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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 >> Robertson v Robertson [2016] EWHC 613 (Fam) (08 March 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2016/613.html Cite as: [2016] Fam Law 805, [2016] EWHC 613 (Fam), [2017] 1 FLR 1174 |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Royal Courts of Justice |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting throughout in public)
____________________
JANINE COULSON ROBERTSON | Applicant | |
- and - | ||
NICHOLAS ROBERTSON | Respondent |
____________________
MR J. COHEN QC and MISS J. MURRAY (instructed by Meadows Ryan Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE HOLMAN:
Introduction
The essential facts
The assets now
The ASOS shares and the three Wimbledon properties
"The matter stands differently regarding property ('non-matrimonial property') the parties bring with them into the marriage or acquire by inheritance or gift during the marriage …"
"The nature and the source of the property and the way the couple have run their lives may be taken into account in deciding how it should be shared."
"… I would query whether what Wilson LJ proposes in his judgment is really passive growth and reject [my emphasis] the notion that the only growth that can be take into account is passive growth …"
and then went on to explain why.
"… In order to consider the exercise of assuming purely passive economic growth would … require an economist to identify statistically significant correlations that have a causal impact on the company …"
Mr Lane is:
"… not, however, an economist and [does] not have relevant expertise … Therefore, there is significant difficulty for a non-economist such as [himself] to apply the concept of passive growth."
"An award of £5 million … represents less than one-third of the value of the New Star shares and less than one-sixth of the husband's total worth. An award of less than half of the value of the New Star shares reflects the amount of work done by the husband on this business project before the marriage." [my emphasis]
"On the other hand, where at the beginning (or end) of the marriage an actual transaction is under way or in view which in due course yields a considerable new asset, there is no difficulty in principle (even if there may be some difficulty in valuation) in accepting that part of that asset may have to be excluded from any assessment of matrimonial acquest or included in what the parties brought into the marriage. In the present case, Mr Miller already had, at the marriage date, real connections in the form of the Jupiter funds which he later took to New Star and real prospects under the gentlemen's agreement made with Mr Duffield of acquiring, as he subsequently did, valuable shares in New Star. I would regard these as real contributions brought into the marriage, which should on any view be taken into account accordingly."
Application of section 25
Special contribution
"Thus a special contribution arises in circumstances in which a spouse's contribution, direct or indirect, to the creation of the matrimonial property has been so extraordinary as to dictate a departure within the sharing principle from the ordinary consequence of its equal division …" (emphasis in the original judgment)
Other circumstances
Outcome
The matrimonial home | £12,431,250 |
The house in Oxfordshire | £3,217,500 |
A property in London SW6 | £2,413,125 |
Another property in London SW6 | £2,876,250 |
Personal bank accounts | £5,251,021 |
Money owed to her | £3,013,656 |
Cash and jewellery | £1,254,000 |
Range Rover (already in her name) | £80,000 |
Bentley | £50,295 |
The river boat in England | £41,400 |
__________ | |
£30,628,497 | |
Less her personal debts and liabilities | (£362,098) |
__________ | |
Net | £30,266,399 |
__________ |
Cross-check
Judicial discretion and arbitrariness
"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 we should accept and by which we should cease to be disconcerted."
Costs
Last words