Irish Independent

Estranged couple divorced by mistake after law firm error

- ALEX BARTON

A computer error at a family law firm has left a couple accidental­ly divorced.

Solicitors at Vardags, headed by Ayesha Vardag, a self-described “diva of divorce”, used an online system to process a marital split for one of its clients.

The president of the family court division said the lawyers thought they were making an applicatio­n for another couple but accidental­ly issued a final order in proceeding­s between a couple who separated in 2023 after being married for 21 years.

The applicatio­n was granted within 21 minutes of the order’s registrati­on to the divorce portal and while they were still attempting to agree the financial terms of their split.

The error was only discovered days later and lawyers at the firm applied to rescind the divorce order at the High Court in London.

However, the family court president rejected the applicatio­n for the order to be set aside and said there was a public interest in respecting the “certainty and finality that flows from a divorce order and maintainin­g the status quo that it has establishe­d.

Ms Vardag said the ruling was akin to “the computer says no, you’re divorced”. She believes it was “a bad decision” as “the state can’t be divorcing people just because of an online clerical error”.

“There has to be intention on the part of the couple,” she said. “When it’s brought to the court’s attention that it was a mistake, and everyone accepts that, obviously it has to be undone. The principle of intention underpins the justice of our legal system.”

Ms Vardag rose to fame following her role in a landmark Supreme Court case in 2010 which changed the law to make prenuptial agreements legally enforceabl­e in the UK.

She then made headlines in 2020 after asking all staff at her firm to stop wearing cardigans and to stop looking like “pretty young things” around the office. Employees at her firm were told to aim to look “executive” and like “the president of a significan­t country”.

In 2023, she sent out refreshed guidance to her 120 staff members, saying that while outfits need to be “still absolutely topend and appropriat­e to the luxury market with which we engage… day to day, if you fancy an electric-blue sequinned jacket and gold leather trousers, if you want pink hair or scarlet Dr Martens, if you want a purple velvet jacket, that’s all good”.

Vardags has been contacted for comment. (© Telegraph Media Group Ltd 2024)

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