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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> McFarlane v McFarlane [2004] EWCA Civ 872 (07 July 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/872.html Cite as: [2004] 3 WLR 1480, [2005] Fam 171, [2004] 3 All ER 921, [2004] EWCA Civ 872 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL
DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE FAMILY DIVISION
MR
JUSTICE BENNETT
FD01D08002 & FD02D03334
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LATHAM
and
LORD JUSTICE
WALL
____________________
MCFARLANE v. MCFARLANE |
||
- and - |
||
PARLOUR v. PARLOUR |
____________________
Smith
Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421
4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr J Posnansky QC & Mr S Trowell
(instructed by Levison Meltzer Pigott) for Mr McFarlane
Mr N Mostyn QC &
Miss D Bangay (instructed by Clintons) for Mrs Parlour
Mr N Francis QC &
Mr B Molyneux (instructed by Alexiou Fisher Phillips) for Mr Parlour
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Thorpe:
Introduction.
McFarlane v. McFarlane.
The facts.
The case before the District Judge.
The Judgment of the District Judge.
(a)"In terms of contributions, from 1991 to date the husband has been the breadwinner for this family. He has worked extremely hard and has been and continues to be very successful. In 1991 the parties made a joint decision that their children would be brought up by the mother on a day-to-day basis and she would abandon her career. It has been suggested on behalf of the husband that the wife did not enjoy her work and found it stressful; that she willingly gave up her career; implying thereby that it diminished the value of her contribution in running the home and protecting the husband from the day to day stresses of the child rearing. I reject this argument. The value of the wife's contribution is derived from what she did and how well she did it, rather than her motivation for doing it and, in any event, she disputes that she did not enjoy her job. There has not been a scintilla of criticism of the wife, either as a partner or as a mother. The parties contribution to this long marriage has been different but of equal value."
(b) "Part of the overall circumstances of this case is that the joint decision of the parties to concentrate on the husband's career in order to provide the funding of the family's lifestyle has resulted in the greatest fruits of his endeavours being available towards the end of the marriage and after its breakdown. In effect, the spadework for these rewards was carried out over a long period and it would be unfair to take the view that recent increases in the husband's earnings since the breakdown of the marriage have not been contributed to by the wife. The wife's contributions enabled the husband to create a working environment which has produced greater rewards, in respect of which she should have her fair share. She also continues to make a contribution to the family in her nurturing of the children in a single parent household. That contribution did not come to an end when the parties separated."
(a) "The husband has estimated his own financial needs, exclusive of housing costs, at £60,000 to £80,000 per annum, giving no particulars. He plans to pay off his share of the borrowings incurred in the purchase of [his new home] over a five-year period, which will require payments of approximately £347,500 per annum. This is an entirely voluntary responsibility which he is perfectly entitled to take on, but it is not a reasonable one…Doing the best that I can I therefore conclude that he has paid almost half a million pounds more for his housing than in my judgment is reasonable."
(b) "This would have resulted in the husband having to service less debt than he has actually incurred and I do not consider that the wife and children should be penalised because of the husband's decision with his partner to buy [his new home] which was beyond his reasonable requirements."
"In the context of this case, the joint decisions made by the parties about how these children should be brought up and financially supported and the husband's earning capacity, it is in my judgment unreasonable to expect this wife to take steps to acquire or improve her earning capacity in the foreseeable future, and that is, at the very least, until [the youngest child] reaches secondary school age, when the matter might be very different."
"The taxation concessions available to the husband in obtaining partnership loans to finance the purchase of property are very generous. Tax relief is available to him on all interest repayments on these loans at higher rates and this how he has financed part of purchase of [his new home]. I take the view that, after determining what is a fair outcome in respect of the wife's claim for maintenance, taking into account the eight factors specified in Section 25(2) of the Matrimonial Causes Act, none of which predominate over the others, and against the background of all these circumstances of the case, that how the parties choose to spend their available income is a matter for them. I am far from satisfied that either of them intends to provide for their later years by way of conventional pension fund investments."
(a) "The court's fundamental duty is to apply Section 25 of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 as amended to all the circumstances of the case in order to arrive at a fair outcome, and I remind myself that fairness does not necessarily mean equality, even where the parties have agreed in principle to an equal division or thereabouts of capital assets."
