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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Stack v Dowden [2005] EWCA Civ 857 (13 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/857.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 857 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CENTRAL LONDON CIVIL JUSTICE CENTRE
His Honour Judge Levy QC
CHY04209
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH
and
LADY JUSTICE SMITH
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BARRY ALAN STACK |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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DEHRA ANNE DOWDEN |
Defendant/Appellant |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Francis Wilkinson (instructed by Attiyah Lone of 106-107 King Street, Hammersmith, London W6 0QP) for the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Chadwick :
The claimant's primary submission – express trust
"The Purchasers declare that the survivor of them is entitled to give a valid receipt for capital money arising from a disposition of all or part of the property."
"The second paragraph of that transfer certainly suggests that there was to be a joint tenancy of the Property, but it is not sufficient by itself for there to be an express declaration of trust, as was found in one of the cases to which [counsel] had referred me."
The case which the judge had in mind as authority for that proposition was, I think, Huntingford v Hobbs [1993] 1 FLR 736.
Implied, resulting or constructive trust
"In a case where the legal estate in property is conveyed to two or more persons as joint tenants, but neither the conveyance nor any other written document contains any express declaration of trust concerning the beneficial interests in the property (as would be required for an express declaration of this nature by virtue of s 53(1)(b) of the Law of Property Act 1925), the way is open for persons claiming a beneficial interest in it or its proceeds of sale to rely on the doctrine of 'resulting, implied or constructive trusts' (see s 53(2) of the Law of Property Act 1925). In particular, in a case such as that, a person who claims to have contributed to the purchase price of the property which stands in the name of himself and another can rely on the well-known presumption of equity that a person who has contributed a share of the purchase price of property is entitled to a corresponding proportionate beneficial interest in the property by way of implied or resulting trust (see, for example, Pettitt v Pettitt [1970] AC 777 at 813-814, per Lord Upjohn). . . ."
". . . If, however, the relevant conveyance contains an express declaration of trust which comprehensively declares the beneficial interests in the property or its proceeds of sale [as was the position in that case], there is no room for the application of the doctrine of resulting, implied or constructive trusts unless or until the conveyance is set aside or rectified; until that event the declaration contained in the document speaks for itself."
But it is pertinent to note, first, that the Court accepted, in that case, that a conveyance into joint names which contains no declaration of the beneficial interests does not lead necessarily to the conclusion that the parties were entitled beneficially in equal shares – (ibid, 118D) - and, further, that, although this Court referred in Goodman v Gallant to "the well-known presumption of equity that a person who has contributed a share of the purchase price of property [which stands in the name of himself and another] is entitled to a corresponding proportionate beneficial interest in the property by way of implied or resulting trust", the Court did not suggest that that was the only basis upon which a person could establish a beneficial interest. It was open to a person claiming a share in the property to rely upon a constructive trust arising out of the common intention of the parties as to what their respective shares should be.
"A resulting implied or constructive trust – and it is unnecessary for present purposes to distinguish between these three classes of trust – is created by a transaction between the trustee and the cestui que trust in connection with the acquisition by the trustee of a legal estate in land, whenever the trustee has so conducted himself that it would be inequitable to allow him to deny to the cestui que trust a beneficial interest in the land acquired. And he will be held to have so conducted himself if by his words or conduct he has induced the cestui que trust to act to his own detriment in the reasonable belief that by so acting he was acquiring a beneficial interest in the land."
Those observations were made in the context of a dispute between husband and wife in proceedings which predated the Matrimonial Property and Proceedings Act 1970. But they are of general import; and, in particular, they remain applicable to cases where the parties have not been married.
"In such a case [where the court is satisfied that it was the common intention of both spouses that the contributing wife should have a share in the beneficial interest and that her contributions were made upon this understanding] the court must first do its best to discover from the conduct of the spouses whether any inference can reasonably be drawn as to the probable common understanding about the amount of the share of the contributing spouse upon which each must have acted in doing what each did, even though that understanding was never expressly stated by one spouse to the other or even consciously formulated in words by either of them independently. It is only if no such inference can be drawn that the court is driven to apply as a rule of law, and not as an inference of fact, the maxim 'equality is equity', and to hold that the beneficial interest belongs to the spouses in equal shares.
The same result however may often be reached as an inference of fact. The instalments of a mortgage to a building society are generally repayable over a period of many years. During that period, as both must be aware, the ability of each spouse to contribute to the instalments out of their separate earnings is likely to alter, particularly in the case of the wife if any children are born of the marriage. If the contribution of the wife in an early part of the period of repayment is substantial but is not an identifiable and uniform proportion of each instalment, because her contributions are indirect or, if direct, are made irregularly, it may well be a reasonable inference that their common intention at the time of the acquisition of the matrimonial home was that the beneficial interest should be held by them in equal shares and that each should contribute to the cost of its acquisition whatever amounts each could afford in the varying exigencies of family life to be expected during the period of repayment. In the social conditions of today this would be a natural enough common intention of a young couple who were both earning when the house was acquired but who contemplated having children whose birth and rearing in their infancy would necessarily affect the future earning capacity of the wife."
"There is no dispute that when the property was placed in joint names, the two parties intended that that they should each have a beneficial interest in it. The difficulty lies in establishing the extent of those beneficial interests in the absence of any declaration of trust.
In the absence of any declaration of trust, the parties respective beneficial interests in the property fall to be determined not by reference to any broad concepts of justice, but by reference to the principles governing the creation or operation of resulting, implied or constructive trusts which by s 53(2) of the Law of Property Act 1925 are exempted from the general requirements of writing imposed by s 53(1).
In Walker v Hall [1984] FLR 126 at p 133, Dillon LJ made the following statement of a well known general principle:
'. . . the law of trusts has concentrated on how the purchase money has been provided and it has consistently been held that where the purchase money for the property acquired by two or more persons in their joint names has been provided by those persons in unequal amounts, they will be beneficially entitled as between themselves in the proportions in which they provided the purchase money. This is the basic doctrine of the resulting trust and it is conveniently and cogently expounded by Lord Upjohn in Pettitt v Petitt [1970] AC 777 at p 814'
The application of this principle ordinarily gives rise to no difficulty where the whole of the initial purchase price has been contributed by the two or more interested parties in the form of cash derived out of their respective resources without the benefit of a loan."
He then went on to address the more usual case where the parties do not (together) contribute the whole of the initial purchase price out of their own resources. The property is purchased with the benefit of a loan . He said this (ibid, 744G-745D):
"Greater problems arise in cases such as the present, where part of the money required has been borrowed on mortgage. On the particular facts of some such cases the court, for the purpose of ascertaining the parties' proportionate interests in the property, has thought it right to attribute to them the intention that their contributions to the purchase should be ascertained as at the date when the property eventually came to be sold."
He referred to the observation of Lord Diplock in Gissing ([1971] AC 886, 909D-E) that:
". . . there is nothing inherently improbable in their acting on the understanding that the wife should be entitled to a share which was not to be quantified immediately upon the acquisition of the home but should be left to be determined when the mortgage was repaid or the property disposed of, on the basis of what would be fair having regard to the total contributions, direct or indirect, which each spouse had made by that date. Where this was the most likely inference from their conduct it would be for the court to give effect to that common intention of the parties by determining what in all the circumstances was a fair share."
And he pointed out that inferences of that nature as to the common intentions of the parties were drawn by this Court on the particular facts of Young v Young [1984] FLR 375 and in Passee v Passee [1988] 1 FLR 263. But he went on to say this:
"However, in a case where a purchase in the joint names of two parties has been financed partly in the form of cash provided by one or both of them, and partly by way of a loan on mortgage, another approach open to the court is to assess the parties' contributions to the purchase, and thus their proportionate interests in the property, by reference to the time of the initial purchase, having regard to what sums each of them actually paid and what obligations each of them actually assumed in relation to the mortgage. This, for example, was the approach adopted by this court in Crisp v Mullings [1976] 239 EG 119 and by Bush J in Marsh v von Sternberg [1986] 1 FLR 526."
