Tiger Woods’ ex-partner sues legend for $30m 

Herman, 39, has filed a lawsuit against the golfing icon in an attempt to nullify a non-disclosure agreement she alleges Woods, 47, made her sign at the start of their relationship.

Tiger Woods’ ex-partner sues legend for $30m 

Golf superstar Tiger Woods ex-partner Erica Herman is allegedly suing the legend “for $30m” after claiming that he “tricked” and kicked her out of the Hobe Sound mansion where they lived.

We reported how the American has split from his girlfriend and is now embroiled in a bitter legal row.

Herman, 39, has filed a lawsuit against the golfing icon in an attempt to nullify a non-disclosure agreement she alleges Woods, 47, made her sign at the start of their relationship.

Herman claims the NDA should be voided when there is evidence of assault or harassment.

TMZ reported a private trust run by the golfer is trying to "aggressively enforce" the NDA following the end of their relationship.

Now the Daily Mail claims that Herman “filed a separate case against his trust in October” which alleges that “he kicked her out of their shared home”.

And they state that she is seeking $30m for the emotional damages. 

In court papers obtained by the publication, she alleges that agents working for Woods had persuaded her to leave their $48m home to go on a short holiday.

However, when she got to the airport, they then informed her that she was locked out of the property. 

Herman claims that Woods' representatives removed $40,000 of her money and made “scurrilous and defamatory allegations” about how she had got it in the first place.

She is demanding over $30m for the claimed “breaches of duty” that she says has left her suffering “severe” emotional damages.

Herman says that she should have been allowed to live in the home in Hobe Sound, Florida, for another five years.

But she alleges Woods used “trickery” after breaking up with her in October. 

Herman sued Tiger's trust, the Jupiter Island Irrevocable Homestead Trust.

The trust is the legal owner of the mansion in Hobe Sound where the pair lived together for six years. 

She says that she provided “valuable services” at Woods' requests as part of an “oral tenancy agreement” which she says gave her the right to live in the property for a “certain duration of time.”

The lawsuit has been filed as a trust litigation and states: “All expenses that related to (Herman's) residency were fully paid by the defendant or its privies.

“This agreement was fully performed for the six-year period prior to the events giving rise to this lawsuit.

“The duties that were performed by the plaintiff were extensive and of an extraordinary nature in light of the overall circumstances and environment in which she lived.”

Herman says that there were still five years left on the oral agreement for her to live at the property when Woods engaged in “prohibited practices”.

The pair have not been seen together in public since the US Open tennis in August 2022.

That includes Woods' most-recent PGA Tour appearance at the Genesis Invitational two weeks ago, where he finished T45 - but made headlines for handing Justin Thomas a tampon and then hit a ball into a spectator's jacket pocket.

Herman, though, was alongside Woods at the 2019 Masters, the sight of arguably the greatest of his 15 major golf victories, as well as his historic 80th PGA Tour win at East Lake, Georgia the previous year.

The pair were first pictured cosying up on the course at the Presidents Cup.

Erica - who managed his pop-up restaurant titled The Woods - was wearing a "player spouse" badge usually reserved for wives and girlfriends.

And they went officially public a month later in November 2017.

She was once harshly branded a "gold digger" who "chased Tiger like a puppy" but was later credited with saving the golf legend's life.

They remained together following Woods' horrific car crash that broke his leg and threatened to end his ability to walk, let alone return to the golf course.