Entertainment

Britney Spears objects to paying her mother’s £460,000 legal fees

Lawyers argued there was no legal authority ‘at all’ for the singer to pay the fees.
Lawyers argued there was no legal authority ‘at all’ for the singer to pay the fees. Lawyers argued there was no legal authority ‘at all’ for the singer to pay the fees.

Britney Spears has asked US judges to deny a request that she pay more that 600,000 US dollars (£460,000) to foot her mother’s legal fees, accrued during the battle to end the singer’s conservatorship.

Lawyers argued the pop megastar had “continuously and generously” supported her mother financially for years and there was no legal authority “at all” for her to pay the fees.

The controversial legal arrangement, which controlled the pop star’s life and finances for almost 14 years, was ended in November 2021 following a lengthy legal process.

Shortly before its termination Lynne Spears applied for payments totalling 663,202.84 US dollars (£507,101) from her daughter’s estate for costs incurred during the process.

But in court documents obtained by the PA news agency lawyers for Spears said her mother had not been an official party involved in the conservatorship.


“Lynne Spears and her counsel seek payment of legal fees and costs — from Britney Spears — of more than 660,000 US dollars,” stated the documents, filed by her lawyer Matthew Rosengart on Tuesday in Los Angeles.

“Britney Spears opposes the Petition in its entirety.”

The filing continued: “Britney Spears has for decades been her family’s sole breadwinner, supporting her entire family.

“It warrants noting that Lynne Spears has for at least a decade resided in a large, expensive house owned by Britney Spears in Kentwood, Louisiana, for which her daughter has also continuously – and generously – paid Lynne Spears’s utilities, telephone services, insurance, property taxes, landscaping, pool work, pest control, repairs, and maintenance, totalling approximately 1.7 million US dollars (£1.3m).

Britney Spears
Britney Spears In court documents obtained by the PA news agency lawyers for Spears said her mother had not been an official party involved in the conservatorship (PA)

“The Petition cites no authority at all to support the conclusion that a conservatorship estate (or, in this case, a former conservatee’s estate) can be held financially responsible for the attorney’s fees of a third party like Petitioner here.”

Lynne Spears’ November filing said she was requesting the fees for helping her daughter out of her “crisis” and “achieve independence from her conservator father James Spears” – also known as Jamie Spears.

Lawyers for Jamie Spears have also called for his daughter’s estate to continue paying his legal fees, saying he had “stepped up” and kept “opportunistic and wholly self-interested parties at bay”.

The judge is yet to make a decision regarding Lynne Spears’ legal fees and further hearings in the case are scheduled for July,