In midst of a divorce that lawyers say will take up to a year to finalize, attorneys for Kim Kardashian's former love interest, Kris Humphries, are seeking to prove that the couple's 72-day marriage was nothing but a fraud and a publicity stunt done by Kardashian, reported on Aug. 16 by the Associated Press.

The party is seeking records of Kardashian's reality show and details of depositions that the reality star had with her mother and current beau Kanye West, likely turning the "legal bickering" into a full-length case that might draw on for another year, according to the AP.

Attorneys and the judge at the couple's divorce hearing on Wednesday said that whether it is a divorce or annulment, nothing will be happening any time soon.

On top of that, Humphries' lawyer said that the reality star and her team are not helping move the process along any faster.

"I don't want to use the word uncooperative, but they are not making the process easier," Marshall Waller told the judge, while also saying that he would need at least four months to prepare for the trial, according to E!

In an ABC News report, Kardashian's attorney was said to have fired back to the comment, stating that they have already spent at least $250,000 on the case to help move it along. Numerous sources have come out saying that if anything, Kardashian is very eager to get the divorce finalized so she can move along in her serious relationship with hip-hop singer West, who is reportedly hoping to propose to his girlfriend soon.

"To say I am frustrated is an understatement," Laura Wasser, Kardashian's lawyer, told the judge, according to E! "I'm at a loss to figure out what the holdup is. They had a prenup and were married 72 days. To what end does he want this annulment?"

The couple married on Aug. 20, 2011, in a lavish wedding that was aired on E! Kardashian then filed for divorce on Oct. 31 claiming irreconcilable difference between the two. The couple did sign a prenuptial agreement.

The NBC player later claimed that Kardashian married him "solely for TV ratings and publicity," ABC reported.