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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Roocroft v Ball [2016] EWCA Civ 1009 (14 October 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/1009.html Cite as: [2016] WLR(D) 525, [2016] EWCA Civ 1009, [2017] 1 WLR 1137, [2016] 3 FCR 546, [2017] 2 FLR 810, [2017] WLR 1137 |
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ON APPEAL FROM Chester Civil and Family Justice Centre
His Honour Judge Barnett
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KITCHIN
and
LADY JUSTICE KING
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Helen Louise Roocroft |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Moya Margaret Ball (Personal Representative of the Estate of Carol Ann Ainscow (Dec'd)) |
Respondent |
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Richard Todd QC and Charles Eastwood (instructed by Glaisyers Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 5 July 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice King :
(i) whether the judge was wrong in law in summarily dismissing the appellant's claims and
(ii) if not, whether he nevertheless failed to consider the correct test in the context of an application to set aside an order on the grounds of material non-disclosure.
The Facts
The Proceedings
The Judgment
[36] ….It is clear that Ms Roocroft was "concerned at the time of the agreement was made that the disclosure made by [Ms Aisscow] was inadequate and possibly inaccurate", but nevertheless, and, with the advantage of legal advice, she agreed the terms of the settlement and the Order.'
"[37] This is not the territory of "unknown unknowns". Rather it is, at its highest, a case of a "known, unknown". It was known or at least asserted, that Ms Ainscow was a wealthy woman; what was unknown was the precise extent of her wealth."
"[38]…. In my judgment a separate finding of fact exercise is wholly unnecessary in this case. In my judgment I can proceed on the basis of Ms Roocroft's own case as it was presented for the purposes of the MPS [Maintenance Pending Suit] Application, namely that Ms Ainscow was a multi-millionaire business woman and the £30m+ referred to in The Times was an indicator of the substance of the assets and income. "
"[40] In my judgment the present application was doomed to failure. It is important to emphasise that mere non-disclosure is insufficient: the non-disclosure must be material. Frankly I cannot understand how it can be said that there was material non-disclosure. Certainly there had not been full disclosure but Ms Roocroft was aware of all the salient facts and, at risk of repeating myself, the essence of her case was that Ms Ainscow was a very wealthy woman. Nevertheless with the benefit of legal advice from an experienced and able team, Ms Roocroft accepted a settlement and agreed the Order the terms of which can best be described as incongruent with what Ms Roocroft was alleging to be the extent of Ms Ainscow's wealth. Further 3 ½ years have passed since the Order was made, and save as to £7,000, its terms have been fully implemented."
"[43]…..I do not consider that the present application can be characterised as "frivolous" or scurrilous". In my judgment not only does it have no prospects of success, the present application is doomed to failure. The application could, therefore, be struck out. However, I prefer to approach the matter in a slightly different way. I bear in mind firstly the overriding objective in rule1.1 of the FPR and, in particular the need to save expense and deal with cases proportionately.. Secondly, I have regard to my duty to actively manage cases including references in rule1.4(2) of the FPR to (a) deciding promptly which issues require a full investigation (b) deciding the order in which the issues are to be resolved, and (c) the need to deal with as many aspects of the case that I can at this hearing. Finally, I have regard to my general powers of case management as set out in particular, in rule 4.1(3) of the FPR."
"[43]..…. In my judgment the present application is without merit and, therefore, doomed to failure. In my judgment, it would be contrary to the overriding objective and my duty to actively manage this case to allow it to proceed further. Accordingly I use my case management powers and dismiss the application.
The Grounds of Appeal
i) (Grounds 1 – 4) that the judge was wrong in law and on the facts, summarily to dismiss the application in any event and certainly not without notice.ii) That the judge failed to apply the correct test of materiality in the context of an application to set aside an order on the grounds of material non-disclosure
iii) The judge misdirected himself in respect of the competing interests: (a) to ensure that the parties do not mislead the court (b) to uphold agreements freely entered into and (c) in ensuring the finality of litigation.
i) The application should have been struck out pursuant to FPR 4.4ii) The appellant failed in her duty promptly to apply for the order to be set aside.