"As appears from the passage from Lord Diplock's speech in Gissing v Gissing quoted above, the task of the court in cases such as this is to draw the most likely inference as to the common intention of the parties at the date of the purchase from their conduct. This must depend on the facts of the particular case. On the particular facts in Young v Young and Passee v Passee, the evidence disclosed no clear arrangement or understanding between the parties, as at the date of the purchase, in regard to the manner in which the mortgage payments were to be provided for. In the present case, in contrast, while both parties as joint proprietors had to join in the mortgage and assume joint and several liability to the mortgagee building society, there was a clear agreement or understanding that, as between the two of them, Mr Huntingford would pay all the interest due under the mortgage and all the endowment policy premiums which would in due course, if the policy were duly kept up, discharge the capital debt owed to the lender. As at the date of the purchase, while Mrs Hobbs no less than Mr Huntingford was assuming a liability to the lender, it was not contemplated that, as between the two of them, she would have to pay anything towards the discharge of this liability.
'It is of course always possible to look at the subsequent conduct of the parties to see if it shows any light on what they originally agreed, but in the absence of a new or varied agreement, subsequent conduct cannot affect what was originally agreed.' Marsh v von Sternberg (above) at p 533 per Bush J.)
Drawing the most likely inference from the conduct of the parties in the present case, in my judgment the proper common intention to impute to them is a common intention as at the date of purchase that Mrs Hobbs should be treated as having contributed her cash contribution, Mr Huntingford should be treated as having contributed the whole of the sum borrowed on mortgage, and that the property should be owned by the two of them in shares proportionate to such contributions."
On the basis that Mrs Hobbs had contributed £38,860 out of the proceeds of sale of her former home and that Mr Huntingford was to be treated as having contributed the whole of the mortgage advance of £25,000, the property was held in the proportions 61% and 39%.
"In Walker v Hall I expressed the view at p 134C that it was not open to this court, in the absence of specific evidence of the parties' intentions, to hold that the property there in question belonged beneficially to the parties in equal shares, notwithstanding their unequal contributions to the purchase price, simply because it was bought to be their family home and they intended – or possibly one should say 'hoped' – that their relationship should last for life. The effect is that, in the absence of an express declaration of the beneficial interests, the court will hold that the joint purchasers hold the property on a resulting trust for themselves in the proportions in which they contributed directly or indirectly to the purchase price, unless there is sufficient specific evidence of their common intention that they should be entitled in other proportions – eg in equal shares notwithstanding unequal contributions – to rebut the presumption of resulting trust."
There is, if I may say so, nothing controversial in that statement of principle. Nor in his subsequent observation (ibid 393D) that:
"The common intention must be founded on evidence such as would support a finding that there is an implied or constructive trust for the parties in proportions to the purchase price. The court does not as yet sit, as under a palm tree, to exercise a general discretion to do what the man in the street, on a general overview of the case, might regard as fair."
But Lord Justice Dillon went on to say this (ibid, 393E):
"But the common intention of the parties must, in my judgment, mean a shared intention communicated between them. It cannot mean an intention which each happened to have in his or her own mind but had never communicated to the other."
And, (ibid, 393G):
"Since, therefore, it is clear in the present case that there never was any discussion between the parties about what their respective beneficial interests were to be, they cannot, in my judgment, have had in any relevant sense any common intention as to the beneficial ownership of the property. . . . The presumption of resulting trust is not displaced."
Both Lord Justice Steyn (ibid, 395G) and Sir Christopher Slade (ibid, 396F) agreed with that approach. As Lord Justice Steyn put it:
"Given that no actual common intention to share the property in equal beneficial shares was established, one is driven back to the equitable principle that the shares are to be presumed to be in proportion to the contributions."
"But, for the reasons which I have sought to explain, it is (at the least) open to serious doubt whether those passages did reflect the state of the law as it had developed in this area by the time that Springette v Defoe [1992] 2 FLR 388 was decided in March 1992."
". . . the court must first do its best to discover from the conduct of the spouses whether any inference can reasonably be drawn as to the probable common understanding about the amount of the share of the contributing spouse upon which each must have acted in doing what each did, even though that understanding was never expressly stated by one spouse to the other or even consciously formulated in words by either of them independently." [emphasis added]
and to say that I have not altered my view that, properly understood, the authorities before (and after) Springette v Defoe do not support the proposition that, absent discussion between the parties as to the extent of their respective beneficial interests at the time of the purchase, it must follow that the presumption of resulting trust is not displaced and the property is necessarily held in beneficial shares proportionate to the respective contributions to the purchase price. That is not to say, of course, that there will not be cases where the correct conclusion is that the parties' beneficial interests are proportionate to their respective contributions. Cases turn on their own facts.
