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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Hutchings-Whelan v Hutchings [2012] EWCA Civ 38 (26 January 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/38.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 38, [2012] Fam Law 642, [2012] 2 FLR 108, [2012] 4 Costs LR 633, [2012] 1 FCR 339 |
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ON APPEAL FROM
CARDIFF COUNTY COURT (HHJ Masterman)
CF0800676
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE HUGHES
LORD JUSTICE MCFARLANE
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MICHELE ANN HUTCHINGS-WHELAN |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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PAUL ALLAN HUTCHINGS |
Respondent |
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Paul Allan Hutchings appeared in person
Hearing date: 12 January 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice McFarlane :
Background
"Eventually [the husband] was forced to concede in evidence that, on his own evidence, 80% of 106 Commercial Street was paid for ultimately by money derived from his own property. He said that this was "a gift" to [Harry]. When one takes account of interest payments it means therefore that [the husband] "gifted" his son something in the region of £1/4 million at a time when, as he claims, he was "broke". "
i) the judge had reached a figure of £1.066 million as being the profit realised upon the sale of 106 Commercial Street. The husband's case was that the judge, in calculating the profit figure, had failed to take account of interest totalling £136,000 paid by him on loans with respect to the property and also had failed to take account of the provision of expenses relating to this ownership, including the obtaining of planning permission;ii) the judge had not taken account of £19,600 spent upon refurbishing two properties, one at 270 Greenway Road, Rumney and the second at Priory View, Danesbury, Newport;
iii) the judge had placed a value of £50,000 upon a bracelet that the husband owned, which in reality the husband asserted should have been valued at £35,000.
In the light of these three factors Hughes LJ concluded that the husband had an arguable case in submitting that the lump sum awarded to the wife may require revision in his favour.
i) The appellant's current condition;
ii) His treatment;
iii) His capacity to attend court and conduct litigation; and
iv) The prognosis including advice upon when, if at all, the appellant may be fit to attend court and conduct litigation in the future.
i) The continuation of the proceedings, and a failure to achieve a resolution with respect to this couple's finances some twelve years after they separated, appeared to be a major cause of the husband's current decline. Adjourning the proceedings further would seem only to prolong and potentially to exacerbate the situation with no indication of when the husband's circumstances might be said to have improved to render him more able to contribute to the forensic process;
ii) Despite the court receiving the medical reports to which I have referred, neither the husband, nor the solicitor who apparently has power of attorney with respect to his affairs, has produced a medical report which compiles with the direction that I made in December requiring information as to the prognosis and the stage at which the husband may be likely to be said to be fit to attend court;
iii) The issues in the appeal, following the limited grant of permission, are very narrow and relate to matters more akin to arithmetic than principle;
iv) The Court now has a wealth of written material setting out the arguments on each side in respect to the remaining points and it is questionable what further illumination might be achieved from oral submissions by litigants in person on both sides.
v) The husband has on his own account a solicitor with power of attorney and a charging clause, who could act for him, but has elected not to take any steps to enable him to do so, or even to ask him to come to this court.
The judge's judgment
"a further concern is that [the husband] has carried out the majority of the transactions referred to in this case with long-standing friends and business associates. These include Mr D, Mr and Mrs C, the S's, Mr GH, Mr G and doubtless others, quite apart from his own sons. Added to this [the husband] has demonstrated that he is quite ready to lie to lending institutions and to the court about his income and the true ownership of properties. He is extremely resentful of the fact that he may be ordered to pay a further sum to [the wife]. He has shown reluctance to engage in these proceedings and I draw the inference that he has only unwillingly provided the documents necessary for full and frank disclosure, and these of course are incomplete. To some extent this may well be because he conducts his business by word of mouth with trusted associates and is, as he says, not good with paperwork. This removes pure arithmetic from assessment of the overall position and means certain assumptions have had to be made. But the overall picture that emerges is of [the husband] going to considerable lengths to disguise his financial position, both from HMRC and [the wife]. If this is wrong then [the husband] has only himself to blame due to his secrecy and failure to produce a candid account of his dealings backed up by credible records".
"I have therefore come to the conclusion that the fair way of approaching the apportionment of the parties' assets after this period of time is to award [the wife] one half of the value of plot 1, Tyr Winch Road as at 2004 (which should have been brought into account at that date) evidenced by sale price of £315K, i.e. £157K. [The husband] benefited from the sale of 106 to the tune of £1.066M but from that must be deducted the CGT payable of £384K leaving £682K and I consider that [the wife] should now be awarded a part of that profit discounted to reflect the matters set out in the preceding paragraph [credit to the husband for radical improvement of finances post separation]. One half would be too much and one quarter too little. One third amounts to £227K. If one adds that to the £157K the result is £384K. Applying the equality yardstick, that sum happens to be less than half of the parties' joint assets of £804K. These various sums are deliberately expressed in "round figures" because of the inevitable degree of inference, estimate and assumption but that is a useful comparison to make. I therefore conclude that the fair sum to award [the wife] is £384,000."
Profit from 106 Commercial Street
Greenway Road and Priory View, Danesbury
a) the husband made no specific claim for such costs in the case presented by his QC;
b) they were not established in evidence;
c) they have no direct arithmetical relevance to the lump sum awarded.
Bracelet
"…and I find that he could, if he had to, sell the jewellery as well which I take (in the absence of any better evidence) to be worth the £75K he paid for it." [the sum of £75K includes the £50K for the bracelet.]
Overview
"this removes pure arithmetic from assessment of the overall position and means that certain assumptions have had to be made"
That conclusion seems to be inevitable from the manner in which the husband had conducted himself and the evidence, or lack of it, that had been produced.
Costs
"The general rule in ancillary relief proceedings is that the court will not make an order requiring one party to pay the costs of another party; but
The court may make such an order at any stage of the proceedings where it considers it appropriate to do so because of the conduct of a party in relation to the proceedings (whether before or during them)."
Lord Justice Hughes:
Lord Justice Maurice Kay: