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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Gadhavi v Gadhavi [2015] EWCA Civ 520 (23 April 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/520.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 520 |
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B6/2014/0087 |
PRINCIPAL REGISTRY OF THE FAMILY DIVISION
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE O'DWYER)
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BEATSON
LORD JUSTICE RYDER
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GADHAVI |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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GADHAVI |
Respondents |
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Mr Ranjanbala Karsan Govin Gadhavi appeared in Person
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE RYDER:
"The income, earning capacity, property and other financial resources which each of the parties to the marriage has or is likely to have in the foreseeable future, including in the case of earning capacity any increase in the capacity which it would in the opinion of the court be reasonable to expect a party to the marriage to take steps to acquire."
"24. The assets that were not only to be used for the benefit of the husband's family in India but in truth were predominantly to enable him to acquire a significant holding of property in India. The reality of these funds is that the husband controls them. They are available to him as much or as little as he determines in his position as head of the family in India and in his position as having funded and having continued to fund that property. I have no doubt that if requested by him, moneys would be made available to him and the property sold.
25. To that extent, looking at the criteria under section 25 that I read out, they are resources available to the husband. The issues in this court seem to have revolved though also as to whether they are beneficially owned by the husband. It is clear that the property is in the mother's name. It was paid, as originally described, probably initially funded by the husband and thereafter by the husband's TV scheme. The husband was entirely unbelievable in his assertion that his father might have had the funds that he was not aware of for the initial acquisition. I find that it was the husband's project throughout and his claim that the father might have been assisted by others in the husband's family including his sisters is unsupported by any credible evidence. But there is in fact evidence going the other way that Mr Gadhavi was in fact supporting his sisters. As I have said, there is no account of how the husband's father could begin to have funded the original £18,000 deposit required.
26. Throughout the husband's evidence it is clear that he was the originator of funds and in control of the property. He accepts he is the head of the family and has always provided. I accept that he feels heavily the need to provide for his family in India. He could, in my judgment, undoubtedly occupy the property in India himself but I accept that he does not wish to live primarily in India. If it were to be sold he would feel the need – and I recognise the part he plays in the family – to provide for his family and I take that into account to the extent that this property should be treated as a resource for the husband.
27. However, it has not been demonstrated to me that the actual beneficial ownership does not follow the legal ownership. On the contrary, the likelihood is that the property does genuinely vest in the mother but because of the ties of family and the origins of the money, she undoubtedly would do, as her son requested, as would indeed the Indian family. The strict concept of Chancery law as to ownership and equity does not sit easily in these circumstances with the family traditions in India and the structures adopted by the husband. And in my judgment it would strain the language of trusts to impose a resulting or constructive trust upon these arrangements. Nor do I find room for implying a trust. I have not been assisted by counsel in this particular regard but my own assessment is that this was clearly a binding family arrangement rather than that vested in property law.
28. The finding I make, therefore, is intended to be a finding that accurately reflects the reality of the position: that there are in the mother's name funds which have been originally almost entirely provided by the husband from the family income of Mr and Mrs Gadhavi in this country. These funds are available to the husband by reason of his position in the household and he is able to cause them to be paid or distributed as he may deem appropriate. I have stopped short of finding, however, that the husband has a definable property interest as understood under English law but I am satisfied that it is a resource available to the husband should he so choose."
"Question: [Isn't it] the case that actually this money was going to fund the property and at some point, as the eldest son, you are likely to have an interest in that property?
Answer: Your Honour, it is true in many ways…"
"The eldest son becomes the administrator in most or almost all of the families. He helps in the administration work or whatever work is needed and because I was doing that prior to that all my life ever since I became 17, 18, I was helping my father, you know, in all his work."
(a) Where a husband can only raise further capital, or additional income, as the result of a decision made at the discretion of trustees, the court should not put improper pressure on the trustees to exercise that discretion for the benefit of the wife.
(b) The court should not, however, be 'misled by appearances'; it should 'look at the reality of the situation'.
(c) If on the balance of probability the evidence shows that, if trustees exercised their discretion to release more capital or income to a husband, the interests of the trust or of other beneficiaries would not be appreciably damaged, the court can assume that a genuine request for the exercise of such discretion would probably be met by a favourable response. In that situation if the court decides that it would be reasonable for a husband to seek to persuade trustees to release more capital or income to him to enable him to make proper financial provision for his children and his former wife, the court would not in so deciding be putting improper pressure on the trustees.
"(86) I think that a clear distinction is to be drawn between, on the one hand, the position where the person being encouraged is a member of the payer's family and, on the other hand, where he is a trustee in a fiduciary relationship with the payer. In the former case, the payee has no more than a mere spes of bounty which may, at the election of the provider, reasonably or unreasonably, be withheld. In the latter case, the provider has a legal obligation to consider the beneficiary's interests. The very reason for the existence of the trust is to provide benefit for the beneficiary.
(87) A clear and helpful description of the relationship of trustee and beneficiary in a discretionary trust has been given by the Royal Court of Jersey in Re the Esteem Settlement [2004] WTLR 1 at 60:
'[163] A trust exists where a trustee holds property for the benefit of one or more beneficiaries (see Art 2 of the 1984 Law). The important point is that save to the extent permitted by the trust deed (eg remuneration) the trustee may not benefit from the assets; they are held entirely for the benefit of the beneficiaries. As Lord Blackburn put it in the Privy Council decision in Letterstedt v Broers (1884) 9 AC 371 at 386: 'It must always be borne in mind that trustees exist for the benefit of those to whom the creator of the trust has given the trust estate'. In other words, trustees have no interest of their own in the trust property; their sole purpose is to deal with the trust assets for the benefit of the beneficiaries. All the powers of the trustees may be exercised only in the interests of the beneficiaries and in accordance with the terms of the trust deed.
[164] What the exercise of such powers will involve will, of course, vary considerably according to the nature of the trust the number of beneficiaries, the underlying purposes behind the establishment of the trust the nature of the assets and many other factors …
[165] Furthermore, it is important that the relationship between trustee and beneficiary should be harmonious. Indeed, lack of harmony may be of itself a good reason for a trustee to resign or be dismissed (see Letterstedt at 386). This is not surprising because the trustee's sole duty is to act for the benefit of the beneficiaries. In our judgment there is nothing untoward in beneficiaries making requests of a trustee as to the investment of the trust fund, the acquisition of properties for them to live in or for the refurbishment of properties in which they already live. In our judgment many decisions of this nature are likely to arise because of a request by a beneficiary rather than because of an independent originating action on the part of a trustee. The approach that a trustee should adopt to a request will depend upon the nature of the request, the interests of other beneficiaries and all the surrounding circumstances. Certainly, if he is to be exercising his fiduciary powers in good faith, the trustee must be willing to reject a request if he thinks that this is the right course. But when a trustee concludes that the request is reasonable having regard to all the circumstances of the case and is in the interests of the beneficiary concerned, he should certainly not refuse the request simply in order to assert or prove his independence. His duty remains at all times to act in good faith in the interests of his beneficiaries, not to act against those interests for improper reasons.
[166] In our judgment, where the requests made of trustees are reasonable in the context of all the circumstances, it would be the exception rather than the rule for trustees to refuse such requests. Indeed, as Mr Joumeaux accepted, one would expect to find that in the majority of trusts, there had not been a refusal by the trustees of a request by a settlor. This would no doubt be because, in the majority of cases, a settlor would be acting reasonably in the interests of himself and his family. This would particularly be so where there was a small close-knit family and where the settlor could be expected to be fully aware of what was in the interests of his family. Indeed, in almost all discretionary trusts, the settlor provides a letter of wishes which expresses informally his desires in relation to the administration of the settlement. Furthermore he may change his wishes from time to time. In our judgment it is perfectly clear that trustees are entitled (see Abacus Trust Company (Isle of Man) Ltd v Barr [2003] 1 All ER 763) to take account of such wishes as the settlor may from time to time express provided, of course, that the trustees are not in any way bound by them. The trustees must reach their own independent conclusion having taken account of such wishes.
[167] On numerous occasions during the course of the hearing Mr Journeaux was driven to repeat that Abacus had not rejected any request of Sheikh Fahad. A lack of any refusal may of course be indicative of the fact that trustees have abdicated their fiduciary duties and are simply following the wishes of the settlor without further consideration. But, as mentioned above, a lack of any refusal may be equally consistent with a properly administered trust where the trustees have in good faith considered each request of the settlor, concluded that it is reasonable and concluded that it is proper to accede to such requests in the interests of one or more of the beneficiaries of the trust. But one does not start, as at times seems to have been the plaintiffs' case, with an attitude that it is very surprising and worthy of criticism that the trustee acceded to all Sheikh Fahad's requests. On the contrary, as the Privy Council said in Letterstedt, trustees exist for the benefit of beneficiaries and it is in our judgment very common that trustees will have perfectly properly acceded to all the requests of a settlor without in any way abdicating their fiduciary duties and responsibilities.'
(88) This exposition sets out with clarity the very different nature of, on the one hand, the relationship between a fiduciary and his beneficiary; and, on the other, that of mere donor and donee. If the court makes a reasonable request of trustees to make funds available to meet an ancillary relief award, then it can assume that ordinarily the trustees will accede to such a request. The same cannot be assumed of a request of a mere donor, for it is his prerogative to be unreasonable, if that is his inclination."
LORD JUSTICE BEATSON
LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON
Order: Application granted in part