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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> LK v K [2006] EWHC 153 (Fam) (10 February 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2006/153.html Cite as: [2006] Fam Law 635, [2006] EWHC 153 (Fam), [2006] 2 FLR 1113 |
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SINGER J
This judgment is being handed down in private on 10 February 2006. It consists of 48 paragraphs and has been signed and dated by the judge. The judge hereby gives leave for it to be reported.
The judgment is being distributed on the strict understanding that in any report no person other than the advocates or the solicitors instructing them (and other persons identified by name in the judgment itself) may be identified by name or location and that in particular the anonymity of the children and the adult members of their family must be strictly preserved.
FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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L-K |
Petitioner |
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- and - |
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K |
Respondent |
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Charles Howard QC and Philip Marshall (instructed by Payne Hicks Beach) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 13 January and 10 February 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Singer :
'Where proceedings relating to divorce, legal separation or marriage annulment between the same parties are brought before courts of different Member States, the court second seised shall of its own motion stay its proceedings until such time as the jurisdiction of the court first seised is established.'
'Quite apart from Brussels II, comity of legal systems demanded that courts of competent jurisdiction should be respected in their decision-making and their orders should stand until varied by that court or on appeal. The German court was a competent court of jurisdiction which had to determine questions of fact after hearing evidence from both parties. It was not for an English court to seek to dictate to a German court how it should find on a disputed issue, nor on the legal basis for a decision in German law, and the court declined to act, in effect, as an appellate court, and to review their decision. The decision of the German court to approve substituted service was a judicial and not an administrative decision, and was based on whatever evidence the German court considered was necessary.'
'… First we must espouse the Regulation and apply it wholeheartedly. We must not take or be seen to take opportunities for usurping the function of the judge in the other Member State. Once another jurisdiction is demonstrated to be apparently first seised, this jurisdiction must defer, by holding itself in waiting in case that apparent priority should be disproved or declined. Second one of the primary objectives of the Convention is to simplify jurisdictional rules and to eliminate expensive and superfluous litigation. A divorcing couple that has to litigate the consequences of the marital breakdown is not blessed. The couple that first litigates where to litigate might be said to be cursed.' [My emphasis]
2.6 Presentation of petition
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(2) Unless otherwise directed on an application made ex parte, a certificate of the marriage to which the cause relates shall be filed with the petition.
36. In the earlier passage in his judgment to be found at [18] Thorpe LJ commented on the exercise of the power to award maintenance in a suit which might be struck down for some fundamental reason, that ' [t]here is manifestly a risk of unjustified and irrecoverable payments, but that has to be balanced against the risk of denial of access to justice for the petitioner, if she has not the means to sustain herself and the litigation pending its determination.' In relation to legal costs he observed at [25]:
'So if the applicant has no assets, can give no security for borrowings, cannot guarantee an outcome that will enable her to enter into an arrangement such as that which was upheld in Sears Tooth v Payne Hicks Beach, then there is no source of funding of the litigation other than the approach to the court for maintenance pending suit that will include a substantial element to fund the cost of litigation. Obviously in all these cases the dominant safeguard against injustice is the discretion of the trial judge, and it will only be in cases that are demonstrated to be exceptional that the court will consider exercising the jurisdiction. But I am in no doubt that in such exceptional cases section 22 can in modern times be construed to extend that far.'