The situation of Silvia Tortosa’s will has become a matter of vital importance in the media. The death of the actress aroused much expectation after learning of the alleged infidelity of her husband, Carlos Cánovas. After the writing was published, her partner was excluded from any economic reception, raising sensitivities that were revealed in an interview with Tony Aliaga.

“He is the person whose hand Silvia was holding when she died. His level of intimacy was maximum. They had been together for 22 years. They met in Barcelona and not only has he been her representative, he has been her best friend. He has spoken because he believes that many inaccuracies have been said, such as when Parada said that Silvia had several representatives. “He invites us to ask for a contract that she has signed with someone other than him,” she said.

However, the director of Readings Luis Pliego was in charge of revealing a surprising detail about this decision: an infidelity clause. “There is a clause in the will, which Tony reveals. The first thing that comes out is that Carlos is disinherited for being unfaithful. He revokes his previous will and disinherits this person, who also does not want him to have any memory of her, for infidelity. There is an article that contemplates this possibility,” he explained yesterday Monday in TardeAR.

The person in charge of the magazine returned to the program this Tuesday to go into detail: “We are going to read the clause. She states that she is de facto separated from her aforementioned spouse – Luis Carlos Molina Cánovas – so she does not have any legitimate rights. In the event that any right may apply to him, he is disinherited for serious breach of marital duties in accordance with the provisions of article 855.1 of the Civil Code.”

“In the clause she also talks about her marital status. She says that she is in her third marriage with this man, in the United States, pending being registered in the Spanish registry without descendants. So, they would not be married here,” Pliego added, thus justifying the absence of Carlos Cánovas in his wife’s will. A fact that contrasts with his statements when his death was discovered weeks ago.

“It has all been very unexpected. Nobody expected it. We have had some terribly hard years in every sense. And after she, who was a fighter, overcame breast cancer, this complication came to her that has been devastating. It was, like what happened to her father, that the disease took him in a month with something very similar,” she stated in statements to the newspaper ABC.