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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 >> Juffali v Juffali (Rev 1) [2016] EWHC 1684 (Fam) (30 June 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2016/1684.html Cite as: [2017] 1 FLR 729, [2016] Fam Law 1086, [2016] 4 WLR 119, [2016] EWHC 1684 (Fam), [2016] WLR(D) 380 |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
CHRISTINA ESTRADA JUFFALI |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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WALID JUFFALI |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Justin Warshaw QC, Mr Geoffrey Kingscote and Mr Nicholas Wilkinson (instructed by Mishcon de Reya LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 24th, 27th, 28th, 29th and 30th June 2016
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Roberts
A. Introduction
B. Background
The circumstances in which the marriage came to an end
"Four: The Parties agree that the amount shall be paid within a period of one month. If payment is not made within the aforementioned period, [the respondent] shall have the right to retract this Contract at any time he wants, and he shall have the full right unilaterally to cancel the Contract or to continue with it.
Five: [The children] agree to pay the sale price by handing over all profits to [the respondent] until the full sale price is settled. In the event of the inability to pay the amount within a month, and if [the respondent] wishes to continue with the Contract, he shall have the right to take receipt of all the profits of the Companies, or part of the same, until the full price has been settled. He shall have the right unilaterally to decide between full or partial receipt.
Six: In the event, God forbid, of the death of [the respondent], the claim for payment of the outstanding amount of the Contract Value will lapse and the sale shall be correct and complete and the possessions the Subject Matter of the Contract shall not form part of the estate." [My emphasis]
These proceedings and the litigation which followed
C. These proceedings
(i) The respondent was not resident in the United Kingdom for tax purposes;
(ii) He does not have any assets in the United Kingdom which give rise to a taxable income;
(iii) He does not pay the annual remittance charge;
(iv) He files no tax returns;
(v) He discharges his expenses and living costs when in the United Kingdom using credit cards or expense accounts.
D. The Law
(1) Subject to subsection (3)[5], before making an order for financial relief the court shall consider whether in all the circumstances of the case it would be appropriate for such an order to be made by a court in England and Wales, and if the court is not satisfied that it would be appropriate, the court shall dismiss the application.
(2) The court shall in particular have regard to the following matters –
(a) the connection which the parties to the marriage have with England and Wales;
(b) the connection which those parties have with the country in which the marriage was dissolved or annulled or in which they were legally separated;
(c) the connection which those parties have with any other country outside England and Wales;
(d) any financial benefit which the applicant or a child of the family has received, or is likely to receive, in consequence of the divorce, annulment or legal separation, by virtue of any agreement or the operation of the law of a country outside England and Wales;
(e) in a case where an order has been made by a court in a country outside England and Wales requiring the other party to the marriage to make any payment or transfer any property for the benefit of the applicant or a child of the family, the financial relief given by the order and the extent to which the order has been complied with or is likely to be complied with;
(f) any right which the applicant has, or has had, to apply for financial relief from the other party to the marriage under the law of any country outside England and Wales and if the applicant has omitted to exercise that right the reason for that omission;
(g) the availability in England and Wales of any property in respect of which an order under this Part of this Act in favour of the applicant could be made;
(h) the extent to which any order under this Part of this Act is likely to be enforceable;
(i) the length of time which has elapsed since the date of the divorce, annulment or legal separation.
(1) In deciding whether to exercise its powers under section 17 above and, if so, in what manner the court shall act in accordance with this section.
(2) The court shall have regard to all the circumstances of the case, first consideration being given to the welfare while a minor of any child of the family who has not attained the age of eighteen.
(3) As regards the exercise of those powers in relation to a party to the marriage, the court shall in particular have regard to the matters mentioned in section 25(2)(a) to (h) of the 1973 Act and shall be under duties corresponding with those imposed by section 25A(1) and (2) of the 1973 Act where it decides to exercise under section 17 above powers corresponding with the powers referred to in those subsections.
(3A) ……
(4) As regards the exercise of those powers in relation to a child of the family, the court shall in particular have regard to the matters mentioned in section 25(3)(a) to (e) of the 1973 Act.
(5) ……
(6) Where an order has been made by a court outside England and Wales for the making of payments or the transfer of property by a party to the marriage, the court in considering in accordance with this section the financial resources of the other party to the marriage or a child of the family shall have regard to the extent to which that order has been complied with or is likely to be complied with.
(7) …..
"71 To take up some of the points made in the preceding paragraphs, the proper approach to Part III simply depends on a careful application of sections 16, 17 and 18 in the light of the legislative purpose, which was the alleviation of the adverse consequences of no, or no adequate, financial provision being made by a foreign court in a situation where there were substantial connections with England. There are two, interrelated, duties of the court before making an order under Part III. The first is to consider whether England and Wales is the appropriate venue for the application: section 16(1). The second is to consider whether an order should be made under section 17 having regard to the matters in section 18. There are two reasons why the duties are interrelated. First, neither section 16(2) nor section 18(2)(3) refers to an exhaustive list of matters to be taken into account. Section 16(1) directs the court to have regard to "all the circumstances of the case" and section 16(2) refers the court to certain matters "in particular". Second, some of the matters to be considered under section 16 may be relevant under section 18, and vice versa. An obvious example would be that section 16(2)(e) refers the court to the financial provision which has been made by the foreign court. Plainly that would be relevant under section 18. So also the direction in section 18(6) to the court, in considering the financial resources of a party, to have regard to whether an order of the foreign court has been complied with would plainly be relevant in considering whether England is the appropriate venue. [my emphasis]
72 It is not the purpose of Part III to allow a spouse (usually, in current conditions, the wife) with some English connections to make an application in England to take advantage of what may well be the more generous approach in England to financial provision, particularly in so-called big-money cases. There is no condition of exceptionality for the purposes of section 16, but it will not usually be a case for an order under Part III where the wife had a right to apply for financial relief under the foreign law, and an award was made in the foreign country. In such cases, mere disparity between that award and what would be awarded on an English divorce will certainly be insufficient to trigger the application of Part III. Nor is hardship or injustice (much less serious injustice) a condition of the exercise of the jurisdiction, but if either factor is present, it may make it appropriate, in the light of all the circumstances, for an order to be made, and may affect the nature of the provision ordered. Of course, the court will not lightly characterise foreign law, or the order of a foreign court, as unjust.
73 The amount of financial provision will depend on all the circumstances of the case and there is no rule that it should be the minimum amount required to overcome injustice. The following general principles should be applied. First, primary consideration must be given to the welfare of any children of the marriage. This can cut both ways as the children may be being supported by the foreign spouse. Second, it will never be appropriate to make an order which gives the claimant more than she or he would have been awarded had all proceedings taken place within this jurisdiction. Third, where possible the order should have the result that provision is made for the reasonable needs of each spouse. Subject to these principles, the court has a broad discretion. The reasons why it was appropriate for an order to be made in England are among the circumstances to be taken into account in deciding what order should be made. Where the English connections of the case are very strong there may be no reason why the application should not be treated as if it were made in purely English proceedings. The full procedure for granting ancillary relief after an English divorce does not apply in Part III cases. The conditions which can be attached to leave, together with the court's case management powers, can be used to define the issues and to limit the evidence to be filed, as was done by Munby J in this case. This enables the jurisdiction to be tailored to the needs of the individual case, so that the grant of leave does not inevitably trigger a full blown claim for all forms of ancillary relief."
(a) the income, earning capacity, property and other financial resources which each of the parties to the marriage has or is likely to have in the foreseeable future, including in the case of earning capacity any increase in that capacity which it would be reasonable in the opinion of the court to expect a party to the marriage to acquire;
(b) the financial needs, obligations and responsibilities which each of the parties to the marriage has or is likely to have in the foreseeable future;
(c) the standard of living enjoyed by the family before the breakdown of the marriage;
(d) the age of each party to the marriage and the duration of the marriage;
(e) any physical or mental disability of either of the parties;
(f) the contribution which each of the parties has made or is likely in the foreseeable future to make to the welfare of the family, including any contributions by looking after the home or caring for the family;
(g) the conduct of each of the parties, if that conduct is such that it would in the opinion of the court be inequitable to disregard it;
(h) … the value to each of the parties to the marriage of any benefit which, by reason of the dissolution … of the marriage, that party will lose the chance of acquiring.
"Clearly, and this is well recognised, there is some overlap between the factors listed in section 25(2). In a particular case there may be other matters to be taken into account as well. But the end product of this assessment of financial needs should be seen, and treated by the court, for what it is: only one of the several factors to which the court is to have particular regard. This is so whether the end product is labelled financial needs or reasonable requirements. In deciding what would be a fair outcome the court must also have regard to other factors such as the available resources and the parties' contributions. In following this approach the court will be doing no more than giving effect to the statutory scheme."
