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England and Wales Family Court Decisions (other Judges) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (other Judges) >> RN v TT [2024] EWFC 264 (B) (14 June 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/OJ/2024/264.html Cite as: [2024] EWFC 264 (B) |
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IMPORTANT NOTICE
This judgment was delivered in private. The judge has given leave for this version of the judgment (but no other) to be published.
All persons, including representatives of the media, must ensure that this condition is strictly complied with. Failure to do so will be a contempt of court.
Neutral citation: [2024] EWFC 264 (B)
IN THE CENTRAL FAMILY COURT
14th June 2024
Before:
His Honour Judge Edward Hess
B E T W E E N:
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
RN
Applicant
- and –
TT
Respondent
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Mr Uade Alukpe (Solicitor of Curling Moore, Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Applicant.
Mr Matthew Richardson (Counsel instructed by Ian Whitbread of Wilson LLP, Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
Written Judgment of His Honour Judge Edward Hess dated 14th June 2024
INTRODUCTION
His Honour Judge Edward Hess:
(i) A collection of applications and court orders.
(ii) Material from the wife including her Form E dated 14th December 2020, her answers to questionnaire which were undated and her statements dated 7th November 2022, 8th April 2024 and 23rd May 2024.
(iii) Material from the husband including his Form E dated and his statements dated 2nd November 2022 (in the form of an email) and 23rd May 2024.
(iv) Material from CS Estate Agents on property valuation issues.
(v) Completed ES1 and ES2 documents and an agreed chronology.
(vi) Selected correspondence and disclosure material.
THE MARRIAGE AND THE DIVORCE
THE FINANCIAL REMEDIES PROCEEDINGS
THE BASIC LAW
(1) It shall be the duty of the court in deciding whether to exercise its powers under section 23, 24, 24A or 24B above and, if so, in what manner, to have regard to all the circumstances of the case, first consideration being given to the welfare while a minor of any child of the family who has not attained the age of eighteen.
(2) As regards the exercise of the powers of the court under section 23(1)(a), (b) or (c), 24, 24A or 24Babove in relation to a party to the marriage, the court shall in particular have regard to the following matters :-
(a) the income, earning capacity, property and other financial resources which each of the parties to the marriage has or is likely to have in the foreseeable future, including in the case of earning capacity any increase in that capacity which it would in the opinion of the court be reasonable to expect a party to the marriage to take steps to acquire;
(b) the financial needs, obligations and responsibilities which each of the parties to the marriage has or is likely to have in the foreseeable future;
(c) the standard of living enjoyed by the family before the breakdown of the marriage;
(d) the age of each party to the marriage and the duration of the marriage;
(e) any physical or mental disability of either of the parties to the marriage;
(f) the contributions which each of the parties has made or is likely in the foreseeable future to make to the welfare of the family, including any contribution by looking after the home or caring for the family;
(g) the conduct of each of the parties, if that conduct is such that it would in the opinion of the court be inequitable to disregard it;
(h) in the case of proceedings for divorce or nullity of marriage, the value to each of the parties to the marriage of any benefit which, by reason of the dissolution or annulment of the marriage, that party will lose the chance of acquiring.
(1) Where on or after the grant of a decree of divorce or nullity of marriage the court decides to exercise its powers under section 23(1)(a), (b) or (c), 24 or 24A or 24B above in favour of a party to the marriage, it shall be the duty of the court to consider whether it would be appropriate so to exercise those powers that the financial obligations of each party towards the other will be terminated as soon after the grant of the decree as the court considers just and reasonable.
(2) Where the court decides in such a case to make a periodical payments or secured periodical payments order in favour of a party to the marriage, the court shall in particular consider whether it would be appropriate to require those payments to be made or secured only for such term as would in the opinion of the court be sufficient to enable the party in whose favour the order is made to adjust without undue hardship to the termination of his or her financial dependence on the other party.
"The wife's application faces formidable difficulties.
(a) The marital cohabitation subsisted for scarcely more than two years.
(b) It broke down 31 years ago.
(c) The standard of living enjoyed by the parties prior to the breakdown could not have been lower.
(d) The husband did not begin to create his current wealth until 13 years after the breakdown.
(e) The wife has made no contribution, direct or indirect, to its creation.
Furthermore, (f), the wife's delay in bringing the application appears to be inordinate. She can explain the first 13 years of it: there was no point in pressing financial applications against the husband while he had no money. But what about the delay for the 14 years from say 1997 until 2011, when her application was issued? She says that, for the first several of those years, she did not realise that the husband was becoming wealthy and that, for example, his continued failure to maintain Dane led her to assume that there was no significant change in his financial circumstances. But that point takes the wife to no further than 2001 when, on becoming an adult, Dane went to live with the husband. She points to the legacy of discouragement from seeking financial provision from the husband which arose from the justices' nominal order in 1992, from the agency's nil assessment in 1997 and from unproductive consultations with local solicitors in 1994 and 1996. But there is no explanation for much of the more recent delay. Consistently with the potentially life-long obligations which attend a marriage, there is no time-limit for seeking orders for financial provision or property adjustment for the benefit of a spouse following divorce. Sections 23(1) and 24(1) of the 1973 Act provide that such orders may be made on granting a decree of divorce "or at any time thereafter". Yet there is a prominent strain of public policy hostile to forensic delay. The court will look critically at explanations for it; and, even irrespective of its effect upon the respondent, will be likely, by reason of it and subject to the potency of other factors, to reduce or even to eliminate its provision for the applicant. Nevertheless it remains important to address its effect upon the respondent. In some cases, albeit not in the present, a respondent can show that he has assumed financial obligations or otherwise arranged his financial affairs in the belief that the applicant would make no claim against him and that he has done so in a way which, even if it were possible, it would not be reasonable for him to put into reverse. Sometimes, instead, he can point to factual issues of which the dimming of memories or the disappearance of witnesses over the period of the delay no longer permits accurate determination. But, were this wife's application to proceed to substantive determination, the need for resolution of factual issues would be slight. All that is said on behalf of the husband in the present case is that the delay has deprived him of the chance of establishing that, around 1992, the wife's financial applications were dismissed; but, as already indicated, a dismissal is so unlikely that it should be entirely discounted. Confronted by the difficulties identified at (a) to (f) in paras 30 and 31 above, what might the wife assert so as to carry her application forward to possible success? It is, standing alone, insufficient that the husband is now so wealthy that (as has readily been agreed) he can meet whatever award, if any, might reasonably be made in her favour and there is no need for any exploration of his financial circumstances. But the wife asserts needs, both for a better home for herself and her family and, in the light of the severe limitations on her earning capacity, for a fund out of which to maintain herself for the rest of her life. These, with questionable forensic wisdom, she quantifies at £0.55m for the home and £1.35m for the fund, and thus at a total of £1.9m. Even at this stage one can say that, in the light of the negatives, an award approaching that size is out of the question. It is a dangerous fallacy, albeit currently propounded by those who favour reform along the lines of the Divorce (Financial Provision) Bill currently before the House of Lords, that the current law always requires rich men to meet the reasonable needs of their ex-wives. As Thorpe LJ said in North v North [2007] EWCA Civ 760, [2008] 1 FLR 158, at para 32, "... it does not follow that the respondent is inevitably responsible financially for any established needs... [h]e is not an insurer against all hazards..." In order to sustain a case of need, at any rate if made after many years of separation, a wife must show not only that the need exists but that it has been generated by her relationship with her husband: see Miller v Miller, McFarlane v McFarlane [2006] UKHL 24, [2006] 2 AC 618, para 138 (Lady Hale)...In Pearce v Pearce (1980) 1 FLR 261 the parties separated in 1969 and for nine years the wife cared single-handedly for the three children. Until 1977 the husband was an undischarged bankrupt and made no financial contribution to the running of the wife's household, which was sustained by state benefits. In 1978 the husband inherited from his father a house worth £19,000 and liquid capital of £15,000. The wife then applied for an order for a lump sum. The Court of Appeal upheld an award to her of a lump sum of £12,000. Ormrod LJ, with whom Orr LJ agreed, said, at p 264, that courts would not encourage applications long after the divorce but that the justice of the case might require an award notwithstanding a lapse of time. He continued: "One has here a husband who has never paid a penny piece for the maintenance of his former wife or his three children since, at the latest, 1969 and it means that the wife has lived in great difficulty on social security with all the responsibilities for bringing up these three girls unaided, all that length of time, so that on the merits, in my judgment, she has a strong case. Her claim on the merits certainly goes a long way to eliminating the contrary factor, the lapse of time."
Ormrod LJ added, at p 266: "The husband has never attempted to discharge his obligations in relation to these three children. The whole responsibility has been placed on the wife, whose life must have been made very difficult all these years. Is there any reason whatever why, now that the husband has come into a certain amount of money, she and the children should not have the opportunity of benefiting to some extent from it?" Finally Ormrod LJ held, at p 267, that, in the light of his lack of contribution to the wife's household, the fact that the husband's capital had come to him by inheritance long after the separation was no ground for exempting it from partial redistribution to the wife and that the award gave her "an opportunity of perhaps living in something a little bit better than the poverty which she has been living in all these years". For another example of a short marriage, a substantial contribution on the part of the wife in caring for the children, a 30-year delay in her bringing her application (following an overseas divorce) and a significant capital award, see M v L (Financial Relief After Overseas Divorce) [2003] EWHC 328 (Fam), [2003] 2 FLR 425. In my view this court should direct the swift referral of the wife's application to...a judge of the Family Division...It may however be helpful to suggest that the major issues requiring limited investigation by way of oral evidence seem at this stage to be the wife's delay on the one hand and the disparate contributions to the care of the children on the other. These are, to my mind, the two magnetic factors. They pull in opposite directions and the question may ultimately prove to be whether, in the light also of the five difficulties identified in para 30 above, the wife's delay is so potent a factor as not just to reduce but even to eliminate what might otherwise have been awarded to her by reference to contributions and possibly also to needs. Had it been relevant, as Jackson LJ considered, to ask whether the wife's application had a real prospect of success, my opinion would have been that it had a real prospect of comparatively modest success..."
SECTION 25 ANALYSIS
Welfare of a minor child
Capital Resources and the Duration of the Marriage
(i) It was purchased by the wife in her sole name in February 2002, before the parties had met.
(ii) It was purchased for £132,500 with a mortgage in the wife's sole name of £119,250.
(iii) It became the family home from the time the parties began cohabiting in November 2003 to the time of the separation in June/July 2011.
(iv) The husband did not contribute to the purchase price and has made no financial contributions to the mortgage.
(v) At the time the parties separated in June/July 2011 it was worth in the region of £157,500 (this figure not coming from a formal valuation, but having been produced by a sensible analysis of general house price changes over the relevant period) and the outstanding mortgage was £109,072. The net equity in the property at this time was therefore c. £43,703.
(vi) If this case were to be decided just by the husband's sharing entitlements, an argument would be to say that his claim should be limited to one half of the net equity available at the time of separation, i.e. one half of £43,703, i.e. £21,851. This was the case put by Mr Richardson on behalf of the wife.
(vii) The property is currently worth £250,000 (this figure comes from the SJE CS valuation and is not in dispute.
(viii) The mortgage was paid off by the wife by monthly payments between 2002 and 2024 and there is no longer any outstanding mortgage.
(ix) The current net equity in the property is therefore c.£242,500.
(x) The property is occupied by the wife's brother (who is a gratuitous licensee) as it has been since 2011. It appears that he has no enforceable rights to remain there.
(i) The wife has produced convincing evidence of the current value of her Aviva pension. This is a defined contribution personal pension which she has accrued by continuous monthly payments from 1999 to the present. She obtained online a statement of its current CE value by going on to an online Aviva portal and (as at 16th May 2024), the valuation figure is £109,347. I reject Mr Alukpe's suggestion that this is not a reliable figure (he never pursued in cross-examination his suggestion that the wife had attempted to manipulate the figure) and I propose to adopt the figure in my asset schedule.
(ii) The wife has two NHS Pensions - one (in the NHS Pension 1995 Scheme) which has accrued value through contributions between 1999 and 2008 and again between 2011 and 2015 (she took time out from the scheme between 2008 and 2011 while working as a locum) and another (in the NHS Pensions 2015 Scheme) which has accrued value through contributions between 2015 and the present day. The latest official CE figures for these pensions were produced in December 2020 at £338,354 and £149,865 respectively. As discussed above, it has proved impossible to extract later figures. Mr Alukpe has suggested that these figures might now be £650,000 and £225,000 respectively, but these were really no more guesses. It is difficult to see how the 1995 Scheme pension could have risen that much in a period where there were no contributions, but it may be that the figure will have gone up a little as a result of changed actuarial assumptions. I can imagine that the 2015 Scheme will have gone up through more than three years of further service and contributions and actuarial assumptions have also changed; but again it is difficult to know what the actual figure is now. Rather than make a guess myself at a precise up to date figure I propose to say that I would expect the figures to have risen to some extent from December 2020 to now; but probably rather less than the figures guessed at by Mr Alukpe, and considerably less in the case of the 1995 scheme.
(iii) I have been addressed in this context on the subject of 'marital acquest' by Mr Richardson. In my view the relevant period for calculating the 'duration of the marriage', from which a marital acquest calculation should follow, is the period from the date of the parties commencing cohabitation (November 2003) to the date of permanent separation (June/July 2011): see, for example, MB v EB [2019] EWHC 1649. This is a period of some 7½ years. Mr Alukpe's suggestion that the period should be extended to Decree Absolute is inconsistent with the authorities on this point and I do not accept it.
(iv) In relation to the Aviva pension I have no actuarial information on how much of this has accrued before, during or after the marriage; but a very broad straight-line analysis [4] suggests that of the £109,347, only 30% or £32,804 represents marital acquest.
(v) In relation to the NHS Pension Scheme 1995, I have no actuarial information on how much of this has accrued before, during or after the marriage; but (again) a very broad straight-line analysis [5] suggests that only about 38.5% of the value represents marital acquest. On the 2020 figure of £338,354, £130,266 might represent marital acquest.
(vi) In relation to the NHS Pension Scheme 2015, all of it accrued after the separation so none of it is marital acquest.
(vii) A strict mathematical answer to this case, permitting only the equal sharing of pensions accrued during the marriage, might produce for the husband a 15% pension sharing order on the Aviva Pension (worth £16,402) and a 19.25% pension sharing order on the NHS Pension Scheme 1995 (worth £65,133 at the 2020 CE valuation). The total of these two figures would be worth £81,535 or c. 74.6% of the Aviva Pension value (ignoring any increase in the NHS Pension 1995 Scheme). This compares with the wife's open offer of a 75% pension sharing order on the Aviva pension, albeit that this might not fully reflect the increase in the value of the NHS Pension Scheme 1995.
REALISABLE ASSETS/DEBTS
-address of flat redacted- |
242,500 |
Savings |
80,743 |
Investments |
139,496 |
Credit card debts |
-115 |
HMRC Tax Debt |
-26,878 |
Outstanding Legal Costs [6] |
-6,331 |
TOTAL |
429,415 |
Husband
Savings |
230 |
Investments |
0 |
Credit card debts |
0 |
Outstanding Legal Costs [7] |
-27,650 |
TOTAL |
-27,420 |
PENSIONS
Aviva Pension CE |
107,347 |
NHS Pension Scheme 1995 |
338,354 |
NHS Pension Scheme 2015 |
149,514 |
TOTAL |
595,215 |
Husband - no pensions
(i) one half of the net equity of -address of flat redacted- (the family home) available at the time of separation, i.e. one half of £43,703, i.e. £21,851; and
(ii) on the basis of the sharing of pensions accrued during the marriage, a 15% pension sharing order on the Aviva Pension and a 19.25% pension sharing order on the NHS Pension Scheme 1995.
Income
Contributions
Needs
(i) The wife's flat should be sold, and the net equity divided equally. This would produce £121,250 for the husband.
(ii) In addition, a lump sum representing half of all of the wife's savings and investments. This would produce £110,120 for the husband.
(iii) A further lump sum representing one half of the wife's annual gross income, i.e. 50% x £188,494, that is £94,247. Mr Alukpe did not really try to explain the relevance of the wife's gross income to such a lump sum.
(iv) This would require the wife to pay the husband £325,617 (or nearly 76% out of her total realisable assets of £429,415).
(v) In addition, the husband seeks 45% pension sharing orders in relation to all three of the wife's pensions.
OUTCOME
(i) The wife will pay a lump sum of £35,000 to the husband within 28 days. I propose to adopt the wife's figure, recognising that he will lose some of this to his costs liability.
(ii) There will be a pension sharing order of 100% of the Aviva pension. I have concluded that this should be higher than the offered 75% on the basis that some allowance should be made for the possibility that the NHS 1995 Pension may have risen in value.
(iii) There will otherwise be a clean break.
(iv) There shall be liberty to apply in relation to implementation.
NEXT STEPS
HHJ Edward Hess
Central Family Court
14th June 2024.
[1] Nobody appears to have taken the point that, as the FDR judge, he perhaps should not have been dealing with a subsequent directions hearing.
[2] She has incurred costs of £41,853 and paid £35,522 towards this figure.
[4] Assuming it has been contributed to for 25 years, 4 of which were prior to cohabitation (1999 to 2003), 7½
were during the marriage (2003 to 2011) and 13½ were post-separation accrual (2011 to the present day).
[5] 5 years (2003 to 2008) out of an accrual period of 1999 to 2008 and 2011 to 2015) 13 years
[6] She has incurred costs of £41,853 and paid £35,522 towards this figure, leaving £6,331 outstanding.
[7] He has incurred costs of £27,650 and paid not a penny towards this figure, leaving £27,650 outstanding.