Billionaire wife could have sued millions in divorce



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Could have sued her husband for divorce

ofKerstin Nilsson

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Tom Hagen, 70, is good at nearly two billion.

In the marriage preamble, his wife would receive nothing in principle, but several lawyers believe that in court she would have received hundreds of millions in a divorce.

Now the billionaire is in custody, suspected of murdering his wife, Anne-Elisabeth Hagen, 70.

Tom and Anne-Elisabeth Hagen would have celebrated a golden wedding this fall.

But by then the grandmother had already disappeared for a year: kidnapped according to her family, murdered according to the police.

On Thursday, Norwegian billionaire Tom Hagen was arrested, suspected of murder, or assisting in the murder of his wife.

It is not yet known what Tom Hagen would have had on the grounds to murder or murder his wife, if he is guilty.

But it could be about money.

Anne-Elisabeth Hagen.

Photo: Norwegian police

Anne-Elisabeth Hagen.

Talk about divorce

According to various reports to the Norwegian media, Anne-Elisabeth Hagen had spoken about the divorce. He should also have said that he lived in a “troubled marriage,” writes VG.

The couple married in 1969 and lived a withdrawn life at their home in Lørenskog, on the outskirts of Oslo.

After 18 years of marriage, they wrote their first marriage order.

By then they had had three children together and Tom Hagen had begun to build his fortune.

In the Preface to Marriage, the house and all its possessions were written by Anne-Elisabeth Hagen. That meant that she would own everything if any of her investments went wrong, and she would get half in the event of a divorce.

The seven companies Tom Hagen owned, as well as any inheritance on his part, would remain his, according to VG.

Photo: TT

Norwegian billionaire Tom Hagen has been arrested.

Conditional gift

His wife’s share would be the inheritance in his family, the parents’ leisure plot, a 1987 Citroën model or a car of a similar standard, and a NOK 200,000 gift from her husband.

That money would be invested in high-interest accounts or covered bonds and could only be used in a particularly difficult situation. The terms of the gift were applied until Anne-Elisabeth Hagen turned 67, which was a year and a half before she disappeared.

Four days before Christmas Eve 1993, the spouses wrote under an addendum to the Marriage Ordinance. Then the whole house becomes hers: she gets furniture and accessories.

The reason for this should be that Anne-Elisabeth Hagen has been handed over to her parents’ house and does not need to own her and her husband’s house.

A mockery

In the event of a divorce, she would receive furniture and equipment, a car and 200,000 Norwegian kroner, a thief compared to the multi-million dollar wealth her husband would retain.

But the uneven distribution could have been an advantage for Anne-Elisabeth Hagen in a divorce.

Since the marriage ordinance does not take the wife into account, several lawyers such as VG and Norwegian TV, NRK, have been in contact with her, so it should not apply under Norwegian law.

– If you had questioned marriage regulation regarding your desire to divorce, your husband would have been “omitted” by a court, divorce attorney Mette Yvonne Larsen tells VG.

– I have rarely seen such an unequal marriage order, lawyer Randi Birgitte Bull tells NRK.

“Had canceled”

The same goes for Christina Steimler, director and attorney for NRK’s ​​Indem law firm:

– If the court found that Anne-Elisabeth Hagen would, in fact, end up on a bare hill, much indicates that the marriage regulation had been wholly or partially annulled in a judicial review. The starting point of the marriage law on joint ownership will then apply. This means that, in principle, the total wealth of the spouses should be divided equally between the spouses.

Tom Hagen denies the crime and appealed the arrest.

The three children of the spouses are also convinced that their father is innocent.

Police now have four weeks to strengthen the evidence against Tom Hagen and to find the body of Anne-Elisabeth Hagen.

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