The woman and her lover also had a son, who is now 10 years old. Shutterstock photo illustration.
Chinese justice sentenced a woman to compensate her lover’s wife 3.79 million yuan (about $ 560,000) after verifying the hidden relationship they have established.
The grieving wife sued her husband’s mistress to “return her all material goods that he had given her during their relationship, “the court heard.
Justice understood that he was right and ordered his lover to pay 3.79 million yuan to his lover’s wife.
According to documents released by the Zhuanghe People’s Court in Liaoning, northeastern China, the actor, a woman named Li, and her husband, Wang, they have been married since 1991.
Infidelity and couple. Photo: Shutterstock illustration.
But in 2008, Wang began an extramarital affair with another woman, identified under the pseudonym of Xiaoxia.
Almost 12 years later, in 2020, Li found out about her husband’s relationship after discovering that he regularly sent her sums of money to her lover.
Wang admitted his relationship and even confessed it to his wife he also had a son with Xiaoxia, now 10, who has supported them for years.
Evidence presented in court showed that Wang transferred 1.47 million yuan ($ 217,700) to his mistress between 2013 and 2020, bought two apartments worth a total of 1.45 million yuan ($ 214,700) and also gave him a car worth 870,000 yuan ($ 128,000). .
Xiaoxia supported him I never knew Wang was married and that the money he has received over the years went to child support, but the court said this case was about ownership of property and not child support.
Chinese law states that neither party in a marriage can spend the couple’s common goods without the other party’s consent, and since Li never consented to Wang’s “gifts”, now Xiaoxia must return a total of 3.79 million yuan ($ 560,000) to her lover’s wife.
Eventually, the court told Xiaoxia you have the option to file a separate case and sue Wang for child support, but that their relationship so far “goes against public custom.”
Source: South China Morning Post
Source: Clarin