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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> M-M (A Child), Re [2014] EWCA Civ 276 (17 March 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/276.html Cite as: [2014] 2 FLR 1391, [2014] EWCA Civ 276 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE PRINCIPAL REGISTRY OF THE FAMILY Y DIVISION
HHJ HUGHES QC
FD12P04024
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE McFARLANE
and
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Re: M-M (A child) |
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The Respondent Father appeared in person
Hearing date: 21 February 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice McFarlane :
i) Payment by the father to the mother of a lump sum of not more than £44,620.94, such money to be used to discharge debt that the mother had accrued to various financial institutions. The order provided for the father to make the payments himself directly to the various institutions;
ii) Periodical payments from the father to the mother for O's maintenance in the monthly sum of £1,000 until the child is eighteen, or finishes her secondary education, whichever be the later;
iii) Additional periodical payments paid annually representing 15% of the gross amount of any bonus received by the father from his employers, less tax.
In addition HHJ Hughes reserved any further applications with respect to O to herself, if available.
Background
The first instance hearing
HHJ Hughes's judgment
"8. Whilst the father has resources to pay a lump sum the mother has a roof over her head and that of the child. He has not got the resources she seeks namely £180,000. I must take into account the recent payments which he has made. In reaching my decision that he should pay a lump sum it seemed to me that the father needed to help the mother get out of the debt so that she could spend her future income on her own improvements to the house or buying herself a car. I was not satisfied that the father could afford more than the costs of the debts while keeping his own mortgage payments up to date and supporting his wife and young family. So, I ordered him to pay a lump sum amounting to the costs of the hard debts which are set out in Bundle 2 at Tab C6 19. I believe that he should pay the debts directly to the lender so that the mother is not tempted to leave the debts in place and spend the money. In my judgement the mother should not be obliged to repay the sums to him and nor can she claim any more lump sums from him.
9. While the father's basic salary remains at £6,400 per month I believe that the fair order is that he pay £1,000 per month to the maintenance of O. That must be paid each month and the first such payment will be on the 10th August 2013 when his next payment is due. Of course the salary has two elements: the basic salary and the bonus payments. The father says he will know by 1st August each year what his net bonus payment has been for the previous year and he has not received payments this year. So I oblige him by 1st August 2014 and each subsequent year in which he is paying maintenance for O to notify the mother of the amount of the net bonus payment. He must also account to he mother for 15% thereof. The mother agreed that there should not be a variation of the basic level of maintenance if the father earned the equivalent of £7,000 or less per month. If his basic pay is more than £7,000 each month I would hope the parties could agree a commensurate level of increase in O's monthly maintenance. If they cannot agree they may have to return to the Court". "
Arguments on appeal
a) The amount of maintenance ordered does not cover the child's overall needs;
b) The amount of maintenance ordered takes no account of the disparity of lifestyles as between the two households;
c) The judge was wrong to focus on the fact that the father had already paid £60,000 to the mother for O's maintenance, without taking into account the years prior to 2010 during which no payment was made. When spread evenly throughout O's life, the maintenance payments made by the father amounted only to £550 per month;
d) The judge was wrong to consider that the father's income was limited to £6,400 per month, when, normally, each year he received further payments of commission and bonus;
e) Whilst the mother does not need to seek provision under Schedule 1 for housing, she is entitled to look to the father to assist in the maintenance of the property in which his daughter lives.
a) The CSA figure that is appropriate to these circumstances is based upon a starting point of 15% being payable for one child, but this figure is then discounted by 25% to reflect the fact that the father is also responsible for three other children. The resulting percentage from that equation is 11.25%. If that percentage is applied to a monthly net figure of £6,400 the resulting CSA figure is £720 per month;
b) The father therefore argues that the additional £280 necessary to bring that CSA figure up to £1,000 is sufficient to represent his varying potential to receive bonus and commission over and above his ordinary monthly payments and is therefore to be seen as a top up;
c) He therefore argues that there is no justification for yet a further top up by requiring additional payments out of any bonus he receives;
d) In any event, a rate of 15% on his bonus is well above the CSA rate of 11.25%
e) The relevant ceiling on the CSA scheme in place at the time of the first instance hearing was £104,000 net per annum. This is well in excess of the father's current annual net income of £76,800. The father is outside the CSA scheme because he lives abroad. However, had he been in the CSA scheme, there would be no jurisdiction to order top up payments.
Discussion
"(6) This section shall not prevent a court from exercising any power which it has to make a maintenance order in relation to a child if—
(a) a maintenance assessment is in force with respect to the child;
(b) the amount of the child support maintenance payable in accordance with the assessment was determined by reference to the alternative formula mentioned in paragraph 4(3) of Schedule 1; and
(c) the court is satisfied that the circumstances of the case make it appropriate for the absent parent to make or secure the making of periodical payments under a maintenance order in addition to the child support maintenance payable by him in accordance with the maintenance assessment."
Mrs Justice Proudman
Lord Justice Moore-Bick