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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 >> Saxton v Bruzas [2018] EWHC 3879 (Fam) (19 December 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2018/3879.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 3879 (Fam) |
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Royal Courts of Justice Strand London WC2A 2LL 3.15pm – 4.45pm |
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B e f o r e :
THE PRESIDENT
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TIMOTHY LEWIS SAXTON | ||
and | ||
JOANNE CLAIRE BRUZAS |
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291-299 Borough High Street, London SE1 1JG
Tel: 020 7269 0370
[email protected]
THE RESPONDENT appeared In Person
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Crown Copyright ©
This Transcript is Crown Copyright. It may not be reproduced in whole or in part, other than in accordance with relevant licence or with the express consent of the Authority. All rights are reserved.
This judgment was delivered in private. The judge has not given leave for this version of the judgment to be published.
THE PRESIDENT:
"The draft minutes of consent was referred to Deputy District Judge Berry for consideration. The judge has not approved the order and had made the following comments, 'It is far from clear what the net effect will be of this proposed order, nor is it clear that it is reasonable to dismiss the respondent's claim for periodical payments in view of the large disparity between the parties' incomes. What is the rationale behind the terms of the order?'"
"Although there is a discrepancy in the parties' incomes, the petitioner has committed himself to a long term payment plan to enable the parties to achieve their objectives. He is currently paying the mortgage on the respondent's property. The increased mortgage on the former matrimonial home, which was re-mortgaged to release equity for the respondent, plus monthly instalments of £2,500 per month. Although the respondent has no income now, she does anticipate being able to generate an income through her company, Bruzas & Co, which will enable her to support herself financially. In the past she has been able to pay herself an income of £1,000 per annum. The respondent acknowledges that as a result of the monthly instalments being paid to her by the petitioner, together with the monthly mortgage payments being paid upon the former matrimonial home and the property held in trust for her, the petitioner is unable to make any further payments to the respondent in the form of maintenance or otherwise".
"The only relevant points really were… (B) the letter from DJ Berry. …I do not think Jo [the wife] ever saw the letter from DJ Berry – I did not want to discuss it in front of Tim (the husband), given that he is still sworn in, but I distinctly recall at the time that he did not want Jo to see it".
Counsel then replies a short time later by email to the solicitor:
"I agree with everything you say, although I do not think I can mislead the court if directly asked whether she saw the letter… However, it must be that she knew about the letter, otherwise why would she sign that waiver in February? I just fear if it is does come to light that he withheld it, then the judge might take a bit of a dim view".
"Mr Saxton told me that at some point he saw Ms Bruzas, and again they renegotiated the terms. This involved a significant benefit by way of a payment to be made directly to the wife, as opposed to a payment intended to reduce the mortgage secured against (the property) not to paid until the consent order had been approved, but that does not strike me as a matter of materiality. Therefore, the wife would have received an additional sum of £60,000 directly to her. Mr Saxton's recollection is not clear either as to what was said. He told me that he had informed Ms Bruzas of the contents of the letter emanating from Deputy District Judge Berry. He was unable to make it clear to me whether or not he had shown her the letter – at one moment he thought that he probably had, at the next he was not so clear – nor that he had specifically said to her that the court had expressed its concern about the termination of periodical payments. The wife's case at the time, as expressed in at least one letter to the court, was that although she had been unable to operate the business, a recruitment consultancy, Bruzas & Co, which was presently in abends, she was expecting, since her health had now recovered, to be able to rejuvenate this business and shortly to generate an income for herself of £100,000 per annum. The wife says (and it is not contended otherwise) that during the marriage she had been rather successful and had generated a significant income, certainly at one stage, being at that point the major contributor to the marriage. The important point about this aspect of the evidence is that she was confident that she would be able to maintain or to reinstate this income.
21. I accept that there is nothing frankly inconsistent with what the husband told me on the last occasion, and told me on Friday, as to what had happened in respect of the District Judge Berry letter. He told me (and this does not strike me as unremarkable) that he has reflected and tried to recollect in more detail what happened since this letter first became the focus of attention at the February/March hearing, and that his recollection is now somewhat better. I am left, however, with some unclarity as to precisely what it was that the wife knew about this letter. The issue, of course, also arises as to whether it would have made any difference had she been shown it".
"By the morning of the second day Mr Marshall told me that there were interesting and complex arguments with regard to privilege, but nonetheless he and his team had taken the view that the pragmatic way to deal with this was for me to formally admit this document".
"Mr Webb (the husband's solicitor) explained to me as follows, the email was written from his handheld device, or perhaps a tablet on the train at the end of a busy day. The passage which is recorded, as to the husband not wanting the wife to see the letter, is his recollection at the time, and that what he said at the time, that he was able to 'distinctly recall' he thought now was incorrect. He had looked at his records and he was certain that they[?] had not given Mr Saxton advice that the wife should not be shown this letter. I am not helped in this aspect of the case by not knowing in what circumstances a 'whistle-blower', assuming this to be in Mr Webb's firm, as I think it must be, came to pass on this information to me and for the wife. However, on what I have been told, it would be a very strong thing for me to find that I have been misled by a solicitor of the Supreme Court with a significant number of years of experience under his belt. Although the explanation is not a very comfortable one, I do not feel able to reject it. I also have to ask myself the question, would the husband have known at the time that the query with regard to periodical payments was something which might or ought to cause her some concern before she entered into this agreement? I have already referred to the fact that the wife was referred to having received legal advice from several firms of solicitors over the year that this litigation has been continuing, although she told me that at the time in question she had only had one hour's free consultation with a firm with whom she had no previous relationship and no subsequent relationship either".
Therefore, in terms of a key passage in the redacted emails, to the effect that the solicitor stated in the email, 'I distinctly recall at the time that he (the husband) did not want Jo (the wife) to see it (the DDJ Berry letter),' Parker J's finding was that she accepted that that was not a correct statement of the position.
"The precursor to this was that in response to District Judge Berry's letter of 28 January, the husband's solicitors had written to the Principal Registry, without copying the documents in to the wife, in which a similar presentation was set out. Notwithstanding that that letter was not copied in to the wife, Mr Marshall submits that it is highly material that the second letter, dated 24 February 2014, to the court, which contained exactly the same information, was copied in to her by email. She therefore would have had every opportunity to write to the Principal Registry to disavow what was said, in particular in relation to periodical payments.
29. I remind myself that the question asked by District Judge Berry in 28 January letter was the rationale behind the terms of the order, and whether it was reasonable to dismiss the wife's claims in the light of the disparity between the parties' incomes, and that in all the documentation to which I have referred the wife had agreed with the husband that her intention was to revitalise her business with the expectation of a substantial income. It is the wife's case that had she seen that letter she might have taken a different view as to whether or not she should sign up to the order. That is a point which has troubled me greatly during the course of this case, but I need to set that also in the context of the other evidence and submissions which the wife has given to me as to why she says this order should be set aside, particularly with a view to providing income/a pension for her".
Before moving on, it is right to record that the wife's case, as stated by Parker J in the middle of paragraph 29, is precisely the case that she puts before this court today. In a nutshell she says,
"I was not given the opportunity to consider the position on periodical payments in the light of the fact that a judge had asked for the rationale to support the absence of a periodical payments provision in the order, notwithstanding the apparent disparity of income between the parties".
"Certainly, the wife says she did not sign a waiver. I have referred to the one of 28 February, she denied that was her signature or that she had ever described herself as Joanne Saxton, as opposed to Joanne Bruzas. The wife's evidence as to when she had first seen this document and realised that it was not her document was not clear nor consistent, and she could not explain why she had not made it clear to me at the previous hearing that she disavowed this document. I have referred to the statement of information for a consent order that is signed with what looks like, even in the photocopy, an identical signature, and it is Joanne Saxton, not Bruzas. She again disavows that document, she takes the point also that the date was filled in in the husband's hand, not in hers, that latter point seems to me of no materiality whatsoever if the parties were together, as the husband says, and this is not suggested to be untrue, when they signed this document".
Omitting paragraph 32, paragraph 33:
"Those misunderstandings and misrepresentations caused me to have some doubt as to the accuracy of the wife's recollection as to what happened at the time when these agreements were negotiated. I said in my earlier judgment that I had no reason to disbelieve the wife when she said that she had not seen the District Judge Berry letter; I do not think she did, it was certainly not sent to her by the court. Having heard the husband's evidence and having seen how that resulted in the change of the provision made by the order, I have come to the conclusion that something must have happened to cause there to be further movement on the husband's side. On the one hand, £60,000 is not much compensation for the lack of periodical payments. On the other, against the wife's confident representation and belief at the time, which I am satisfied she had, she had an income capacity of £100,000 per year, £60,000 is perhaps not so nugatory, but furthermore, I need to remind myself again that District Judge Berry's did not say that these terms were unconscionable in any event. The letter simply asked for an explanation and a rationale as to why the wife would be prepared to give up her claims, and the documents, which I am satisfied that the wife signed, and signed willingly at the time, were sufficient to satisfy him, as indeed he was satisfied".
"40. As I have said, I have considerable sympathy for the wife, who plainly struggles with her current difficulties. However, I need to adopt a principled and clear approach, rather than allowing my sympathies to dictate the results in this case. I have come to the conclusion, notwithstanding my concerns, particularly about the letter from the court, that the wife has not satisfied me that had she been aware of this letter this would have caused her to think twice about the provision that was to be made. As I have already said more than once, the effect of the letter from the court was not to say that this order should not be made, only that the court needed the information upon which it would be".
Then 42:
"In those circumstances, I have come to the conclusion that this is a case very familiar in this area of litigation where the wife has, for understandable reasons, come to the conclusion that she has had a bad deal from the financial remedy order made. That she has thought better of it and has in her own mind reworked the events so as to justify her application. Furthermore, as I am satisfied that there was no intention deliberately to mislead this court, I have to bear in mind as well that the husband has made provision for the wife to a not insignificant extent over the years. I am satisfied that the husband's agreement to make further provision for her has not been out of a guilty conscious, but out of a wish to avoid this type of litigation. I have come to the conclusions accordingly that I must dismiss the application to set aside the consent order".
"(The solicitor) brought up the District Judge Berry letter, he explained that a letter had been sent from District Judge Berry which raised concerns that the wife may be due spousal maintenance. He said he had intentionally not sent the letter on to her. He said he was now worried about this because it may jeopardise the case and he would be in trouble. He said that (the wife) had realised the importance of the letter and she had been emailing him about it, but that he was ignoring her".
"The court must in every case, of course, be satisfied that what is prima facie proved really is dishonest, and not merely disreputable or a failure to maintain good ethical standards, and must bear in mind that legal professional privilege is a very necessary thing and it is not likely to be overthrown, but on the other hand, the interests of victims of fraud must not be overlooked. Each case depends on its own facts".
"In each of these cases the wrongdoer has gone beyond conduct which merely amounts to a civil wrong; he has indulged in sharp practice, something of an underhand nature, where the circumstances required good faith, something which commercial men would say was a fraud or which the law treats as entirely contrary to public policy".