"In the search for a fair outcome it is pertinent to have in mind that fairness generates obligations as well as rights. The financial provision made on divorce by one party for the other, still typically the wife, is not in the nature of largesse. It is not a case of "taking away" from one party and "giving" to the other property which "belongs" to the former. The claimant is not a supplicant. Each party to a marriage is entitled to a fair share of the available property. The search is always for what are the requirements of fairness in the particular case."
"[137] …[T]here has to be some sort of rationale for the redistribution of resources from one party to another. In my view there are at least three. Any or all of them might supply such a reason, although one must be careful to avoid double-counting. The cardinal feature is that each is looking at factors which are linked to the parties' relationship, either causally or temporally, and not to extrinsic, unrelated factors, such as a disability arising after the marriage has ended.
[138] The most common rationale is that the relationship has generated needs which it is right that the other party should meet … This is a perfectly sound rationale where the needs are the consequence of the parties' relationship, as they usually are. The most common source of need is the presence of children, whose welfare is always the first consideration, or of other dependent relatives, such as elderly parents. But another source of need is having had to look after children or other family members in the past. Many parents have seriously compromised their ability to attain self-sufficiency as a result of past family responsibilities. …. A further source of need may be the way in which the parties chose to run their life together. …. All couples throughout their lives together have to make choices about who will do what … sometimes freely made in the interests of them both. The needs generated by such choices are a perfectly sound rationale for adjusting the parties' respective resources in compensation."
"In the great majority of cases, the court is trying to ensure that each party and their children have enough to supply their needs, set at a level as close as possible to the standard of living which they enjoyed during the marriage."
"… the lifestyle enjoyed during the marriage sets a level or benchmark that is relevant to the assessment of the level of the independent lifestyles to be enjoyed by the parties."
"91. …. In her oral evidence the wife was clear that she seeks a very different lifestyle and one which, in her view, is justified because the husband can afford it…."
And later,
"112. … ..the determinative principle in this case is that of need. When an application is being determined by reference to the principle of need the court will, obviously, have to assess the applicant's capital needs (housing and other capital items) and income needs (their annual living expenses). Further, if the latter are being met by the payment of a capital sum, the court will have to consider the period for which income needs, in fairness, should be met and the rate at which they should be made for the duration of or during that period.
113. Subject to first consideration being given to the welfare of minor children, the principal factors which impact on the court's assessment of needs are: (i) the length of the marriage; (ii) the length of the period, additional to (i), during which the applicant spouse will be making contributions to the welfare of the family; (iii) the standard of living during the marriage; (iv) the age of the applicant; and (v) the available resources as defined by section 25(2)(a).
114. In my view, the starting point for the assessment of needs is the standard of living during the course of the marriage. This was the view expressed by the Law Commission in its 2014 report, Matrimonial Property, Needs and Agreements (Law Com. No 343)(para 2.34/2.35) in respect of "very wealthy cases": "needs are still assessed primarily by reference to the marital standard of living". This does not mean that it is either a ceiling or a floor but, as Mr Howard agreed during the course of his submissions, it provides a benchmark or starting point against which to assess needs."
"The use of the standard of living as the benchmark emphatically does not mean that, as referred to above, in every case needs are to be met at that level either at all or for more than a defined period (of less than life). Often, as Baroness Hale said in Miller v Miller; McFarlane v McFarlane [para 158]: "The provision should enable a gentle transition from that standard [the marital standard of living] to the standard that she could expect as a self-sufficient woman." In G v G, Charles J said:
"[136] What I take from this guidance on the approach to the statutory task is that the objective of achieving a fair result (assessed by reference to the words of the statute and the rationales for their application identified by the House of Lords):
(i) is not met by an approach that seeks to achieve a dependence for life (or until remarriage) for the payee spouse to fund a lifestyle equivalent to that enjoyed during the marriage (or parity if that level is not affordable for two households), but:
(ii) is met by an approach that recognises that the aim is independence and self-sufficiency based on all the financial resources that are available to the parties."
"It is a mistake to regard the marital standard of living as the lodestar. As time passes how the parties lived in the marriage becomes increasingly irrelevant. And too much emphasis on it imperils the prospects of eventual independence."
