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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 F [2011] EWHC 586 (Fam) (11 March 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2011/586.html Cite as: [2011] Fam Law 686, [2011] 2 FLR 533, [2011] EWHC 586 (Fam) |
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This judgment is being handed down in private on 11 March 2011. It consists of 54 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 may be identified by name or location. In particular the anonymity of the children and the adult members of their family must be strictly preserved. If reported, it shall be the duty of the Law Reporters to anonymise this judgment.
FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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N |
Petitioner |
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- and - |
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F |
Respondent |
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Nigel Dyer QC and Victoria Domenge (instructed by Mishcon de Reya) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 7-10 March 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mostyn:
The central issue
I thought he was pretty rich. He used to say he was very rich. His uncle called him a yuppie. He would say "I am much richer than a yuppie; it is insulting to call me a yuppie".
The evidence demonstrates that H had assets worth £2.116m at the time of the marriage in 1993. Merely to adjust by inflation would up-rate that figure to £3.4m today. If one were to allow for a measure of passive growth using, say the FTSE100 index, or 3.75% compound interest, then the figure becomes £4.2m.
i) It was introduced a long time ago since when it has been converted into and merged with matrimonial property. This mingling means that it is not just evidentially difficult to establish the scale of such pre-marital property; but it also signifies, in effect, an agreement by H to share it with W.
ii) H has "alienated" certain sums during the marriage.
iii) H has since 2007 eschewed the exploitation of a substantial earning capacity in the financial sector in favour of a lowlier paid job as a schoolmaster. By contrast W, notwithstanding that she is a qualified clinical psychologist, with a doctorate, has no meaningful earning capacity.
iv) H has conducted the litigation "tactically" (which I take to mean "unfairly") and has caused unnecessary costs to be incurred.
The Law
[Pre-marital property] represents a contribution made to the welfare of the family by one of the parties to the marriage. The judge should take it into account. He should decide how important it is in the particular case. The nature and value of the property, and the time when and circumstances in which the property was acquired, are among the relevant matters to be considered. However, in the ordinary course, this factor can be expected to carry little weight, if any, in a case where the claimant's financial needs cannot be met without recourse to this property.
Similarly in Robson, Hughes LJ stated at para 96:
That the origin of assets in inheritance is a relevant factor for the court in no sense means that the approach to inherited assets ought always to be the same. What is fair will depend on all the circumstances; those cannot exhaustively be stated but will often include the nature of the assets, the time of inheritance, the use made of them by the parties and the needs of the parties at the time of trial.
In similar vein, Ribeiro PJ stated in LKW v DD at para 91:
…there is no hard and fast rule as to whether such property should be excluded. It is very much a matter within the judge's discretion to be exercised taking account of all the circumstances of the particular case.
It is plainly important that, conformably with the ideal of justice in the individual case, there be general consistency from one case to another of underlying notions of what is just and appropriate in particular circumstances. Otherwise, the law would, in truth, be but the "lawless science" of "a codeless myriad of precedent" and "a wilderness of single instances" of which Lord Tennyson wrote in his poem "Aylmers Field"
Similarly in DD v LKW Ribeiro PJ stated:
49. While recognizing that some uncertainty is inescapable, it is nevertheless desirable that the appellate courts should attempt to provide guidance with a view to encouraging consistency and predictability. As Lord Nicholls pointed out in Miller/McFarlane [at para 6]:
"...an important aspect of fairness is that like cases should be treated alike. So, per force, if there is to be an acceptable degree of consistency of decision from one case to the next, the courts must themselves articulate, if only in the broadest fashion, what are the applicable if unspoken principles guiding the court's approach."