"Again, in many such cases, the answer will be provided by evidence of what they said and did at the time of the acquisition. But, in a case where there is no evidence of any discussion between them as to the amount of the share which each was to have – and even in a case where the evidence is that there was no discussion on that point – the question still requires an answer. It must now be accepted that (at least in this Court and below) the answer is that each is entitled to that share which the court considers fair having regard to the whole course of dealing between them in relation to the property. And, in that context, 'the whole course of dealing between them in relation to the property' includes the arrangements which they make from time to time in order to meet the outgoings (mortgage contributions, council tax and utilities, repairs, insurance and housekeeping) which have to be met if they are to live in the property as their home."
The course of dealing between the parties in relation to 114 Chatsworth Road
"Although the parties kept separate bank accounts and they had different savings accounts, I accept the evidence of [Mr Stack] that effectively they managed their affairs together"
And, at paragraph 40 of his judgment:
"It seems to me, although [Miss Dowden] has been the bigger wage-earner over this very long association between the parties, they have both put their all into doing the best for themselves and their family as they could."
"The Transfer deed indicated the parties' intention to be the joint beneficial owners of the property at 114 Chatsworth Road, and the parties can therefore be treated as the beneficial tenants in common in equal shares without further analysis."
The judge did not address the contention that (absent an express declaration of trust) sufficient evidence of the parties' intention to be joint beneficial owners of the property could, nevertheless, be found in paragraph 2 of the transfer deed. Although Mr Stack had said, at paragraph 5 of his witness statement dated 4 September 2003, that "We purchased the property at Chatsworth Road put in our joint names (sic) to ensure that if one of us died, the property would pass to the other under the rule of survivorship", the judge made no finding to the effect that the significance of the declaration was brought to the attention of either party. He would, I think, have been entitled to be sceptical of Mr Stack's assertion that, absent an explanation from the solicitor acting in the purchase, he was aware of "the rule of survivorship". There was no evidence of a solicitor's letter – comparable to that set out in the judgment of the Court in Harwood v Harwood (ibid,279E-F) – which explained why it was thought appropriate to include paragraph 2 in the transfer deed. There was nothing (other than the declaration and Mr Stack's witness statement) to suggest that the principle that a joint tenant takes the whole property by survivorship was ever in the minds of the parties. Miss Dowden's pleaded case, which she supported in evidence, was that the purchase proceeded in joint names without discussion. As she put it, at paragraph 16 of the witness statement which she made on 23 January 2004:
"I don't think we ever talked about who should be the legal owner of Chatsworth. It just happened that both our names were put forward to the agents as purchasers and the purchase went through in joint names. To the best of my recollection there was never any discussion between myself and Barry about ownership of the house at Chatsworth."
"In the premises there is to be inferred a common intention that the Claimant and the Defendant hold the property at 114 Chatsworth Road . . . legally for themselves as beneficial owners in equal shares . . ."
The judge did not think it necessary to resolve the question whether the parties had discussed the beneficial ownership of 114 Chatsworth Road at the time of the purchase. At paragraph 20 of his judgment he said this:
"The Claimant said there was conversation about joint ownership at that time; the Defendant said otherwise. Assuming against the Claimant, there was no such conversation, it seems to me, having regard to the good relationship that the parties had up to then enjoyed, both before and after the purchase, it is likely that there was some understanding between them. As was said in one of the cases cited to me, it takes little to assume that there was such common intention."
In those circumstances, as it seems to me, this Court has to approach this appeal on the basis that there was no discussion, at the time of the purchase of 114 Chatsworth Road, as to the respective shares of the parties in that property. Mr Stack did not assert in his pleadings that there was; Miss Dowden said in her evidence that there was not; and the judge made no finding.
The Purves Road property
". . . direct contributions to the purchase price by the partner who is not the legal owner, whether initially or by payment of mortgage instalments, will readily justify the inference necessary to the creation of a constructive trust. But, as I read the authorities, it is at least extremely doubtful whether anything less will do."
What will not do in that context, as Lord Bridge made clear (ibid, 131D-G) is work done in and about the property (including decoration and renovation) after the property has been acquired.