Whilst that observation was made in the context of a case where there were limited resources and where ongoing provision for monthly spousal maintenance was required to meet needs, it is a general principle with which I wholeheartedly agree, as did Moylan J in BD v FD. In that case, his Lordship took the view that in the case of a very long 30-year marriage, where there were ample resources to meet the claim, the longer the length of the marriage and/or the periods over which the applicant spouse would be making ongoing contributions to the welfare of a child or children of the family, the more likely the court will decide that the applicant spouse's needs should be provided for at a level which is similar to the standard of living during the marriage.
(i) The first consideration in any assessment of needs must be the welfare of any minor child or children of the family.
(ii) After that, the principal factors which are likely to impact on the court's assessment of needs are: (i) the length of the marriage; (ii) the length of the period, following the end of the marriage, during which the applicant spouse will be making contributions to the welfare of the family; (iii) the standard of living during the marriage; (iv) the age of the applicant; and (v) the available resources as defined by section 25(2)(a).
(iii) There is an inter-relationship between the level at which future needs will be assessed and the period during which a court finds those needs should be met by the paying former spouse. The longer that period, the more likely it is that a court will not assess those needs on the basis throughout of a standard of living which replicates that enjoyed during the currency of the marriage.
(iv) In this context, it is entirely principled in terms of approach for the court to assess its award on the basis that needs, both in relation to housing and income, will reduce in future in an appropriate case.
E. The arguments advanced by the parties
"It is difficult to convey the extraordinary level of luxury and opulence we were fortunate enough to enjoy. It was one that, because of the sheer expense required to maintain it, is only open to a very small number of families, even within the global ultra-wealthy."
(i) a sum of just under £½ million for the purchase of cars which she proposes to keep at her various properties;
(ii) a sum of £1,050,000 for artwork;
(iii) a sum of just under £2.1 million to discharge the US$3 million mortgage which is currently secured on her Californian property[9];
(iv) a sum of just under £7,000 to discharge an outstanding liability for some legal costs in unrelated litigation;
(v) a sum of just over £50,000 in respect of the costs of some judicial review proceedings which she launched in St Lucia at the time of the respondent's strike out application. She may be found liable for the costs incurred by the St Lucia government and seeks a contingency fund in case that bill lands at her feet.
£ | |
London property outgoings | 1,213,626 |
Henley property outgoings | 329,191 |
London and Henley house housekeeping | 125,960 |
London and Henley car expenses | 167,084 |
Beverly Hills property outgoings | 428,418 |
Beverly Hills housekeeping | 21,770 |
Beverly Hills car expenses | 50,289 |
Holiday and travels | 2,106,274 |
Animal and pet expenses | 8,808 |
Personal – health | 76,654 |
Personal – clothes and accessories | 1,021,047 |
Personal – beauty | 138,033 |
Social and entertainment | 484,122 |
Fees | 175,500 |
(Extended) Family costs | 160,016 |
Mobile phone costs | 26,367 |
Annual cost | 6,533,159 |
Average monthly cost | 544,430 |
"I do not doubt that a moral obligation could in the right circumstances be of relevance, when considering the appropriate distribution between spouses of accumulated wealth. One may, for example, think of a spouse who was, with his or her partner's knowledge and consent, accustomed to support a parent or siblings or other relatives or a small charity, in circumstances where the relative or charity would depend on further support for the future. Surely, the wish to continue such support would be entitled to some weight, although how much would depend on the other circumstances."
The respondent's trust interests
(a) The WAJ Trust: minus (£2.6 million);
(b) The CABEC Trust: c.£68 million;
(c) The CABEC II Trust: c.£30 million.
Total 2013 to 2015 | US$74,248,894 |
Average taken over 3 years | US$24.75 million per annum |
Sterling equivalent | £17.325 million per annum |
(i) her claim for a housing fund of up to £68 million for a London property is nearly three times the value of her current home at BGH (valued at £22.5 million). Her original claim that is was worth £100 million has been shown to be a gross exaggeration of its value;
(ii) her annual travel budget is in excess of £2.1 million per annum including nearly £600,000 per annum for private jet charters. She is claiming nearly £½ million per annum to rent a yacht for two weeks, just under £145,000 to provision it during the charter and a little short of £5,000 to tip the crew. She plans to spend the October half term this year in Paris staying in the Presidential Suite at The Ritz at a cost of just under £250,000 plus a further £74,000 odd for the nanny's room. She is claiming a further £103,000 for two weeks in the South of France at the Hotel du Cap-Eden-Roc and a further £30,000 odd for the nanny's room on that holiday.
