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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> Q v Q [2005] EWHC 402 (Fam) (18 March 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2005/402.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 402 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Q |
Petitioner |
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- and - |
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Q |
Respondent |
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Lucy Theis Q.C. and Rowena Bridge (instructed by Messrs Clifton Ingram) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 21 to 23 February 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Bennett :
The wife's proposals as to capital.
(1) The wife will retain as her property absolutely the properties B, C and D, subject to the existing mortgages.(2) The anticipated net tax rebate arising out of R LLP of circa £900,000 will be paid to the wife.
(3) The husband will make to the wife what is called a "balancing payment" of £200,000 to achieve "approximate balance sheet equality". [£200,000 was, in the course of the hearing, reduced to £140,000.]
(4) The husband will transfer to the wife the two policies with Clerical Medical.
(5) The husband will discharge the wife's loan of £120,000 with the Butterfield Bank.
(6) The wife will retain the Peugeot car; the wife will retain the BMW X5 and take over the obligation to finance its purchase.
(7) The wife will transfer her half-share to the husband absolutely in F property.
(8) The wife will transfer her half-share to the husband absolutely in property A
(9) In respect of all the properties, such transfers as are required will be executed at the husband's expense. Each party will bear their respective CGT liability upon each transaction.
(10) The husband will retain
a) his pensions
b) his toy collection
c) any other assets and chattels in his possession.
(11) The wife will retain the contents of property B and all other assets and chattels in her possession.(12) The jewellery will be divided by agreement [achieved during the course of the hearing].(13) Upon discharge by the parties of their respective obligations there shall be a clean break as to capital.
(1) Agreed, save that the husband must be released from the mortgages on properties B, C and D. If evidence from the wife is not forthcoming as to how she will service the mortgages on the three properties, C and D should be sold and the net proceeds used to reduce the mortgage on B(2) Agreed.
(3) Only in the event of R LLP producing the anticipated net tax rebate of £900,000 would the husband make a "balancing payment", and then only in the sum of £45,000 [increased during the final hearing to £54,000].
(4) Agreed.
(5) Agreed, subject to the wife producing documentary evidence that £120,000 is the sum due.
(6) Agreed subject to the wife producing evidence that she will take over the finance or pay the sums outstanding.
(7) to (11) inclusive – agreed.
(12) Agreed. [Agreement was reached on day two of the final hearing].
(13) Agreed.
(1) The husband should pay to the wife 50% of his net income from all sources for an extendable term of four years, to cover both maintenance for the wife and the children but also monies to be invested by the wife as further capital to facilitate a clean break as to income in due course.(2) A reasonable allowance for the wife's own maintenance should be £120,000 per annum for four years and £20,000 per annum for each child, to include holidays and all expenditure. The husband should also pay the school fees.
(3) In the event that R LLP scheme succeeds, the proportion of the husband's net income payable to the wife would reduce to 45% for the four year term. [This particular proposal was withdrawn at the start of the final hearing].
(1) The percentage should be 37.5%, but reducing to 32.5% over the four year term if R LLP succeeds.(2) The figures should be £80,000 per annum for the wife and £15,000 per annum for each child, plus school fees.
Asset | Wife | Husband |
Property B | 490,563 | |
Property D | 135,941 | |
Property C | 136,042 | |
Property A | 639,699 | |
Property F | 947,600 | |
Insurance policies | 75,862 | |
Cars | 20,000 | |
Shares | 4,000 | |
Pensions (including | ||
Friends Provident, Scottish Mutual and Skandia) | 692,065 | |
Butterfield loan | 120,000 | (120,000) |
R LLP | 900,000 | |
T Limited | 216,463 | |
Coutts account | 4,941 | |
Coutts account (Husband sole) | 76,244 | |
T Limited | 17,851 | |
Natwest loan | (41,157) | |
Woolwich savings | 920 | |
Payment to Wife for Newspaper articles | 10,000 | |
Toys | 15,000 | |
Pawnbroker debts | (14,880) | |
Z4 car loan | (4,000) | |
Credit cards | (15,000) | |
Legal costs | (75,000) | (60,000) |
Butterfield monies | (81,000) | |
Husband's CGT (on sale of property E, transfer of properties D and C) | (34,520) | |
Wife's CGT (due on sale of property E and transfer of property A) | (12,618) | |
Husband's CGT (re Property F, Husband will pay Wife's liability on transfer to him and remainder due on future sale) | (367,508) | |
Wife's CGT (if sold Property D and Property C) | (18,647) | |
1,681,143 | 1,977,718 |
Income
For the children.
For the Wife
"to consider whether it would be appropriate so to exercise those powers that the fundamental obligations of each party towards the other will be terminated as soon after the grant of decree as the court considers just and reasonable" s.25A(1).
