Billionaire Donald Bren Left Children 'Very Angry and Very Hurt' After Trial, Ex Girlfriend Says
Donald Bren does not have to pay adult children extra millions, jury rules.
Aug. 30, 2010 -- The ex-girlfriend of billionaire Donald Bren said the lawsuit waged to get her adult children millions in back child support was "not about greed" but about broken promises.
Jennifer Gold, whose children have vowed to appeal a jury's ruling in favor of Bren, told "Good Morning America" today that her 18-year-old son and 22-year-old daughter were devastated by Bren's court testimony that he never considered them a family.
"It was quite cruel," she said. "They're very angry and very hurt."
The children, Christie Alexis Bren and David Leroy Bren, had sued Bren for $400,000 a month retroactive to the day they were born, saying the $130 million payout was commensurate with their father's lifestyle.
"It's not really about the money, it's about the rights of the children," Gold said. "It's about what their birthright is."
Gold, who initiated the lawsuit in 2003 on behalf of her children, who were minors at the time, insisted that in addition to four legal contracts signed promising living expenses and college educations for the children, Bren had also verbally vowed to be a part of their lives.
"It's not about greed," she said. "It's actually about protecting their rights according to his promises."
She said the last time Bren spent any measurable amount of time with their children was when Christie Bren was 9 years old and David Bren was 5.
Donald Bren and his attorney declined to comment. Bren, chairman of the Irvine Co., has an estimated net worth of $12 billion. He is known as a generous philanthropist and political donor.
Bren, No. 16 on the Forbes list of America's richest people, was not in the courtroom last week as the jury returned its nine-three verdict, stating that he had not made the children or their mother, his ex-girlfriend, any false promises.
Bren testified during court proceedings in Los Angeles that he believed he had already more than adequately provided for the two children he fathered with his former Gold in the 1980s by paying for their health care and education, and providing cash for an estimated total of $9 million in their lifetimes.
"I feel for the two children," Bren testified, "but I believe I have provided for them."
"We weren't married, we weren't a family," he said in front of his children. "I never told her I loved her."
Gold told "Good Morning America" that she believed Bren's testimony was "completely lies."
Bren's Lawyer: 'He's Never Going to Be to Those Children Father of the Year'
During the trial, Gold produced what she called love notes from Bren, 78, as evidence of their ongoing relationship.
"Jennifer, the enclosed check is for you to pick out your birthday suit. Love and kisses," one note read.
And another: "Happy Valentines Day. You see, I really do care in my own way. Love Donald."
Former Los Angeles prosecutor Robin Sax said the issue of whether Gold and Bren loved each other is a moot point compared to the valid agreement they had to make sure their children were provided for.
"The question of greed really seems apparent because they're coming back after the fact," she said.
That Bren, a fiercely private man, chose to go to trial rather than attempt to settle seems out of character. But Sax suggested that he may have had good reason to do so with two of those reasons waiting for him at home.
"There are probably a lot of other issues at play," she said, "including the fact that he is now married and has a 7-year-old."
In opening arguments in a Los Angeles courtroom, Bren's lawyer, John Quinn, told the jury that the 78-year-old Bren didn't make or break any promises regarding the children. He just had no relationship with them. "This is not a case about whether Mr. Bren was a good father, a bad father or an indifferent father," said Quinn. "He wasn't around so he wasn't a father for most of the time…He's never going to be to those children father of the year."
Gold and her children for years had an out-of-court agreement with Bren that he would provide financial support to the children and maintain a parental relationship. On average, he was providing each child with about $10,000 a month during those years, according to the Los Angeles Times.
Quinn showed jurors a series of four legal agreements involving child support entered into by Gold each time she became pregnant and after the children were born. The contracts, beginning in 1988, rose from $3,500 a month to $18,000 a month between 1992 and 2002.
Chodos said that along with written agreements, Bren verbally promised to take care of them for life and acknowledge them as his. Chodos said that Gold would have received much more money for the children had she not abided by Bren's wishes to protect his privacy and instead gone to court for more support years earlier. According to Quinn, Bren paid his son and daughter a combined $3 million during that 14-year period. Quinn maintained that Bren met his financial obligations to both.
In court records, Gold described Bren's lifestyle: a fleet of five jets with two full-time pilots, a 240-foot yacht with a crew, lavish homes in Bel-Air and Orange County, Calif., a ranch in Idaho and large staff of servants. "It costs a lot of money to keep all of these things going," Gold recalled Bren saying in a conversation about his spending.
Chodos says the children deserve more, given the $3 million to $5 million per month Gold says Bren told her he spent on personal expenses. Chodos contends that the law requires that an obligated parent pay support "according to the parent's circumstances and station in life."
Bren's attorney disputed the per month spending figure of the mogul, saying the figure was likely closer to $125,000 and the planes were part of a private jet leasing company he owns.
"Donald Bren is able to live and does live like a maharajah," Chodos said in court.
Question of Promises Raised in Child Support Battle
Quinn made no apologies for his client's wealth and described him as being obsessed with privacy, working seven days a week and barely taking vacations. "He doesn't have a chauffeur. He has only one car. He's a man who shines his own shoes, pumps his own gas," Quinn said.
The billionaire's attitude toward the children was always clear to their mother, Quinn said. "Those promises were never made. There's not a scrap of paper. There are no witnesses. She never told anyone about these promises," Quinn said.
Quinn acknowledged Bren, who has other children from other relationships, was not a typical father figure for Christine and David.
What set off the legal fireworks? According to published reports, when Bren brushed off the children when they by chance ran into him at a upscale restaurant nearly a decade ago, Gold decided to sue.
The jury's decision on how much the children deserve will hinge heavily on how Gold describes Bren's wealth during their time together, 1984-1996.
Chodos conceded they lived a nice life. "But this is about what they were entitled to," he told the courtroom.
Attorneys for both sides could not be reached and daughter Christie declined to comment.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.