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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> SBX v ABX [2022] EWHC 3652 (Fam) (23 May 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2022/3652.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 3652 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(In Private)
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SBX |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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ABX |
Respondent |
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Official Court Reporters and Audio Transcribers
5 New Street Square, London, EC4A 3BF
Tel: 020 7831 5627 Fax: 020 7831 7737
[email protected]
MR T. SCOTT QC and MR T.HARVEY appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE FRANCIS:
H's applications Date | Jurisdiction | Topic | Date W notified |
14.8.20 | Country A | Variation of all maintenance obligations | * |
8.12.20 | Country A | Extension of response deadline | * |
6.4.21 | Country A | Objection to W's request to extend response filing deadline | * |
7.9.21 | Country A | Request for determination of the Court's jurisdiction | * |
6.1.22 | England | Stay of W's variation and enforcement applications | 6.1.21 |
W's applications Date | Jurisdiction | Topic | Date H notified |
23.9.20 | Country A | Court formally notified of W contesting H's application | 30.9.20 |
5.10.20 | Country A | Extension of response deadline | 13.10.20 |
2.11.20 | Country A | Dismissal of H's variation application and costs (together with a substantive filing) | 14.12.20 |
30.12.20 | England | Enforcement - ¶36 (Business R payments) | 27.4.21 |
31.12.20 | England | Variation of periodical payments (unspecified) | 27.4.21 |
17.2.21 | Country A | Extension of response deadline, request for translations | 22.2.21 |
26.3.21 | Country A | Further extension of response deadline | 29.3.21 |
11.6.21 | England | Enforcement - ¶41 (maintenance – school fees) | 7.7.21 |
25.6.21 | England | Enforcement - ¶37 (maintenance – spousal) | 7.7.21 |
25.6.21 | England | Enforcement - ¶38 (maintenance – mortgage payments) | 7.7.21 |
20.7.21 | Country A | Extension of response deadline | 22.7.21 |
13.9.21 | England | Enforcement -¶40 (maintenance – children) | 10.1.22 |
30.9.21 | England | FMH – discharge of trust and undertakings | 30.11.21 |
*Note: Applications in Country A are made to the Court, which serves the responding parties. Notification dates are hence unknown and would need to be confirmed with the Court of Country A.
"1. Where proceedings involving the same cause of action and between the same parties are brought in the courts of different Member States, any court other than the court first seised shall of its own motion stay its proceedings until such time as the jurisdiction of the court first seised is established."
The husband has applied to stay some, but not all, of the wife's applications. The reason he has not applied to stay the two most recent ones is because they were made only just before the January 2022 hearing. Mr Scott submits, and I do not think Mr Glaser takes issue with this, that the court can, of its own motion, stay any of the proceedings, and in fact if I look again at the provisions of Article 12, it is mandatory that "the court first seised shall of its own motion stay its proceedings", etc, and so I draw no distinction here between the stay application made and the ones which Mr Scott says are deemed to have been made or which I can deal with. It seems to me that it would be wrong to distinguish between them on that basis.
"Notwithstanding that there were arguments put forward by the applicant that might lead the Italian court to conclude that the respondent had failed to establish its jurisdiction. The facts of this case fell squarely within the terms of Article 12 of the Maintenance Regulation. The terms of Article 12 made it clear that it was not for the court applying Article 12 to investigate the question of whether the Italian court had jurisdiction or not. It was plain that there were proceedings ongoing in both England and in Italy in relation to the maintenance provisions of the 2011 order and that those proceedings were between the same parties.
Furthermore, in the circumstances of this case, the proceedings in Italy and the proceedings in England involved the same cause of action for the purposes of Article 12(1) of the Maintenance Regulation. They concerned the same provisions of the same order. Both sets of proceedings concerned at the heart the wife's right to maintenance payments under the terms of the order and the husband's obligation to pay maintenance under the terms of the order. Both cases will involve consideration of the extent to which those rights and obligations should subsist having regard to an alleged change of circumstances."
Then the judge went on to find out which court was first seized.
"Article 12 [of the Maintenance Regulation] is directed to dealing with the position which could arise if a maintenance creditor brought maintenance proceedings in more than one court. The phrase 'the same cause of action' in article 12(1) has to be read in the light of the objects of the Maintenance Regulation referred to in the case law cited above. Since article 3 allows a choice of jurisdiction and the substantive law to be applied in relation to a maintenance claim which differs as between member states, I consider that the phrase refers to the nature of the claims being brought, i.e. as claims for maintenance of a specific person, rather than to the precise cause of action in law."
In para.42 of that judgment, Lord Sales had said:
"Article 3 of the Maintenance Regulation is concerned with defining the set of jurisdictions in which the maintenance creditor has the right to bring her claim."