(b) "In my view, the appropriate maintenance award for this wife is £250,000 per annum which equates to 33.18% of the husband's present net income. This reflects her needs, obligations and the contribution that she has made over the years of the marriage. It may well need to be revised in later years for a variety of reasons. It is a matter for her whether she chooses to make pension provision, but she will not be able to avail herself of tax-relief on pension contributions while she is not an income tax payer and it is a matter for her whether she takes out insurance to protect her and the children's position in the event that the husband dies or is ill and unable to work."
The judgment of Bennett J.
1. The order was manifestly excessive given that the wife had not put her annual requirements at more than £128,000 per annum.2. The district judge had wrongly allowed for the wife to build up a retirement fund and/or to insure herself against the husband's incapacity or premature death.
3. The district judge had taken insufficient account of the standard of living during the marriage.
4. The district judge had taken insufficient account of the husband's need to make provision for his retirement out of present income.
5. Fresh evidence as to the husband's income for the year ending 31st May 2004 invalidated the rate of £250,000 a year.
6. The district judge's finding that the husband had unreasonably overspent in housing himself was wrong and miscalculated.
"In doing so I shall give the same weight to the Section 25 factors as did the district judge. She saw and heard the wife and the husband. She has made important findings to which I propose to be completely loyal. It is clear to me, as I have endeavoured to set out in this judgment, that she placed considerable weight on the wife's contribution both past, present and future."
53. "The effect of the order of £250,000 per annum by way of periodical payments for the wife is to give her a sum of money which is arithmetically way, way above her needs. I repeat: her budget of £128,000 per annum is not a historical one, but is designed, and has been carefully thought out, for current and future needs. Her needs, of course, are not the be all and end all of her application, for, if they were, that would fly in the face of s.25. The court must apply all the criteria, giving such weight to each factor as the court determines is appropriate in the particular circumstances of the case. However, the fact is that the wife has been awarded a sum so much over her needs that there are only two possible results. Either she spends the difference or she saves the difference. If she saves it, as the thrust of her case suggests she will and she wants to, she is thereby in fact accumulating capital.
54. Miss Stone, in her excellent submissions to me, specifically conceded that the size of the award gives the wife the opportunity to save if she so wishes. Thus the reality, in my judgment, is that the husband will be paying over to the wife from his resources monies which are likely to be directed into financial vehicles for the accumulation of capital. In my judgment, Mr Posnansky has made good his submission that the effect of the order is to subvert the principle set out in many cases that an award of capital is made once and once only, and that the purpose of periodical payments is maintenance.
55. It is my judgment, with all due respects to the district judge, that, having given the wife an award from which she is likely to be able to save large sums of money and thereby accumulate capital, it is no answer to say, as she did, that it is a matter for the wife whether she chooses to make provision for pension and other matters."
58. "I wholly reject Mr Posnansky's submission that the fair award for the wife is £100,000 per annum. To suggest that the wife in all the circumstances of this case should walk away with £100,000 per annum when set against the husband's net income of £753,000 per annum is, in my judgment, thoroughly mean and would be unfair. It goes nowhere near reflecting the s.25 factors as, I repeat, evaluated by the district judge.
59. At the end of the marriage the husband's income was rising and rising pretty rapidly. The standard of living was increasing. The husband's income and his standard of living has resulted from what the district judge described at p.20 in her judgment as a result of the "spadework". The wife's contribution is continuing and will continue in the future vis-à-vis the children, something which, following a divorce, is a contribution that is sometimes overlooked or even played down. The district judge did neither and properly, in my judgment, gave it appropriate weight.
60. What figure should then be substituted for 250,000? The quantification of periodical payments is more an art that a science. The parameters of s.25 are so wide that it might be said that it is almost impossible to be "scientific". In my judgment, I would be doing justice to both parties if I award the wife £180,000 per annum by way of periodical payments.
61. The husband may say that still exceeds her budget by a significant amount and thereby I am falling into the same error as did the district judge. I agree that the figure I propose to order does exceed her budget and significantly. But if I am right to reject the husband's case, then I ask the rhetorical question; how else are all the s.25 factors, as evaluated by the district judge, to be given full weight other than by making the kind of award that I propose? The more that an award is refined down closer and closer to £100,000, the greater would be the criticism that I would be devaluing the s.25 criteria (other than the wife's needs) as evaluated by the district judge.
