Really disillusioned with the court system and humanity right about now. It's all over now, though, so I can at least talk about it. It involves a good friend of mine (no, really, this isn't me pretending it's a friend)...who I'll refer to as Rick.
It all started about 18 months ago, when Rick answered his wife's (who I'll call Jill from this point) cell phone, and the moron on the other line couldn't even fake a decent alibi. He actually asked if Jill were there, and if so whether she was planning on coming by later or not. I mean, just blatantly stupid. So Rick, naturally, asked Jill what that was about. She flat told him "Oh, he's the guy I've been sleeping with for the past few months." So, obviously, there was a problem in the marriage.
Rick asked Jill what she wanted, and she agreed to try counseling for a while (note, Jill's career was as a marriage counselor), so they went to someone she knew. The counselor started the session by asking what each person wanted. Rick said he wanted Jill to stop sleeping around. Jill said she wanted him to spend more time off work and go on vacations more often. The counselor responded with "Well, first, you need to stop sleeping around." Jill thought that was unreasonable unless Rick was expected to give up something as well. Jill thought it was fair that she'd stop sleeping around when Rick agreed in writing to taking her on four planned vacations a year and two spontaneous vacations per year. The counselor turned to Rick and said "This marriage won't work. It's not worth it." So, Rick agreed it was time to end the marriage, which Jill thought was ridiculous and that he didn't really want to work at the marriage. Jill had been sleeping around on him for 8 years, and she couldn't understand why it was all of a sudden a problem now.
So, they started the divorce proceedings. Sounds like a pretty open and shut case, right? Oh no, because Illinois is a no-fault divorce state, so any argument of infidelity is meaningless. Rick thought it would be beneficial to just use an arbitrator that was a friend of Jill's, so it could be over and done with quickly. Jill disagreed, thinking she wouldn't get a fair deal if her friend knew all the facts, so Jill hired a lawyer and took Rick to divorce court. She blamed him for the divorce at this point, and just wanted to ruin Rick as much as possible. Her initial demand was a monthly alimony check equaling about 90% of Rick's take-home money, plus the house, the retirement account, and half the profits of his side small business. Rick obviously balked at that, because he wouldn't have been able to afford to live at that rate. He didn't even care about the house, since they were under water on the mortgage anyway, but he couldn't live on 10% of his salary. So Jill's lawyers continued to issue outrageous demands over the next 15 months, since Jill's parents paid for the lawyers (she blamed Rick for the divorce, so they blamed Rick for the divorce). Over that time, Rick's financial partner on the small business seized the business back because of fear of Jill getting a piece of it.
Finally, after 15 months of constant legal bullshit, a week before this past Christmas, Jill said she wanted to discuss new terms with Rick and the lawyers. Rick agreed, because he couldn't keep affording to pay the lawyer to draw out the legal proceedings. At the meeting, the lawyers spent about 45 minutes simply bickering about the value of the house (whether it was the appraised value or the value of the mortgage), at which point Rick asked the lawyers to just stop, and that he wanted to speak to Jill alone. Jill agreed, and the lawyers left the room. Rick got out a sheet of paper, and told Jill to write down whatever would get her to just walk away and end it. Jill proceeded to write down everything that was Rick's, from his computer, to his entertainment setup, the dogs, down to his iTunes account (no lie), along with whatever was currently in his retirement account, plus 50% of his take-home over the next 5 years. Rick looked it over, and agreed, because he was sick of it and just wanted it to be over.
The judge actually laughed out loud at the demands (when he got to the iTunes account, he chuckled and said "Wow, really? Moving on...". But it's finally over. Rick has the house and the debt, lost his small business, will only make half his salary for the next 5 years, and lost his dogs and his electronics. All because he wasn't happy with a wife that constantly cheated on him. But we still had a party for him, because he was just relieved it was over.