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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> CR v SR [2013] EWHC 1155 (Fam) (22 January 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2013/1155.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 1155 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
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SR |
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MR. C. FEE (instructed by Bross Bennett) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE MOYLAN:
"(a) the court considers that the appeal would have a real prospect of success; or
(b) there is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard".
"In his skeleton argument Mr. Chamberlayne has suggested that the object of the test is only to weed out the hopeless appeal. I would not go that far. I would suggest that the concept of a real prospect of success must mean, generally speaking, that it is incumbent on an appellant to demonstrate that it is more likely than not that the appeal will be allowed at the substantive hearing. Anything less than a 50/50 threshold would of course, by linguistic definition, mean that it is improbable that the appeal will be allowed and in such circumstances it would be hard to say that any appeal had a real prospect of success; rather, it could only be said as a matter of logic that it had a real prospect of failure".
In the course of his judgment, Mostyn J. makes it clear, in particular in para. 3, that:
"The new procedure set out in Part 30 of the Family Procedure Rules is intended to align the procedure for appeals from district judge to judge with the procedure that has obtained since the year 2000 under CPR 52 in relation to appeals from judges to the Court of Appeal".
"9) It has been on said on many occasions that judges should not place a judicial gloss on the words of either the statute or the rules. With the greatest of respect to Mostyn J., it may well have been that this aspect was not argued fully before him and that his attention was not, in particular, drawn to a decision of the Court of Appeal, of Tanfern Limited v. Cameron MacDonald & Anor. [2000] 1 WLR 1311, in which Brooke LJ. said the following (at para.21):
"21. Permission to appeal will only be given where the court considers that an appeal would have a real prospect of success or that there is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard. Lord Woolf MR has explained that the use of the word of 'real' means that the prospect of success must be realistic rather than fanciful [see Swain v. Hillman, The Times, 4th November 1999; Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Transcript No. 1732 of 1999].
10) The test for permission to appeal is, of course, exactly the same in the Court of Appeal. It, therefore, follows that this court is bound by Tanfern Limited v. Cameron-MacDonald and I consider that there should be no gloss placed on the words of the rules other than to say that 'real' means that the prospect of success must be realistic rather than fanciful".
"The first ground ("real prospect of success") presents no conceptual problems. It is precisely the same test as that which the courts apply when considering summary judgment: see rule 24.2. The rationale is the same. If a claim or defence has no real prospect of success, the court will prevent the litigant from pursuing it. Likewise, if an appeal has no real prospect of success, the court will prevent the litigant from pursuing it. The main practical difference is that, for obvious reasons, more appeals are weeded out by this process, than first instance claims or defences".
The White Book then refers to Swain v. Hillman [2001] 1All ER 91 and to Tanfern Limited v. Cameron-MacDonald.
"In the circumstances, I consider that each of the selected growth rates may [and I emphasise the word 'may'] be achievable".
"Because of working capital constraints and because it is generally considered imprudent to fully draw on account of profits which have not yet been made, it is usual for partners to draw only a percentage of their anticipated income for a year during the year itself and to draw the balance as and when the accounts have been finalised and working capital conditions permit".
"It would not, in my view, be unreasonable for the petitioner to expect to be able to draw £5,700 per month. It would not be unreasonable to expect that the petitioner might be able to draw any undrawn profits in respect of the year ending 31st March 2013 by 30th September 2013".
The reference to undrawn profits is based on the assumed growth rates as set out in para. 5.28. The middle assumption, namely a 30% rate of growth, would result on the analysis undertaken in the report in the husband being entitled to a gross profit share of just over £136,000.
"Even if the judge was correct to order that the wife should receive, by transfer of the former matrimonial home, all the capital, she should have given consideration for some form of Mesher order, whereby the husband could recover some of the capital value of the former matrimonial home in the future".
"No consideration has been made of the husband's ability to re-establish his capital position in the future, which, in the current climate and given the husband's age, runs contrary to the concept of fairness, on any view, after a relatively long marriage to which both parties have made a full contribution".
"I have, however, reluctantly come to the conclusion that the Husband is right in saying that the judgment is subject to justified criticism in three respects:-
(a) It does not sufficiently reason the very significant departure from equality that is the effect of the order. Indeed, the judgment does not mention the need to justify a departure from equality.
(b) In so far as there is a needs justification for departure, it does not explain how the resulting capital order will fairly meet the needs of both parties, as opposed to the Wife alone.
(c) It does not adequately explain the interplay between the periodical payments order and the capital order".
"I entirely accept that needs can justify a departure from equality but, if the court is to do so, it is necessary to consider the needs of both parties. I equally accept that disparity in earning capacity can justify departure, but again this has to be considered in the context of the needs of both parties not just the wife. In particular, there has to be consideration of how such a departure can be justified if there is also a substantive periodical payments order. With the greatest of respect to a very experienced judge, I do not consider that the judgment sufficiently did so".
The conclusion of Moor J. in that case was that there should be a dismissal of the liability to pay maintenance.