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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Holliday and Anor v Musa & Ors [2010] EWCA Civ 335 (30 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/335.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Civ 335, [2010] WTLR 839, [2010] 2 FLR 702, [2010] Fam Law 702 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
FAMILY DIVISION
Her Honour Judge Kushner QC,
sitting as a Judge of the High Court
GD07FO1113
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice-President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division
LORD JUSTICE RIX
and
LORD JUSTICE WILSON
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Holliday and Anr |
Respondents |
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- and - |
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Musa and Ors |
Appellants |
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Peter Crampin QC and Ulick Staunton (instructed by Hunters Solicitors) for the Respondents
Hearing date : 2nd March 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Waller :
"7.1 Although all the matters above are relevant to the question of Mr Guney's domicile at the date of his death, they do not, in my view, point cogently for or against the proposition that Mr Guney intended to end his days in N. Cyprus."
"The issue therefore arises, that, if Mr Guney had not assumed a domicile of choice in the UK and retained his domicile of origin, was that domicile Greek Cypriot by reason of the position of Paphos following partition, or Turkish Cypriot, by reason of his culture and heritage? If the decision is that Mr Guney was domiciled in England, that issue does not fall to be decided."
But the issue she identified never would arise and it was never argued that it would since, if Mr Guney had a domicile of origin it was in Cyprus, not one part of Cyprus. That is not to say the problems in Cyprus might not be relevant to the question whether he intended to reside permanently somewhere else, but that is a different matter.
"If I find that Mr Guney intended to shift his main residence back to Cyprus or not to end his days here, then the domicile of choice would in effect have been rescinded and the domicile of origin would have revived."
But no-one was arguing that Mr Guney had achieved a domicile of choice in England but then abandoned it.
"5. In Re Fuld [1968] P 675 Scarman J explained that the legal relationship between a person and the legal system of the territory which invokes his personal law is based on a combination of residence and intention. Everybody has a domicile of origin, which may be supplanted by a domicile of choice. He noted two particularly important features of domicile (page 682D-E) which are relevant to this case:
"First, that the domicile of origin prevails in the absence of a domicile of choice, i.e., if a domicile of choice has never been acquired or, if once acquired, has been abandoned. Secondly, that a domicile of choice is acquired when a man fixes voluntarily his sole or chief residence in a particular place with an intention of continuing to reside there for an unlimited time." [As pointed out by Buckley LJ in IRC v. Bullock [1976] 1 WLR 1178 at 1184H Scarman J's formulation "for an unlimited time" requires some further definition]
6. After reviewing the more important authorities and noting the need in each particular case for "a detailed analysis and assessment of facts" in relation to the subjective state of mind of the individual in question, Scarman J stated the law in terms which this court should expressly approve (page 684F-685D)
"(1) The domicile of origin adheres unless displaced by satisfactory evidence of the acquisition and continuance of a domicile of choice; (2) a domicile of choice is acquired only if it is affirmatively shown that the propositus is resident in a territory subject to a distinctive legal system with the intention, formed independently of external pressures, of residing there indefinitely. If a man intends to return to the land of his birth upon a clearly foreseen and reasonably anticipated contingency, e.g., the end of his job, the intention required by law is lacking; but, if he has in mind only a vague possibility, such as making a fortune (a modern example might be winning a football pool), or some sentiment about dying in the land of his fathers, such a state of mind is consistent with the intention required by law. But no clear line can be drawn; the ultimate decision in each case is one of fact - of the weight to be attached to the various factors and future contingencies in the contemplation of the propositus, their importance to him, and the probability, in his assessment, of the contingencies he has in contemplation being transformed into actualities. (3) It follows that, though a man has left the territory of his domicile of origin with the intention of never returning, though he be resident in a new territory, yet if his mind be not made up or evidence be lacking or unsatisfactory as to what is his state of mind, his domicile of origin adheres…."
"45. That leaves the crucial question whether Andreas changed his mind after 1995 and formed an intention to live permanently or indefinitely in England, thereby abandoning the domicile of origin which, on the deputy judge's analysis, he had retained down to about 1995.
46. On that question I make several general points.
(1) First, the question under the 1975 Act is whether Andreas was domiciled in England and Wales at the date of his death. Although it is helpful to trace Andreas's life events chronologically and to halt on the journey from time to time to take stock, this question cannot be decided in stages. Positioned at the date of death in February 2003 the court must look back at the whole of the deceased's life, at what he had done with his life, at what life had done to him and at what were his inferred intentions in order to decide whether he had acquired a domicile of choice in England by the date of his death. Soren Kierkegaard's aphorism that "Life must be lived forwards, but can only be understood backwards" resonates in the biographical data of domicile disputes.