"In any case in which, despite a substantial capital base available for division, clean break is not presently practicable, the court has a statutory duty to consider the future possibility. That duty assumes particular prominence in cases where there is a certain and substantial surplus of future income over future needs. If, as in one of the present appeals, the surplus will be predictably short-lived, the first option for consideration should be the planned progress to clean break by means of a substantial term order open to a later application for extension. The obligation on the parties to achieve financial independence is mutual. The earner must give proper priority to making payments on account out of the surplus income. The payee must invest the surplus sensibly, or risk that her failure so to do might count against her on an application for discharge under s 31(7A) and (7B). Given the mutuality of the obligation, the opportunity and responsibility to invest should, in my judgment, be shared. It strikes me as discriminatory, and, therefore, wrong in principle, for the earner to have sole control of the surplus through the years of accumulation. The preferred mechanism by which the surplus is to be divided annually must be periodical payments. They are variable, which lump sum orders are not. They can, therefore, reflect fluctuations in the payer's income. They are determined by the court in the event of dispute. They terminate on the remarriage of the recipient. The practicality of such an order will depend upon many factors. Essentially the completion of the process must be foreseen within a relatively short span. A term of 5 years which these cases illustrate may be towards the limit of the foreseeable."
a. set the "baseline figure" for the maintenance needs of the wife and children
b. decide the period of time for which the wife will require support after the term order ends
c. apply the appropriate multiplier to the wife's baseline figure to calculate what lump sum is needed to provide her with maintenance at her baseline rate over the period assessed in b.
d. assess how much available capital the wife is likely to have after her term order ends (leaving aside any capital from excess pps)
e. assess how much extra capital the wife needs to reach the lump sum in c.
f. divide the amount of the extra capital by the years in the term order
g. make a periodical payments order in the sum of the baseline figure.
If that procedure is followed then that leads to an award of 37.5% - see paragraph 49 of Miss Theis' final submissions.
"106. My present view is that in this jurisdiction we should not flirt with, still less embrace, any of the categorisations of the defining purposes of periodical payments advanced by academic authors. The judges must remain focused on the statutory language, albeit recognising the need for evolutionary construction to reflect social and economic change. The statutory checklist and the overall circumstances of the case allow the judge to reflect factors which are said to be inherent in either the entitlement model or the compensation model. But to adopt one model or another or a combination of more than one is to don a straitjacket and to deflect concentration from the statutory language. Clearly in the assessment of periodical payments, as of capital provision, the overriding objective is fairness. Discrimination between the sexes must be avoided. The cross-check of equality is not appropriate for a number of reasons. First, in many cases the division of income is not just between the parties, since there will be children with a priority claim for the costs of education and upbringing. Secondly, Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead suggested the use of the cross-check in dividing the accumulated fruits of past shared endeavours. In assessing periodical payments the court considers the division of the fruits of the breadwinner's future work in a context where he may have left the child-carer in the former matrimonial home, where he may have to meet alternative housing costs and where he may have in fact or in contemplation a second wife and a further child."
"118. The problem is that the concept of fairness is elastic and often subjective. Attempts to identify what society would consider to be an appropriate yardstick to use to determine fairness have found the answer elusive and the material with which we have been provided from other jurisdictions has merely underlined how difficult the search for the answer has proved to be. In the absence of a consensus, decisions will have to continue to be made on a pragmatic and individual basis, which is inevitably unsettling for litigants and their advisors."
"134. Mr Singleton and Mr Mostyn are, however, I think, right when they submit that a payee's right to periodical payments is to a share of the payer's income which the payee (in each of the current cases the wife) has, through her domestic contribution, helped the payer develop. I, therefore, agree that where the payer's income is sufficiently large (as here) a cut-off point for periodical payments based on generously interpreted needs, thereby leaving a large surplus of income for the payer to do with as he pleases, has no foundation in the statute and is discriminatory. But the danger of this approach seems to me to be that it runs the risk to reintroducing the repealed tailpiece of s 25 of the Matrimonial causes Act 1973 by the back door. If the payee has, in effect, a vested, life-long interest in such an income, is she not being placed in the position in which she would have been if the marriage had not irretrievably broken down? And is the principle contained in s 25A not being simply by-passed?
135. I am the first to acknowledge that periodical payments based on a proportion of joint incomes (for example, the old 'one-third' rule) was discriminatory and may well have caused injustice to women payees. The balance which, it seems to me, needs to be struck in a case such as the present, is the need to achieve fairness to both wives whilst fulfilling the obligation imposed by s 25A. In my judgment, that is not achieved by open-ended orders of the type sought by both Mrs McFarlane and Mrs Parlour. It is achieved by orders which exceed need in amount, and which divide equitably the very large income enjoyed by both husbands. But with that division, in my judgment, comes a responsibility on the payee to use the surplus over needs towards financial independence and self-sufficiently."
"145. The profession inevitably craves certainty so that it can advise its clients appropriately. That, of course, is not a new aspiration. In Martin (BH) v Martin (D) [1978] Fam 12, (1977) FLR Rep 444 in which this court upheld the right of a wife to remain indefinitely in a very modest matrimonial home against the claim of her former husband that it should be sold and the proceeds equally divided, Ormrod L.J. said, at 20 and 449 respectively:-
'I appreciate the point he (Mr Aglionby, counsel for the husband) has made, namely that it is difficult for practitioners to advise clients in these cases because the rules are not very firm. That is inevitable when the courts are working out the exercise of the wide powers given by a statute like the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973. It is the essence of such a discretionary situation that the court should preserve, so far as it can, the utmost elasticity to deal with each case on its own facts. Therefore, it is a matter of trial and error and imagination on the part of those advising clients. It equally means that decisions of this court can never be better than guidelines. They are not precedents in the strict sense of the word. There is bound to be an element of uncertainty in the use of the wide discretionary powers given to the court under the 1973 Act, and no doubt there always will be, because as social circumstances change so the court will have to adapt the ways in which it exercises discretion. If property suddenly became available all over the country many of the rationes decidendi of the past would be quite inappropriate."