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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Ahmed v. Ahmed [2003] ScotCS 306 (09 December 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2003/306.html Cite as: 2004 SCLR 247, [2003] ScotCS 306 |
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EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION |
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Lord Hamilton Lord Macfadyen Lord McCluskey
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A1950/01 OPINION OF THE COURT delivered by LORD McCLUSKEY in Reclaiming Motion by SAMRANA AHMED Pursuer and Respondent against SYED MASOOR AHMED Defender and Reclaimer
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Act: Scott; Balfour & Manson for Maxwell MacLaurin, Solicitors, Glasgow
Alt: Coutts; Brodies
9 December 2003
[1] The pursuer (the mother) and the defender (the father), also referred to as the reclaimer, were divorced in 1994. The Court of Session interlocutor pronouncing decree was dated 11 May 1994 and was extracted on 1 June 1994. By that interlocutor and decree, the mother was awarded custody of two of the children of the marriage, Syad Rezaah Ahmed (born in 1981) and Mahein Ahmed. Mahein was born on 15 December 1984, and was therefore 18 on 15 December 2002. The 1994 interlocutor also ordained payment by the defender to pay "to the Pursuer qua tutrix and administratrix of £50 per week as aliment for each of the said children for so long as they or either of them is in the care of the Pursuer and unable to earn a livelihood". (The reference to "tutrix" is an error, but no point has been taken in relation to it). [2] By motion on 11 October 2000 the pursuer invited the Court to vary the award in Mahein's favour by increasing it. The motion was opposed; the Temporary Lord Ordinary allowed the pursuer to lodge a Minute to Vary and allowed the defender to lodge Answers. A Proof on the adjusted Minute and Answers was taken before Lord Clarke. By interlocutor dated 25 June 2002 he found the defender (the Respondent in the Minute and Answers) liable to pay aliment for Mahein in the sum of £220 per week from 11 October 2000, and varied the award of 11 May 1994 accordingly. It is against that interlocutor that this Reclaiming Motion is now taken. [3] The Lord Ordinary held that it had been established that there was a sufficient change of circumstances since the 1994 interlocutor to justify variation of that award. There was no submission that he erred in this regard. Before the date of the Proof on the Minute and Answers, Syad Reezah Ahmed had entered the process to claim an alimentary payment from his father. By a Joint Minute to which authority was interponed on 10 May 2002 the father agreed to pay £150 per week as aliment for Syad Reezah Ahmed until he reached the age of 25. [4] The challenges to the Lord Ordinary's conclusion are set forth in the Grounds of Appeal, to which reference may be made. In summary, what was submitted was that:-(1) the award of increased aliment should not have been backdated to 11 October 2000;
(2) the new award was excessive because it required the father to pay a sum 'in excess of the whole current needs of the child' (Mahein), and to make provision twice for certain 'past needs';
(3) the result of the order was to require the father to meet the whole burden of support for the child; but, having regard to the law and the factual circumstances, the burden should have been apportioned between the parents;
(4) the Lord Ordinary erred in making on order for back-dating aliment 'by reference to current need'.
"Items 1 and 2 of 38/1 relate solely to Rezah and are excluded.
Items 12, 13, 19 and 25(i) relate solely to Mahein. In 13 £50 is allowed for school trips on basis of 41B-C [of the transcript of evidence].
Items 3 - 8, 14 - 18, 20, 21, 23, 24 and 26 - 27 are household expenses in respect of which 40% is attributed to Mahein (40% to respondent and 20% to Rezah who is there half the time (see 34E-F) or at least 22 weeks (Opinion [9]).
Items 9 - 11, 25(ii), GMC subscriptions and legal expenses in USA are unrelated to Mahein.
Item 22 was time limited and can be dealt with in back-dating (Mahein took her test in April 2002: see 26D).
The Mortgage element at item 28 can be divided into four elements:
(i) The original mortgage included as a household expense (see above).
(ii) The respondent had raised a loan to cover the cost of certain treatment for Mahein (see 47E). The treatment cost £9,500. If backdating covers the cost, then the debt can be repaid (see below).
(iii) Legal expenses (84C - 85C):
(iv) Credit card debts (unspecified amount) but can be repaid if appropriate by backdating.
The needs are given monthly, but then require to be expressed weekly. Standard child benefit for one child (including lone parent supplement) is debited".