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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 >> N v N [2006] EWHC 3269 (Fam) (19 December 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2006/3269.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 3269 (Fam), [2007] 1 FCR 749, [2007] Fam Law 294 |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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N |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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N |
Respondent |
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Deborah Bangay QC (instructed by Addleshaw Goddard) for the Respondent (the named Applicant)
Hearing date: 9 November 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Charles J :
Introduction
The approach on appeal
i) a failure to give adequate reasons,
ii) error in law by failing to apply the right legal approach or test,
iii) error of law in the exercise of the right test or approach (and thus here in the exercise of the balancing exercise introduced by s. 31(7) and (7B) MCA 1973) by taking into account matters which were irrelevant, or ignoring matters that were relevant, and
iv) that the conclusion reached in the exercise of the relevant judicial discretion having applied the right test (and thus having had regard to the right factors) is plainly wrong.
Failure to give reasons
The 1981 Order
Further provision by the husband
i) the conversations that took place led the wife to believe that if she had the provision relating to nominal periodical payments removed she would receive satisfactory consideration for doing so,
ii) what the wife said in a later conversation led the husband to the conclusion that the provision for nominal periodic payments had been removed from the order,
iii) there was no real consensus, and
iv) notwithstanding the finding in (ii) the totality of his findings brought him back full circle to the fact that the provision for nominal periodic payments remained.
The wife's position after and as a result of the1981 Order and the subsequent payments.
The wife's move to Australia
The husband's increase in wealth
Sad features of this case
i) the dispute as to the husband's wealth and the associated costs thereof, and
ii) the introduction into the issues by the wife of allegations that the husband had used pressure, threats and other inducements.
The husband's main arguments
Alleged Errors of Law
"By what possible criteria, legally or morally, can it be fair to activate such an order where a spouse's requirements are wholly of her own making in that she made investment and life style choices over which the husband had no control which have resulted in a financial need"
Error of law by a failure to take factors into account or by taking incorrect factors into account
Plainly wrong
i) the circumstances at and around the time of the separation and the difficult position the husband was in both financially and in respect of the day to day care of the children,
ii) the findings as to the financial position of the wife as a result of the 1981 Order and the later payments and transfers by the husband,
iii) the point that the husband is worse off by taking the generous approach he did by making those transfers and not returning to court to obtain a clean break, which it is likely he would have obtained at the time he made them without payment or transfer of more,
iv) the DJ's finding that the wife led the husband to think that the provision for nominal periodic payments had been removed from the 1981 Order,
v) the false allegations made by the wife, and
vi) the present approach of the courts and the public policy relating to it of seeking a clean break and the point that this was not possible in 1981 without the wife's consent which resulted in the safety net in the 1981 Order.
i) the existence of the nominal order and thus the possibility that the wife could seek an upward variation and the point that certainly at the outset both parties knew this, and thus the existence of the safety net,
ii) the findings of the DJ recorded in paragraph 20 above, and the points made in paragraph 21 above which support the conclusions of the DJ that notwithstanding the finding recorded in 20(ii) the correct approach was to proceed on the basis (a) that the order for nominal periodic payments (and thus the possibility for its variation) remained, and (b) that despite the argument on behalf of the husband that there was not a clean break at any stage,
iii) the problems in this area of law concerning agreements or estoppels because of the statutory requirement that court makes the order (see for example Edgar v Edgar [1980] 1 WLR 1410 and Rose v Rose [2002] 1 FLR 978),
iv) the matters listed in s. 25 (2)(a) and (b) MCA which are part of all the circumstances of the case and the changes in them since 1981 and thus the changes in the financial positions of the husband and wife and the differential between them that has arisen over the years. That differential is now very considerable albeit that (a) it is the product of the choices they have made and their activities and the assistance they have received during the period that they have led separate lives, and (b) there is no contribution by the wife to the husband's increase in wealth or by him in her losses and lifestyle decisions. In this context I note that the passage from the skeleton argument of the husband, quoted in paragraph 33 above, correctly in my view refers to there being a financial need, and
v) part of the wife's present problems, and thus that financial need, arise from the losses on her investments and in my view it would not be reasonable to discount this on the basis that she should have sought to mitigate or recover the loss by litigation, and in my view such losses are within the range of factors that the parties, and the court in 1981, would have said could trigger an application to vary the nominal periodic payments order.
i) the conclusion that the DJ reached which was based on a reasonably modest budget and resulted in a capital award that related to a small percentage of the husband's assets, and
ii) the conclusion urged by the husband before the DJ and me,
are both within the range of decisions open to a court taking the correct approach to the judgmental exercise given to it by the MCA.
Conclusion