Legal
Twenty-Four Years Later, a Wife Wins Her Award: The Gohil Saga’s Lessons

A divorce saga that has run for almost a quarter of a century has finally seen a financial remedy ruling. This article considers the case and its implications for those advising HNW individuals.
The following article is from Vandana Chitroda, partner at the law firm Broadfield. The editors are pleased to share this content and hope the insights stimulate conversations. The standard editorial disclaimers apply to views of guest writers. To comment, email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com and amanda.cheesley@clearviewpublishing.com
A protracted divorce saga that some consider the most litigated
family dispute in history recently reached a long-awaited
judgment of financial remedy. The ruling provides several key
insights for the future practice of family law.
Gohil v. Gohil began over 24 years ago, in May 2002. The
ruling judge described the ensuing course of events as an
“extraordinary implosion” (1)that played out in criminal, family,
and civil courts. An abridged timeline provides the necessary
context for the takeaways that will follow.
-- 2002: The Wife serves the Husband a divorce
petition;
-- 2004: Family court approves a Consent Order awarding the Wife
£270,000 ($356,000);
-- 2010-11: The Husband is found guilty of money laundering; the
Crown commences
confiscation proceedings under the Proceeds of Crime
Act;
-- 2012: Family court issues a set-aside on the award, reopening
the settlement on account
of the Husband’s non-disclosure;
-- 2015: After a reversal on appeal, the Supreme Court restores
the set-aside;
-- 2023: Criminal proceedings determine the Husband’s ill-gotten
sum and the Crown’s
recoverable amount; and
-- 2025: A family court judge awards the Wife £6.83M,
representing 69.5% of the newly
determined matrimonial assets.
Four takeaways for family law strategy
The winding road the case traveled, and the destination it has
now reached, highlight four important considerations for the
practice of family law moving forward. Whether representing an
applicant or respondent, a strong legal team will keep these in
mind in the planning and execution of a family law strategy,
particularly in cases of high complexity.
Material non-disclosure may reopen an order, but such a reopening
is only the beginning.
The 2015 Supreme Court restoration of the set-aside confirmed
that non-disclosure of assets can satisfy the requirements for
reopening an ostensibly finalised case. Before reaching a new
settlement, however, there may lie ahead a robust re-examination
and re-litigation of key questions, including what assets exist,
who owns them, whether they are matrimonial, and if they are
eligible to satisfy an award. Anticipating these with maximum
scrutiny is likely to support a strong outcome.
Legal title is not the end of the ownership and asset inquiry.
Investigation in the criminal case found that the Husband had
employed a complex structure of entities and third-party legal
owners to obscure his true assets. In the end, however, in the
family court he was nevertheless found to be a beneficial owner,
expanding the pool of assets from which the Wife’s financial
remedy claim could be sourced. Good legal representation will go
the extra mile to map both parties’ assets, looking beyond what
the legal paper trail turns up.
Parallel proceedings affect but do not determine outcomes.
The Husband’s criminal proceedings affected which assets were
considered to be tainted due to them having been obtained from
his criminal activity, and therefore available for confiscation
by the Crown. Public policy considerations therefore weighed on
the outcome of the settlement, as only untainted assets would be
realisable by the Wife. On the other hand, although arguments and
assumptions driving the criminal case were relevant in the family
court, the judge insisted on assessing the facts of the case at
his own independent discretion.
Assessment of an award hinges on practicality: there is a
difference between winning the argument and collecting the
award.
To determine the final award, the ruling judge relied upon the
established principle of “needs, sharing, and compensation” with
an emphasis on what could be reasonably identified and recovered.
English Law’s sharing proposition sets a 50-50 starting point of
division of matrimonial assets, from which adjustments are made
based on the case’s circumstances. In Gohil, although
the judge noted that an award to the Wife representing 75-80
percent of the available assets may have been justified, he
settled on a lesser figure (69.5 per cent) in deference to
prioritising identified, realisable assets. A good lawyer will
advise their clients that judges consider liquidity in addition
to the evidence presented.
Conclusion
Given the complexity of the case and the enormous, ever-growing
body of evidence, the judge found it prudent to underscore his
need to rely on inference and probabilistic reasoning in making
his final ruling. In doing so, he showcased the critical role
that sound strategy and legal arguments play in navigating
complex and high-end divorce proceedings and achieving meaningful
results.
Footnote
1 https://caselaw.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ewhc/fam/2025/3646