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29 Fam. L.Q. 141 (1995-1996)
Human Capital as Property in Celebrity Divorces

handle is hein.journals/famlq29 and id is 165 raw text is: Human Capital as Property in
Celebrity Divorces
ALLEN M. PARKMAN, Ph.D., J.D.*
I. Introduction
How much is Tom Cruise's celebrity status worth? This no longer
will be an academic question if the courts expand the definition of
property distributed at divorce to include celebrities' enhanced earning
capacity.' No-fault divorce introduced in most states in the 1970s re-
duced the importance of negotiated divorce settlements and, conse-
quently, increased the courts' role in financial and custodial arrange-
ments at divorce. Recently, this role has expanded to include celebrity
status as marital property.2 The increased importance of the courts in
divorce settlements has been disappointing, especially their definition
and evaluation of property.3 Most courts limit their definition of the
* Regents' Professor of Management, Anderson School of Management, The
University of New Mexico.
1. A celebrity is a celebrated person who is well-known and widely recognized.
THE RANDOM HOUSE DICTIONARY 146 (1980). While that status could be based on a
variety of reasons including being a very bad Olympic ski jumper, the cases have dealt
exclusively with individuals who have obtained celebrity status by being entertainers.
2. Golub v. Golub, 527 N.Y.S.2d 946 (Sup. Ct. 1988); Piscopo v. Piscopo, 557
A.2d 1040 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 1989); and Elkus v. Elkus, 572 N.Y.S.2d 901
(App. Div. 1991). See also Gary S. Stiffelman, Note, Community Property Interests
in the Right of Publicity: Fame and/or Fortune, 25 UCLA L. REV. 1095 (1978); Stuart
B. Walzer & Jan C. Gabrielson, Celebrity Goodwill, 2 J. AM. ACAD. MATRIM. LAW
35 (1986); Cynthia M. Germano, Note, Do You Promise to Love Honor and Equitably
Divide Your Celebrity Status Upon Divorce? A Look at the Development and Application
of New York's Equitable Distribution Statute, 9 Lov. ENT. L.J. 153 (1989); Janine
R. Menhennet, Elkus v. Elkus: A Step in the Wrong Direction, 12 Loy. ENT. L.J.
561 (1992); and Robin P. Rosen, A Critical Analysis of Celebrity Careers as Property
Upon Dissolution of Marriage, 61 GEO. WASH. L. REV. 522 (1993).
3. See Allen M. Parkman, Human Capital as Property in Divorce Settlements,
40 ARK. L. REV. 439 (1987).

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