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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 >> Briers v Briers [2017] EWCA Civ 15 (25 January 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/15.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Civ 15 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE FAMILY COURT AT BIRMINGHAM
His Honour Judge Rogers
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE SENIOR PRESIDENT OF TRIBUNALS
and
LORD JUSTICE LINDBLOM
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Glenn Hugh Briers |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Nicola Ann Briers |
Respondent |
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Mr Justin Warshaw QC and Mr Joshua Viney (instructed by FBC Manby Bowdler LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 23 November 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Ernest Ryder, Senior President:
a. The judge was plainly wrong in his conclusion that the parties did not reach an agreement in 2005;
b. The judge failed to have sufficient regard to the wife's delay in bringing the claim and the lack of any cogent explanation for the same;
c. The judge's determination was wrongly based on entitlement rather than need;
d. The judge failed to have sufficient regard to the value of the assets at the time of separation;
e. The judge failed to have sufficient regard to the husband's contribution to the business after separation;
f. The judge failed to have sufficient regard to the evidence that the business would not be sold and would be passed instead to the children so that its value would not be realised by the husband;
g. The judge failed to have sufficient regard to the risk attached to the business including from potential tax liabilities connected with the business.
The alleged agreement:
a. "[12] …underlying her presentation was a vulnerability. She found the recollection of events painful … At times her recollection was incomplete …the overwhelming impression she made [was] of a woman doing her very best to give an honest and balanced account…
b. [15] …I have no doubt the wife is telling the truth about this example…
c. [9] …I accept the written and oral evidence of the wife as to the detail."
a. "[9] …I have no doubt that he was the dominant personality and sought to prevail in the relationship psychologically…
b. [13] …The husband made a less favourable impression upon me…
c. [14] …I also found the husband under cross-examination could be dismissive or evasive of perfectly proper enquiries…the more those matters are explored closely and forensically, the more unconvincing became the husband's responses.
d. [15] …I am cautious about the husband's evidence because of its tendency towards unreliability.
a. the solicitor's note of the meeting on 16 March 2005;
b. the lack of any substantive objection from the wife to the detail of the proposal;
c. the unsigned separation agreement which included in its draft terms the proposed transfers that actually took place;
d. The wife's active participation in the negotiations including her request that the husband's suggestion that she receive a salary of £10,000 pa be included in the draft agreement as a variation;
e. The wife's acknowledgement in oral evidence that a consensus was reached;
f. The husband's execution of all elements of the agreement; and
g. The wife's acquiescence without disagreement from 2005 until 2013.
a. The husband became increasingly dismissive of the wife;
b. The wife felt intimidated by the way the husband put his initial position for example the implied threat that any claim that included the business could lead to its liquidation;
c. The wife consulted her own solicitors who wrote to the husband in December 2002 asking for full and frank disclosure which the husband did not provide;
d. The wife was consistent (and in her own terms insistent) that the husband should provide full and frank disclosure which he never did;
e. The draft deed of separation was not a negotiated document: it was produced on the instructions of the husband's accountant by the husband's solicitor;
f. The husband misled the wife about the ownership of the property he moved into after separation;
g. The discussion at the meeting with the husband's solicitor was conditional upon the husband providing full and frank disclosure as the note of the meeting records;
h. No proper disclosure was ever made and accordingly no agreement was ever reached.
Delay:
Entitlement as against need:
The valuation of the business and contributions:
The inheritance:
Tax liabilities:
Lord Justice Lindblom:
Lady Justice Rafferty: