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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 >> US v SR [2018] EWHC 3207 (Fam) (29 November 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2018/3207.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 3207 (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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US |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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SR |
Respondent |
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The Respondent appeared as a litigant in person
Hearing dates: 7th, 8th and 9th March 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Roberts:
A. Introduction
B. The background
"In this context, it is a staggering figure. The near financial ruin which these proceedings have inflicted on this family is compounded by the fact that, even now, each continues to spend significant further sums on various private detection agencies doggedly pursuing the other in terms of their mutual suspicions that each has still to make full and frank disclosure of their finances. They are sums which this family cannot afford ..".
C. My conclusions at the end of the July 2014 hearing and the order made on 1 May 2015 as a result of the husband's subsequent Barrell application
(i) Property FC, the former matrimonial home in Berkshire, had an agreed value of £1.1 million with an equity of £777,000. The property was to be transferred to the wife who would take over responsibility for the mortgage. This was agreed on the basis that she would continue to make her permanent home in England for the foreseeable future in order to make herself available to the three children who were continuing their education in this jurisdiction.
(ii) One of the Moscow investment apartments acquired during the marriage, Property A, had an agreed value of US$1.05 million (c.£613,000). The wife was in receipt of the rental income of some £27,500 per annum. The property was, and is, mortgage free. She was to retain that property as a vehicle for generating future income.
(iii) Of the other property in Moscow, Property R, I said this at para 13 of my judgment:
"This is the Moscow property which has generated a great deal of controversy both in terms of its value, and in terms of the husband's suspicion that the wife's underlying agenda is to retain the property as a home for herself in the event that she decides to return permanently to Moscow in a few years' time when the children have completed their education in this jurisdiction. The wife accepts that she may well leave England when she no longer needs to be here for the children. However, without rehearsing at length the oral evidence which I heard on this subject, I am satisfied that the wife is fully aware of the urgent need for funds to be realised from the sale of this property. Whatever aspirations she may once have had, the plain fact of the matter is that, without releasing equity from this property, neither the husband nor the wife is going to have the financial means to run their lives, clear debt and provide for their future needs in terms of homes and incomes."
The best available evidence at the time was that the property had a gross sale value of US$3.5 million. The marketing agents believed that a sale at a figure of US$3 million could be achieved within a time frame of six to nine months. A mechanism was put in place for marketing Property R on the basis that, after top-slicing costs, tax and an education fund for the children of £100,000, each party would receive 50% of the net proceeds or the equivalent of c.£926,000 less any claw back for additional tax and expenses. From his share of the sale proceeds, the husband was to pay the wife a capitalised sum of £30,000 to cover his future contribution towards the children's expenses. His contribution was crystallised at that level because of (i) the children's ages, and (ii) his dependence on pension as his sole source of income. In relation to costs, I allowed him to defer a sum of approximately £70,000 which was the final contribution I directed him to make from his share of the Property R proceeds towards a global costs liability of £400,000.
(iv) In terms of the future, I assessed each of the parties as having broadly similar housing needs. The expectation was always that the husband would not be in a position to buy a home for himself and his family until the Property R sale proceeds had been distributed. His pension then provided him with approximately £42,600 net per annum. At the time of the final hearing in 2015 he retained cash assets of some £230,000 which fund was to be used to supplement all his living expenses (including his rent) until the Moscow property sale had been completed. The wife would continue to receive the rent from the two Russian investment properties (a total of c.£92,000 per annum) until the end of the (then) current tenancy when the property would be marketed for sale with vacant possession. Thereafter she would have the Property A rental monies and her share of the Property R proceeds to invest as she saw fit as an income producing fund.
(v) It was agreed that there would be no pension sharing on the basis that (i) the husband's pension was already in payment, and (ii) he had already carved out a dependant's pension which would be payable to his (much younger) second wife and mother of his young child in the event of his death. The pension was valued at between c. £1.5 million and £1.76 million depending on the basis of computation.
"81. Assuming a sale at US$3.5 million, W will be left with readily realisable assets of c.£2.316 million. She will be clear of debt, save for the FC mortgage of £290,000. Mr Ewins' calculations in relation to the Duxbury fund she requires to top up her income over and above the [Property A] rental is predicated on a figure of £860,000. That sum will be available to her subject to any decisions she makes in relation to restructuring.
82. The husband will have cash of c.£1 million depending on the extent to which he chooses to deplete his existing capital between now and a sale of [Property R]. He, too, will be clear of debt and will retain intact the entirety of his pension. He will be able to re-house himself and his family for the figure of £750,000 to £800,000 (which is the figure suggested to me by Mr Sear in closing submissions) or, if he chooses, he can buy a more expensive property. I accept that he wishes to make provision for his youngest daughter and he will need to decide how best that provision can be carved out of the available resources. Including the value of his pensions, the husband's net overall position will be significantly better than the wife's in that he will retain assets worth c. £2.744 million (or 54.22% of the total available resources).