(2) Secondly, special care must be taken in the analysis of the evidence about isolating individual factors from all the other factors present over time and treating a particular factor as decisive. In this case the deputy judge carefully considered the long residence in England in the context of Andreas's continuing connection with Cyprus throughout his time here. In relation, however, to the years after 1995 the focus of the judgment is almost entirely on the relationship with Renata, their engagement and the wedding plans. Nothing much else happened between 1995 and 2003 that could have altered the agreed position that, despite having lived most of his life from the age of 19 in London and having made his fortune here, Andreas still retained, at the age of 55, his Cypriot domicile of origin. The development of the relationship with Renata was the only factor from which an inference could be made that Andreas changed his mind in the period 1995 to 1999/2003 about where he would make his permanent home. The judge's treatment of that one factor as decisive or conclusive of domicile must be examined with care. As appears from the authorities, marriage by a man with a domicile of origin in one country to a woman domiciled in another country and post-matrimonial residence with his wife in that other country for many years are important considerations, but they are not conclusive. The matrimonial factor does not, as a matter of law, mean that the husband acquires a domicile of choice in that country and abandons the domicile of origin, to which he has not actually returned to live: IRC v. Bullock [1976] 1WLR 1178; see also Dicey & Morris on The Conflict of Laws 13th Ed para 6-049 and Abraham v. A-G [1934] P 17. The court was also referred to Forbes v. Forbes (1854) Kay 341; Aitchison v. Dixon (1870) LR 10 Eq Cas 589; and A-G v. Yule ...1931) 145 LT 9 at 16,17. They all make interesting reading, but a comparison of the facts of one domicile case with the facts of another domicile case is of limited assistance in deciding this case."
"7.9 Therefore, it follows that I have to take into account that from 1958 to 2006, some 48 years, Mr Guney [Ramadan] was resident in England. This is not decisive of domicile but is significant.
7.10 Moreover, there are three issues which mark out the true intentions of Mr Guney [Ramadan], in my view. The first is the intentions of the deceased in respect of the house in Newmarket House, Roundhill Drive, Woking, Surrey. The second is his desired arrangements for his funeral and burial. The third is his approach towards his son, Houssein."
"I see no particular inconsistency in the suggestion that in the latter stages of his life he wanted a larger property, with a garden and room for a study. His opting for more comfort, if anything, goes hand in hand with the renovations in the flat in Kyrenia."
"Further, Mr Guney [Ramadan] himself said he would "disappear, go to find your mother and not come back. Maybe after I finish the mausoleum. I know as soon as it is finished I will be ready to go" (my spelling). This has the mark of a man waiting to finish his burial place, not a monument."
"7.40 I accept the evidence that Mr Guney [Ramadan] realised that he would be unlikely to see his youngest child grow into adulthood and he was concerned to spend as much time with him as possible before he died. He said as much in his journal in Barbados.
7.41 That desire would simply not be possible if he were to move to live in Cyprus. Houssein had been brought up in the UK and there was no suggestion that either Ms Holliday or Houssein would move to Cyprus if Mr Guney [Ramadan] were to settle there for his final days.
7.42 In view of the closeness between father and son, I do not think that Mr Guney [Ramadan] would be satisfied with his son merely visiting him either. He wanted to be with him as much as possible.
7.43 If for no other reason, the relationship with Houssein demonstrated that Mr Guney [Ramadan], despite his links, emotional ties and pure love for his birthplace, had no intention of moving back to live there."
"Taking all these matters into account, I am of the view that whatever his domicile of origin could be deemed to be, given the political upheavals over the years, by the time of his death Mr Guney [Ramadan] established a firm domicile of choice in the UK."
"I accept that Mr Guney [Ramadan] spent an increasing amount of time at Glades Cottage in the Cemetery, including staying there overnight on occasions without Ms Holliday. I further accept that Mr Guney [Ramadan] may have kept a separate bedroom in Victoria Road. I accept that, on occasions he regretted having a partner who was significantly younger than him and that he felt they had less in common than previously. However, although there may have been disputes between him and Ms Holliday, I am of the opinion that their relationship remained intact."
Lord Justice Rix:
Lord Justice Wilson: