(30 Mar 2018) Lawyers for the children of the late French rock singer Johnny Hallyday started court proceedings on Friday to contest the will that leaves everything to his widow.
Hallyday's eldest children are contesting the document that bequeaths his property and artistic rights "exclusively" to his widow, Laeticia Hallyday, 43.
A hearing was held Friday at a tribunal in Nanterre, a suburb of Paris, at the request of Hallyday's eldest children, David Hallyday, 51, and Laura Smet, 34.
They want their late father's inheritance to their step-mother - Hallyday's fourth wife - to be frozen.
The court decision is expected at a later date.
The hearing had been postponed after the children's lawyers said basic documents were missing.
Hallyday - dubbed the "French Elvis" - died last December from lung cancer.
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Hallyday's eldest children are contesting the document that bequeaths his property and artistic rights "exclusively" to his widow, Laeticia Hallyday, 43.
A hearing was held Friday at a tribunal in Nanterre, a suburb of Paris, at the request of Hallyday's eldest children, David Hallyday, 51, and Laura Smet, 34.
They want their late father's inheritance to their step-mother - Hallyday's fourth wife - to be frozen.
The court decision is expected at a later date.
The hearing had been postponed after the children's lawyers said basic documents were missing.
Hallyday - dubbed the "French Elvis" - died last December from lung cancer.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/38468d8aec235776b2ecce5498f58ada
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
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