83. In percentage terms, the difference between what the wife will retain (47.78%) and what the husband will retain (54.22%) is not far short of 10%. On the basis of the global asset base (just over £5 million), that difference in their respective shares is a proper reflection of the wife's misappropriation of the husband's half share of the £1 million loss incurred on the sale of Property B. That is not the route by which I have reached my conclusions as to distribution and extraction but it is a useful cross-check nonetheless as to the overarching fairness of the award on a needs basis.
84. It is axiomatic that these figures will increase in direct proportion to any increase which can be achieved in the sale price of [Property R]. However, proceeding on the basis of the best evidence available to me, I am satisfied that, even at US$3.5 million, needs are met on both sides."
"85. Is it fair in all the circumstances that the wife should receive less than 50% ? My answer to that question is: undoubtedly, yes. I cannot ignore the impact of her conduct in selling Property B at such a substantial undervalue. The notional reattribution is properly anchored to this departure. I bear in mind, too, that in terms of Wells sharing, she is receiving predominantly liquid (or at least realisable) assets. That should provide her with a degree of financial autonomy in terms of her future decision-making which will not necessarily be available to the husband in circumstances where a substantial percentage of his share of the assets will remain tied up in pension. Furthermore, in terms of overall fairness, I am satisfied that the award which I have made properly reflects the existence of non-matrimonial property acquired by the husband prior to the marriage which represents an unmatched contribution by him."
D. The husband's Barrell application dated 25 November 2014 and the subsequent hearing on 1 May 2015 resulting in the "mainframe order" made on that date
E. Events following the making of the mainframe order on 1 May 2015
F. The parties' written positions prior to this hearing
G. The Law
(i) the order remains executory and is thus capable of being varied (the Thwaite jurisdiction);
(ii) the court has power under s 24A of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 to make an order for sale upon the making of a lump sum order or "at any time thereafter".
As an alternative, Mr Sear submits that the outcome proposed by the husband can be achieved by engaging the Barrell provisions of the mainframe order.
"The learned judge was entitled, in his discretion, to make a new order for ancillary relief in favour of the wife, notwithstanding the refusal of the wife to consent to his doing so. His jurisdiction arose, not from the liberty to apply as he held, but from the fact that the wife's original application for ancillary relief was still before the court and awaiting adjudication. It had not been dismissed since the conveyance had never been executed, so that that part of the order ., by which her application was dismissed, had never come into effect."
"Merely because an order is still executory the court does not have, any more than it has in relation to an undertaking, any general or unfettered power to adjust a final order let alone a final consent order merely because it thinks it just to do so. The essence of the jurisdiction is that it is just to do it would be inequitable not to do so because of or in the light of some significant change in the circumstances since the order was made."
"(i) if there has been fraud or mistake;
(ii) if there has been material non-disclosure;
(iii) if there has been a new event since the making of the order which invalidates the basis, or fundamental assumption, upon which the order was made;
(iv) if and insofar as the order contains undertakings; and
(v) if the terms of the order remain executory."
"The 'test' for determining whether one or more of these five circumstances may exist in a particular case will differ. For example to establish (i) it is necessary to prove 'fraud' or 'mistake', whereas to establish (iv) or (v) it is only necessary to establish that there is an undertaking or that the order remains executory. With respect to cases where there is an undertaking or an order that is still executory the approach to determining whether or not to set aside or vary the order is, as the appellant submits, based upon it being inequitable to hold to the terms of the original order in the light of a significant change of circumstances. Given that this is a case about an executory order, it is not necessary to engage any further with the Appellant's wider submission regarding the test where the jurisdiction may arise in other circumstances. In any event I agree with Mr Chamberlayne that the circumstances justifying intervention are likely to be met where an order remains executory as a result of one party frustrating its implementation."
"9. However, it is an iron rule that aside from a lump sum payable in instalments, and aside from a set aside on traditional grounds as discussed below, a capital award cannot be varied, or, a fortiori, discharged, by a court of first instance. That an order has, in the usual way, a "liberty to apply" clause certainly does not entitle a court to rewrite non-variable capital awards and to make different ones. Equally, the fact that a dismissal clause does not take effect until there has been full compliance with certain transfers and payments plainly does not entitle a court to replace an executory order with a new one. The judge referred to the decision of Thwaite v Thwaite [1982] Fam 1. In a recital to an order made on 13 July 2016 he stated:
"In accordance with the authority of Thwaite v Thwaite the court may consider the order and refuse to enforce the order if it is inequitable to do so. Where such outcome is determined it is open to the court to determine the matter afresh."
10. I have to say that I do not agree with this. In Thwaite, at page 9, Ormrod LJ stated:
"Where the order is still executory, as in the present case, and one of the parties applies to the court to enforce the order, the court may refuse if, in the circumstances prevailing at the time of the application, it would be inequitable to do so: Mullins v. Howell (1879) 11 CH D 763 and Purcell v. F.C. Trigell Ltd. [1971] 1 QB 358, 366, 367. Where the consent order derives its legal effect from the contract, this is equivalent to refusing a decree of specific performance; where the legal effect derives from the order itself the court has jurisdiction over its own orders: per Sir George Jessel M.R. in Mullins v. Howell (1879) 11 Ch D 763,766.""
