17 February 2026

Overseas Divorce, English Property: 90% of the Home to the Wife

The recent decision in Fisayo Olaoluwa Awolowo v Olusegun Samuel Awolowo is a striking reminder of the power of the English court to intervene financially following a foreign divorce — and of how decisive housing needs can be where the former matrimonial home is the only significant asset.

The Background: A Nigerian Divorce, an English Asset

The parties had divorced in Nigeria. However, the only substantial asset was the former matrimonial home in England. The wife pursued financial relief in this jurisdiction under Part III of the Matrimonial and Family Proceedings Act 1984.

This is often misunderstood. An overseas divorce does not prevent an application in England where there is a sufficient connection and where justice requires further financial provision.

In this case, the court ultimately ordered the sale of the former matrimonial home, with 90% of the proceeds to the wife.

That is a significant departure from equality — and worth examining.

Needs Trump Sharing (When There’s Only One Asset)

Where there is a single substantial asset — particularly a home — the court’s focus inevitably sharpens around housing needs.

There was no vast asset schedule here. No offshore structures. No business valuations. Just a property.

The decision reflects a well-established but sometimes uncomfortable truth: When resources are limited, needs dominate.

An equal division would not have met the wife’s housing requirements. The court therefore adjusted the division to achieve fairness in practical terms — not theoretical equality.

Part III: Not a Second Bite — But a Safety Net

Applications following overseas divorce are not designed to allow forum shopping or duplication. The court must consider whether:

  • There is a sufficient connection to England and Wales;
  • It is appropriate for the court to exercise jurisdiction;
  • Further financial provision is justified.

The case underlines that where there has been little or no meaningful financial resolution abroad — and where an English property is central — the court will not hesitate to step in.

Points of Wider Interest for Practitioners

  1. The Former Matrimonial Home Remains Powerful

Even in modest cases, the family home retains emotional and practical primacy. Where children or primary care arrangements are involved, the housing need analysis can significantly skew division percentages.

  1. Equality Is Not the Starting Point in Every Case

While sharing is a fundamental principle in big money cases, where assets are limited the court often moves quickly to a needs-based outcome.

  1. Enforcement and International Dimensions Matter

Where a divorce occurs abroad but assets are here, strategic decisions about jurisdiction can be outcome-determinative. Early specialist advice is critical.

A Broader Reflection

This case is a reminder that family law is rarely about percentages in the abstract. It is about practical outcomes — roofs over heads, stability for children, and fairness in context.

Where there is only one meaningful asset, the court’s task is brutally binary: If one party receives enough to house themselves adequately, the other may have to accept significantly less.

That can feel harsh — but it reflects the statutory obligation to achieve fairness within finite resources.

If you are dealing with an overseas divorce but assets in England — particularly property — the jurisdictional landscape is complex and time-sensitive. Early advice can make all the difference.

22 October 2025

When Divorce Crosses Borders: Financial Relief After a Foreign Divorce in TY v XA [2025] EWFC 349

When marriages span multiple countries, untangling financial obligations can become a jurisdictional labyrinth. The recent High Court judgment of TY v XA (No. 2) [2025] EWFC 349 by Mr Justice Cusworth is a compelling example of how England’s Part III Matrimonial and Family Proceedings Act 1984 powers operate when one spouse seeks financial relief after an overseas divorce — here, in Germany.

The case stands as a reminder that Part III applications are not a second bite of the cherry, but a safety net against injustice where a foreign financial settlement leaves one party inadequately provided for.

The International Background

TY and XA — an Austrian husband and French wife — married in Austria, lived across Europe, and divorced in Germany in 2019. The German court approved a notarised Separation Deed, under which the wife received maintenance for a fixed term and payment of rent, but no capital settlement. The husband, meanwhile, retained substantial wealth.

After relocating to London with the children (with permission from the German court), the wife applied in England for Part III relief, arguing that the German settlement was unfair and left her in financial hardship. Her application was supported by significant evidence of mental and physical health difficulties, limiting her earning capacity.

The Legal Challenge: What Can England Do After a Foreign Divorce?

The central legal question was whether the English court could revisit — or vary — the German Deed. Under Part III of the 1984 Act, the court can make financial orders after a foreign divorce if there is a sufficient English connection and if it is appropriate to do so, having regard to all the circumstances (Agbaje v Agbaje [2010] 1 AC 628).

However, the Maintenance Regulation (EU 4/2009) still applied to this case, meaning English courts could not review the substance of the German order (Art. 42), but could vary it if circumstances had changed (Art. 21).

Mr Justice Cusworth held that the German Deed was valid and binding under German law, but that subsequent changes in circumstance—notably the wife’s health deterioration, relocation, and ongoing needs—justified modification of the maintenance terms, not a wholesale re-opening of the settlement.

A Question of Fairness and Forum

The court drew heavily on Agbaje principles, emphasising that Part III is not a tool for forum shopping. A mere disparity between a foreign award and what would have been achieved in England is not enough. Yet where unmet needs remain, and where England has become the parties’ clear home, the court may intervene to ensure fairness.

In TY v XA, both parties and their children were now habitually resident in London, and the German court no longer had jurisdiction. Against this backdrop, Mr Justice Cusworth ordered enhanced maintenance provision for the wife and children — recognising real change in their financial and medical circumstances since 2019.

Why This Case Matters

This judgment underlines several key points for practitioners and internationally mobile families:

  1. Part III relief is exceptional, not routine. It is a remedy for unfairness, not an opportunity to re-litigate a foreign divorce.
  2. Foreign settlements remain binding — but not untouchable. English courts can modify maintenance where there has been a genuine change of circumstances.
  3. Timing and motive matter. Delays in applying and perceived forum-shopping will weigh against applicants.
  4. Evidence is everything. The wife’s success rested on clear, medical evidence demonstrating her deteriorating health and inability to earn.

Cross-Border Fairness in the Modern Family Court

TY v XA shows the delicate balance English courts strike between respecting foreign judgments and ensuring fairness for families who have since made their lives here. The decision reinforces that Part III jurisdiction is not about English generosity — it’s about English justice.

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