62. I am sure the parties will understand that no family judge in exercising this jurisdiction can achieve perfection given the width of s.25. He or she can only do his best to get as near to it as possible in the circumstances of any particular case."
"The appeal should be limited to a review of the decision or order of the district judge."
Parlour v. Parlour.
The facts.
The Findings of Bennett J.
"Accordingly although the marriage only lasted some three and a half years it would not be just, in my judgment, to ignore the fact that their relationship endured for seven or slightly more years."
"I am satisfied that compared to the lifestyles of other footballers in the same bracket as the husband the wife and husband in this case did lead a comfortable but not an extravagant way of life."
"She is a full time mother of three children aged 8, 6 and 4. I am satisfied that she bore the brunt of bringing the children up whilst the parties co-habited. Furthermore it is obvious that she will have to bear the burden of bringing them up during their childhood. Thus by the time the youngest child is 16 the wife will have had a further 12 years of caring for the children. If the youngest remains at home until she is 18 then the period would be 14 years. That I recognise at once is, together with her past caring for the children, an enormous contribution. I am satisfied too that she has no earning capacity. She told me in evidence that she made no sacrifices in giving up her work with the opticians in 1994 nor has she been disadvantaged in staying at home. She accepted that she had not given up any career. There is no dispute, as I understand it, that the wife was a marvellous mother and ran the household efficiently and looked after the children and the husband to the very best of her considerable ability."
"As to the husband's contribution he was and is a very talented footballer. That sprang from his natural talent, being a member of the Arsenal Football Club, and having the good fortune to be coached by Arsène Wenger, a top class coach. So, strictly speaking, the financial wealth of the family was created by the husband. However, in my judgment, there is a very significant factor in the success of the husband in which the wife played a vital role. The wife has suggested in her evidence that the husband was and is a drinker. From what I have read in the papers and been told by the husband and wife in evidence, I am satisfied that the husband was in an environment where, before the advent of Arsène Wenger in 1996, there was very considerable drinking amongst certain players in the Arsenal Football Club. In the early days I am satisfied that the husband did participate in some of those drinking sessions. However the wife realised that that was the way to ruin and unhappiness and I am satisfied that in about the mid 1990's or slightly later she took a grip on the situation and encouraged and persuaded her husband to move away from that style of living. That rather bland description of what she did probably understates her contribution in this respect. In the mid 1990's the husband gave interviews to the press in which he publicly praised the wife for all that she did to bring him back from the brink.
Thus the wife did make a contribution to the husband's success as a footballer for Arsenal and also for England (in the late 1990's and in 2000 the husband played for England and was capped 10 times)."
"The wife has no income or if she can invest what she has not spent of the lump sum, such income would, in the circumstances of this case, be insignificant. I am satisfied as I have already said that she has no earning capacity now or in the foreseeable future. Her life is bound up with her children and will be for some considerable time in the future.
The husband. I have already set out his income and other financial resources. He is secure in a very large income until June 2005. What will happen thereafter is unknown. The husband told me in evidence, which I accept, that after a player reaches the age of 31 and his contract expires, he will not be given a contract which lasts for more than a year but it may be renewed for a year at a time. In June 2005 the husband will be 32 years old. So, if Arsenal retain his services, he will be given a year's contract, renewable thereafter. The husband has no plans for his future thereafter. However, it may be that any new contract might not contain such high remunerations, and/or discretionary payments under EBTs may decline or possibly cease. After he has ceased to be a professional footballer- at least with Arsenal- it is likely that his income will decline very considerably."
"However, I am satisfied, looking at needs alone, generously construed, the figure of £180,000 per annum for the wife and the three children is substantially too high. If I were to allow £30,000 for all of the three children and £120,000 for the wife, in my judgment that would be fair and just."
"So far as the obligations and responsibilities of the husband are concerned he now has two families to maintain. However, in fairness to him, he has not suggested that the wife and the children should be in any way disadvantaged by the fact that he has to maintain his partner and their child. In any event I am satisfied that now and for the foreseeable future there will be more than adequate income to properly maintain his partner and child without in any way affecting his primary obligation and responsibility to the wife and the children."
Bennett J's Conclusions.
