550 So. 2d 556 | Fla. Dist. Ct. App. | 1989
We reluctantly hold that a de facto marriage relationship, however strong,
The trial judge did not err in setting a reasonable attorney’s fee in an amount that was less than the amount the ex-wife actually paid her attorney.
AFFIRMED.
. The ex-wife and her "de facto” husband live openly as man and wife and have had their relationship “blessed” by a priest; the ex-wife was unsuccessful at having her prior marriage annulled by an ecclesiastical authority and would lawfully marry but for her religious convictions. In making the separation agreement, the ex-husband relied not on any expansive meaning of the word “remarriage” but on his confidence that the ex-wife, because of her strong religious convictions, would not live with another man except in a state of lawful marriage.