Summary:

In my publication this week, I would like to discuss alimony for women divorce. If the women want to increase the alimony, she can go for an appeal with an additional evidence, requesting for the alimony increase and the appeal court can amend the judgment. When the women get a favorable verdict to seize the ex-husband's asset, even if the ex-husband doesn't have any asset to seize, subsequently the women have the right to request from the execution court to blacklist the ex-husband.

Question

I am an Arab woman who has filed for divorce, custody and an alimony case against my husband. I won the case but want to file an appeal to increase the amount of alimony I am entitled. I have since found out that my ex-husband has already filed an appeal. Will the fact that he filed for an appeal before me affect the outcome? Will each appeal be held in different hearings? Will we have two judgments? Do I have to attend the appeal hearing personally? If I win my appeal, will I be able to claim the court charges? What will happen if my husband does not respect the court orders?

Answer

It does not make a difference who filed first. Both appeals must be heard at the same hearing before the same tribunal. The judge decides on both of them on the same day.

You have the right to attend the hearing personally or your lawyer could attend on your behalf. Your physical presence is not required unless the judge asks you to attend in person.

You have the right to submit additional evidence or any new documents in the appeal – taking into account that such documents need to be legally translated into Arabic if they were issued in any other language. If such documents were issued by foreign courts they must be attested by the UAE Embassy in the country in which they were issued.

The appeal court has the right to amend the judgment or to cancel it or to return the case to the first instance court.

The governing rule that is always applied in appeal is that no petitioner shall be harmed by his petition. So your appeal will not harm you and the same rule applies to your husband.

In your appeal, the amount of alimony granted could be increased if your appeal is accepted by the judge and the amount can be decreased only if your husband's appeal is accepted instead.

The appeal judgment can be objected in the high court within one month. Should you win your appeal or petition, the other party has to cover your court charges.

Should your ex-husband not respect court orders, you have the right to file for execution and request from the court to seize your husband's assets. If he doesn't have any assets and has not paid you your due amount, you have the right to request from the execution court to blacklist him.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.