"(1) In exercising the powers under Section 23(1)(a) and (d) of the 1973 Act the court must have regard to all the circumstances of the case, first consideration given to the welfare of the children.
(2) The court must, in particular, have regard to the matters set out in Section 25(2).
(3) In carrying out that exercise, the court is entitled to place such importance and weight on each matter in Section 25(2)(a) as it thinks appropriate in the circumstances of the case (see White).
(4) However, "needs" or "reasonable requirements" is not a determinative or limiting factor in cases where the payor has an ability to pay more than the payee's needs. – (see Cornick No.2, White, and Cornick No. 3).
(5) Thus the objective implicit in the exercise of the Court's discretion under Section 25 is to achieve a fair outcome in the financial arrangements between the parties, (see White.)
(6) In seeking to achieve a fair outcome there is no place for discrimination between the spouses and their respective roles. There should be no bias in favour of the money-earner and against the home-maker and child-care, (see White.)
(7) The English statutory code allows of only one application of capital between spouses. Where, as in this case, capital claims are compromised and receive the court's approval by way of order, they cannot be revisited or reissued, see Pearce and the House of Lords and Privy Council cases referred to therein at paragraph 17.
(8) Where there has been or is to be capital provision made in favour of a spouse then, generally speaking a subsequent or concurrent award of periodical payments ought to be for that spouse's maintenance, and ought not to be used to further distribute monies to the payee so as to give her (or him) savings i.e. capital. But such a factor must yield to a greater or lesser extent to the particular circumstances of the case if fairness so dictates. Thus with that qualification, I broadly accept the thrust of Mr Francis's submissions."
"In my judgment to confine in this instant case an award of periodical payments for the wife to a ceiling of "needs" or "reasonable requirements" where the husband has the ability to pay more, indeed far more, than the wife's needs would be a faulty exercise of the court's discretion. For that could be to determine her application by reference to only one matter in Section 25(2) and ignore the other matters. I accept that the wife's contribution (as I have found it to be) made a significant difference to the success of the husband. She was part of the circumstances that persuaded the husband to drop the laddish culture and, as she put it, "grow up". Her contributions to the home, and the children, both now and in the future must not be underestimated, overlooked or played down.
The husband's open offer of periodical payments is equivalent to 10% of his net income. To suggest that in the circumstances of this case the wife should walk away with £120,000 (for her and the children) when set against her husband's net income of about £1.2 million is thoroughly mean and would be unfair. However, to award her £444,000 because that represents 37.5% of his net income which is the same percentage of the capital she received, would be an unprincipled and unfair award on the facts if this case. She would in one year receive sufficient monies, which, after making provision for her and the children's needs, would leave her with a sum equivalent to her present lump sum or more. If the award were backdated to March 2003 and were to run to June 2005, a period of 2 years and 3 months, she would effectively have acquired further capital to the tune of £500,000 and more. That in my judgment could be seen to be blowing a large hole through the middle of Pearce and in the instant case would be quite unwarranted.
Thus, in my judgment, the court must seek a way that does justice to the parties and which does not, so far as is possible, impose a glass ceiling on the one hand but which does not hand out capital on the other. It surely must be implicit in the concept of periodical payments when placed next to the concepts of lump sum and property adjustments that where there has been a capital adjustment between spouses in accordance with White, as it was in the instant case, the function of periodical payments should not then or at some later date be seen to further the claimant spouse's ability to mine the paying spouse's income for further capital. I see the force in Mr Mostyn's submissions that my decision in M v. M contains irreconcilable tensions and contradictions. Indeed the decision I will make in the instant case may be subject to the same criticism. But as I endeavoured to explain in M v. M, the quantification of periodical payments is more of an art than a science, given the width of the discretion expressly given to the court by Parliament."
Counsel's submissions on the appeals.
Conclusions.
The principle that governed the judgments of Bennett J.
Section 25A.
"Exercise of Court's Powers in Favour of Party to Marriage on Decree of Divorce or Nullity of Marriage
(1) Where on or after the grant of a decree of divorce or nullity of marriage the court decides to exercise its powers under section 23(1)(a), (b) or (c), 24, 24A or 24B above in favour of a party to the marriage, it shall be the duty of the court to consider whether it would be appropriate so to exercise those powers that the financial obligations of each party towards the other will be terminated as soon after the grant of the decree as the court considers just and reasonable.
