Grant Hughes is offering his own requests.
More than a month after Sophia Bush filed for divorce from the entrepreneur, he submitted a response to the One Tree Hill star's petition. In addition to citing "irreconcilable differences" as the reason for their breakup, Hughes, 42, asked the court to not grant spousal support to both him and Bush, 41, according to court documents obtained by E! News.
Furthermore, Hughes—who listed his and the Chicago PD alum's date of separation as June 27—asked that attorney's fees and other costs be individually paid for by him and Bush, per court documents.
On top of that, Hughes requested that the court confirm his assets as separate property.
E! News has reached out to Hughes and Bush's reps for comment and has not yet heard back.
Last month, Bush filed for divorce, just a year ago they had tied the knot in Hughes' home state of Oklahoma. The wedding location, Bush later explained, was picked for a specific purpose.
"Imagine what we could do if we turned our wedding into an event to showcase Tulsa," Sophia told Vogue in July 2022. "The cultural renaissance happening there. Tech. Philanthropy. Civil rights justice. The art. The leadership. We could focus all of this attention and turn the spotlight on them."
Though Bush was adamant about keeping her private life away from the spotlight, Hughes did celebrate their first wedding anniversary with an Instagram tribute.
"Happy 1st Anniversary, my love!" he wrote on Instagram in a since-deleted post. "What a full, beautiful, dynamic, exciting, growth-filled year we've had together. I truly love doing life with you!"
For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News App2025-01-11 20:101805 view
2025-01-11 19:571331 view
2025-01-11 19:252584 view
2025-01-11 18:561167 view
2025-01-11 18:33892 view
2025-01-11 18:121484 view
With Republicans on track to win control over both chambers of Congress and Donald Trump returning t
The snappy "eat the rich" comedy Dumb Money is about a sly bunch of Reddit users who made some Wall
In the 22 years that have passed since Sept. 11, 2001, just as many New York Fire Department employ