(iii) her budget for clothing and jewellery is in excess of £1.02 million per annum including £40,000 for a new fur coat every year; £83,000 for fifteen new cocktail dresses every year; £80,000 for a special gown annually; £109,000 for seven haute couture dresses annually; £197,000 for two white tie jewellery sets every year; and £79,000 on cocktail dress jewellery sets every year. In addition, she seeks a further £58,000 for two luxury handbags every year; £23,000 for six casual handbags every year; and £35,000 on ten clutch handbags every year. Sunglasses will cost a further £4,000 per annum (15 new pairs every year). She has budgeted for two new sets of ski wear every season (including new helmets every year). She envisages buying 54 pairs of shoes a year, seven of which (for white tie events) will cost an annual sum of just under £21,000;
(v) a further £39,000 is needed for two new watches every year (to add to her existing collection of 43 valuable watches);
(vi) she claims to need three new suitcases every year at a total cost of just under £15,000 and five new silk dressing gowns each year;
(vii) her beauty costs include a sum of just under £94,000 per annum for treatments and £22,812 on products including £9,400 per annum on four bottles of face cream;
(viii) her staff costs are exceptionally high at £335,558 per annum. She claims to need in her London home a live-in butler, housekeeper, nanny and chauffeur. This impacts on the manner in which she advances her housing needs because it follows that her London property will need a separate annexe or wing to accommodate these staff. In addition, she has costed the employment of her live-out staff on the basis of a need for two cleaners, a chef, a reserve nanny and an office manager. She has budgeted for two live-in cleaners at the home in Henley which she wishes to purchase despite planning to spend on 43 days a year in the property. There is further provision in her budget for staff at her Beverly Hills home where she claims to need three housekeepers and extra staff when the family visits;
(ix) her mobile telephone is estimated to cost £26,000 per annum;
(x) in terms of leisure and entertaining, her budget includes £50,000 for Christmas lunch and a further £50,000 for each of her and Sirina's birthday parties every year; £21,000 for theatres and shows; £28,000 for Wimbledon tickets each year and just under £18,000 per annum for a box at Ascot annually; and £10,000 per annum to attend Elton John's White Tie Ball;
(xi) the cost of running cars at the various homes she anticipates owning at the conclusion of these proceedings comes to just under £220,000 per annum. The capital sum she is seeking for cars as part of her overall award is £495,000 for five new cars – three in London and two in the United States. In addition, she seeks within her annual budget the cost of hiring a Bentley with chauffeur for the eight days she intends to travel around the West Coast.
"55. I need only refer to one authority, namely the Supreme Court decision in the case of Agbaje v Agbaje [2010] UKSC 13; [2010] 1 FLR 1813. The proper approach to be taken in a case such as this is set out by Lord Collins of Mapesbury at paragraphs [71] to [73] of his speech. I do not propose to repeat these important paragraphs word for word. I distil the following principles:-
(a) The intention of the [1984] Act was the alleviation of the adverse consequences of no, or no adequate, financial provision being made by a foreign court in a situation where there were substantial connections with England and Wales.
(b) The situation is different from an application that is made pursuant to the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 as Lord Collins makes plain that some of the matters to be considered under section 16 may be relevant to section 18, and vice versa.
(c) It is not the purpose of Part III to allow a spouse with some English connections to make an application in England and to take advantage of what may well be the more generous approach in England to financial provision, particularly in so-called big-money cases, although there is no condition of exceptionality.
(d) Hardship or injustice is not a condition to the exercise of the jurisdiction but, if either factor is present, it may make it appropriate in the light of all the circumstances, for an order to be made and may affect the nature of the provision ordered.
(e) The amount of the financial provision will depend on all the circumstances of the case and there is no rule that it should be the minimum amount required to overcome injustice. It will never be appropriate to give the claimant more than she or he would have been awarded had all the proceedings taken place within this jurisdiction. Where possible, the order should have the result that provision is made for the reasonable needs of each spouse. Subject to these principles the court has a broad discretion.
(f) The grant of leave does not inevitably trigger a full blown claim for all forms of ancillary relief.
