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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 >> SR v HR & Ors (Rev 1) [2018] EWHC 606 (Fam) (23 March 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2018/606.html Cite as: [2018] 4 WLR 68, [2018] EWHC 606 (Fam), [2018] 2 FCR 200, [2018] BPIR 1188, [2018] WLR(D) 206, [2018] 2 FLR 843 |
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FAMILY DIVISION
(On appeal from HH Judge Sharpe
Sitting in the Family Court at Swansea
CX11D00057)
IN THE MATTER OF THE MATRIMONIAL CAUSES ACT 1973
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
SR |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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HR |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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SC (as Trustee in Bankruptcy of SR) |
Intervener |
____________________
The Respondent appeared in person
Paul French (instructed by Morgan Rostron Solicitors) for the Intervener
Hearing date: 20 March 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mostyn:
"In accordance with the authority of Thwaite v Thwaite the court may consider the order and refuse to enforce the order if it is inequitable to do so. Where such an outcome is determined it is open to the court to determine the matter afresh"
"Where the order is still executory, as in the present case, and one of the parties applies to the court to enforce the order, the court may refuse if, in the circumstances prevailing at the time of the application, it would be inequitable to do so: Mullins v. Howell (1879) 11 Ch D 763 and Purcell v. F. C. Trigell Ltd. [1971] 1 QB 358, 366, 367. Where the consent order derives its legal effect from the contract, this is equivalent to refusing a decree of specific performance; where the legal effect derives from the order itself the court has jurisdiction over its own orders: per Sir George Jessel M.R. in Mullins v. Howell (1879) 11 Ch D 763, 766."
"But there is no ground here so far as I can see for setting aside this consent order. It was deliberately made, with full knowledge, with the full agreement of the solicitors on both sides. It cannot be set aside. But, even though the order cannot be set aside, there is still a question whether it should be enforced. The court has always a control over interlocutory orders. It may, in its discretion, vary or alter them even though made originally by consent."
Again, this gives no support to the notion that if the court, exercising its equitable jurisdiction, refuses to enforce an order it gains the power to make a completely new one.
"An undertaking is a solemn promise which a litigant volunteers to the court. A court has no power to impose any variation of the terms of a voluntary promise. A litigant who wishes to cease to be bound by her (or his) undertaking should apply for "release" from it (or "discharge" of it); and often she will accompany her application for release with an offer of a further undertaking in different terms. The court may decide to accept the further undertaking and, in the light of it, to grant the application for release. Equally the court may indicate that it will grant the application for release only on condition that she is willing to give a further undertaking or one in terms different from those of a further undertaking currently on offer. In either event the court's power is only to grant or refuse the application for release; and, although exercise of its power may result in something which looks like a variation of an undertaking, it is the product of a different process of reasoning."
As will be seen (see paras 18(2) and 19 below), the original substantive orders required the wife to pay 70% of a property in Haulfryn to the husband. Judge Sharpe replaced the share of 70% with one of 20%. Instead of making a direct replacement could Judge Sharpe have said to the wife: I will, pursuant to Thwaite, decline to enforce your obligation to pay the husband 70% of the equity in the Haulfryn property provided that you agree to pay him 20% instead? In my judgment that would be quite unacceptable. It would amount to a blatant circumvention of the statutory prohibition on variation.
"An application to set aside a financial remedy order should only be made where no error of the court is alleged. If an error of the court is alleged, an application for permission to appeal under Part 30 should be considered. The grounds on which a financial remedy order may be set aside are and will remain a matter for decisions by judges. The grounds include (i) fraud; (ii) material non-disclosure; (iii) certain limited types of mistake; (iv) a subsequent event, unforeseen and unforeseeable at the time the order was made, which invalidates the basis on which the order was made."
Although the framers of this paragraph have theoretically left the door open to expansion of the classes of cases where a set aside may be sought, it is difficult to conceive of any. Certainly, mere delay in implementing a routine property adjustment order could never amount to a ground for a set aside under rule 9.9A.
i) The property at Picton Place has been sold and the proceeds of sale after payment of the first mortgage and the costs of sale were £93,716. Of this £46,810 has been distributed to the wife; £11,778 is held to satisfy a charging order in respect of a debt of the husband in favour of MNBA; and £35,128 is held pending my decision, but under the orders is payable to the wife. Thus, under this subparagraph the wife has received, or will receive, £81,938.ii) The property at Haulfryn is worth around £95,000 (the husband says £105,000; the wife says £85,000). There is no mortgage. After costs of sale it has the net value of some £92,150. Under the orders the husband receives 70% of this value but must give credit for the £11,778 MNBA debt effectively paid on his behalf by the wife and a debt charged on the property of £3,300 in favour of the Child Support Agency. Thus, the husband (or, rather, his trustee in bankruptcy) will receive under this subparagraph: £92,150 x 70% - £11,778 - £3,300 = £49,427. The wife will receive: £92,150 - £3,300 - £49,427 = £39,423. The total of these two sums is £88,850 which equates correctly to the net proceeds of sale after deduction of costs of sale and the CSA charge.
iii) Under the two preceding subparagraphs the wife receives a total of £121,361 while the husband receives £49,427.
iv) The property at Abergwili Road goes to the husband. However, this property is "under water" in that its mortgage exceeds its value by about £12,000. The husband will be liable for this shortfall. In addition, the intervener has tabulated further debts of the husband of £41,162. When the costs of the bankruptcy are taken into account it can be seen that it is most unlikely that the husband will receive any surplus from the £49,427.
Note 1 An order under section 24A can only be made when making an award for capital provision; it cannot be made as an interim measure. There is a regrettable difference of opinion between Cobb J and myself as to whether an interim order for sale can be made under FPR 20.2(1)(c)(v): see BR v VT [2015] EWHC 2727 (Fam) and WS v HS [2018] EWFC 11. I firmly and respectfully maintain my view. An order for the sale of property is essentially procedural; of itself it does not alter proprietary rights. I cannot see that words should be read into the rule to the effect that to make such an order an underlying statutory power must be identified. In my opinion to provide in the rules the independent power to order an interim sale is not ultra vires the parent statute (sections 75 and 76 Courts Act 2003). However, until the matter can be resolved by a higher court I suggest that applications for an interim sale are made under section 17 of the Married Women’s Property Act 1882. Such an application is to be made in short form under the Part 18 procedure within the financial remedy proceedings: see FPR 8.13 and 8.14. [Back]