Tls 1557 Last 1 Help And Parsing Please
Crosswords2 mins ago
Hi guys Hope you can help.When I was 20 I married and we split up when I was 29.About 4-5 years before we split up he got a job in the civil service and I was obviously on his pension as his wife.Anyway,we divorced,I got on with my life etc.We only see each other once in a blue moon and that is when kids are dropped off etc.He has been dreadful since we divorced,called me every name under the sun.3 yrs ago he re-married but still kept being dreadful to me.
The out of the blue last week he rang me,nice as pie,and said would I sign I letter removing myself from his pension as he has forgotten all about this.I said ok .Afterwards my partner said that did I realise I am entitled to a portion of his pension from the day I was put on it till I remove myself.I think this is wrong as why hasnt he taken me off years ago but I have been told he cant,even though he has a new wife - I have to sign a letter and I am entitled to my fair share.
Is this true??
No best answer has yet been selected by kazzianne. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If you had a divorce settlement then this will (should anyway) have been taken into account then and you have no future entitlement. Either a small (and it will be very small) portion of his pension will be paid to you when he retires or you will have had some other asset or payment in lieu.
Your entitlement was to a proportion of the pension from the day he joined the scheme to the date of your divorce - assuming you divorced after 2000, when the rules on pension sharing came in.
Having said that I am not at all sure what you mean by 'on' and 'off' his pension.
I work in the pensions industry and I would urge you very strongly to think about this further.
Your ex husband would have been required to declare his pension entitlements when you divorced and this should have been taken into account in your divorce settlement.
If he "forgot" this pension then you could potentially be entitled to half of the value of it. You would not necessarily have to split his pension up or anything that complicated.
Of course, if it has already been taken into account then it is not an issue.
This type of Pension is a much more valuable asset than most people realise. It will almost certainly be worth in excess of �10,000 and could be worth many times more than that, depending on your ex-husband's salary.
Please do take the time to check whether this pension was taken into account in your divorce settlement.