56. It is, therefore, clear that, as I am applying a different statute, different considerations apply compared to a pure MCA 1973 application. In this regard, I agree with the observations of Coleridge J in Z v A [2012] EWHC 467; [2012] 2 FLR 667. It follows that I disagree with the observations of Mostyn J made at [2014] EWHC 3411[10]. The award may be the same as it would have been under the 1973 Act, if the English connections are very strong but, equally, it may not be. It all depends on the circumstances of the particular case being tried."
"[46] Pulling the threads together it seems to me that the relevant principles in play on an application for spousal maintenance are as follows:
(i) A spousal maintenance award is properly made where the evidence shows that choices made during the marriage have generated hard future needs on the part of the claimant. Here the duration of the marriage and the presence of children are pivotal factors.
(ii) An award should only be made by reference to needs, save in a most exceptional case where it can be said that the sharing or compensation principle applies.
(iii) Where the needs in question are not causally connected to the marriage the award should generally be aimed at alleviating significant hardship.
(iv) In every case the court must consider a termination of spousal maintenance with a transition to independence as soon as it is just and reasonable. A term should be considered unless the payee would be unable to adjust without undue hardship to the ending of payments. A degree of (not undue) hardship in making the transition to independence is acceptable.
(v) If the choice between an extendable term and a joint lives order is finely balanced the statutory steer should militate in favour of the former.
(vi) The marital standard of living is relevant to the quantum of spousal maintenance but is not decisive. That standard should be carefully weighed against the desired objective of eventual independence.
(vii) The essential task of the judge is not merely to examine the individual items in the claimant's income budget but also to stand back and to look at the global total and to ask if it represents a fair proportion of the respondent's available income that should go to the support of the claimant.
(viii) Where the respondent's income comprises a base salary and a discretionary bonus the claimant's award may be equivalently partitioned, with needs of strict necessity being met from the base salary and additional, discretionary items being met from the bonus on a capped percentage basis.
(ix) There is no criterion of exceptionality on an application to extend a term order. On such an application an examination should be made of whether the implicit premise of the original order of the ability of the payee to achieve independence had been impossible to achieve and, if so, why.
(x) On an application to discharge a joint lives order an examination should be made of the original assumption that it was just too difficult to predict eventual independence.
(xi) If the choice between an extendable and a non-extendable term is finely balanced the decision should normally be in favour of the economically weaker party."
"It is a matter for W as to whether or not she wants to retain a second home in the US. She has no need for it. She should sell Beverly Hills. This would give her c£11m. She can use this as an income fund immediately. If she wants to purchase a luxurious property in Beverly Hills, she can do so for $6m. She does not need to do so, particularly given that she intends to spend only 43 nights a year at the property."
"At the end of her licence to occupy [S's] property she will be able to live at Roland Mansions and will have an additional £17m in total from H. It is a matter for her as to whether or not she chooses to deploy some of this fund to buy a more spectacular home. She does not need to do so. She will have a home in London, £17m from H and her own residual assets of £17m; totalling £37 million."
E. Discussion and analysis
"63 In decisions at first instance, however, it has been held that it is "only 'appropriate' for the English court to intervene with financial relief to the minimum extent necessary so as to remedy the injustice perceived to exist without intervention": A v S (Financial Relief After Overseas US Divorce and Financial Proceedings) [2003] 1 FLR 431, para 98, a decision of Bodey J, applied by Coleridge J in the present case [2008] EWHC 3618.
64 There is no statutory basis for this limitation, and it is contrary to principle. For example a talaq entitled to recognition may be granted abroad in a "big money" case when almost all relevant connecting factors are with England. In those circumstances there would be no reason not to apply English law so as to give the same provision for the wife as she would have obtained had there been divorce proceedings in England. There would be no need for any enquiry as to the minimum required to remedy the injustice. Nor, if the wife had independent means, would an enquiry into hardship be necessary or relevant."
"… There will be some cases, with a strong English connection, where it will be appropriate to ask what provision would have been made had the divorce been granted in England. There will be other cases where the connection is not strong and a spouse has received adequate provision from the foreign court."