Strike out and Summary Judgment
"(1) … the court may strike out a statement of case if it appears to the court—
(a) that the statement of case discloses no reasonable grounds for bringing or defending the application;
(b) that the statement of case is an abuse of the court's process or is otherwise likely to obstruct the just disposal of the proceedings …"
"Examples of cases within the rule
2.1 The following are examples of cases where the court may conclude that an application falls within rule 4.4(1)(a) –
(a) those which set out no facts indicating what the application is about;
(b) those which are incoherent and make no sense;
(c) those which contain a coherent set of facts but those facts, even if true, do not disclose any legally recognisable application against the respondent.
2.2 An application may fall within rule 4.4(1)(b) where it cannot be justified, for example because it is frivolous, scurrilous or obviously ill-founded.
2.3 An answer may fall within rule 4.4(1)(a) where it consists of a bare denial or otherwise sets out no coherent statement of facts.
2.4 (omitted)
2.5 The examples set out above are intended only as illustrations.
2.6 Where a rule, practice direction or order states 'shall be struck out or dismissed' or 'will be struck out or dismissed' this means that the order striking out or dismissing the proceedings will itself bring the proceedings to an end and that no further order of the court is required.
"2.4 A party may believe that it can be shown without the need for a hearing that an opponent's case has no real prospect of success on the facts, or that the case is bound to succeed or fail, as the case may be, because of a point of law (including the construction of a document). In such a case a party concerned may make an application under rule 4.4"
"[36] ……..The objection to a grant of summary judgment upon an application by an ex-spouse for a financial order in favour of herself is not just that its determination is discretionary but that, by virtue of section 25(1) of the 1973 Act, it is the duty of the court in determining it to have regard to all the circumstances and, in particular, to the eight matters set out in subsection (2). The determination of an application by a court which has failed to have regard to them is unlawful: Livesey (formerly Jenkins) v Livesey [1985] AC 424 at p 437, Lord Brandon of Oakbrook. The meticulous duty cast upon family courts by section 25(2) is inconsistent with any summary power to determine either that an ex-wife has no real prospect of successfully prosecuting her claim or that an ex-husband has no real prospect of successfully defending it."
"A party may believe that it can be shown without the need for a hearing that an opponent's case has no real prospect of success on the facts, or that the case is bound to succeed or fail, as the case may be, because of a point of law (including the construction of a document). In such a case a party concerned may make an application under rule 3.4 or Part 24 (or both) as he thinks fit.
It can be seen then that the active part of the paragraph is in identical terms to FPR PD4A 2.4 notwithstanding that the family rules have no power of summary judgment analogous to CPR r 24.2
"[27] I suggest that rule 4.4(1) of the Family Rules has to be construed without reference to real prospects of success. The three sets of facts set out in paragraph 2.1 of Practice Direction 4A exemplify the limited reach of rule 4.4(1)(a), valuable though no doubt it sometimes is. The touchstone is, in the words of paragraph 2.1(c) of the Practice Direction, whether the application is legally recognisable. Applications made after the applicant had remarried or after an identical application had been dismissed or otherwise finally determined would be examples of applications not legally recognisable. Since the greater includes the lesser, it is no doubt possible to describe applications which fall foul of rule 4.4(1) as having no real prospect of success. Nevertheless paragraph 2.4 of the Practice Direction remains in my view an unhelpful curiosity which cannot override the inevitable omission from the family rules of a power to give summary judgment."
"[29] Although, however, the wife's appeal against the strike-out should succeed and her application should proceed, it is essential at this stage to conduct a provisional evaluation of the issues. For, by rule 1.4(1) of the Family Rules, the court must further the overriding objective by actively managing cases, which, by rule 1.4(2)(b)(i)(c), includes promptly identifying the issues, isolating those which need full investigation and tailoring future procedure accordingly. This exercise will dictate the nature, and in particular the length, of the substantive hearing….."
"……Although the power to strike out under rule 4.4(1) extends beyond applications for financial remedies, for example to petitions for divorce, no doubt it is to such applications that the rule is most relevant….."
i) The principles enunciated in Wyatt v Vince apply equally to an application to set aside a consent order in financial remedy proceedings as to applications for the making of a financial remedy order.ii) The Court's power to strike out an application pursuant to FPR 4.4(1) is of 'limited reach' and has to be construed without reference to "real prospects of success", it follows that an application is not an abuse of process for the purposes of FPR r 4.4(1)(b) simply by reason of the fact that it has no real prospect of success.
iii) An application has 'no reasonable grounds' for the purpose of FPR r 4.4(1)(a) if it is not legally recognisable in the sense that it is incoherent or the applicant has remarried.
iv) There is no summary judgment procedure under the Family Proceedings Rules. That does not however mean that the court is constrained from exercising its case management powers to direct there to be some form of abbreviated hearing following a provisional evaluation of the issues.
Conclusions as to Strike out / Summary judgment
Material Non-Disclosure.
"[49] The issue as to whether there has been non-disclosure is a question of fact "involving an evaluative assessment of the available admissible evidence. Such a question is, of course, common in civil, and family litigation and under our common law system the rule is that it can only be answered by a judge after hearing from live witnesses as well as looking at the documents………"
"[49] …..attempts to seek summary judgment in relation to such disputed issues often fail even when the evidence appears very strong, because experience shows that a full investigation at trial with witnesses occasionally undermines what appears pretty clearly to be the truth when relying on documents alone: see e.g. Sir Terence Etherton C in Allied Fort Insurance Services Ltd v Creation Consumer Finance Ltd [2015] EWCA Civ 841 at [81], [89], [90] and the cases which he cites. Accordingly in practice it is only when the documentary evidence is effectively unanswerable that "summary judgment" can be justified.
"[50] there is also a principled reason behind this rule, namely that, at least where there is a bona fide dispute of fact upon which oral testimony is available, a party is normally entitled to a trial where he and his witnesses can give evidence, and he can test the reliability of the other party and/or her witnesses by cross-examination."
"[44]……. where a party's non-disclosure was inadvertent, there is no presumption that it was material and the onus is on the other party to show that proper disclosure would, on the balance of probabilities, have led to a different order; whereas where a party's non-disclosure was intentional, it is deemed to be material, so that it is presumed that proper disclosure would have led to a different order, unless the party can show, on the balance of probabilities that it would not have done so.
See also Sharland [33].
It follows that the nature of the non-disclosure, i.e. deliberate or inadvertent, may have a significant impact upon the outcome of the case. Whilst establishing deliberate non-disclosure presents an example of the type of case suggested by Lord Wilson as being suitable for an abbreviated hearing where the documents present an overwhelming case, equally it may well be an area which needs specific investigation through oral evidence and cross examination even though it has already been established per adventure that there has in fact been non-disclosure.
i) Decide if there had been non-disclosure on the part of the deceased and if so whether it was deliberate on the one hand or innocent/inadvertent on the other. Such a finding would ordinarily be reached by the judge having heard oral evidence as well as considering the documents although in certain circumstances the court may use its case management powers to conduct some form of abbreviated hearingii) If the non-disclosure was found to be deliberate, then it is presumed to be "material" and the original consent order would be set aside unless the party who has failed to disclose can prove, on the balance of probabilities, that the order would have been substantially the same even had full disclosure been made.
iii) If on the other hand the non-disclosure is found to have been inadvertent or innocent, the burden is on the party seeking to set aside the order to prove that the non-disclosure was 'material', that is to say that had proper disclosure been made the court would have made a substantially different order justifying the setting aside of the consent order.
What then was the judge's approach in this case?
"[40] In my judgment the present application is doomed to failure. It is important to emphasise that mere non-disclosure is insufficient: the non-disclosure must be material. Frankly I cannot understand how it can be said there was material non-disclosure. Certainly there had not been full disclosure but [the Appellant] was aware of all the salient facts and, at risk of repeating myself, the essence of her case was that [the deceased] was a very wealthy woman. Nevertheless and with the benefit of legal advice from an experienced and able team, [the Appellant] accepted a settlement and agreed the Order the terms of which can best be described as incongruent with what [the Appellant] was alleging to be the extent of [the deceased's] wealth"
"[22] I am not persuaded that the importance of encouraging settlement, which I entirely agree is considerable, is sufficient to allow [the respondent] to retain moneys which he only obtained by fraud."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Kitchin :
Lord Justice Elias :