"The money to purchase Purves Road was raised by myself. I was working at the time and [Mr Stack] was not officially working. He did a little unofficial painting and decorating. I had some savings which we used as a deposit and the rest of the money was raised on mortgage. The deposit monies did not come from a joint savings account as [Mr Stack] alleges in paragraph 6 of his statement because we have never had a joint account. It was my money and it came out of my account. The mortgage was in my name as I was the only one working. I paid the mortgage payments and the household bills, although [Mr Stack] may have occasionally contributed to some household expenses. The bills were all in my name and I always paid them.
[Mr Stack] did not want to be on the deeds as he did not want the responsibility of the mortgage or household debts and running costs. . . . [He] did not want to commit to me or seemingly the children. "
In support of that last sentence she drew attention to the fact that, when the birth of their first child was registered (on joint information), Mr Stack gave his address as 76 Taplow, Adelaide Road, NW3 - although he was, in fact living at 160 Purves Road at the time – and the child was registered with her surname rather than his.
"Given the fact that by that time [1993] there had been a relationship stretching from 1975 or so, certainly from a little later as man and wife, and given the work that [Mr Stack] had done on the Purves Road Property, and given that although their finances were kept separately there had been contributions to their living between the parties, I should have been surprised if [Mr Stack] would not have been found to have certainly some entitlement to a part of the proceeds of sale."
The judge's approach, in that paragraph, fails to address the first of the two questions identified in paragraph [68] of my judgment in Oxley v Hiscock ([2005] Fam 211, 246C): "whether there was evidence from which to infer a common intention, communicated by each to the other, that each shall have a beneficial share in the property". It gives no weight to Lord Bridge's observation, in Lloyds Bank Plc v Rosset [1991] 1 AC 107, 133A-B, that in cases where there has been no discussion between the parties at the time of the purchase – that is to say, cases within his second category – it is extremely doubtful whether anything less than a direct contribution to the purchase price by a person who does not become the legal owner will justify an inference that it is the common intention that he or she is to have a beneficial interest. In my view the reasoning in paragraph 17 of the judge's provides no basis for a conclusion that Mr Stack would have been entitled, in 1993, to any share in the proceeds of sale of 160 Purves Road.
The savings in the Halifax account
"Was the £30,000 invested in 114 Chatsworth Road joint savings, or not? I cannot say that the whole of the £30,000 was joint savings, but certainly by that time, taking account of the way in which [Mr Stack] and [Miss Dowden] conducted themselves, there was, as [Mr Stack] said in his evidence, really a partnership between them in the way they lived."
Confidence in the judge's conclusion is not enhanced by his apparent failure to appreciate that the amount found from Miss Dowden's Halifax account was £58,000 rather than £30,000; although his mistake may have come from paragraph 8 of Mr Stack's witness statement (where he refers to £30,000 of the purchase price of 114 Chatsworth Road coming "from our joint savings"). And, if the judge could not say that "the whole of the £30,000 was joint savings" he may, perhaps be taken to have thought that less than one half of the £58,000 was joint savings.
"When we purchased Chatsworth Road in August 1993 I contributed £125,020 to the purchase price of £190,000. This was my own money. It comprised £66,663.13 from the proceeds of sale of Purves Road and the balance came from my own savings. [Mr Stack] says at paragraph 8 of his statement that £30,000 came from our joint savings. This is not true. We did not have a joint bank account. All the money was mine. I earned it from working hard at my job."
"Spouses living in amity will not normally think it necessary to formulate or define their respective interests in property in any precise way. The expectations of parties to every happy marriage is that they will share the practical benefits of occupying the matrimonial home whoever owns it. But this is something quite different from sharing the beneficial interest in the property asset which the matrimonial home represents."
Although those observations were made in the context of a marriage and in relation to the interests of the parties to that marriage in the matrimonial home, they apply with at least equal force to property owned by unmarried cohabitees. No doubt both Mr Stack and Miss Dowden would readily accept that, in the loose sense in which the word is now used in this context, they were "partners". But that has nothing to do with partnership in the strict (or Partnership Act) sense of that word; and to describe them as "partners" in that loose sense says nothing about their respective property interests.
