Sunday World (South Africa)

How to spot hidden divorce assets

Wise up and look to these tell-tale signs to ensure fairness

- By Kabelo Khumalo

Going through a divorce can be a messy exercise, and unfortunat­ely some spouses attempt to hide assets before or during divorce proceeding­s to avoid sharing them with to their soonto-be ex.

Depending on one’s marital regime, assets acquired during marriage can be split 50/50.

This makes it attractive for people who are angry at their estranged spouses or feel they have worked too hard to equally split the assets to try hide assets.

Family law expert Bertus Preller said hiding assets during a divorce is a dishonest and unlawful practice.

The following can be signs that a spouse is hiding assets:

• They get defensive when you question them about their finances;

• When you find ATM receipts for accounts you are not familiar with; and

• When large withdrawal­s are

made from your joint account without discussion.

The main objectives of concealing assets in a divorce are to:

• Not declare them at all, depreciate assets or conceal the extent thereof;

• Overstate debts to announce insolvency;

• Report revenue (income) to be less than it really is; and

• Claim expenditur­e to be greater than it truly is.

“Your possession­s may consist of your matrimonia­l home, holiday home, financial investment­s, bank accounts, savings, shares, your retirement funds, pension plans, cash value on life insurance, and much more.”

Instead of depending on your spouse’s honesty or putting your trust in fair and just conduct of legal advisers, wise up and look out for these tell-tale signs:

• Accounting:

They maintain that a computer containing crucial financial records has mysterious­ly crashed, eliminatin­g harddrive failure. They befriend a financial adviser and go “out of town on business” (to set up remote schemes).

• Assets:

They report an extraordin­ary decline in the value of marital and/or business assets and investment­s to dissuade suspicion. Assets are transferre­d to family or friends (to be reversed after the divorce).

• Banking:

They preserve or obtain total control of bank accounts, banking informatio­n and passwords. They also open several personal or business bank accounts to shift funds and set up bank accounts in the name of a child or friend.

• Business:

They fail to reimburse business expenses (postponed till after the divorce), overpay creditors or pre-pay suppliers (which can be refunded after the divorce). Family or friends are added to the payroll or paid for “consulting services” (to be paid back to you later).

• Expenses:

They make abnormally expensive purchases, such as on recreation­al toys or cars, art and collectors’ items (which can be sold again). Multiple cellphones or numbers are obtained in a short time (to hide interactio­ns and dealings), and they make large amounts of drawings on debt (to enhance liabilitie­s and stash the cash).

• Income:

They suffer a mysterious decrease in income but keep expenses the same, while abstaining from receiving commission­s or bonuses (until after the divorce).

• Legal:

They pressure their spouse to sign legal documents in a hurry without studying them thoroughly, propose mutual power of attorney for estate planning (to gain control) and establish ways to transfer funds to countries with less stringent monetary laws.

• Personal:

They complain about money or debt to avoid later suspicions, are vague or deceptive about financial affairs, accept accounts and statements at a private postal box or mailing address and maintain the sudden failure of a business.

• Tax:

They submit false, underrepor­ted tax returns and overpay the taxman (to be refunded after the divorce).

 ?? /Pexels Photos ?? During divorce, couples should take note when their soon-to-be ex gets defensive when questioned about finances.
/Pexels Photos During divorce, couples should take note when their soon-to-be ex gets defensive when questioned about finances.

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