Baroness Hale added that consistency and predictability should be promoted in order "to enable and encourage the parties to negotiate their own solutions as quickly and cheaply as possible".[para 122]
50. However, as Ormrod LJ observed, (Martin v Martin [1978] Fam 12) the courts' pronouncements on a provision like section 7 "can never be better than guidelines". This is because, as Gibbs CJ explained (Mallett v Mallett at 609), the courts "cannot put fetters on the discretionary power which the Parliament has left largely unfettered." Dealing with the natural tension existing between the need for flexibility on the one hand and the desire for consistency on the other, Brennan J stated:
"The only compromise between idiosyncrasy in the exercise of the discretion and an impermissible limitation of the scope of the discretion is to be found in the development of guidelines from which a judge may depart when it is just and equitable to do so -- guidelines which are not rules of universal application, but which are generally productive of just and equitable orders." (Norbis v Norbis (1986) 161 CLR 513 at 538)
51. As his Honour pointed out, Lord Denning MR addressed the problem of guiding the exercise of an unfettered judicial discretion in Ward v James [1966] 1 QB 273 at 295 in the following terms:
"The cases all show that, when a statute gives discretion, the courts must not fetter it by rigid rules from which a judge is never at liberty to depart. Nevertheless, the courts can lay down the considerations which should be borne in mind in exercising the discretion, and point out those considerations which should be ignored. This will normally determine the way in which the discretion is exercised, and thus ensure some measure of uniformity of decision. From time to time the considerations may change as public policy changes, and so the pattern of decision may change: this is all part of the evolutionary process."
The late Lord Bingham of Cornhill put it this way in his book "The Rule of Law" (Allen Lane, 2010) at page 51:
The job of the judges is to apply the law, not to indulge their personal preferences. There are areas in which they are required to exercise a discretion, but such discretions are much more closely constrained than is always acknowledged.
In the present case, bearing in mind that it was a marriage of more than 30 years, that there were three children and that the wife was an active partner in the farming business as well as meeting the responsibilities of wife and mother, the only plausible reason for departing from equality can be the financial help given by the husband's father. I agree, however, that the significance of this is diminished because over a long marriage the parties jointly made the most of that help and because it was apparently intended at least partly for the benefit of both. As Lord Simon of Glaisdale said, in delivering the judgment of the Privy Council in a case under the former New Zealand legislation Dorothy Haldane v George Christopher Haldane [1977] AC 673, 697:
'Initially a gift or bequest to one spouse only is likely to fall outside the Act, because the other spouse will have made no contribution to it. But as time goes on, and depending on the nature of the property in question, the other spouse may well have made a direct or indirect contribution to its retention.'
Similarly in Miller Lord Nicholls stated:
[24] In the case of a short marriage, fairness may well require that the claimant should not be entitled to a share of the other's non-matrimonial property. The source of the asset may be a good reason for departing from equality. This reflects the instinctive feeling that parties will generally have less call upon each other on the breakdown of a short marriage.
[25] With longer marriages the position is not so straightforward. Non-matrimonial property represents a contribution made to the marriage by one of the parties. Sometimes, as the years pass, the weight fairly to be attributed to this contribution will diminish, sometimes it will not. After many years of marriage the continuing weight to be attributed to modest savings introduced by one party at the outset of the marriage may well be different from the weight attributable to a valuable heirloom intended to be retained in specie. Some of the matters to be taken into account in this regard were mentioned in the above citation from the White case. To this non-exhaustive list should be added, as a relevant matter, the way the parties organised their financial affairs.
And Baroness Hale stated under the heading "The source of the assets and the length of the marriage" at para 148:
In White, it was also recognised that the importance of the source of the assets will diminish over time (see 611B and 995 respectively). As the family's personal and financial inter-dependence grows, it becomes harder and harder to disentangle what came from where.
Similarly in LKW v DD Ribeiro PJ stated at para 96 that "an important factor which comes into play is the duration of the marriage".
To what property does the sharing principle apply? The answer might well have been that it applies only to matrimonial property, namely the property of the parties generated during the marriage otherwise than by external donation; and the consequence would have been that non-matrimonial property would have fallen for redistribution by reference only to one of the two other principles of need and compensation to which we refer in para [68], below. Such an answer might better have reflected the origins of the principle in the parties' contributions to the welfare of the family; and it would have been more consonant with the references of Baroness Hale of Richmond in Miller at paras [141] and [143] to 'sharing … the fruits of the matrimonial partnership' and to 'the approach of roughly equal sharing of partnership assets'. We consider, however, the answer to be that, subject to the exceptions identified in Miller to which we turn in paras [83]–[86], below, the principle applies to all the parties' property but, to the extent that their property is non-matrimonial, there is likely to be better reason for departure from equality. It is clear that both in White, at 605F–G and 989 respectively, and in Miller, at paras [24] and [26], Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead approached the matter in that way; and there was no express suggestion in Miller, even on the part of Baroness Hale of Richmond, that in White the House had set too widely the general application of what was then a yardstick.
