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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> Webber v Webber [2006] EWHC 2893 (Fam) (16 November 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2006/2893.html Cite as: [2007] WLR 1053, [2007] Fam Law 209, [2007] 1 WLR 1053, [2007] 2 FLR 116, [2007] 1 WLR 1052, [2006] EWHC 2893 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE PRESIDENT OF THE FAMILY DIVISION
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Webber |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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Webber and Crown Prosecution Service |
Respondent Intervenor |
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Miss Charlotte Lees (instructed by Messrs Wills Chandler Solicitors) for the Respondent
Mr Peter Doyle QC and Mr Ben Fitzgerald (instructed by Crown Prosecution Service) for the Intervenor
Hearing dates: 19 July 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Mark Potter, P:
Introduction
"The confiscation [hearing] and the ancillary relief application shall be heard together at the Central Criminal Court on a date to be fixed by that court.
His Honour Judge Kramer QC [the judge with the conduct of the case at the Central Criminal Court] shall be asked whether he has experience with dealing with ancillary matters and, if the answer is No, then either a Judge of the Central Criminal Court with the experience with ancillary relief matters or a judge of the Family Division who is also a nominated judge of the Administrative Court and/or a judge with experience of the Crown Court shall determine both matters.
This order shall be served upon the Crown Prosecution Service and the Central Criminal Courts."
Background and history
The Powers of the High Court prior to POCA
"The broad scheme involves the making of confiscation orders at the time of sentencing and of prior protective orders. The latter are designed to render the accused rending a confiscation order inappropriate or nugatory by disposing of his assets between the time when an information is about to be laid against him and the making of a confiscation order in the event of conviction."
per Lord Donaldson of Lymington in Re Peters [1988] QB 871 at 874D as quoted in para 14 of Customs & Excise v A.
"12…
The court is not obliged to exercise its powers under section 23 or 24: section 25(1) gives it a discretion to do so;
(2) The fact that one or both of the parties to the marriage had been engaged in or convicted of trafficking in drugs is plainly a material circumstance of the case within section 25(1); and drug trafficking is almost certainly conduct which it would be inequitable to ignore.
(3) The court would plainly be bound to have regard to any drug trafficking confiscation order and the financial obligation which one or both of the parties had under any such order;
(4) The court equally and plainly must have regard to the extent to which the assets of the parties were the products of drug trafficking; and the extent to which their standard of living and respective financial contributions to the marriage derived from drug trafficking.
13.In short, in deciding whether to exercise its powers to make a property adjustment order under section 24 MCA 1973, the court would be bound fully to take into account any order made under DTA 1994 and to decide whether or not, in all the circumstances of the case it was appropriate to exercise the discretion under section 25 MCA to make a property adjustment order under section 24 MCA, or whether it was appropriate to decline to make such an order and to allow the DTA Order to be enforced. It is not difficult to envisage cases in which the latter would be the correct cause – an obvious example being where the matrimonial assets were the fruits of drug dealing in which both parties were engaged or complicit. That, however, is a wholly different question from whether the terms of the DTA 1994 prevent the court exercising its MCA 1973 jurisdiction at all."
"(2) Subject to the following provisions of this section, the powers should be exercised with a view to making available for satisfying a confiscation order or, as the case may be, any confiscation order that may be made in the defendant's case, the value for the time being in realisable property held by any person, by means of the realisation of such property…
(4) The powers shall be exercised with the view to allowing any person other than the defendant … to retain or recover the value of any property held by him.
(5) In exercising the powers, no account should be taken of any obligations of the defendant… which conflict with the obligation to satisfy the confiscation order"
"43…there is nothing in the provisions of either MCA 1973 or DTA 1994 which requires the court to hold that either Statute takes priority over the other when the provisions of each are invoked in relation to the same property. Both statutes confer discretion on the courts, which the court may or may not choose to exercise, to make orders. The terms of those orders will depend on the facts of the individual case…
44. Equally, it does not seem to me to be axiomatic that it is more in the public interest to enforce an order under section 31 DTA 1994 than to make a property adjustment order under section 24 MCA 1973. If the former has the effect of forcing a spouse to sell her home and become dependent on the state for housing and housing support in order to meet a confiscation order in relation to property which was not acquired by the profits of crimes; if the wife has made a substantial financial or other contribution to the acquisition of that property; if the crime involved is one of which she was ignorant and by which she is untainted, it seems to me that the public policy argument may well go the other way. Each case must depend on its own facts.