(2) Where the court decides in such a case to make a periodical payments or secured periodical payments order in favour of a party to the marriage, the court shall in particular consider whether it would be appropriate to require those payments to be made or secured only for such term as would in the opinion of the court be sufficient to enable the party in whose favour the order is made to adjust without undue hardship to the termination of his or her financial dependence on the other party.
(3) Where on or after the grant of a decree of divorce or nullity of marriage an application is made by a party to the marriage for a periodical payments or secured periodical payments order in his or her favour, then, if the court considers that no continuing obligation should be imposed on either party to make or secure periodical payments in favour of the other, the court may dismiss the application with a direction that the applicant shall not be entitled to make any future application in relation to that marriage for an order under section 23(1)(a) or (b) above."
"There are two principles which inform the modern legislation. One is the public interest that spouses, to the extent that their means permit, should provide for themselves and their children. But the other – of equal importance – is the principle of "the clean-break". The law now encourages spouses to avoid bitterness after family break-down and to settle their money and property problems. An object of the modern law is to encourage each to put the past behind them and to begin a new life which is not overshadowed by the relationship which has broken down."
• Priority for the needs of the children
• Greater weight to be given to the divorced wife's earning capacity and to the desirability of both parties becoming self-sufficient
• Imposing a "clean break" where practicable and appropriate.
"There was, however, a wide-spread feeling amongst those who commented on the Discussion Paper that greater weight should be given to the importance of each party doing everything possible to become self-sufficient, so far as this is consistent with the interests of the children; and we believe that the statutory provisions should contain a positive assertion of this principle.
The court has, under the existing law, power to make orders for a limited term, and this power is sometimes exercised when it is felt that a spouse (usually the wife) needs some time to readjust to her new situation but could not or should not expect to rely on continuing support from her husband. We think that it would be desirable to require the courts specifically to consider whether an order for a limited term would not be appropriate in all the circumstances of the case, given the increased weight which we believe should be attached to the desirability of the parties becoming self-sufficient."
"Nevertheless, the response to the Discussion Paper showed strong support for the view (with which we agree) that such finality should be achieved wherever possible, as for example where there is a childless marriage of comparatively short duration between a husband and a wife who has income, or an earning capacity, or in cases of a longer marriage, where there is an adequate measure of capital available for division."
"The response to the Discussion Paper indicated wide support for the view that the court should be more clearly directed to the desirability of promoting a severance of financial obligations between the parties at the time of divorce; and to give greater weight to the view that in the appropriate case any periodical financial provision ordered in favour of one spouse (usually the wife) for her own benefit – as distinct from periodical payments made to her to enable her to care for the children – should be primarily directed to secure wherever possible a smooth transition from marriage to the status of independence. We believe that this general objective should be embodied in the legislation."
Outcome in McFarlane.
i) The husband's capacity to re-mortgageii) The extent to which the wife had built up a capital reserve from the surplus of income over expenditure in the intervening years
iii) The revival of the wife's earning capacity, the youngest child having reached secondary school age.
"…How the parties choose to spend their available income is a matter for them."
Later she said: -
"It is a matter for her whether she chooses to make pension provision…and it is a matter for her whether she takes out insurance to protect her and the children's position in the event that the husband dies or is ill and unable to work."
Outcome in Parlour.
"32. The court should have little difficulty in concluding that in about 4 years time H will enter his twilight years and that there is a real risk that he will not have husbanded his income responsibly so as to make proper long-term support for his family.
33. The court should also conclude that the prognosis of net income set out by JW in her second report is reasonable (about £1.2m net per annum until June 2003).
34. Thus the court should conclude that to award W £444,000 from March 2003 to June 2004 from this income, which derives in large measure from a contract signed during the marriage, is wholly fair. It is a reasonable sharing of income. If it enables W to make savings then that is right and proper, on the facts of this case.
35. W will accept in any future capitalisation that she should bring into account such sum of periodical payments that she is awarded in excess of her aliment. The judgment can make this explicit."
Reciprocal Assessment of Needs.
