Silvio Berlusconi need no longer pay his ex-wife €1.4million (£1,249,773) a month after an Italian court ruled the former prime minister had been unfairly treated in a divorce settlement.
The Milan appeals court also told Veronica Lario, a former actress, to hand back to Berlusconi alimony payments totalling some €60million (£54million), saying she had no right to the money.
The good news for the tycoon politician comes as his political career – considered dead and buried only a year ago – is also back on the rise.
Berlusconi, left, need no longer pay Veronica Lario, right, who has been ordered to pay back £54million to the former prime minister
The Milan case concluded on Thursday and follows a landmark ruling by Italy’s top appeals court in May that said divorce settlements need not guarantee spouses their previous standard of living but rather ensure they were financially independent.
Berlusconi, Italy’s seventh richest man, according to Forbes, with a wealth estimated at about €7billion, was married to Lario for more than 22 years.
They split in 2009, with the normally reserved Lario writing to Italy’s national news agency to denounce her husband’s interest in other women. Their divorce was formalised in 2014.
Following their separation, Berlusconi was embroiled in scandals over his ‘bunga bunga’ parties and convicted of paying to have sex with a 17-year-old underage prostitute.
The couple were divorced in 2014 after being married for more than 22 years but the former actress must now hand back alimony payments
The verdict was later overturned when an appeals court said it could not be proved he knew she was underage.
Berlusconi’s partner of the last five years is Francesca Pascale, a former television show girl 49 years his junior.
A court in 2012 initially awarded Lario alimony of three million euros a month. This was subsequently cut to €1.4million, but Berlusconi complained it was still too high.
A legal source said the Milan judges took into consideration the May Supreme Court ruling and decided that Lario, who has cash deposits of some 16 million euros as well as jewels and a real estate business, did not need additional monthly income.
There was no immediate comment from Lario or her lawyers.