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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> WW v HW [2015] EWHC 1844 (Fam) (10 June 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2015/1844.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1844 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(SITTING AS A DEPUTY HIGH COURT JUDGE)
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WW |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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HW |
Respondent |
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LEWIS MARKS QC AND KATHERINE COWTON (instructed by Stewarts) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 20th -24th April, 10th June 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was handed down in private on 10th JUNE 2015. It consists of 74 paragraphs and has been signed and dated by the judge.
The judge hereby gives leave for it to be reported.
Mr CUSWORTH QC:
a. The marriage was conditional upon the agreement being executed [Rec. B]
b. The parties intended that the agreement should be legally binding upon them [Rec. H]
c. They had each received independent legal advice and were fully aware of the right that they each were acquiring or surrendering [Rec. J]
d. They had each fully and frankly disclosed their respective means and other relevant circumstances. [Rec. K]
e. They each acknowledged that it was not possible to exclude the jurisdiction of the Court to make orders under the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973. [Rec. L]
f. Neither would make any claim against the other on dissolution of the marriage, and would enter into a consent order to that effect, without prejudice to their right to make such a claim in respect of a child. [Cl.13]
g. Any real property jointly owned would be vested in joint names as tenants in common, and their respective proportions of ownership would be set out in a Declaration of Trust to be drawn up, and otherwise in accordance with their respective financial contributions to that property. [Cl.9]
h. All pre-marital, gifted or inherited property should remain the parties' respective ownership. [Cl.3/4]
i. Neither would make any claim against the other's separate property, or against any trust interest, in the event of dissolution of the marriage. [Cl.10/11]
Factors detracting from the weight to be accorded to the agreement
68. If an ante-nuptial agreement, or indeed a post-nuptial agreement, is to carry full weight, both the husband and wife must enter into it of their own free will, without undue influence or pressure, and informed of its implications...
69. ...Sound legal advice is obviously desirable, for this will ensure that a party understands the implications of the agreement, and full disclosure of any assets owned by the other party may be necessary to ensure this. But if it is clear that a party is fully aware of the implications of an ante-nuptial agreement and indifferent to detailed particulars of the other party's assets, there is no need to accord the agreement reduced weight because he or she is unaware of those particulars. What is important is that each party should have all the information that is material to his or her decision, and that each party should intend that the agreement should govern the financial consequences of the marriage coming to an end.
70. It is, of course, important that each party should intend that the agreement should be effective. In the past it may not have been right to infer from the fact of the conclusion of the agreement that the parties intended it to take effect, for they may have been advised that such agreements were void under English law and likely to carry little or no weight. That will no longer be the case... In future it will be natural to infer that parties who enter into an ante-nuptial agreement to which English law is likely to be applied intend that effect should be given to it.
71. In relation to the circumstances attending the making of the nuptial agreement, this comment of Ormrod LJ in Edgar v Edgar at p 1417, although made about a separation agreement, is pertinent:
"It is not necessary in this connection to think in formal legal terms, such as misrepresentation or estoppel; all the circumstances as they affect each of two human beings must be considered in the complex relationship of marriage."
The first question will be whether any of the standard vitiating factors: duress, fraud or misrepresentation, is present. Even if the agreement does not have contractual force, those factors will negate any effect the agreement might otherwise have. But unconscionable conduct such as undue pressure (falling short of duress) will also be likely to eliminate the weight to be attached to the agreement, and other unworthy conduct, such as exploitation of a dominant position to secure an unfair advantage, would reduce or eliminate it.
72. The court may take into account a party's emotional state, and what pressures he or she was under to agree. But that again cannot be considered in isolation from what would have happened had he or she not been under those pressures. The circumstances of the parties at the time of the agreement will be relevant. Those will include such matters as their age and maturity, whether either or both had been married or been in long-term relationships before. For such couples their experience of previous relationships may explain the terms of the agreement, and may also show what they foresaw when they entered into the agreement. What may not be easily foreseeable for less mature couples may well be in contemplation of more mature couples...
73. If the terms of the agreement are unfair from the start, this will reduce its weight, although this question will be subsumed in practice in the question of whether the agreement operates unfairly having regard to the circumstances prevailing at the time of the breakdown of the marriage.
...Fairness
75. White v White and Miller v Miller establish that the overriding criterion to be applied in ancillary relief proceedings is that of fairness and identify the three strands of need, compensation and sharing that are relevant to the question of what is fair. If an ante-nuptial agreement deals with those matters in a way that the court might adopt absent such an agreement, there is no problem about giving effect to the agreement. The problem arises where the agreement makes provisions that conflict with what the court would otherwise consider to be the requirements of fairness. The fact of the agreement is capable of altering what is fair. It is an important factor to be weighed in the balance. We would advance the following proposition, to be applied in the case of both ante- and post-nuptial agreements, in preference to that suggested by the Board in MacLeod:
"The court should give effect to a nuptial agreement that is freely entered into by each party with a full appreciation of its implications unless in the circumstances prevailing it would not be fair to hold the parties to their agreement."
76. That leaves outstanding the difficult question of the circumstances in which it will not be fair to hold the parties to their agreement. This will necessarily depend upon the facts of the particular case, and it would not be desirable to lay down rules that would fetter the flexibility that the court requires to reach a fair result. There is, however, some guidance that we believe that it is safe to give directed to the situation where there are no tainting circumstances attending the conclusion of the agreement.
Autonomy
78. The reason why the court should give weight to a nuptial agreement is that there should be respect for individual autonomy. The court should accord respect to the decision of a married couple as to the manner in which their financial affairs should be regulated. It would be paternalistic and patronising to override their agreement simply on the basis that the court knows best. This is particularly true where the parties' agreement addresses existing circumstances and not merely the contingencies of an uncertain future.
Non-matrimonial property
79. Often parties to a marriage will be motivated in concluding a nuptial agreement by a wish to make provision for existing property owned by one or other, or property that one or other anticipates receiving from a third party. The House of Lords in White v White and Miller v Miller drew a distinction between such property and matrimonial property accumulated in the course of the marriage. That distinction is particularly significant where the parties make express agreement as to the disposal of such property in the event of the termination of the marriage. There is nothing inherently unfair in such an agreement and there may be good objective justification for it, such as obligations towards existing family members. As Rix LJ put it at para 73
"…if the parties to a prospective marriage have something important to agree with one another, then it is often much better, and more honest, for that agreement to be made at the outset, before the marriage, rather than left to become a source of disappointment or acrimony within marriage."
...
81. Of the three strands identified in White v White and Miller v Miller, it is the first two, needs and compensation, which can most readily render it unfair to hold the parties to an ante-nuptial agreement. The parties are unlikely to have intended that their ante-nuptial agreement should result, in the event of the marriage breaking up, in one partner being left in a predicament of real need, while the other enjoys a sufficiency or more, and such a result is likely to render it unfair to hold the parties to their agreement.
...
Need
118. Baron J had held that the ante-nuptial agreement was "manifestly unfair" in that it made no provision for the possibility that the husband might be reduced to circumstances of real need. Wilson LJ at para 144 appears to have thought that there was nothing unfair about this and, inferentially, that had the husband been in a situation of real need the agreement would none the less have been good reason for the court to decline to alleviate this by an order of ancillary relief. We would not go so far as this.
119. We stated at para 73 above that the question of the fairness of the agreement can often be subsumed in the question of whether it would operate unfairly in the circumstances prevailing at the breakdown of the marriage, and this is such a case. Had the husband been incapacitated in the course of the marriage, so that he was incapable of earning his living, this might well have justified, in the interests of fairness, not holding him to the full rigours of the ante-nuptial agreement. But this was far from the case. On the evidence he is extremely able, and has added to his qualifications by pursuing a D Phil in biotechnology. Furthermore the generous relief given to cater for the needs of the two daughters will indirectly provide in large measure for the needs of the husband, until the younger daughter reaches the age of 22. Finally the Court of Appeal did not upset the judge's order that the wife should fund the discharge of debts of £700,000 owed by the husband, only a small part of which she had challenged.
120. In these circumstances we consider that the Court of Appeal was correct to conclude that the needs of the husband were not a factor that rendered it unfair to hold him to the terms of the ante-nuptial agreement, subject to making provision for the needs of the children of the family.
a. The reasons why she felt the need for and propriety of the pre-nuptial agreement at the outset of the marriage.
b. Her denials that she gave any reassurance prior to his signature that H should not worry about signing the pre-nuptial agreement.
c. The parties' standard of living during the marriage, and the extent to which their marriage was conducted as an equal financial partnership.
d. Her involvement in the events which occurred around her becoming entitled to a $3m. commission payment in 2008, and the subsequent tax treatment of that payment up to the point when the parties decided not to place the funds into an EBT.
e. Her account (as opposed to the nanny's) of the parties' domestic arrangements and their respective contributions in that sphere.
a. Positively asserted that he had not been advised that the law on pre-nuptial agreements might change, before disclosing a letter (albeit voluntarily) to him which gave just that advice.
b. Suggested that he did not have the impact of the pre-nuptial agreement in mind when later seeking to persuade W to enter into a post-nuptial agreement.
c. Failed to correct a plainly inaccurate submission from his previous leading counsel at an earlier hearing characterising commission received by FF as akin to money in a Film Scheme, which can now be seen to have been made on what H knew then to have been an entirely false premise.
d. Claimed, orally, that in 2008 W had told him that she had concerns that she may have acted in breach of contract in accepting the commission payment, despite telling the Revenue that this was a realisation to which he had come only during these proceedings.
e. Asserted that he had put all that he could have into the renovation of the parties' home, when it is clear that he did not; and at the same time asserting to the Revenue that he had been living off the capital realised from the sale of his former home in London, E1, when (a) he cannot have been, and (b) these are the funds which, had he used them at all, he could have put to the renovation of the parties' home.
a. That he well understood the recital to the agreement (B) which stated in terms that without the agreement the parties would not otherwise marry.
b. That he also understood that the financial disclosure provided was important in informing the terms of the agreement, and that reliance was being placed upon the assertions which he was there making.
c. That he then felt no compunction about telling an untruth to his fiancee and her advisers in order to procure an arrangement that he clearly wanted at that time.
d. That he had given some significant thought to the importance or otherwise of entering into the agreement prior to its execution.
'In the accounts for 31 March 2009, a transaction took place which initially was understood to be a loan facility for the company to further develop its film production work which is its primary trading activity. The understanding was that the facility would be repaid at a future date if the films proved to be profitable. The company has recently been made aware that the loan made was in fact income for the company in the first instance and as such a prior year adjustment will be made in the account for the period 31 March 2014 with a revised CT600 return being prepared accordingly.'
'[9] In Miller & McFarlane Lord Nicholls specified that the matrimonial home should always be designated matrimonial property, whatever its source… This is reflected in the remarks of Wilson LJ in K v L... But even the matrimonial home is not necessarily divided equally under the sharing principle; an unequal division may be justified if unequal contributions to its acquisition can be demonstrated. In Vaughan v Vaughan [2008] 1 FLR 1108 Wilson LJ stated at para 49:
"… the home had been owned by the husband, free of mortgage, since well before the marriage and… the contributions of each party to the welfare of the family during the marriage were in effect agreed to have been equal in value albeit not in kind. Although, in the words of Baroness Hale in Miller v. Miller, McFarlane v. McFarlane [2006] UKHL 24, [2006] 2 AC 618 at 663E, "the importance of the source of the assets will diminish over time", I consider that the husband's prior ownership of the home carried somewhat greater significance than either the district or circuit judge appears to have ascribed to it".'
a. That the primary purpose of this agreement was to protect from a sharing claim W's inherited property, which is an entirely reasonable ambition.
b. The agreement expressly left open the ability for either side to make a separate claim in relation to provision for their children, and it is in that regard that W acknowledges that substantial provision, albeit in trust, should be made for H.
c. That the fact that the agreement made no provision for the parties' respective needs may have been due in part to the fact that H did, as I have found, deliberately overstate his financial position at the time of the agreement, so as to make himself appear more self-sufficient. The agreement cannot therefore be judged unfair from the start, given the financial disclosure that each then made. H must accept responsibility for the disclosure which he chose to give.
d. That H was prepared to exaggerate his financial status to procure the agreement and so the marriage, demonstrates that he was very far from being broad-sided at the time of its completion. There are no relevant vitiating circumstances here.
e. The advice which both parties received was given at a time when the Court's approach to such agreements was much more reticent than it is now. I acknowledge that there are no international considerations in play. As explained by Lord Phillips at paragraph [70] in Radmacher: 'It is, of course, important that each party should intend that the agreement should be effective. In the past it may not have been right to infer from the fact of the conclusion of the agreement that the parties intended it to take effect, for they may have been advised that such agreements were void under English law and likely to carry little or no weight.'
f. In this regard I note that Connell J had, in July 2001, delivered his judgment in M v M (Prenuptial Agreement) [2002] 1 FLR 654, in which he had said at [21] that the Court 'should look at any such agreement and decide in the particular circumstances what weight should, in justice, be attached to it.' In that case the agreement had had a significant impact upon the outcome of the case. I note too the advice that H received that although the agreement 'was not legally enforceable', he would be most unwise to get involved in working on the wife's inherited estate, as he wouldn't get his money back. This suggests that he was aware that the document may have had some real impact at least. He was also advised that such documents may become binding, although of course that has still to happen. I also cannot ignore the recital to the agreement at [Rec. H], that the parties intended that the agreement should be legally binding upon them. H signed that document.
g. All of the factors referred to at paragraph [72] of Radmacher are significant here, and militate in favour of giving weight to the agreement. H was under no especial pressure to agree – he was a man already in his 40s, the parties already had a child out of wedlock, and he was aware of W's desire to protect her inheritance as a condition of the marriage. For W, as I accept, signing this agreement was a condition of entering into the marriage. Individual autonomy is an important consideration here.
'1. It is the court, and not the parties, that decides the ultimate question of what provision is to be made;
2. The over-arching criterion remains the search for 'fairness', in accordance with section 25 as explained by the House of Lords in Miller/McFarlane (i.e. needs, sharing and compensation). But an agreement is capable of altering what is fair, including in relation to 'need';
3. An agreement (assuming it is not 'impugned' for procedural unfairness, such as duress) should be given weight in that process, although that weight may be anything from slight to decisive in an appropriate case;
4. The weight to be given to an agreement may be enhanced or reduced by a variety of factors;
5. Effect should be given to an agreement that is entered into freely with full appreciation of the implications unless in the circumstances prevailing it would not be fair to hold the parties to that agreement. i.e. There is at least a burden on the husband to show that the agreement should not prevail;...'
c) Is likely to be unfair to hold the parties to an agreement which leaves one spouse in a predicament of real need, while the other enjoys a sufficiency or more (para 81). However, need may be interpreted as being that minimum amount required to keep a spouse from destitution. For example, if the claimant spouse had been incapacitated in the course of the marriage, so that he or she was incapable of earning a living, this might well justify, in the interests of fairness, not holding him or her to the full rigours of the ante-nuptial agreement (para 119).
a. Probably designed to increase the net value of the assets which he holds, so that if the pre-nuptial agreement is implemented, he emerges with as much money as possible;
b. Reckless as to the impact on W, her career and reputation, and regardless of whether the tax levied at the end of the process is higher than it might otherwise be, provided that it falls on her;
c. Inappropriate having regard to the joint decision taken to use FF to invoice for the commission, and the joint discussions which followed about possible tax treatment of the funds;
d. Misconceived in that primary responsibility for the problems with the Revenue clearly lies with the untrue assertions made in the company accounts in relation to which I find H bears primary responsibility, along possibly with his accountant Mr Wrigglesworth.
'a line of authority which stretches back to the decision of this court in Martin v Martin [1976] Fam. 335 that, in the words of Cairns LJ at 342H,
"a spouse cannot be allowed to fritter away the assets by extravagant living or reckless speculation and then to claim as great a share of what was left as he would have been entitled to if he had behaved reasonably."
The only obvious caveats are that a notional re-attribution has to be conducted very cautiously, by reference only to clear evidence of dissipation (in which there is a wanton element) and that the fiction does not extend to treatment of the sums re-attributed to a spouse as cash which he can deploy in meeting his needs, for example in the purchase of accommodation.'