"It has never been the custom in ancillary relief litigation to look with scrupulous care at the budget items of the prospective payer. Of course, it is incumbent on the judge to cross check to ensure that the adjudication that meets the applicant's needs is an adjudication which the respondent can afford. But that essential task the judge specifically performed as is plain from the passage which I have already cited."
"…The financial needs…which each of the parties to the marriage has or is likely to have in the foreseeable future."
The Wider Issues.
(a) The evolution of the statutory powers between 1857 and 1970;
(b) The definition of periodical payments;
(c) The principles governing the assessment of periodical payments;
(d) The guidance to be derived from judgments and academic analysis in other jurisdictions.
The evolution of the statutory powers and the definition of periodical payments.
"In every such case it shall be lawful for the court to make an order on the husband for payment to the wife during their joint lives of such monthly or weekly sums for her maintenance and support as the court may think reasonable. "
"An order requiring the husband to pay to the wife during their joint lives such monthly or weekly sum for her maintenance as the court thinks reasonable."
i. Paragraph 17(a) makes plain that the Law Commission advocated new terminology rather than new powers. Financial provision was the generic term for periodical and lump sum payments.
ii. Financial provision was contrasted with provision by property adjustments.
iii. Whilst the primary objective of financial provision orders was 'to provide income for the maintenance of spouses' the introduction of the lump sum order had 'blurred the line between provision from income and provision by way of adjustments to capital': see Paragraph 49 of the Report.
"I do not accept that argument for the following reasons.
(1) The purpose of the 1970 Act was to change statutory provisions that were outdated and inadequate and to make a new start.
(2) Although the word "maintenance" was used in both SS1 and 6 of 1970 Act (now SS22 and 27 of the MCA 1973) there are changes between section 6 of the 1970 Act (section 27 of the MCA 1973 and its predecessors and the word "maintenance" is not used in the predecessors to section 1 of the 1970 Act (section 22 of the MCA 1973).
(3) The subsequent amendments to section 27 of the MCA 1973 confirm or clarify that "maintenance" was not used by Parliament to refer to the old common law duty of a husband to maintain his wife.
(4) The report (read alone and together with the Working Paper) supports the conclusion that "maintenance" was not used by Parliament to refer to the old common law duty of a husband to maintain his wife.
"I do not believe that Hale J erred in her approach in principle to this case, and I reject the submission which Mr Mostyn has made that there was a delimiting factor (as he termed it) which should have had the effect of restricting a judge hearing an application for variation to what he termed the budgetary or marital standard."
"[106] In my judgment, just as it is on the first application for orders for financial provision, White v White [2000] 2 FLR 981 is clear authority on an application for variation (and for an order for a lump sum on a discharge or variation of a periodical payment) for the following points, namely that (a) the court should not rely on the judicial concept of 'reasonable requirements' as a determinative or limiting factor in cases when a payor has, or acquires, an ability to pay more than the payee's financial needs even when they are interpreted generously and called 'reasonable requirements', and (b) the court should exercise its discretion by applying the words of the statute."
The principles upon which periodical payments are to be assessed.
"Of the criteria mentioned in Paragraph 82(a), (i) [the respective means, needs, earning capacity and financial responsibilities of each spouse] and (ii) [the standard of living of the parties] will be especially relevant to periodic cash provisions; the others to property adjustments and lump sum awards."
"But, as already emphasized, the two types of financial provision cannot and should not be kept wholly distinct, and all criteria are, or may be, relevant."
"But I can see nothing, either in the statutory provisions or in the underlying objective of securing fair financial arrangements, to lead me to suppose that the available assets of the respondent become immaterial once the claimant wife's financial needs are satisfied. Why ever should they? If a husband and wife by their joint efforts over many years, his directly in his business and hers indirectly at home, have built up a valuable business from scratch, why should the claimant wife be confined to the court's assessment of her reasonable requirements, and the husband left with a much larger share? Or, to put the question differently, in such a case, where the assets exceed the financial needs of both parties, why should the surplus belong solely to the husband? On the facts of a particular case there may be a good reason why the wife should be confined to her needs and the husband left with the much larger balance. But the mere absence of financial need cannot, by itself, be a sufficient reason. If it were, discrimination would be creeping in by the back door. In these cases, it should be remembered, the claimant is usually the wife. Hence the importance of the check against the yardstick of equal division."
The guidance to be derived from judgments and academic analysis in other jurisdictions.
