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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 >> A v A [2018] EWHC 340 (Fam) (28 February 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2018/340.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 340 (Fam), [2018] WLR(D) 205, [2018] 4 WLR 66, [2018] 2 FLR 342 |
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FAMILY DIVISION
An Appeal from HHJ Hughes QC sitting at the Central Family Court
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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A |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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A |
Respondent |
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Mr. P Chamberlayne Q.C. and Ms S. Hillas (instructed by Irwin Mitchell) for the Respondent Wife
Hearing date: Tuesday 13th February 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Cohen:
Background:
The Original Order:
The order commences with a recital as follows:
"Upon the petitioner and respondent mutually agreeing, acknowledging and declaring that: the terms of this order are accepted in full and final satisfaction of all claims for income, capital and pension sharing orders which either party may be entitled to bring against the other or the other's estate in any jurisdiction howsoever arising.
i. Pay the deposit upon the property of £260,000:
ii. Take out a mortgage in the sum of £2.49 million from Coutts & Co. which he would service and,
iii. That, until the sale of RG, he would provide the wife with the sum of £12,000 per month to meet her living expenses.
The wife would "repay the BL mortgage in full and reimburse the husband for the interest payments on the mortgage that he will make on her behalf pending the sale of RG" and that the sum of £12,000 per month would be paid by the husband as a "loan" and that the loan would increase by the amount that he advanced to her each month from 16th February 2012 until the sale of RG.
i. The amount of the BL deposit;
ii. The interest payments that he had made on the BL mortgage; and
iii. The amount accrued under the BL loan namely £12,000 per month from 16th February 2012.
The English Property "RG":
The Spanish Property:
The hearing at first instance
The Judgment under Appeal:
i. Each party had been reasonable in their efforts to sell the properties. She made no criticism of either party in respect of the properties' failure to sell.
ii. The judge was "quite sure" that the wife would not have agreed to pay her own maintenance and mortgage interest repayments by way of a loan had she known how long this would go on for, how much it would have cost her and how much it would deplete her capital funds.
iii. The wife would have been unlikely to have had her claims for maintenance dismissed in six months and replaced by an arrangement whereby she was lent money to maintain herself in a new home which would be repayable on an increasing basis if either of the parties had known that the properties would be unsold after six years.
iv. She accepted that the husband had acted to his own detriment by making the payments that he had made in reliance on the terms of the agreement.
v. The failure to sell the properties was a major and significant change and one which the court could not ignore. Had she received her Duxbury fund in 2011/12 when aged 50/51, the wife would have received £2 million [which I have already explained is in error] which was estimated to provide her with an annual income of £89,000. The cash sum that she would have, after repaying the husband what he was owed, was the sum of only £800,000 yielding her an income on Duxbury calculations of around £40,000 p.a.
vi. The cost to the husband of paying £12,000 per month plus the mortgage interest was a total of £216,000 p.a. Thus, in three/four years, if the properties remain unsold, the wife's entire capital fund would have been removed as it would all be owed to the husband. She would be totally dependent upon her pension.
vii. It was not foreseeable in 2011 that, after a short period of time, the husband's businesses would be so successful as to provide him with substantial income and capital.
"The intention of the 2011 order in broad terms was to give the wife money to purchase an alternative home, £2 million as a Duxbury fund, and pension provision by way of a clean break. No court would have expected her to forego maintenance for six years or pay for herself or to pay for her housing mortgage interest as a loan. It seems to me that the fair way forward in this case is to release her from the undertakings to repay the mortgage interest and the maintenance to the extent that she receives the original £1.3 million from the husband upon the sale of RG and £700,000 upon the sale of the Spanish property."