An example of the application of this technique is C v C [2009] 1 FLR 8 where Moylan J decreed a 60/40 division of the property stating:
[94] I have come to the clear conclusion that the wealth owned by the husband prior to the marriage and prior to 1984 was substantial and justifies a departure from equality. None of the other features in the case merits separate consideration. It would be unhelpful to suggest that the assessment of the extent to which such departure is justified can be calculated by reference to any formula or clear mathematics. It would also be unhelpful to suggest that it must be justified in this way, as that would result in the dangers highlighted by Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead at para [26] of his speech.
[95] The essence is that, by the time the parties met, the husband was aged 40. He had been in the property business for over 10 years, had set up two companies in 1980 which, by 1984 and more so by 1988, were well established and successful, with a substantial asset base. This is not a case, as suggested by Mr Mostyn, of modest savings, but one of substantial wealth. Taking all these factors into account, in my judgment, I would be achieving fairness if I awarded the wife 40% of the current wealth, dividing the pension assets and the other assets separately in the same proportion.
33. My view is that, in applying the sharing principle to this case, we should in the first instance adopt the approach commended to the judge by Miss Stone. We should therefore effect a division of the total assets of £25million into the part reflective of non-matrimonial assets and that reflective of matrimonial assets. But in doing so we should remember that, as Lord Nicholls stressed in Miller/McFarlane at [26], we are unlikely to need, still less to achieve, a precise division. The remaining step to be taken pursuant to Miss Stone's approach will be easy partly because in this case there is no ground for sharing the non-matrimonial assets other than 100% to the contributor and 0% to the other and partly because, by contrast, there is no ground for sharing the matrimonial assets other than equally.
34. My view however is that we should test the result suggested by the adoption of Miss Stone's approach against application of Mr Pointer's approach, namely by identifying, for allocation to the wife, such lesser percentage than 50% of the total assets as seems to make fair overall allowance for the husband's introduction of his company into the marriage.
35. Criticism can easily be levelled at both approaches. In different ways they are both highly arbitrary. Application of the sharing principle is inherently arbitrary; such is, I suggest, a fact which we should accept and by which we should cease to be disconcerted. Mr Pointer's approach seems particularly by-and-large. But is the greater apparent specificity of Miss Stone's approach an illusion? Powerful voices are raised against the accuracy of the types of valuation which her approach often requires. For example in H v. H [2008] EWHC 935 (Fam), [2008] 2 FLR 2092, Moylan J, at [5], described valuations of private companies as particularly fragile and suggested that their ostensible accuracy was no more than a chimera and that their purpose was to assist the court "in testing the fairness of the proposed outcome". We may infer that Moylan J would have preferred in the first instance to adopt Mr Pointer's approach and, at most, only to test the suggested result against application of Miss Stone's approach. The exercises, on the one hand, of adopting A and of testing against B and, on the other, of adopting B and of testing against A may indeed have subtly different consequences. At all events in this case, particularly in circumstances in which a central valuation mandated by it has been crystallised by sale, I prefer in the first instance to adopt Miss Stone's approach.
In that case the pre-marital property was, by adjustment of an agreed accountants' valuation to reflect what was described as a "springboard" and the application of passive growth referable to the FTSE All Share Oil and Gas Producers Index, calculated to be £9m. That was subtracted from the total assets of £25m leaving £16m of matrimonial property, which was divided equally. The award was tested, secondarily, by the overall percentage technique. Wilson LJ stated at para 52:
As I have observed, the question-mark to be set against the above calculation is properly recognised by a resolution to test its suggested award to the wife of £8m by the application of Mr Pointer's approach. The sum of £8m represents 32% of £25m. My view of overall fairness to both parties, developed at an early stage and not displaced in the course of protracted subsequent reflection, is that an award of 40% to the wife, for which Mr Pointer contends, would be unfair to the husband and that the bracket fair to both would be between 30% and 36%. So the suggested award, albeit not precisely in the middle of the bracket, survives the test.
