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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Waiwaiku v Waiwaiku [2004] EWCA Civ 20 (14 January 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/20.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 20 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM SOUTHEND COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE YELTON)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
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KOKULO NYANPEE WAIWAIKU | Appellant/Respondent | |
-v- | ||
LEONA VIKI WAIWAIKU | Respondent/Applicant |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The Respondent did not appear and was not represented
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Crown Copyright ©
"Those [i.e. her allegations of his financial position] are grotesquely enormous figures which I am absolutely convinced bear no relation whatever to the true financial situation before me."
He found on page 11 of his judgment:
"I am sure that they have told me truthfully what their own position is."
That is an important finding. It is a finding of credibility against which it is usually extraordinarily difficult successfully to appeal. The result of the finding was that the Deputy District Judge found on page 12 of his judgment:
"There is no sum from those savings accounts which can be divided in two, and no half to be given to her. It simply is not there."
In paragraph 17 of his judgment he said this:
"I have dealt at some considerable length with this because the wife's contention that there nearly 116,000 is unaccounted for was critical to her view of the entire matter. I have looked into it and I have thought about it and I have considered it and I have considered what both of them have said about it, and I simply do not accept that there was 116,000 which has evaporated from the family savings and I approach the rest of the case on that basis."
"As stated above I accept the documentary evidence adduced by the husband showing an equivalent monthly figure net of tax as £4,715. An earlier figure of £7,100 stated in a schedule produced on his behalf is simply a mistake. I reject the wife's suggestions that the husband's earnings have been under-declared in his Form E."
Again, at page 6:
"I feel sure that with appropriate independent financial advice and assistance from specialist lenders, the husband should be able to satisfy these capital requirements [his debts] quite readily and without any significant reduction in his income."
Finally, at page 7:
"I conclude that he has a robust and substantial earning capacity as a GP and solid - if not rosy - earning prospects for the future. He has debts, but these could easily be rolled up into a re-mortgage. I also think he has substantial untapped borrowing potential based on his professional standing as a GP."
"That is the financial position of the parties as found by the Deputy District Judge and I have outlined it because there is no serious challenge, other than that which I have just dealt with, as to the future, to these findings in that respect."
"It is always seemed to me to be the case, that while one does not regard borrowing capacity, lump sums normally, I say normally because there are exceptions in every case, should be made from assets which are available to one party or the other or can be raised on an asset that the party has and, when one bears in mind that the husband already has debts in the region of twenty thousand pounds, on the earnings that he has and on the assumption that I am upholding as I am the Periodical Payments Order which the Deputy District Judge made, it does not seem to me that the conclusion to which he came, that the husband could pay another thirty thousand pounds, was supportable either on the evidence before him or on the evidence I have seen since, which is that the husband has tried to borrow it and cannot. ... The question is, is it right to, is it even reasonable to make the husband pay it, which would involve raising it in circumstances in which as I have already indicated, the finances are in something of a mess in any event.
Now I appreciate that the wife would say, well I want that money because I have these various debts, one of which is as I have said is charged on the property but, on the other hand, one has to have a certain amount of regard, a considerable amount of regard, to reality and I have come to the conclusion that the Deputy District Judge erred in principle in making any Lump Sum Order in addition to the Order for the transfer of the house and the endowment policies, and it seems to me that that part of his Order should be deleted."
ORDER: Applications for permission to appeal and a stay of execution refused; Mrs Waiwaiku to be supplied with a copy of this judgment at public expense.