The Arguments on Appeal:
On behalf of the husband it was argued as follows:
i) The husband's primary point is that this was a consent order carefully negotiated and crafted over months of negotiation. It was intended to provide the parties with a clean break and send them off each on their own way.ii) The judge, in her judgment, paid lip-service at most to the principle that the parties' agreement is a matter of the utmost importance and should, unless there is a very good reason otherwise, be respected. I was referred to Radmacher v Granatino [2011] 1 AC 534 and Zimina v Zimin [2017] EWCA Civ 1429.
iii) This order would never have been set aside if the Barder v Caluori [1988] AC 20 or Myerson v Myerson [2009] 2 FLR 147 principles were to be applied. What has happened was eminently foreseeable. The parties took a punt on the value of the two properties and their failure to sell is a direct result of that.
iv) There was no minimum figure contained in the agreement which the wife might receive. If the wife wanted a minimum that is something that she should have negotiated.
v) The husband has gone on paying, pursuant to the terms of the agreement, the sum of some £216,000 a year to his manifest disadvantage. Indeed, under the order of the judge that will continue indefinitely until the properties are sold.
vi) The wife could have put a stop to all this by taking out an application to the court for the properties to be sold at a lesser price than that at which they were being marketed.
vii) The judge's rationale which in part was a comparison of the parties' respective financial positions, took into account an immaterial factor. That the husband had done well financially since 2011 by his own financial endeavours is immaterial.
viii) It is unfair to release one party only from a reciprocal obligation.
ix) Insofar as the judge justified her order by reference to fairness she failed to take into account, as she should have, what was agreed at the time. That would be the best judge of fairness.
x) This was a commercial agreement which the court cannot go behind and release a party from one part of it only.
xi) The wife cannot say that the consequence of being held to the agreement would leave her on the breadline. She would still have a pension fund of £2 million plus whatever sum is received when the properties do eventually sell.
xii) It is very much a matter of chance that the wife has been given this legal avenue to come back to the courts to vary an undertaking. If the order had been differently drafted so that the sum that she was to repay the husband was by way of reverse lump sum, it would not be variable. It is a matter of fluke that the obligation to repay is by way of undertaking rather than order.
I find many of these points to be well made and I will return to them.
On behalf of the wife it was argued as follows:
i) This case is dealing with a very specific set of circumstances. The wife agreed to what would have provided her with a fund, outside the provision of her new home and pension, of at least £3 million and perhaps as much as £4.5 million.ii) She would never have agreed to accept monthly payments by way of loan so as to generate a huge debt if it had ever been anticipated that it would have gone on for so long or the value of her fund would have been so dramatically reduced.
iii) It was never the intention of the wife to assume the risk.
iv) Unless she is given relief, there may well be no income fund at all. It needs only another 3.5 years before the entire sum disappears, leaving her only with a property and a pension fund which, at the moment, she is too young to access and will remain so for another four or so years.
v) If the gateway to release from an undertaking is a significant change of circumstances then there could hardly be a more dramatic change than this.
vi) It is impossible for the husband to argue that it has produced an unfair result when his financial position is so much stronger than hers.
vii) This is not a first-instance hearing. On an appeal the judge's ruling is only to be displaced if it is plainly wrong or has taken into account irrelevant material or omitted important material. It is not for me to substitute my discretion for that of HHJ Hughes.
Discussion:
Replacement Undertakings:
Conclusion:
i) the parties came to an agreement that was intended to be a clean break and a complete agreement of all matters between them,
ii) the order had in a number of respects already been put into effect,
iii) the husband had honoured the agreement and paid substantial sums to, and for the benefit of, the wife in the expectation that he was going to be repaid.
i) In a few years time the wife will be entitled to cash-in her pension and take 25% of it as a lump sum. I would require persuasion that she should not pay that or a significant element of it to the husband in part-repayment of the debt.ii) I would want to give consideration as to whether the wife's new property should not continue to carry an element of mortgage so as to release funds to repay the husband.
iii) I would need persuasion that it was just for the husband to be required to go on paying the current monthly provision of £12,000 per month to the full extent. I say this particularly when the figures put to the judge, as contained in the judgment, suggest that the income fund that the wife would have achieved from her (wrongly described) Duxbury fund was £89,000, which approximates to £7,400 per month when he is currently paying £12,000 per month. I would wish to have a close eye on the wife's budget to assess what is a reasonable sum going forward. I would also want to know her capital position to act as a further check on that figure.