[143] Some argue that this dictum stipulates that the two-stage process should be telescoped into one. I find it difficult to accept that this is what the Court of Appeal intended. A telescoped approach runs the risk of insufficient logical rigour being applied to the identification and treatment of the two very different categories. It runs the risk of palm-tree justice being applied. It is so easy to say – 'well there is a good deal of non-matrimonial property here so I will reduce the claimant's share to 40%', but that approach simply does not tell anyone what weight is being given to that factor. There is also the point that para [66] of Charman by its terms requires an identification and quantification of the non-matrimonial property in order to inform the percentage share. What is the point of all this work if it is then to put to one side in favour of a percentage based on 'feel'?
[144] I, therefore, decline to accept that the Court of Appeal intended to abrogate the two-stage approach used by Burton J and in other cases. Certainly, the overall percentage share must be undertaken as a final check, for the yardstick of equality applies to all the assets and is there to guard against inadvertent discrimination as Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead memorably pointed out in White.
[145] I have found above that the total non-Zendan property amounts to £18,147,310. H's pre-marital property amounts to £2,182,111. The matrimonial property is, therefore, £15,965,199. On the facts of this case there is no good reason why this should not be equally shared in accordance with well established principle. Thus W will receive net exit funds of £7,982,600. ….
…
[147] The award to W of £7,982,600 represents 44% of the non-Zendan assets which I judge to be fair having regard to the scale of H's pre-marital property.
I did not allow any up-rating of the husband's pre-marital property for the reasons explained in para 91 where I stated:
[91] I find that H brought into the marriage assets worth £2,182,111, as per Appendix 8 of Miss Bangay's skeleton. H has produced no evidence that on top of this he had £800,000 or any other sum in an X Bank savings account. I do not adjust this sum of £2,182,111 to reflect the effect of inflation over the last 10 years, for two reasons. First, in that period the FTSE 100 has in fact gone down. It is debatable whether that sum if invested would now be worth more than £2.182m. Second, given the degree of merger that has taken place over the period of the marriage I take the view that any investment return on these moneys should be regarded as matrimonial rather than non-matrimonial property.
i) Whether the existence of pre-marital property should be reflected at all. This depends on questions of duration and mingling.
ii) If it does decide that reflection is fair and just, the court should then decide how much of the pre-marital property should be excluded. Should it be the actual historic sum? Or less, if there has been much mingling? Or more, to reflect a springboard and passive growth, as happened in Jones?
iii) The remaining matrimonial property should then normally be divided equally.
iv) The fairness of the award should then be tested by the overall percentage technique.
D2 The exercise often stops at "needs"
54. The second point is that in most cases, discussion of the guidelines is superfluous. Usually, the available assets are insufficient to cater for the needs of both parties after termination of the marriage so that the exercise does not progress beyond consideration of their needs. As Lord Nicholls put it in Miller/McFarlane:
"In most cases the search for fairness largely begins and ends at this stage. In most cases the available assets are insufficient to provide adequately for the needs of two homes. The court seeks to stretch modest finite resources so far as possible to meet the parties' needs."[62]
55. It is therefore only in cases where surplus assets remain to be distributed after seeing to the parties' needs that the guidelines may require consideration. The disposal of simple cases should not be pointlessly complicated by inappropriate attempts to apply such guidelines.
Need
[118] Baron J had held that the ante-nuptial agreement was 'manifestly unfair' in that it made no provision for the possibility that the husband might be reduced to circumstances of real need. Wilson LJ at para [144] appears to have thought that there was nothing unfair about this and, inferentially, that had the husband been in a situation of real need the agreement would nonetheless have been good reason for the court to decline to alleviate this by an order of ancillary relief. We would not go so far as this.
[119] We stated at para [73] above that the question of the fairness of the agreement can often be subsumed in the question of whether it would operate unfairly in the circumstances prevailing at the breakdown of the marriage, and this is such a case. Had the husband been incapacitated in the course of the marriage, so that he was incapable of earning his living, this might well have justified, in the interests of fairness, not holding him to the full rigours of the ante-nuptial agreement. But this was far from the case. On the evidence he is extremely able, and has added to his qualifications by pursuing a D Phil in biotechnology. Furthermore, the generous relief given to cater for the needs of the two daughters will indirectly provide in large measure for the needs of the husband, until the younger daughter reaches the age of 22. Finally, the Court of Appeal did not upset the judge's order that the wife should fund the discharge of debts of £700,000 owed by the husband, only a small part of which she had challenged.