45. Accordingly, the fact that section 31(2)–(6) DTA 1994 require the court's powers for the realisation of property to be exercised in a particular way in enforcement proceedings under that Act does not, in my judgment, mean that by necessary implication that those sub-sections either exclude or take priority over powers of the court under MCA 1973 section 24. Unlike bankruptcy proceedings, the property which is subject to the confiscation order does not vest in the Receiver appointed under section 26 or 29 DTA 1994. It remains the property of the defendant drug trafficker, and is thus capable of being transferred to the defendant's former spouse under MCA section 24."
"Looking at the matter generally, the outcome should not depend on whether an order made under the 1973 Act had been concluded in the wife's favour before the confiscation was made against her husband. Carried to its logical conclusion that would offer a material advantage to a spouse who rushed into divorce and ancillary relief proceedings as soon as she discovered the slightest grounds for suspicion that her husband was involved in drug dealing and a corresponding disadvantage if she delayed…. A further consequence would be an unseemly competition between the prosecution and the Crown Court, where the wife would not be heard, and the solicitors acting for the wife in ancillary proceedings, from which the prosecution would be absent. First come, first served, would be unlikely to produce a just result. These are persuasive arguments for the view that, notwithstanding any perceived "priority", the decision of the courts should not be confined to enforcement of a confiscation order first and exclusively, but even where a confiscation order has been made, provided the circumstances justify (for example, as here, where a wholly innocent spouse and property untarnished by drug dealing or its profits are involved), the enforcement process should at least acknowledge the existence of the 1973 Act and the power of the court to exercise its discretion by taking account of the interests of the innocent spouse as well as the criminal defendant."
"the court certainly is required … to take into account what in Re Peters called the "legislative steer" to the effect that the value of realisable property should be maintained with a view to making it available to satisfy any confiscation order that may be made. But it is not, in my view … a conclusive consideration in all case." (para 23)
The regime under POCA
"(5) If a court in which proceedings are pending in respect of any property is satisfied that a restraint order has been applied for or made in respect of the property, the court may either stay the proceedings or allow them to continue on any terms it thinks fit."
Sub-section (6) provides that, before exercising any power conferred by sub-section (5), the court must give an opportunity to be heard to the applicant for the restraint order (i.e. in this case the CPS).
"(2) The powers –
(a) must be exercised with the view to the value of the time being of realisable property being made available (by the property's realisation) for satisfying any confiscation order that has been made or may be made against the defendant;
(b) must be exercised, in a case where a confiscation order has not yet been made with a view to securing that there is no diminution in the value of the realisable property….
(3) Sub-section (2) has effect subject to the following rule –
(a) the powers must be exercised with a view to allowing a person other than the defendant or recipient of the tainted gift to retain or recover the value of any interest held by him…"
"11. ….The court is merely concerned with the arithmetic exercise of computing what is, in effect, a statutory debt. That process does not involve any assessment, in our judgment, of the way in which that debt may ultimately be paid, any more than the assessment of any other debt. No questions therefore arise under Article 8 at this stage in the process.
12. Different considerations, will, however arise if the debt is not met and the prosecution determine to take enforcement action, for example by obtaining an order for a Receiver. As the House of Lords explained in Re Norris[2001] 1WLR 1388, this is the stage of the procedure in which third party's rights can not only be taken into account but resolved…. It would be at that stage that the court would have to consider whether or not it would be proportionate to make an order selling the home in the circumstances of the particular case… The court would undoubtedly be concerned to ensure that proper weight is given to the public policy objective behind the making of confiscation orders, which is to ensure that criminals do not profit from their crime. And the court will have a range of enforcement options available with which to take account of the rights of third parties such as other members of the Ahmed family."
The grounds of the application
Conclusion