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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 >> Moutreuil v Andreewitch & Anor [2020] EWHC 252 (Fam) (12 February 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2020/252.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 252 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Case No. FD19F00024 |
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MAGALI MOUTREUIL |
Claimant |
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and |
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(1) PETER RICHARD ANDREEWITCH (A.K.A. RICHARD ANDREEWITCH) (2) PIER INVESTMENT COMPANY LIMITED |
Defendants |
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AND |
Case No. ZC18P04081 |
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Between : |
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MAGALI MOUTREUIL |
Applicant |
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and |
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PETER RICHARD ANDREEWITCH (A.K.A. RICHARD ANDREEWITCH) |
Respondent |
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Mr Peter Andreewitch was unrepresented
Hearing dates: 3 February 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Lieven DBE :
a. The Claimant's application (with case number ZC18P00514) in the Central Family Court pursuant to section 8 of the Children Act 1989 (the "Welfare Proceedings");
b. The Claimant's application (with case number ZC18P04081) in the Central Family Court pursuant to Schedule 1 of the Children Act 1989 (the "Schedule 1 Proceedings");
c. The Claimant's claim under Part 7 of the Civil Procedure Rules (with claim number FD19F00024) seeking a determination of the parties' beneficial interests in the Shares and/or the Property as defined below (the "Ownership Proceedings").
"At times he was evasive in response to cross examination; and as the hearing proceeded, I had increasing reservations about the credibility of the father and came to find his explanations and justifications to be implausible and unconvincing".
"Until such time as the parties' respective claims in these proceedings and in case number FD19F00024 have been finally determined by the court, the applicant and the respondent must not in any way dispose of, deal with or diminish the value of the following assets whether they are in or outside England and Wales, namely:-
(i) The shares of Pier Investment;
(ii) Christchurch Street;
(iii) any other income or assets of Pier Investments except insofar as is necessary for Pier Investment to meet its tax or other liabilities".
27.The Bank Statements showed that Mr Andreewitch had effectively used the Bank Account as his personal piggy bank, making regular payments out of it, not only from his first substantive bank statement supplied (11 May 2018) to 22 March 2019 when the Freezing Order was made, but also after the Freezing Order was made.
28. The first payment following the Freezing Order was made on 25 March 2019, and payments continue to the last statement provided, on 29 November 2019. In short, Mr Andreewitch appears to have paid no attention whatsoever to the Freezing Order.
29. As regards the purpose of the withdrawals and transfers from the Bank Account, the Bank Statements show that they were almost all of them were made in respect of Mr Andreewitch's personal expenses, with no conceivable benefit to Pier.
30. Payments included grocery shopping at Waitrose, Marks & Spencer, Tesco, Morrisons and Sainsbury's; and Mr Andreewitch's personal rent for his flat in Acton from August 2018 to August 2019.
31. From September 2019, the Bank Statements show that Mr Andreewitch used the Bank Accounts to make payments to his partner Ms Metcalfe, some characterised as "repayment" and some as "rent". Pursuant to the order of Mr Justice Cobb made at the 9 December Hearing, on 6 January 2020 Mr Andreewitch disclosed a "Lodger's Agreement" between himself and Ms Metcalfe, pursuant to which he appears to be renting from her "Two bedrooms for Peter Andreewitch and his son, Philipp Andreewitch. Access to communal areas, kitchen, bathroom, sitting room and office" for £850 per month. Total payments to Ms Metcalfe between 12 September 2019 and 29 November 2019 were £3,800.
32. Mr Andreewitch further paid from the Bank Account £20,800 of his personal legal fees, to four different firms of solicitors. He paid £10,800 before the making of the Freezing Order on 22 March 2019, comprising (in December 2018) £3,400 of costs he had been ordered to pay to my solicitors, LSGA, for failure to provide disclosure at a hearing in the Schedule 1 Proceedings in November 2018; and in October £5,000 of fees to Irwin Mitchell LLP (plus a further £1433 in January 2019) who contacted my solicitors in October 2018 in respect of the Schedule 1 Proceedings).
33. Mr Andreewitch paid a further £10,000 of his personal legal fees from the Bank Account after the making of the Freezing Order: £5,000 on 21 May 2019 to Clyde & Co who informed my solicitor that they acted for him in connection with the Ownership Proceedings, and on 28 October 2019 £5,000 to Sinclair Gibson for representing him at a hearing on 21 November 2019 in connection with the Welfare Proceedings. Irwin Mitchell, Clyde & Co, Sinclair Gibson and a fourth firm, Aston Bond (who do not appear to have taken any money from Mr Andreewitch), all appear in the meantime to have ceased acting for Mr Andreewitch. I do not know whether Mr Andreewitch informed them of the existence of the Freezing Order before the paying the fees of above firms of solicitors. In any event, I do not believe that he had any right to do so in light of the terms of the Freezing Order.
The legal framework
"(1) If a person –
(a) required by a judgment or order to do an act does not do it within the time fixed by the judgment or order; or
(b) disobeys a judgment or order not to do an act
then, subject to the Debtors Act 1869 and 1878 and to the provisions of these Rules, the judgment or order may be enforced under the court's powers by an order for committal"
a. It has been made by an application notice using the Part 18 procedure in the proceedings in which the Freezing Order was made;
b. The Application Notice set out in full the grounds on which the committal application is made;
c. The Application is supported by one or more affidavits containing all the evidence relied on.
d. The Application and supporting evidence (save for the Claimant's recent updating affidavit) was personally served on the Defendant by the Claimant before the hearing on 14 January 2020 (a copy of the Application and Affidavit (without the exhibit) having been emailed to the Defendant on 13 January 2020). The Application was then considered, and (in open court) it was ordered to be listed by Judd J on 3 February 2020. The Defendant takes no point on service.
"I have already indicated that it is not contended on behalf of Pan Petroleum that the appellants wilfully breached the Order, but that does not preclude a finding of contempt. Where the Court concludes that the party in contempt has acted on the basis of an interpretation of the Order which was not reasonably arguable, it is not necessary for an applicant to also show that the breach of the Order was committed with actual knowledge. Christopher Clarke J put this point clearly in Masri v Consolidated Contractors [2011] EWHC 1024 (Comm) at [155]:
"In my judgment the power of the court to ensure obedience to its orders for the benefit of those in whose favour they are made would be inappropriately curtailed if, in addition to having to show that a defendant had breached the order, it was also necessary to establish, and to the criminal standard, that he had done so in the belief that what he did was a breach of the order – particularly when a belief that it was not a breach may have rested on the slenderest of foundations or on convenient advice which was plainly wrong."
As that passage demonstrates, equally it is no defence for the party in breach to show that it acted on the basis of legal advice. That will only go to issues of mitigation, not to whether there was a contempt: see the judgment of the Restrictive Practices Court (Megaw J President) in The Tyre Manufacturers' Conference Ltd's Agreement [1966] 1 WLR 1137 at 1162D-H.
"What is clear, however, is that the bona fides of contemnors and their reasons, motives and states of mind have long been recognised as relevant factors in mitigation. It seems, for example, that:
"…no casual or accidental and unintentional disobedience of an order would justify either commitment or sequestration. Where the court is satisfied that the conduct was not intentional or reckless, but merely casual and accidental and committed under circumstances which negative any suggestion of contumacy, while it might visit the offending party with costs and might order an inquiry as to damages, it would not take the extreme course of issuing an order either of commitment or of sequestration.""
Submissions
Conclusions