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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 >> SW v RC [2008] EWHC 73 (Fam) (24 January 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2008/73.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 73 (Fam) |
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MR JUSTICE SINGER
This judgment is being handed down in private on 24 January 2008. It consists of 68 paragraphs and has been signed and dated by the judge. The judge hereby gives leave for it to be reported.
The judgment is being distributed on the strict understanding that in any report no person other than the advocates or the solicitors instructing them (and other persons identified by name in the judgment itself) may be identified by name or location and that in particular the anonymity of the child must be strictly preserved.
FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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SW |
(Appellant father) |
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- and - |
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RC |
(Respondent mother) |
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Mr Christopher Pocock (instructed by TWM Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 25, 26 and 27 June 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Singer:
The procedural history in outline
The substantive appeal against DJ Green's March 2005 decision
F though has been less than clear about his financial position and I am not surprised that M has been misled into thinking and suspecting that he is earning and/or has access to very substantial funds. This is not just because of his great reluctance to disclose necessary paperwork but also because of the way in which he has been shown to spend substantially in spite of pleading poverty. The way F presents to the outside world would lead anyone to believe that he is a man of substantial means. He and his family live between two homes each worth in excess of £1 million. He and his wife drive top-of-the-range/market cars. His two older children go to private schools. He is a member of a world-renowned golf club. He is a member of the gym. He takes several nice holidays a year. He eats in top-class restaurants. He food shops at Harrods and he buys clothes from Armani. Had he been up front and clear with his financial disclosure from the very beginning M would have been able to see a fuller and clearer picture much earlier. He does not present like a man pegged at income of £31,200 per annum as suggested in his affidavit. His golf club membership alone costs about £2,750 per annum. The gym membership costs about £1,100 per annum. In six months between July and December 2004 F has spent approximately £3,500 on clothes and £7,500 on flights and/or holidays.
F suggested that his own outgoings are £7,700 per month but then conceded in cross-examination that many of the figures included in the Schedule had to be halved to take account of his wife's income. F's disclosure of business accounts revealed that in 2004 he drew from the business approximately £278,000 and his wife drew approximately £262,000. Those sums are not income but drawings but they have enabled F to live a very good lifestyle indeed leading M to believe that he had substantial resources at his disposal enabling him therefore to pay much more than he has been paying.
On closer inspection one finds that what on the surface looks like a very comfortable lifestyle indeed is actually not quite so because of heavy borrowing.
For example, the £1.1 million house F and his family live in in Windsor is subject to a mortgage of some £825,000 so that the post-sale equity value of that property is only about £240,000 of which F owns half, therefore £120,000. That property is currently on the market for sale at £1.15 million. It is the only property equity that F has. The other substantial house in which F and his family reside during the week in London is actually not F's property. It was purchased in 1993 and belongs to a trust that F had set up in 1989 years before he even met M and in order to benefit only his older children. That trust has lent approximately £650,000 to F's business in connection with a property venture in Barbados to which I will return later. The loan has not yet been repaid by the business to the trust. To raise the money lent by the trust to the business the London property was mortgaged. It does remain the case that F, his wife and his older children live in the trust property rent-free during the week. They live in the Windsor property at the weekend. The older children go to school in London and so this arrangement suits F and his family very well. Accordingly, as I have said, his position on the surface looks very good but both properties are substantially mortgaged and the trust property does not belong to F in any event. If F and his family did not live in the London property it could be rented out and produce income for the trust.
F also has substantial credit card debts, over £80,000 of them, and he has a bank overdraft that more than wipes out any accounts in credit. He has few other assets, about £1,000 of shares and £4,000 of stocks.
He has already traded down substantially in respect to his accommodation. In November 2003 F sold the family home he and his wife and older children had been living in up till then for £4.50 million and the family moved to the current home in Windsor.
On the other hand whilst apparently so strapped for income and/or other resources F has assisted his sister by loaning her £10,400 over a period of 10 months in 2004 which he says she is now paying back in dribs and drabs. Also he has shown to the court and the outside world generally that he obviously has great confidence in his business and income potential for the future because during the period of these business losses he has continued to live a very nice lifestyle indeed such as I have already described.
When dealing with this aspect of the case I identify three principles. First, I am of the view that the appropriate starting point for a child maintenance award should almost invariably be the figure thrown up by the new child support rules. The Government's express policy in making awards of child maintenance susceptible to abrogation and replacement by a maintenance calculation by the CSA (see s 4(10)(aa) of the Child Support Act 1991) was that child maintenance orders should be negotiated:
'… in the shadow of the CSA. All parties will know that either parent can turn to the CSA in future, and that it will therefore be sensible to determine child maintenance broadly in line with CSA assessment rates.' (see para 25 of the White Paper, A New Contract for Welfare: Children's Rights and Parent's Responsibilities, Cmnd 4349 (1989))
If a child maintenance order, whether made by consent or after a contest, is markedly at variance with the calculation under the new regime then there will be a high temptation for one or other party after the order has been in force for a year, and after giving 2 months' notice, to approach the CSA for a calculation. Quite apart from the obvious acrimony that this would engender, a calculation in a different amount to the figure originally negotiated or awarded may cast doubt on the fairness of the original ancillary relief settlement between the parties, leading to further litigation. These spectres should be avoided at all costs.
