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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Moses-Taiga v Taiga [2005] EWCA Civ 1013 (05 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/1013.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 1013, [2006] 1 FLR 1074 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
FAMILY DIVISION
PRINCIPAL REGISTRY
(MR JUSTICE SINGER AND MR JUSTICE BENNETT)
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
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NNEKA MERCY MOSES-TAIGA | Claimant/Respondent | |
-v- | ||
MOSES OGHENERUME TAIGA | Defendant/Appellant |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
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MR TIM SCOTT QC (instructed by Divorce & Family Law Practice) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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"... upon the Petitioner undertaking to the court to abide by any order that the court may make in respect of that part of the Order for maintenance pending suit provided by paragraph 1(b) of the Order below."
As my Lord has observed during the course of argument, that undertaking is almost incomprehensible. If the court has jurisdiction to make a later order in respect of paragraph 1 of the order below, an undertaking by the petitioner to abide by it seems completely pointless. And if the court lacks the power to make a subsequent order, then it is hard to see what value the undertaking would have to the husband. Mr Scott, who did not appear at that stage, has advanced two theories as to what the drafters of that undertaking were seeking to achieve, but neither of those theories is in itself particularly plausible or convincing. So to my mind I can see not a lot of point or purpose of the inclusion of the undertaking in the order, and certainly it seems to me of scant value to the husband whose interests it was presumably intended to safeguard.
"The trial of the divorce suit, including any jurisdictional and other issues ancillary thereto, and also including the Respondent's application for a stay of the suit, be set down for hearing forthwith on the first open date after 1st January 2004, subject to counsels' availability. Time estimate 10 days. Such date to be fixed by counsels' clerks in consultation with the Clerk of the Rules."
The foreseeable consequence of that direction was that the order of the district judge for maintenance pending suit would subsist for more than a year, given that the application to the Clerk of the Rules was for a ten-day fixture subject to counsel's availability.
"In principle, the amount ordered for the Respondent's legal costs are manifestly excessive when at the moment the issue before the courts are as follows:
i. The validity of the marriage
ii. Jurisdiction of the court
iii.Stay of proceedings
iv. Paternity of the children."
"The court may in its discretion award maintenance pending suit to a wife notwithstanding that the husband is raising a question as to the court's jurisdiction to entertain the suit: once the court decides, if it does, that it has no jurisdiction to hear a particular suit, any prior order as to maintenance pending suit will forthwith cease to be of effect and no order for maintenance pending suit may thereafter be made in respect of that suit which itself has ceased to be of effect. An order may, however, be made even if it is clear that the marriage in question is void."
"I have no doubt of the power of the Court to allot alimony pending the determination of a question of jurisdiction, but it is a matter of discretion whether it shall be allotted in any particular case. In this case, as it appears that there is a substantial question of domicile to be decided, and as it cannot be determined for several months, the wife is entitled to alimony. I therefore reject the application, and the proceedings for alimony must take the usual course."
The wife's application for alimony, given the date of the report, 1875, must, it seems to me, have had a statutory foundation, either being brought under the terms of Matrimonial Causes Act 1857 or perhaps a replacement statute such as the 1866 Matrimonial Causes Act. Therefore, in my judgment, Ronalds is a direct illustration of a point which has been universally recognised - that is, that the whole purpose of alimony pending suit is to sustain the petitioner pending the court's determination. There is manifestly a risk of unjustified and irrecoverable payments, but that has to be balanced against the risk of a denial of access to justice for the petitioner, if she has not the means to sustain herself and the litigation pending its determination.
"Thus there can be no doubt of the court's power to order periodical payments to reflect more that the recipient's mere aliment, provided that all the section 25(2) criteria, all the circumstances of the case and overall fairness so require."
That paragraph follows paragraphs 94 to 96 in which I recorded the first instance development.
"On a petition for divorce, nullity of marriage or judicial separation, the court may make an order for maintenance pending suit, that is to say, an order requiring either party to the marriage to make to the other such periodical payments for his or her maintenance and for such term, being a term beginning not earlier than the date of the presentation of the petition and ending with the date of the determination of the suit, as the court thinks reasonable."
If one reads no further than the words "on a petition for divorce ... the court may make an order for maintenance pending suit" it is difficult to see why the words should not mean exactly what they say. So why should section 22 be interpreted so as to restrict the power of the court in the way suggested by Mr Aderemi? I can see nothing in the language to support his submission where the challenge to jurisdiction is based on the contention that the condition of domicile or habitual residence has not been satisfied.
(Appeal dismissed; summary assessment of the successful respondent's costs in that sum of £10,840.55).