"In the current climate now, where the court is engaged more in dividing up assets than in calculating a party's reasonable needs, there would be logic in trying to calculate and include a figure for any asset which generates a secure income. At its most extreme that might include the valuation of a party's earning capacity. However, in my judgment, the evaluation of such an ephemeral item would be pregnant with problems and lead to endless debate incapable of fair resolution. It would be even more problematic where there was ongoing provision for children."
"The valuation of a person's earning capacity by its reduction to a fixed figure is not an exercise that can usefully be embarked upon. There are too many imponderables. However, it seems to me perfectly proper to pray in aid, by way of makeweight to an argument in relation to any particular capital division, an earning capacity available to one party or another over and above income generated from the capital being divided."
Orders.
Lord Justice Latham:
Lord Justice Wall:
Exercise of court's powers in favour of party to marriage on decree of divorce or nullity of marriage
(1) Where on or after the grant of a decree of divorce or nullity of marriage the court decides to exercise its powers under section 23(1)(a), (b) or (c), 24 24A or 24B above in favour of a party to the marriage, it shall be the duty of the court to consider whether it would be appropriate so to exercise those powers that the financial obligations of each party towards the other will be terminated as soon after the grant of the decree as the court considers just and reasonable.
(2) Where the court decides in such a case to make a periodical payments or secured periodical payments order in favour of a party to the marriage, the court shall in particular consider whether it would be appropriate to require those payments to be made or secured only for such term as would in the opinion of the court be sufficient to enable the party in whose favour the order is made to adjust without undue hardship to the termination of his or her financial dependence on the other party.
…It surely must be implicit in the concept of periodical payments when placed next to the concepts of lump sum and property adjustments that where there has been a capital adjustment between spouses in accordance with White, as it was in the instant case, the function of periodical payments should not then or at some later date be seen to further the claimant spouse's ability to mine the paying spouse's income for further capital.
…. a reforming statute designed to facilitate the granting of ancillary relief in cases where marriages have been dissolved ….We regard the provisions of sections 2,3, 4 and 5 of the Act of 1970 as designed to accord to the courts the widest possible powers in readjusting the financial position of the parties and to afford the courts the necessary machinery to that end….
Whether it is right, or not, to accept counsel for the husband's submission that a clear distinction should be drawn between notices of application for financial provision under s 23 and notices of application for property adjustment orders under s 24, may be doubted. These two sections are, in effect, a statement by Parliament of the code to be adopted by the court in dealing with ancillary relief after divorce generally. The fact that they are two separate sections seems to me to be much more a matter of convenience and drafting than anything else. There is no reason that I can see why any distinction should be drawn between those two classes of relief which the court is now empowered to grant. In my view, these two sections should be, as far as possible, regarded as part and parcel of a single code. It may be very important in many cases when the matter comes to be investigated by the court that the court should be free to make either a property adjustment order or a lump sum order, whichever turns out to be the more convenient in the circumstances. It would be unfortunate, I think, if that degree of elasticity were lost for some technical reason. It is quite plain that the same principles apply in the assessment of claims under each of these two sections. That appears from s 25, and it is equally plain from the judgments in Trippas v Trippas of Lord Denning MR and Scarman LJ. Lump sum orders are alternatives to property adjustment orders, and in many cases one order may prove more convenient than another. I do not think there is any greater difference than that. So, in my judgment, the court should keep technical points of the kind with which we are dealing in this case to an absolute minimum.
I appreciate the point he (Mr. Aglionby, counsel for the husband) has made, namely that it is difficult for practitioners to advise clients in these cases because the rules are not very firm. That is inevitable when the courts are working out the exercise of the wide powers given by a statute like the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973. It is the essence of such a discretionary situation that the court should preserve, so far as it can, the utmost elasticity to deal with each case on its own facts. Therefore, it is a matter of trial and error and imagination on the part of those advising clients. It equally means that decisions of this court can never be better than guidelines. They are not precedents in the strict sense of the word. There is bound to be an element of uncertainty in the use of the wide discretionary powers given to the court under the 1973 Act, and no doubt there always will be, because as social circumstances change so the court will have to adapt the ways in which it exercises discretion. If property suddenly became available all over the country many of the rationes decidendi of the past would be quite inappropriate.