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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> Joy v Joy [2015] EWHC 455 (Fam) (05 March 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2015/455.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 455 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Nichola Anne Joy |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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Clive Douglas Christopher Joy |
Respondent |
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Martin Pointer QC and Miss Kyra Cornwall (instructed by DWFM Beckman) for the Respondent Husband
Hearing dates: 5 and 6 February and 5 March 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Peter Singer:
(1) The court may grant the following interim remedies –
(a) an interim injunction;
(b) an interim declaration;
(c) an order –
(i) for the detention, custody or preservation of relevant property;
…
(v) for the sale of relevant property which is of a perishable nature or which for any other good reason it is desirable to sell quickly; and
…
(d) an order authorising a person to enter any land or building in the possession of a party to the proceedings for the purposes of carrying out an order under sub-paragraph(c);
…
(f) an order (referred to as a 'freezing injunction') –
(i) restraining a party from removing from the jurisdiction assets located there; or
(ii) restraining a party from dealing with any assets whether located within the jurisdiction or not;
…
(j) an order for a specified fund to be paid into court or otherwise secured, where there is a dispute over a party's right to the fund;
…
(m) an order directing any account to be taken or inquiry to be made by the court.
(2) In paragraph (1)(c) and (g),'relevant property' means property (including land) which is the subject of an application or as to which any question may arise on an application.
(3) The fact that a particular kind of interim remedy is not listed in paragraph (1) does not affect any power that the court may have to grant that remedy.
The list in rule 20.2 is plainly an attempt to set out every conceivable form of interim remedy for which a party may wish to apply, although the draftsman of the original CPR scheme, replicated in the FPR, did not rule out the fertile imagination of an applicant to conjure up an application hitherto unimagined and possibly also unimaginable (although were the court to dream up a new form of relief it would implicitly assume that it had always existed but had lain fallow as part of the court's own inherent jurisdiction). Thus rule 20.2(3) (CPR 25.1(3)) provides that 'the fact that a particular kind of interim remedy is not listed in paragraph (1) does not affect any power that the court may have to grant that remedy'. The provision was apparently inserted in the CPR to make clear that the list was not intended to cut down the court's inherent jurisdiction, or to exclude powers granted by statute (e.g. to appoint a receiver under section 37 of the Senior Courts Act 1981).
Mr Pointer invites me to conclude that "it necessarily follows that the attempt by W to squeeze the relief she seeks into rule 20.2 by invocation of rule 20.2(3) cannot work." I would like to reserve my position on that proposition, but my tentative view is that one does not need to go as far as 20.2(3) to find a power to order sale which was clearly anticipated even if not conceived by the framers of the rule, and to my mind is by no means unimaginable.