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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Dow Or Sweeney v Sweeney [2007] ScotCS CSIH_11 (30 January 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSIH_11.html
Cite as: [2007] ScotCS CSIH_11, [2007] CSIH 11, 2007 SC 396

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FIRST DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord President

Lord Eassie

Lord Marnoch

 

 

 

 

 

[2007] CSIH 11

A1642/01

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by THE LORD PRESIDENT

 

in

 

RECLAIMING MOTION

 

in the cause

 

SUSAN DOW or SWEENEY

Pursuer and Reclaimer;

 

against

 

PATRICK CORNELIUS SWEENEY (No. 3)

Defender and Respondent:

 

_______

 

 

 

Act: Wise, Q.C., Cheyne; Digby Brown (for HBM Sayers, Glasgow)

Alt: Mitchell, Q.C.; Brodies LLP

 

30 January 2007

 

Introduction

[1] This action of divorce has a protracted history. It was raised in September 1999 and came to proof in June 2002, two earlier diets having been discharged. The proof ran for nine days. The Lord Ordinary issued his Opinion in October 2002. The hearing on the Summar Roll took place in October 2003 and the court's decision was issued in December of that year (reported at 2004 SC 372). As the outcome of that hearing gave rise to additional questions between the parties, a further hearing was fixed. That hearing took place in June 2005, the court's interlocutor on the merits being issued in August of that year (reported at 2006 SC 82). We have now had before us a discussion as to the disposal of expenses. The expenses incurred by the pursuer, we were informed, were conservatively estimated at £100,000. As the Lord Ordinary did not, in the event, deal with expenses, the issue is at large for this court.

 

The parties' submissions

[2] Miss Wise for the pursuer moved the court to grant to the pursuer expenses (in so far as not already dealt with) in the Outer House and in the Inner House, to certify a Mr. Alan Robb as an expert witness for the pursuer and to award to the pursuer an additional fee in respect of the proceedings in the Outer House. She submitted that the pursuer had been substantially successful, having at each stage of the litigation bettered such extrajudicial offer in settlement as had been made to her; that she had acted reasonably throughout, a judicial remedy being the only means of resort open to her, while on the other hand the defender had had the opportunity to expand his wealth by pursuing his business interests; that, although there had been conflicting Outer House decisions on the issue of the proper treatment of capital gains tax (ultimately resolved in the pursuer's favour at the first stage of the reclaiming motion), the defender had in effect taken a gamble as to the outcome of that issue and had lost.

[3] At the early stages of the litigation the defender had offered less than £115,000 in settlement. Shortly before the proof he had offered a capital sum of £700,000 but without any award of periodical allowance; the Lord Ordinary had in the event awarded a capital sum of £744,784 and a periodical allowance of £4,000 per month for one year. Between the two stages of the reclaiming motion the defender had increased his offer to a capital sum of £850,000, again without a periodical allowance; he had also offered to pay £25,000 towards the pursuer's expenses. The court had awarded a capital sum of £950,000. All the above offers and awards of a capital sum had been on an instalment basis.

[4] It was acknowledged that the principle that expenses followed success was not to be applied in its full rigour in family actions (Little v Little 1990 SLT 785, per Lord President Hope at page 790B-D); but the principle was still relevant, as was parties' conduct. The appropriate award of expenses was also bound up with the resolution of what financial provision had been made; an award which disrupted the balance arrived at in that provision would be inappropriate. Such disruption would not be caused by awarding expenses against this defender, who had a successful and expanding business, while this pursuer's means were restricted to those she had secured in the action. We were referred to a number of Outer House cases in which expenses in family actions had been considered - Macdonald v Macdonald 1995 SLT 72, Adams v Adams (No. 2) 1997 SLT 150, De Winton v De Winton 1997 SLT 1118 and Robertson v Robertson, 14 March 2001, Lord Eassie, unreported.

[5] Mr. Mitchell for the defender submitted that the appropriate order was of no expenses due to or by either party, both in the Outer House and in the Inner House. The whole conduct of the parties should be considered and expenses dealt with on an equitable basis. There might be cases where the relative wealth or poverty of the parties after financial provision had been settled would impinge on what was appropriate by way of an award of expenses. Here, however, the pursuer had, when account was taken of what she already owned as well as the provision which had been made for her by the court's order, an aggregate of property worth £2m. The defender's remaining assets were of an approximately equivalent value. Neither party had acted unreasonably in relation to the litigation. The defender had been forthcoming in disclosure of his assets and co-operative in agreeing valuations. The approach adopted by Lord Cameron of Lochbroom at first instance in Little v Little (and not disturbed by the Inner House) was to be commended. The defender had not adopted an intransigent or unreasonable position in relation to proposals for settlement. The proof had not been conducted wastefully; a number of matters were genuinely in issue. The defender's co-operation at the proof had extended to providing the expert accounting evidence on which the pursuer had relied. The final award of financial provision was about equidistant between parties' positions when account was taken of the pursuer's demand that interest be paid on instalments of the capital sum from the date of decree. In settlement agreements in this class of action (in contrast, for example, to personal injury cases) it was the practice for parties to bear their own expenses. While there was no rule of law to that effect, the situation was analogous to the bringing to an end of a partnership when the expenses of winding up its affairs were borne equally.

 

Discussion

[6] In Howitt v Alexander & Sons 1948 SC 154 Lord President Cooper said, on the general matter of expenses:

"An award of expenses according to our law is a matter for the exercise in each case of judicial discretion, designed to achieve substantial justice, and very rarely disturbed on appeal. I gravely doubt whether all the conditions upon which that discretion should be exercised have ever been, or ever will be, successfully imprisoned within the framework of rigid and unalterable rules, and I do not think that it would be desirable that they should be. In McLaren on Expenses (p. 21) the principle is laid down upon the authority of a number of cases that 'if any party is put to expense in vindicating his rights, he is entitled to recover it from the person by whom it was created, unless there is something in his own conduct that gives him the character of an improper litigant in insisting on things which his title does not warrant'".

[7] Prior to 1985 expenses in what were then called consistorial actions were subject to a special rule, namely, that the husband bore both his own and his wife's expenses (the latter being regarded as "necessaries"), though even in this field that rule was itself subject to exceptions and qualifications (see Nelson v Nelson 1969 SLT 323). By section 22 of the Family Law (Scotland) Act 1985 that rule was abolished; but Parliament did not replace it with any specified alternative rule. Regard being had, however, to the principles to be applied in determining financial provision, it may be inferred that the court was expected to exercise a discretion based on considerations of fairness and of reasonableness. It is not inconsistent with the principle of fairness that a party who is put to expense in vindicating his or her rights should recover those expenses from the other party; but the "expenses follow success" rule, while not irrelevant, should not be applied "in its full rigour" to disputes about financial provision on divorce (Little v Little, per Lord President Hope at page 790). Thus the mere circumstance that a claimant has succeeded in obtaining an award modestly higher than what has been offered, judicially or extrajudicially, by the other party will not ordinarily entitle the successful party to an award of the expenses of process. What has gone before will also be of importance. Parties are to be encouraged to make full disclosure of assets and to agree, where possible, on valuations, thus narrowing as much as practicable the areas of any remaining disputes. Where both parties have co-operated in such matters, the just disposal of expenses may well be of no expenses due to or by. On the other hand where a party takes the other party to proof on an issue or issues on which he is unsuccessful to the extent of the other party's securing an award significantly greater than any outstanding offer, the expense caused to the successful party may well be recoverable by an award (Adams v Adams (No. 2), per Lord Gill at page 151). While each party should be explicit as to what would be acceptable by way of settlement, it will be the relationship of the judicial award to the offer of the obligant, as prospective payee, which will ordinarily be of primary significance.

[8] In the present case no criticism can properly be made of the parties' conduct of matters prior to the proof. Both behaved responsibly. The proof was conducted efficiently and with co-operation between parties. A number of issues remained to be resolved. These included the valuation of the defender's business assets, the proportions in which that aspect of the matrimonial property should be shared, the treatment of capital gains tax and the award of a periodical allowance. On these matters the pursuer was largely successful, either at first instance or in the reclaiming motion. That success made a significant difference to the capital sum which was awarded (or which would have been awarded, if the Lord Ordinary had treated the capital gains tax issue differently). The pursuer was unsuccessful on certain matters put in issue (for example, as to whether a house in Boswell was comprised within the matrimonial property); but these matters took up a relatively small proportion of the time taken at proof and were not of major significance to the assessment of financial provision. (An issue of contact to a child of the marriage in the end occupied little time). The amount which the Lord Ordinary awarded to the pursuer by way of a capital sum exceeded by more than £44,000 the capital sum offered in settlement by the defender at that stage; the Lord Ordinary additionally awarded to the pursuer a periodical allowance at the rate of £4,000 per month for one year. In effect, accordingly, the total award of financial provision made by the Lord Ordinary exceeded by more than £92,000 the offer made by the defender.

[9] In these circumstances, while the parties fully co-operated both prior to and during the proof, the defender put in issue at the proof major items in which he was (or should have been) unsuccessful; the award made significantly exceeded his latest offer. Further, in terms of court time that occupied by issues on which the defender was unsuccessful substantially exceeded those on which he was successful. In these circumstances the appropriate disposal of expenses, in our view, is to find the defender liable to the pursuer in the expenses occasioned by the proof itself but to find no expenses due to or by either party in respect of other proceedings in the Outer House (in so far as not already dealt with).

[10] The major issue in the reclaiming motion was the treatment of capital gains tax. On that, against opposition from the defender, the pursuer was successful. We do not regard the fact that this was a pure question of law as a ground for not marking the pursuer's success by an award in her favour. On the other aspects of the reclaiming motion, the defender was unsuccessful on the matter of special circumstances and only partially successful on the matter of the resources of the parties. The award made in the Inner House exceeded by £100,000 the defender's offer at that stage. In these circumstances, due regard being had both to issues and to result, the pursuer should, in our view, be found entitled to the expenses in the Inner House.

[11] Those awards of expenses would not disrupt the financial provision made, the defender being able to meet them without undue hardship.

Ancillary matters

[12] Two ancillary matters arise. The pursuer sought certification as an expert witness of a Mr. Alan Robb. This motion was not opposed and should be granted. She also sought under various heads an award of an additional fee in respect of proceedings in the Outer House. In the circumstances any award is necessarily restricted to the expenses occasioned by the proof itself. In our view the pursuer is entitled to an additional fee in respect of these expenses but only under heads (e) and (f) of Rule of Court 42.14(3). The cause was clearly of importance to the future lifestyle of the pursuer and the value of the property involved was substantial. Given that the award of expenses is so restricted, the application under heads (a), (b), (c) and (g) is not made out.

 


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