The ineluctable logic of the district judge's order was that F would have to pay the child maintenance from capital. This was contrary to the express bargain which the parties had entered into at the earlier hearing on 19th March 2001. There was a Minton v Minton type of agreement whereby M agreed not to make any further claims of a capital nature.... In effect M was obtaining further capital despite her earlier agreement.
Whether permission to appeal the 2005 outcome out of time is required?
Except where the contrary intention appears, the provisions of this Part apply to proceedings in the High Court and county courts ... (d) under Schedule 1 [of the Children Act 1989], except where financial relief is also sought by or on behalf of an adult.
The determination of the preliminary issues was crucial to the final decision where K should live, in the same way that a determination on limitation matters might be crucial in another case. Issues determined as a preliminary part of the case which are crucial to the final determination can be treated as a determination for the purpose of allowing the Court of Appeal to hear the appeal without waiting for the second part of the split trial. To refuse to intervene at this stage, to allow the case to continue for another 3 days and for there then to be an appeal would be contrary to common sense and to the new civil procedure approach.
Should permission to appeal out of time be granted?
The costs appeal
Even if the case at that stage [4th October 2004] had been dealt with by the dismissal of each party's application to vary the financial order, there would, as it seems to me, be a strong case for M to have her costs, or at least much of her costs up until that date because it had taken her that long and that effort to obtain the necessary information to decide whether or not pursuing a variation was justified.... At that point F has conducted litigation both by pursuing his own application and resisting M's application in a way which has necessitated costs on M's side.
As it seems to me, I cannot ignore the fact that M's application was ultimately not successful. Nor can I ignore the fact that F 's application was pursued in reality, in other words in open litigation, and was also not successful. It seems to me that what that means for costs in the light of the comments of [DJ Green] is that both parties during the final hearing were unsatisfactory and criticism can come from them. Just as F can be criticised for his failings on the financial side of presenting a case by way of his living standards and spending money which did not really represent his true position and misleading the mother, so the mother was not truthful entirely or frank in her disclosure, it seems even in respect of answers that she gave during that final hearing. If parties conduct litigation in that way they have only got themselves to blame if the costs of it are significantly higher than they would otherwise have been.
It seems to me, therefore, that the first decision I come to is that the costs of the final hearing are to fall where they lay, in other words that each party pays their own costs. Neither were successful at that point or each was equally successful and unsuccessful. Both parties were pursuing their respective claims for an increase and decrease. That led, no doubt so far as F's application was concerned, to cross-examining M to a greater extent than would otherwise have been the case if it was not his real case; and M's application for an increase, even in the light of the disclosure that she had, obviously meant that the hearing of that application was longer that it would otherwise have been. So I see no difficulty and, indeed, it seems consistent with the result, that the costs of the final hearing itself should not attract any costs order other than that there be no order for costs for that part.
I do not see on either side a particularly persuasive argument that during that time there was any particular conduct or particular change or feature in the litigation which was not that which applied also to the period of the final hearing itself. A good deal of costs between that period from the beginning of November to the beginning of February would have been the parties gearing up for final hearing and would be progressively intimately connected with that final hearing. In those circumstances my general approach to the final hearing would, I consider, fairly apply to that period also, which is that there should be no order for costs from the beginning of November or thereabouts until the end of the final hearing and the judgment in March.
What I do is I take into account for that period in view of the conduct of the litigation up until that time that the offer in September, which on the findings was consistent with the outcome in February, does not raise such a strong presumption in relation to costs as is contended for by F. I take into account that applications under Schedule 1 are for the benefit of the child and in my judgment it would cause relative hardship on M's side to make her responsible for the costs between the beginning of November and the final hearing when during that period, notwithstanding the Calderbank offer, F was also pursuing his own case as I have already indicated that he did, including pursuing it fully during the final hearing for a reduction. Clearly on the passage that I have already referred to of DJ Green in which she referred to F's application as being unfair and abhorrent there is, or could be said to be, criticism of the pursuit of that case even in the light of the disclosure that there was. If F had abandoned his own application for a variation downwards in October or early November he would, as it seems to me, be potentially in a stronger position in relation to the costs thereafter than he is now. In any event, the effect of making M responsible for the costs during that period in the light of all the circumstances, including F's own pursuit of his application to reduce, would be to create hardship in her household when, on the district judge's findings, she is receiving less help than would otherwise be justified.
This should have been a simple case of the court deciding that the starting-point should be a CSA assessment. Then deciding there was no good reason to depart from this (especially in the light of the capital agreement). Then costs following the event: i.e. the dismissal of M's application.
These opening objectives were wholly unrealistic. Both appeals fail.