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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Moore v Moore [2009] EWCA Civ 1427 (21 October 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/1427.html Cite as: [2010] Fam Law 335, [2010] 1 FLR 1413, [2010] Fam Law 443, [2009] EWCA Civ 1427 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE PRINCIPAL REGISTRY
OF THE FAMILY DIVISION
(MR JUSTICE BODEY)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WALL
and
MR JUSTICE COLERIDGE
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MOORE |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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MOORE |
Respondent |
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Mr G Crosthwaite (instructed by Messrs Crowther) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Lord Justice Thorpe:
"The issue, in view of the wife's concession that the English court is not now going to be asked to take jurisdiction, is as to whether or not the husband is still bound in law to pay her those arrears of maintenance pending suit or whether, on his very late application, the court should either discharge the order as from the date it was made (described during this hearing as 'ab initio') or else remit the arrears."
"So, although I cannot in conscience say that there is not an arguable point, I do urge the applicant to consider most carefully the wisdom of proceeding further in this court."
"The husband had the remedy of seeking a stay of the Maintenance Order pending his appeal but failed to exercise that remedy."
"There is manifestly a risk of unjustified and irrecoverable payments, but that has to be balanced against the risk of a denial of access to justice for the petitioner, if she has not the means to sustain herself and the litigation pending its determination."
"In any future case it is of great importance that the trial of the preliminary issue should be prioritized so that, if it is preceded by a maintenance pending suit order, the duration of that order is kept to a minimum to ensure that the payer is not put at risk of having to advance irrecoverable and unmerited monies."
"The conclusion which I draw is that, in proceedings where maintenance pending suit has actually been paid pending a decision as to jurisdiction on merits, the court has no power to order such payments to be refunded should the payee fail at trial, or, if that is to put it too high, then that court will not exercise any such power as it has unless there is some special circumstance. Plainly it would be unjust to order any such repayment if money paid as maintenance pending suit had already been spent by the wife in reliance on its being hers to spend, or if she were to have managed to make some savings by frugal living, or even if she were to have come into some unexpected money from elsewhere subsequent to the order. So is the position any different where the husband fails to pay in breach of an order for maintenance pending suit? On the wife's discontinuance or failure in the proceedings, is the order rendered unenforceable or else should it be discharged ab initio?. On the husband's argument there is an illogicality in his still having to pay when the wife, as is now known, has chosen not to proceed in this jurisdiction, this being Mr Umezuruike's point that public policy should dictate that she is not now entitled to enforce the order. There is, however, another public policy consideration which outweighs any such perceived 'injustice' to the husband; namely that to deny the wife's enforcement would be to reward a party who has been in wilful breach of a court order. If it were the case that by disobeying an order to pay maintenance pending suit and by holding out until issues as to jurisdiction or merit had been determined a respondent might never have to pay, then there would be no incentive to comply with such an order. Indeed, quite the contrary, and that would have to be the advice to be given to such a respondent - a situation would be most unsatisfactory.
Accordingly, I would hold that where maintenance pending suit has paid been prior to the payees failure at the trial, there is no question of a refund to the payer; and by parity of reasoning that where, as here, maintenance pending suit has been unpaid in breach of an order, there is no question of its becoming unenforceable, nor of the order being discharged ab initio so as to eliminate the arrears. If this is to overstate the position in either respect, then I would add the words 'absent some special circumstance', as to which there is none here."
"Similarly, as Thorpe LJ stressed in Moses-Taiga, it is vital in cases where an order for maintenance pending suit is made in the face of a challenge to the jurisdiction that the hearing of that challenge be expedited. Thorpe LJ expressly emphasised this point in April 2007, on the husband's own application for leave to appeal. Unfortunately for the husband, however, the delay was not kept to a minimum. He did not apply for a date for the stay hearing until October 2007 (nine months after the hearing before Wood J in December 2006) at which time he obtained this date in July 2008, and therein essentially lies the mischief."
Lord Justice Wall:
Mr Justice Coleridge:
"It should be noted that if the appellant's arguments in support of his appeal are right then this would mean that where a petition for divorce is being challenged, whether on grounds of jurisdiction or otherwise, there would be a powerful incentive for the payer under an order for maintenance pending suit to pay nothing at all, in the hope that the petition would be dismissed and that he would therefore have no obligation to pay any of the arrears. It is submitted that this simply cannot be right and, as recognised by Bodey J in paragraph 68 of his judgment, this would 'be to reward a party who has been in wilful breach of a court order'."
Order: Application Granted
Appeal Dismissed