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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Charalambous v Charalambous [2004] EWCA Civ 1030 (30 July 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/1030.html Cite as: [2005] Fam 250, [2005] 2 WLR 241, [2004] EWCA Civ 1030 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE FAMILY DIVISION
MR JUSTCE WILSON
FD02D06673
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MAY
and
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
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FLOROS CHARALAMBOUS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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MARTHA JOANNOU CHARALAMBOUS |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr V Le Grice QC and Mr T Carter (instructed by Phillippou & Co) for the Respondent
Mr M Emanuel (instructed by Hodge Jones & Allen) for the Litigation Friend
Hearing dates : 29th June 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Thorpe:
"As a matter of the conflict of laws, the petitioner's application to vary the Hickory Trust should be determined by reference to the Divorce Law of England and Wales and not by reference to the Recognition of Trusts Act 1987."
"The proper characterisation of the issue shows that the Court is concerned with the powers of the divorce courts rather than the "validity, construction, effects and administration of a trust." As a result the English conflicts rule on financial relief after divorce prevails."
"24. – (1) On granting a decree of divorce, a decree of nullity of marriage or a decree of judicial separation or at any time thereafter (whether, in the case of a decree of divorce or of nullity of marriage, before or after the decree is made absolute), the court may make any one or more of the following orders, that is to say –
(a) an order that a party to the marriage shall transfer to the other party, to any child of the family or to such person as may be specified in the order for the benefit of such a child such property as may be so specified, being property to which the first-mentioned party is entitled, either in possession or reversion;
(b) an order that a settlement of such property as may be so specified, being property to which a party to the marriage is so entitled, be made to the satisfaction of the court for the benefit of the other party to the marriage and of the children of the family or either or any of them;
(c) an order varying for the benefit of the parties to the marriage and of the children of the family or either or any of them any ante-nuptial or post-nuptial settlement (including such a settlement made by will or codicil) made on the parties of the marriage other than one in the form of a pension arrangement (within the meaning of section 25D below);
(d) an order extinguishing or reducing the interest of either of the parties to the marriage under any such settlement, other than one in the form of a pension arrangement (within the meaning of section 25D below)."
Subject, however, in the case of an order under paragraph (a) above, to the restrictions imposed by section 29(1) and (3) below on the making of orders for a transfer of property in favour of children who have attained the age of eighteen.
"1 Applicable law and recognition of trusts
(1) The provisions of the Convention set out in the Schedule to this Act shall have the force of law in the United Kingdom.
(2) Those provisions shall, so far as applicable, have effect not only in relation to the trusts described in Articles 2 and 3 of the Convention but also in relation to any other trusts or property arising under the law of any part of the United Kingdom or by virtue of a judicial decision whether in the United Kingdom or elsewhere.
(3) In accordance with Articles 15 and 16 such provisions of the law as are there mentioned shall, to the extent there specified, apply to the exclusion of the other provisions of the Convention."
"Article 15
The Convention does not prevent the application of provisions of the law designated by the conflicts rules of the forum, in so far as those provisions cannot be derogated from by voluntary act, relating in particular to the following matters-
(a) the protection of minors and incapable parties;
(b) the personal and proprietary effects of marriage;
(c) succession rights, testate and intestate, especially the indefeasible shares of spouses and relatives;
(d) the transfer of title property and security interests in property;
(e) the protection of creditors in matters of insolvency;
(f) the protection, in other respects, of third parties acting in good faith.
If recognition of a trust is prevented by applications of the preceding paragraph, the court shall try to give effect to the objects of the trust by other means."
"3.1 Subject to Clause 22 hereof, this Trust is established under the laws of the Bailiwick of Jersey and the rights of all parties and the construction and effect of each and every provision hereof shall be governed and construed only in accordance with the laws of Jersey, which shall be the proper law hereof (hereinafter called "the Proper Law")
3.2 Subject to Clause 22 hereof, this Trust shall be subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the Royal Courts of the Bailiwick of Jersey which shall be the forum for disputes relating hereto (hereinafter called "the Forum")."