H. The parties' respective cases by the conclusion of the hearing
The net effect of the competing proposals
The wife's liabilities
"50. In terms of the education fund, I have not allowed the full £200,000 or which the wife contends. I recognise the shortfall in terms of the protection it would otherwise provide throughout secondary and tertiary education, but I do not consider an additional £100,000 is affordable if other direct needs are going to be met. I have already remarked during the course of this hearing that private education might well have been a casualty of this litigation and the stances which these parents have adopted in terms of their failure to reach an acceptable accommodation one with the other so as to halt the haemorrhage of legal costs. .. educational costs which continue to arise [over and above the funds from the Will trust] will need to be met through a combination of means. Student loans and holiday jobs are a feature of most young students' lives. If the wife feels she needs to divert part of her free income or capital towards topping up the fund or paying expenses directly, that will be a matter for her. But in circumstances where needs dominate and a total of £2.25 million has been lost to the family as a result of the litigation costs and the sale of property B, I do not regard provision over and above £100,000 to be reasonable."
I. My conclusions
"81. Assuming a sale [of Property R] at US$3.5 million, W will be left with readily realisable assets of £2.316 million. She will be clear of debt, save for the FC mortgage of £290,000. Mr Ewins' calculations in relation to the Duxbury fund she requires to top up her income over and above the [Property A] rental is predicated on a figure of £860,000. That sum will be available to her subject to any decision she makes in relation to restructuring.
82. The husband will have cash of c. £1 million depending on the extent to which he chooses to deplete his existing capital between now and the sale of property R. He, too, will be clear of debt and will retain the entirety of his pension. He will be able to re-house himself and his family for the figure of £750,000 to £800,000 (which is the figure suggested to me by Mr Sear in closing submissions) or, if he chooses, he can buy a more expensive property. . Including the value of his pensions, the husband's net overall position will be significantly better than the wife's in that he will retain assets worth c. £2.744 million (or 54.22% of the total available resources).
83. In percentage terms, the difference between what the wife will retain (45.78%) and what the husband will retain (54.22%) is not far short of 10%. On the basis of the global asset base (just over £5 million), that difference in their respective shares is a proper reflection of the wife's misappropriation of the husband's half share of the £1 million loss incurred on the sale of Property B. That is not the route by which I have reached my conclusions as to distribution and extraction but it is a useful cross-check nonetheless as to the overarching fairness of the award on a needs basis.
85. Is it fair in all the circumstances that the wife should receive less than 50% ? My answer to that question is: undoubtedly, yes. I cannot ignore the impact of her conduct in selling property B at such a substantial undervalue. The notional reattribution is properly anchored to this departure. I bear in mind, too, that in terms of Wells sharing, she is receiving predominantly liquid (or at least realisable) assets. That should provide her with a degree of financial autonomy in terms of her future decision-making which will not necessarily be available to the husband in circumstances where a substantial percentage of his share of the assets will remain tied up in pension. Furthermore, in terms of overall fairness, I am satisfied that the award which I have made properly reflects the existence of non-matrimonial property acquired by the husband prior to the marriage which represents an unmatched contribution by him."
£
Property FC 1,068,000
Property A 375,000
Total 1,443,000
(i) The wife will retain the legal and beneficial ownership of Property R free from any further claim by the husband;
(ii) Property FC will be sold and the net proceeds divided as to 70% to the husband and 30% to the wife. From his share, the husband will discharge his remaining liability for costs in the sum of £69,906, such sum to be paid directly to the wife's former solicitors by the conveyancing solicitors;
(iii) Property A will be sold. The wife will retain the net proceeds of sale free from any further claim by the husband on the basis that the husband's liability of £80,000 in respect of his contribution to the children's educational and other expenses will be set off against any entitlement he may have to a share in that property;
(iv) In the event that the wife is adjudged liable for any accrued interest in respect of the deferred costs liability of £69,906 (but not on any other element of her outstanding costs), the husband shall pay her a lump sum equivalent to 50% of any such interest;
(v) In all other respects, there will be a full and final clean break between the parties in accordance with the terms of my original order;
(vi) No order in relation to the costs of this hearing.
Postscript
Order accordingly
Note 1 Since the hearing concluded, the wife has forwarded to the court an email from Savills, the marketing agents. The marketing exercise of Property FC is now apparently underway although it appears that there may be an issue for potential purchasers in relation to the development of a nearby golf course. I propose to work on the basis of the illustrative figures which I was given during the course of the evidence but to express my conclusions, based on that evidence, in percentage terms. [Back] Note 2 [£69,906 (costs) + £50,000 (childrens education costs) + £30,000 (capitalised child support)] = £149,906 [Back]