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Kevin Costner says his estranged wife will not move out of his house amid divorce

His soon-to-be-ex wife Christine Baumgartner filed for divorce after 18 years of marriage earlier this year.
/ Source: TODAY

A new court filing from actor Kevin Costner says his estranged wife, Christine Baumgartner, is refusing to move out of his home in the Santa Barbara, California, area amid their divorce.

According to court documents obtained by NBC News, Costner says that their prenuptial agreement gave Baumgartner 30 days to vacate the home, which he says was a pre-marital asset he purchased in 1988, 16 years before they tied the knot.

Baumgartner filed for divorce on May 1, 2023, after 18 years of marriage citing irreconcilable differences. The two share three children: Cayden, 16; Hayes, 14; and Grace, 13.

In documents filed on June 9 in Santa Barbara Superior Court, Costner and his legal team maintain that Baumgartner signed a prenuptial agreement agreeing to terms that included Costner keeping the Carpinteria, California, home in question.

“Christine has not moved out, despite multiple requests that she do so and despite Kevin’s offers to assist her financially in relocating to a new residence,” Costner’s legal team wrote in the documents.

“Instead, Christine has taken the position that she will not move out of Kevin’s separate property residence unless and until Kevin agrees to various financial demands.”

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Kevin Costner and Christine Baumgartner at the 2022 Vanity Fair Oscar Party on March 27, 2022 in Beverly Hills, California. Rich Fury/VF22 / Getty Images for Vanity Fair

Costner said in a declaration included in the filing that when he and Baumgartner began to discuss getting married in 2003, he told her it was important to him to “have a home to go to.”

“I was married once before and, upon separation, l found myself without a home base and unable to live in my own home,” the documents read. “I never wanted this to happen again. Because of the nature of my work, I am frequently out of town; it is therefore particularly important to me that when I am home, I have a home to go to.

He continued: “Thus, when Christine (Baumgartner) and I began discussing marriage in 2003, l made it clear to her that I would not marry again without clarity that my separate property residences would remain mine to live in no matter what happened in our marriage. Christine acknowledged to me at the time that she understood the importance of this to me and she agreed to this provision.”

The filing also states that the prenuptial agreement stipulated he pay Baumgartner $100,000 upon their marriage and another $100,000 on their first anniversary, which he did. He was also required to pay Baumgartner $1,000,000 after she filed for divorce, the documents say.

He’s also required, per the prenup, to give Baumgartner a $200,000 deposit to help her purchase a new home and pay property taxes and homeowners insurance for a year on such a new home. Costner also says he’s also offered to pay thousands of dollars for moving costs, to use his “existing staff” to help her move and to add an additional $38,000 a month to Baumgartner — that’s on top of his prenuptial agreement for child support of $30,000 a month.

Costner’s court filing says Baumgartner told him she plans to “at least” challenge the spousal support waiver in the prenup. Baumgartner’s team did not respond to NBC News’ request for comment, nor did Costner.