"The language of the Act is exceedingly wide. I am clearly of opinion that the power thereby conferred extends to a settlement though made in another country and according to the law of that country."
(Counsel have traced the transition of the statutory power from its first appearance in the Matrimonial Causes Act 1859 and it is common ground that there is no material distinction throughout these transitions.)
"Nunneley v. Nunneley seems to me to go the whole length of deciding that whatever be the law applicable to the settlements the effect of S.5 of the 22 and 23 Vict. c. 61, is to give this court power to vary the settlements in its discretion according to the principles laid down in that section."
"138 It will be recalled that article 3 removes entirely from the Convention's coverage the acts done prior to the creation of the trust, which are necessary for its creation. To the contrary, article 15 looks to those hypothetical situations in which an existing trust may deploy effects which are incompatible with the mandatory rules of the forum or of the law of a third country for a field other than trusts. The intent was to preserve above all the forum's substantive law in cases where its conflicts rules designated its own law, but this provision is also intended to preserve a foreign substantive law which is designated by the private international law of the forum.
139 It should be emphasised that the enumeration of the first paragraph of article 15 is by way of example. Mandatory rules in matters which are not listed may therefore also override the trust's rules. Not without reason, it was said that a hostile judge might always find in article 15 a means of frustrating the trust."
"The power of a divorce court to vary a settlement made by the parties to a marriage, under section 24 of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 after granting a decree and under section 17 of the Matrimonial and Family Proceedings Act 1984 after a foreign decree, has been considered in Rule 86. It is important that this power should be exercised in accordance with the English lex fori as part of the whole range of powers exercisable in those contexts and it is submitted that the Recognition of the Trusts Act 1987 does not affect that position."
"In interpreting the Hague Convention, it is important to appreciate that near unanimity on clear 'black and white' provisions in a complex area was impossible, especially in view of time constraints. Often a problematic point was perceived and common lawyers would produce a proposal 'x' while civil lawyers would produce a proposal 'z'. After a 2-hour discussion the matter would be referred to the drafting committee to produce a compromise 'y' in the light of the discussion and in the light of the need to have the matter dealt with in French words comprehensible to civilian lawyers which would then have a parallel English text.
This led often curiously expressed English provisions and to matters being 'fudged' by the use of 'grey' open-textured language capable of being interpreted narrowly or broadly …"
"Article 15 is concerned to ensure the application of the mandatory rules of the law applicable under the forum's conflicts rules to entitlement to assets that happen to be held on trust, irrespective of what the applicable law of the trust may provide. This requires the conflicts rules of the lex fori to be used to apply the mandatory rules of the lex fori or of the lex situs (or of the lex loci solutionis in a very rare case) in preference to applying the applicable proper law of the trust, e.g. if shortly before death or divorce a trust were created in an attempt to avoid the rights of a spouse on the settlor's death or divorce; or if a trust were created in an attempt to defeat claims of the settlor's creditors to the trust assets; or if Manitoban law had been chosen in an attempt to have English land escape the rules against perpetuities and accumulations."
"It is clear from s 24(1)(c ) of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 that an English court has the power to vary a trust governed by English law when it has jurisdiction over divorce, nullity or legal separation proceedings involving the same parties. Section 17 of the Matrimonial and Family Proceedings Act 1984 confers a similar power on the court in respect of foreign decrees. In both cases, the decision to vary is at the court's discretion. Section 24 further provides a basis of competence to vary a trust governed by foreign law. However, whether a court with competence should actually vary a foreign trust raises a question governed by the applicable law of the trust. Article 8(2)(h) of the Trusts Convention makes clear that if a foreign law governs the trust, then it is that foreign law's substantive provisions on variation of trusts which should be applied, not those of English law. It must follow that it is to the applicable law of the trust that an English court should first look when deciding whether to vary the trust."