[120] In these circumstances we consider that the Court of Appeal was correct to conclude that the needs of the husband were not a factor that rendered it unfair to hold him to the terms of the ante-nuptial agreement, subject to making provision for the needs of the children of the family.
Non-matrimonial property
[79] Often parties to a marriage will be motivated in concluding a nuptial agreement by a wish to make provision for existing property owned by one or other, or property that one or other anticipates receiving from a third party. The House of Lords in White v White and Miller v Miller drew a distinction between such property and matrimonial property accumulated in the course of the marriage. That distinction is particularly significant where the parties make express agreement as to the disposal of such property in the event of the termination of the marriage. There is nothing inherently unfair in such an agreement and there may be good objective justification for it, such as obligations towards existing family members. As Rix LJ put it at para [73]:
'… if the parties to a prospective marriage have something important to agree with one another, then it is often much better, and more honest, for that agreement to be made at the outset, before the marriage, rather than left to become a source of disappointment or acrimony within marriage.'
…in applying the principles of need and of sharing, the court is engaged in two separate exercises, which require it to refer to different considerations (Charman, cited above, at [70] and [72]); and that the suggestion that the result of the assessment under the need principle can be introduced into the assessment under the sharing principle in order to identify the extent of departure from equality is inconsistent with the guidance given in Miller/McFarlane, as recognised in Charman at [73] and as noted by the judge himself at [410], that in principle the higher assessment should found the award.
I do not take this passage to suggest that assessment of need is an insulated metric uninformed by factors that are centrally key to the performance of the sharing principle, for the reasons I have stated above.
Narrative
US$ A property in Lexington 270,302 A property in Boston 548,131 Profit share plan 590,448 Brokerage account 437,805 26,279 A Inc shares * 1,116,174 9,302 B Corp shares ** 273,769 3,236,629 converted to £ at Sept 1993 FX rate (0.6538) 2,116,108
* ignoring 3,000 shares later transferred to a family foundation
** ignoring 2,100 shares later transferred to a family foundation
The assets
JOINT ASSETS | £ |
Connecticut property | 536,000 |
Natwest accounts | 500 |
Other assets (cheques) | 140,000 |
Chattels (not included in total) | 22,000 |
subtotal (rounded) | 677,000 |
H SOLE ASSETS | |
Lexington property | 293,000 |
Sole accounts | 23,000 |
Investments | 7,384,000 |
Liabilities | (380,000) |
Unpaid costs | (118,000) |
7,202,000 | |
W SOLE ASSETS | |
Sole accounts & liabilities | (108,000) |
Unpaid costs | (171,000) |
(279,000) | |
PENSIONS | 2,114,000 |
TOTAL ASSETS AND PENSIONS | 9,714,000 |
It is from these funds, coupled with H's earnings and whatever else they can earn in the future, that the parties must house and support themselves and their children.
Conclusions
Total assets | 9,714,000 |
Daughter's fund | (240,000) |
Divisible whole | 9,474,000 |
Excluded sum | (1,000,000) |
8,474,000 | |
50% to W | 4,237,000 |
% of divisible whole | 44.7% |
Sum to H | 5,237,000 |
% of divisible whole | 55.3% |
W's needs
Child Maintenance
i) £240,000 will be paid by H into a joint account of the parties to be used solely for the education of the parties' daughter.
ii) The Connecticut property will be transferred to W subject to the mortgage with a net value of £536,000.
iii) W will receive pension transfers (which will need a mirroring QDRO in the USA) totalling £945,431.
iv) W will receive a lump sum of £3,034,569, from which she will pay her personal unpaid costs and liabilities of £279,000.
v) In this way W will receive property, pensions and cash, which after payment of her debts will amount to £4,237,000.
vi) There will be a clean break between the parties, in life and death.
vii) H will, from 1 April 2011, pay child support of £1,313 per child per month in advance, index linked. When a child is in tertiary education the sum is to reduce to half of the current figure as a contribution to his/her bed and board when with W. Their maintenance support when at university will be agreed between the parents at that time.