buying a car or helping your neighbor see that it's his job to have overhanging ...
If you don't live in Missouri, you may not have heard of Josh Kroenke (above). The Mizzou basketball guard tears it up on the court, where he has also torn ligaments, sprained ankles, and had a con...
If there's one man who understands the business of breakups, it's Raoul Felder. In 38 years as a divorce lawyer he has represented big names such as Robin Givens, Rudolph Giuliani, and the wives (y...
Ever since no-fault divorce laws removed the need to gather dirt, matrimonial attorneys, as they are known, have enjoyed increased respectability. The best evidence is their sleek, skyscraper offic...
Prenuptial agreements were once used primarily by very rich individuals who wanted to protect their assets from their spouses if they ever divorced. But lately, premarital pacts have become more po...
''I don't want to paint a totally rosy picture,'' says 40-year-old Minnesotan Stephen Koch, ''but I feel we are very fortunate.'' ''We'' is Koch, the owner of a Minneapolis marketing and computer l...
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