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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 >> Thum v Thum [2016] EWHC 2634 (Fam) (21 October 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2016/2634.html Cite as: [2016] WLR(D) 573, [2016] EWHC 2634 (Fam), [2016] 4 WLR 171 |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
CATJA MARION THUM |
Petitioner |
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- and - |
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OLIVER THUM |
Respondent |
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Christopher Pocock QC (instructed by Farrer & Co) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 20 October 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mostyn:
"To file [a divorce petition] prematurely is the equivalent of laying one's towel at dawn upon the sun lounger of the English court and returning at high noon to bask in the warmth of the law of England and Wales on divorce and financial remedies."
"I have to say that a divorce petition does not stand in the same position as a writ in a civil action; a divorce petition is dealing with the status of parties and is subject to the rules set out in the Matrimonial Causes Rules 1977; it ought not to state that a marriage has broken down irretrievably if that is not the instructions of the client; and it ought to be served as soon as practicable after filing. It is not appropriate in the Family Division for petitions to be filed and held in secret and not served until it suits the petitioner."
As it happens, the wife's actions in that case did not affect the result. The husband's application for a stay was refused.
"1. A court shall be deemed to be seised:
(a) at the time when the document instituting the proceedings or an equivalent document is lodged with the court, provided that the applicant has not subsequently failed to take the steps he was required to take to have service effected on the respondent; …"
"The Article does not say that a court is seised when the document has been lodged and the applicant has effected (or taken a required step to effect) service. It says that the court is seised when the document is lodged, subject to the proviso (which may only be assessed from some later perspective of hindsight) that there has not been a subsequent failure to take the required steps."
"As I see it, as stated above, the way article 16 works is that there is seisin on the date identified subject to a condition defeasant. That is not a case of apparent seisin maturing into actual seisin but there being actual seisin, which would take priority over any subsequent seisin, unless there was no service or lodgement."
"In the present case the relevant requirement is to be found in CPR 7.5. That provides that a claim form which is to be served within the jurisdiction must be served within four months of the date of issue; and one which is to be served outside the jurisdiction must be served within six months of the date of issue. There is no additional requirement upon the claimant to serve "forthwith" or "as soon as practicable". Nor is there any obligation upon a claimant to choose the quickest method of service, for example personal service rather than service by contractually-agreed method. Under CPR 7.6, a claimant who seeks to extend the time for compliance with CPR 7.5, must explain how he has taken all reasonable steps to comply with rule 7.5 (i.e. served within the requisite four- or six-month period), not how he has acted with all reasonable speed since issue of the claim form."
And at para 73:
"However, in any event, it does not seem to me that my conclusion as to the reasonableness of UBS' behaviour is of any relevance. It cannot be appropriate that, under Article 30, the relevant court has to conduct an enquiry as to whether, applying some wholly uncertain subjective criteria, it regards the issuing party as having inappropriately delayed the service of process. That would introduce the very uncertainty that Article 30 was apparently designed to avoid. The only criterion has to be that the issuing party has subsequently 'failed to take the steps he was required to take to have service effected on the defendant'."
"According to the Brussels I Regulation, the date on which a court in a Member State is to be regarded as seised of proceedings for the purposes of Arts 27-29 of the Regulation is as set out in Art.30. According to that provision, a court is deemed to be seised either when the document instituting the proceedings is lodged with the court, provided that the claimant has not subsequently failed to take the steps he was required to take to have service effected on the defendant, or if the document has to be served before being lodged with the court, it is seised at the time the document is received by the authority responsible for service, provided that the claimant has not failed to take the steps required to have the document lodged with the court. As a result of this clarification, an English court will be seised on issue, rather than on service, always assuming that the defendant did not fail to take the steps necessary to effect service. In this context, it is reasonable to expect that where the court is seised on issue, provided that there is no failure to take the steps to have it made, service is likely to mean substantial, as distinct from technically perfect, compliance with the rules governing service of the document in question. To put the point another way, the claimant will have "failed" to take the steps required to have service effected only where that failure is blameworthy. So a technical failure, such as the failure to include a translation of the writ with the documents served, may not be counted as a failure, but a failure to pay a court fee, with the consequence that the document in question may not, and will not, be served at all, will be seen as a substantial failure on the part of the party who should have paid, with the further result that the earlier date of potential seisin is lost, and the court is not seised until the date on which the fee is paid. It is important to remember, though, that, where there is no failure to arrange for service, the date of seisin is, in England, the date of issue, and not the date on which the steps necessary to arrange for service were fulfilled."
In the footnotes the case that is cited about a blameless failure to include a translation of the claim is Benatti v WPP Holdings Italy SRL & Ors [2007] EWCA Civ 263 [2007] 1 WLR 2316. There Sir Anthony Clarke MR explained at para 31 that WPP 2005 Limited's case was that the writ lodged with the relevant Italian body with a request for service on 1 February 2006 was never validly served on it both because the letter purporting to serve it was addressed to a different entity (WPP Group plc) and also because the addressee was entitled to refuse to accept it without a translation. The time for refusal was unspecified and it was submitted that it therefore remained open to the defendant (unless there had been a prior positive act of acceptance) to intimate its refusal as long as it remained open to it to contest the court's jurisdiction under CPR 11. These technical nit-picking arguments were dismissed; Mr Benatti was not blameworthy and the errors were excused (see paras 65 – 67).