The respective shares of the parties in 114 Chatsworth Road
"[Counsel] submitted that, even if the declaration at the end of the transfer did not constitute an actual declaration of trust, nevertheless, having regard in particular to the form of the transfer and the statements in Mrs Hobbs' first affidavit, there was compelling evidence that the parties intended that Mr Huntingford should take an interest as beneficial joint tenant in the property or its proceeds of sale. I do not, for my part, accept that there was any such compelling evidence. However, this point as to the parties' intentions was not taken in the court below. If it had been, its validity could have been, and no doubt would have been, tested by cross-examination of Mr Huntingford [by] Mrs Hobbs' counsel. As the case was argued at the trial, she had no occasion to put questions to him on this point, or to call evidence on it. In the circumstances, I do not think it right to allow this point to be taken and I put it on one side."
Lord Justice Dillon did not treat the point as distinct from the submission that (as a matter of construction) the transfer contained an express trust ( a point on which he was in the minority). Lord Justice Steyn did not address the point in express terms; but, had he thought it a good point, the decision in Huntingford v Hobbs would have gone the other way.
Compensation in respect of Mr Stack's exclusion from 114 Chatsworth Road.
"One further issue arises for decision. . . . [A]fter the parties split [Mr Stack] moved out of the house and there was an undertaking given to the Magistrates' Court that . . . an allowance of [£900] should be made to him from the net proceeds of sale before division. In January of this year . . . [Mr Stack's] undertaking for that allowance to continue (sic) was refused. There was an application to this Court when an order might have been made where the undertaking was continued. That undertaking was not signed by [Miss Dowden]. It is not clear to me that there was any consideration by the Court of the decision by the Magistrates' Court, so in those circumstances there should, in my judgment, be no deduction for the period from the time of the Magistrates' Court order to now from the sum to be mutually shared. It seems to me, though, that as the sale is very much, I suspect, going to be in [Miss Dowden's] hands, it would be fair to both parties if there should be such an allowance from the month of October until there is a sale of the Property."
The application for permission to cross-appeal
"As to the Chelsea Building Society account in [Miss Dowden's] name, which did contain, I think, £60,000, which is now reduced to £18,000, this seems to me to be one of the ways where the parties have allowed their earnings and their savings to be separately divided. It has been accepted that most of their shares, et cetera, and PEPs, et cetera, should lie where they are without any judgment from the Court. I do not see any reason to take a different decision so far as the Chelsea Building Society account is concerned."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Carnwath :
"… not only couples, married or unmarried, but also friends, relatives and others who may be living together for reasons of companionship or care and support".
The paper summarised the development of the law in this country, and in other parts of the Commonwealth (notably Australia, New Zealand and Canada), and considered alternative approaches to future legislation, including "property-based" and "relationship-based" approaches. The paper made no formal proposals, principally because, as we said –
"… it is quite simply not possible to devise a statutory scheme for the ascertainment and quantification of beneficiary interest in the shared home which can operate fairly and evenly across the diversity of domestic circumstances which are now to be encountered" (para 3.1).
"… will focus on the financial hardship suffered by cohabitants or their children on the termination of their relationship by separation or death. It will restrict its review to opposite or same sex couples in clearly defined relationships. While there need not necessarily be a sexual element to the relationship, at the very least the relationship should involve cohabitation and bear the hallmarks of intimacy and exclusivity, giving rise to mutual trust and confidence between partners".
It is to be hoped that this project - which, as the annual report makes clear, will address the viability of a "relationship-based" approach in clearly defined circumstances - will in due course enable a line to be drawn, in those cases, under the unfortunate history of the attempts of the courts to grapple with these issues over more than 35 years. But it will leave cases which fall outside those defined relationships to be dealt with on the traditional "property-based" approach
(i) The interests should be solely as defined by the transfer deed, or by any written agreement of the parties;
(ii) The interests as defined by (i) may be modified to give effect to differences in the financial contributions made by one or other of the parties at the time of the acquisition.
(iii) They may be modified (further or in the alternative) to take account of any agreement or understanding reached at that time between the parties (whether or not in writing);
(iv) They may be modified to take account of the dealings between the parties during the course of their relationship, so far as casting light on their presumed intentions in relation to their shares in the property.
(v) The division should not depend on past agreements or understanding, but should be determined by reference (partly or wholly) to the future needs and expectations of the parties.
Lady Justice Smith: