Robin Gibb's devastated widow fears the mother of his love kid fathered with their former housekeeper can demand additional cash since his death - despite receiving a £4million pay off. once twelve months of legal wrangling Gibb's lover Claire Yang received the one off payment for three-year-old Snow Robin's care. however once the singer's death the family are said to worry his former lover can demand a bigger slice of his £140million fortune.
Robin's grieving widow Dwina is alleged to be worried Claire, 36, can look for legal recommendation despite agreeing to the one-off kid maintenance deal in January. A supply near the Gibb family told The Sunday Mirror the legal fight, that went on whereas Robin was undergoing hospital treatment, upset Dwina. The supply added: 'If Claire will visit the funeral she is going to be ¬keeping her distance from Dwina and it'll be awkward. Robin never walked off from his responsibilities and invariably created certain the kid was fullyRobin later brought his mistress a home 5 miles from his Thame home once paying her rent before his daughter was born.
Friends have spoken of Claire's love for Robin and therefore the former housekeeper, who became called the star's companion, thought the try may have a future along.
But Robin is assumed to own told his mistress he would never leave his wife. Speaking concerning her married life, Dwina famously said: 'We have an open relationship. Robin has had flings within the past with friends of mine and he talks concerning them.
'It does not worry me as a result of I trust my friends. And I am, after all, his supporter similarly as his wife and lover - and i am certain we'll be together'.
Robin and his twin brother Maurice shaped the Bee Gees with their older brother Barry, currently sixty two within the late 50s.
The trio shot to mega-stardom once making the soundtrack to Saturday Night Fever in 1977. Maurice Gibb died of a burst intestine in 2003 and their younger brother Andy died from a cocaine overdose aged simply thirty within the Nineteen Eighties. underneath the Inheritance (Provision for Family and ¬Dependents) Act 1975, any kid is allowed to contest a can.
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