Needs in the context of the section 25 factors
Section 25(2)(c): Standard of living enjoyed by the family before the breakdown of the marriage; Section 25(2)(a): the income, earning capacity, property and other financial resources which each of the parties has or is likely to have in the foreseeable future
(a) the former matrimonial home, BGH;
(b) the Devon property;
(c) St Saviour's House;
(d) the mews accommodation for his staff in Pont Street;
(e) the Gstaad chalet;
(f) a substantial apartment in Beirut;
(g) villas in Saudia Arabia (which the respondent claims were transferred to his elder daughter in 2013);
(h) properties owned by the Cabec Trust of which he is the principal beneficiary and which include two properties in Belgravia earmarked for the use of his two elder daughters from his first marriage when they visit London. The combined value if these properties is just under £20 million.
These are all properties which, on his case, he will retain at the conclusion of these proceedings.
Section 25(2)(f): contributions to the welfare of the family
Interim budget (April 2016) | Budget until S is 18 | Budget after S is 18 | |||
1. | London property | 0 | 0 | 100,000 | H will pay outgoings during S's minority |
2. | London housekeeping | 113,000 | 25,000 | 113,000 | |
3. | Roland Mansion outgoings | 23,689 | 0 | 0 | Let or sell |
4. | Roland Mansion housekeeping | 13,245 | 0 | 0 | Let or sell |
5. | London car expenses | 34,000 | 34,000 | 34,000 | |
6. | Beverly Hills property outgoings | 319,165 | 0 | 0 | Sell |
7. | Beverly Hills housekeeping | 97,440 | 0 | 0 | Sell |
8. | Beverly Hills car expenses | 3,451 | 0 | 0 | Sell |
9. | Holidays and travel | 285,000 | 285,000 | 285,000 | |
10. | Animal and pet expenses | 51,600 | 8,808 | 8,808 | G227 |
11. | Personal | 429,000 | 429,000 | 429,000 | |
12. | Fees | 20,000 | 20,000 | 20,000 | |
13. | Family costs | 389,850 | 0 | 0 | |
Total | 1,779,620 | 801,808 | 989,808 | only 1 home |
Housing fund (London) £18,000,000
Duxbury fund 44,300,000
£62,300,000
Less contribution by W ( 8,970,000)
Shortfall to be funded by H £53,330,000
Chattels
Provision for the applicant's extended family
Child support
The blue diamond ring
Order accordingly
Note 1 Judgment was handed down on 22 March 2016: Al-Juffali v Estrada, Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs Intervening [2016] EWCA Civ 176 [Back] Note 2 Despite spending periods of time in South Africa during her relationship with this gentleman, I am satisfied that London continued to be her main base. [Back] Note 3 The applicant’s father was unable to work following a heart attack and her grandmother was widowed. [Back] Note 4 D, the respondent’s eldest daughter, is 33 years old and engaged to be married. She holds Saudi and British passports and lives in Switzerland and the United States. She appear to divide her time between Saudi Arabia, the United States, Europe and Asia (Shanghai in particular). According to the evidence in the bundle, her fiancé is a United States national who lives and works in California. H, her younger sister, is 31 years old. She lives in Jeddah where she is the managing director of a Saudi Arabian company. Both women were educated in the United Kingdom. [1/D:26] [Back] Note 5 Section 16(3) concerns the jurisdiction which may arise under Council Regulation (EC) No 4/2009 and Schedule 6 to the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments (Maintenance) Regulations 2011. It has not been necessary to consider Section 16(3) in these proceedings as the respondent has not suggested that the applicant’s application should be dismissed. [Back] Note 6 The Law Commission for England and Wales produced a Working Paper on Financial Relief after Foreign Divorce (Working Paper No 77, [1980] EWLC C77) (1980) as a result of which Part III of the 1984 was enacted. That this was the Law Commission’s intention is clear from the Explanatory Notes which accompanied the draft Bill in relation to what was to become s 16 of the 1984 Act. [Back] Note 7 When the Law Commission reported on “needs” in the context of its report entitled “Matrimonial Property, Needs and Agreements” (Law Com No 343, [2014] EWLC 343), its glossary referred to “needs” as “a very broad concept with no single definition in family law”.
[Back] Note 8 This mortgage debt and the £27.3 million secured against BGH were advanced by J P Morgan on the basis of a split security in order to fund the purchase of the applicant’s Californian property. [Back] Note 9 This mortgage was taken out by the applicant to meet the escalating costs of this litigation. [Back] Note 10 This was the contested leave application in the same case. [Back] Note 11 per para 71 of Lord Collins’ judgment in Agbaje [Back]