"Article 15 then preserves the pre-existing position, irrespective of what is the law applicable to a particular trust, to ensure that one jurisdiction's trust law does not override the mandatory rules of another (civil or common law) jurisdiction whose substantive domestic law is applicable according to the choice of law rules of the forum. Such mandatory rules concern matters such as insolvency, matrimonial property, transfer of title to property with protection afforded to bona fide transferees, and forced heirship succession rights: these rules my lead to the lex fori or the lex situs or lex successionis being applied so as wholly or partly to undo the effects of a trust of assets within the forum."
"There is power in the English court when granting a divorce, nullity or judicial separation decree, or at any time after the decree, to vary any settlement of movable and immovable property made on the parties to the marriage, whether by an ante-nuptial or a post-nuptial settlement. The court can also extinguish or reduce the interest of either of the parties to the marriage under such a settlement. Whenever the court has jurisdiction in the main proceedings for divorce, nullity or judicial separation, then it also has jurisdiction to order such variations. However, this application of English law as the law of the forum has not been restricted to settlements governed by English law or of English property. For example, in Nunneley v Nunneley and Marrian, the English court varied a settlement made in Scotland and in Scottish form of movables and immovables in Scotland. Is this power now limited by the Recognition of Trusts Act 1987 to settlements governed by English law? It would certainly seem undesirable that the power of the court in such family proceedings should be limited by the choice of law rules in the 1987 Act; and the exclusion of those rules might well be supported by reference to Article 15 which allows the English forum still to apply its conflict rules, here in fact leading to the application of the substantive law of the forum, to inter alia "the personal and proprietary effects of marriage". "
"Inasmuch as the deed vested no property in trustees and created no successive legal or beneficial interests it had none of the attributes of a settlement which are familiar to conveyancing practitioners. It has, however, long since been established by decisions which are binding on this court that a disposition of property may a "settlement" for the purposes of section 25 of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1950, notwithstanding that it would not be regarded as a settlement of property for any other purpose. The liberality with which this legislation has been construed is sufficiently exemplified by Bosworthick v. Bosworthick. In that case a wife executed, a few years after her marriage, a bond which secured to her husband an annuity for his life. The marriage was dissolved in 1925 and the wife applied to the court for an order extinguishing her liability under the bond. This court, affirming the decision of Lord Merrivale P., held that the bond was a post-nuptial settlement for the purposes of section 5 of the Matrimonial Causes Act, 1859, and section 192 of the Supreme Court of Judicature (Consolidation) Act, 1925; and the wife's application succeeded. In the course of his judgment Romer J., who was sitting as a member of this court, said that the authorities established "that where a "husband has made a provision for his wife, or a wife for her husband, in the nature of periodical payments, that amounts to a settlement within the meaning of the sections. That may appear to be a very liberal construction of the sections, but I think that it is no more liberal a construction than should be given to them having regard to the obvious purposes for which they were enacted by the legislature."
"The first point taken by Mr. Beyfus on the wife's behalf is fundamental. He has submitted that the four settlements in question are not "post-nuptial settlements made on the parties "whose marriage is the subject of the decree." This submission was made before the registrar, but later abandoned before the hearing was concluded. It has, however, been revived before me and I must deal with it. If he were right in that submission this court would have no jurisdiction to make any order upon this application. I do not entertain any doubt that this submission is wrong. These settlements are settlements of property made in the course of marriage, and they deal with the interests of the children of the marriage. In the disposal of the property for the benefit of each child the respondent wife has been given a voice both as trustee and under the power of appointment even though it is the husband who provides all the money. Under the settlements on the two daughters she also has a beneficial interest in reversion. A settlement can settle on parties to a marriage power over the disposal as well as over the property itself."
"In the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 settlement is not defined, but the context of section 24 affords some clues. Certain indicia of the type of disposition with which the section is concerned can be identified reasonably easily. The section is concerned with a settlement "made on the parties to the marriage." So, broadly stated, the disposition must be one which makes some form of continuing provision for both or either of the parties to a marriage, with or without provision for their children."
Lord Justice May:
Lady Justice Arden: