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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> J v K [2001] JRC 209A (24 October 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2001/2001_209A.html Cite as: [2001] JRC 209A |
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2001/209A
ROYAL COURT
(Family Division)
24th October 2001
Before: |
V.J. Obbard, Esq., Registrar, Family Division |
Between |
J |
Petitioner |
|
|
|
And |
K |
Respondent |
Reasons
Whether consent order ratified by the Court on 30th December, 1998 can be varied with regard:-
(a) to the payment of maintenance in respect of the children of the marriage;
(b) to the date of sale of the former matrimonial home.
judgment
the registrar:
1. In this case the parties were divorced by decree nisi pronounced on 21st May, 1997 on the grounds of one year's separation. The decree was made absolute on 27th January 1999.
2. A summons was filed in September 1999 by the husband with regard to the care of and maintenance for the children.
3. A notice in Form 2, being a cross-application, was also filed by the wife.
4. There is also, in the file, a summons which was never signed by the Greffier concerning an application by the husband for a "draft" agreement entered into between the parties to be ratified.
5. Whatever happened to that application, I am not certain. In any event, a memorandum of agreement signed by the parties on 23rd December, 1998 was eventually ratified by the Court on 30th December, 1998.
6. It deals with the custody care and control of and access to the children, maintenance for them, a 'Mesher' order in respect of the former matrimonial home, and other matters, including provisions in the event of the death of one of the parties prior to the occurrence of a 'trigger' date, income tax child relief and the disposal of other assets of the parties.
7. It is comprehensive and finishes with a paragraph frequently used to indicate that it is made in full and final settlement and intended to constitute a "clean break".
8. The Court order ratifying the agreement states:-
"And it is further ordered that neither the petitioner nor the respondent be entitled to make any further applications under Articles 27, 28, 29 and 29A of the Matrimonial Causes (Jersey) Law 1949 as amended."
9. The agreement contains the following paragraphs 4 to 7:-
"4. That from the 1st January, 1998, the Petitioner shall pay to the Respondent the sum of £40.00 per week by the way of maintenance for each child payable by standing order on the first day of each month into her bank account [at this point, details of the account are given]. The maintenance in respect of the children shall cease once each has respectively attained the age of sixteen years or ceased full-time education (including any course undertaken at Highlands College or any equivalent A Level type course) whichever shall be the later of such events.
5. That the maintenance payable by the Petitioner for the children shall be reviewed:-
a) annually on the anniversary of the 1st June in accordance with the terms of clause 6 below;
b) in the event of either of the children undertaking tertiary education;
c) if either of the children cease to live with the Respondent;
d) in the event of a material change in the circumstances of either party or the needs of the children or any one of them so require.
6. That the maintenance for the children shall be increased in accordance with any increase in the Petitioner's salary. The Petitioner shall not be liable to commence payment of the reviewed maintenance until he receives his increased salary but immediately upon receipt of any increase he will amend the standing order payable to the Respondent in and in addition, will pay to her a sum equivalent to the shortfall in the maintenance from the 1st June to the date upon which the standing order is amended.
7. That the former matrimonial home (hereinafter referred to as "the property") shall remain in the joint ownership of the parties until either:-
a) they agree that it should be sold; or
b) such time as the last of the children shall have attained the age of 16 years or ceased full-time secondary education (including any course undertaken at Highlands College or any A Level equivalent type course) whichever is the later event;
whereupon the property home shall be sold and the sale proceeds divided as hereinafter set out. In the event however of either of the children going on to tertiary education the sale of the matrimonial home shall be reviewed."
10. The husband, in June 2001, some 2½ years later, filed the following application that the Memorandum of Agreement entered into between the parties on the 23rd December 1998 should be varied as follows:-
(i) the deletion of clauses 4, 5 and 6;
(ii) by providing for maintenance to be paid by the Respondent to the Petitioner in respect of A at such rate as the Registrar deems fit; and
(iii) by ordering that the former matrimonial home should be immediately placed on the market for sale."
11. I have no hesitation in hearing the husband's application for a variation in child maintenance, or even for a re-instatement of maintenance for a "child" if he is attending a college of further education, even if over the age of majority.
12. However, I do have reservations about disturbing the agreement about the former matrimonial home.
13. The leading Jersey case, the facts of which are not dissimilar, is Braid -v- Barnes and Brée (9th January 1998) Jersey Unreported. In that case a consent order had been ratified, by virtue of which the former matrimonial home was to be sold. In the event, that proved difficult and the Greffier referred the matter to the Court. The Court had no hesitation in setting aside the order of the Greffier and returning the case to him with a direction to impose a Mesher Order.
14. Sir Peter Crill, sitting as Commissioner, having satisfied himself on the authority of Thwaite -v- Thwaite [1981] 2 All ER 7 that the Court had the power to change an order of the Greffier as it thought fit, continued:-
15. The preliminary matters which I have to decide are whether the agreement which was ratified can be varied and, if so, can it be varied by the authority of the Greffier alone.
16. My decision is that the agreement can be varied, in a similar way to which the Court in Braid -v- Barnes did not feel constrained from doing so.
17. In this case the variation requested comes under the bracket of "implementation" and does not affect the existence of the Mesher Order itself. In effect the husband is asking for an earlier sale date than that originally envisaged, although I have to remark here that both children are already over the age of 16 years, which means that the earliest possible trigger date has already passed.
18. I believe that a consent order, ratified by the Court in Jersey, can be varied more easily than the United Kingdom. In the first place Article 32 of the law so provides, without any particular limitations. Secondly, in most cases the Court or the Greffier ratify agreements in good faith and in reliance on the good advice which litigants have received from their lawyers, who in most cases, countersign the agreement to be ratified. But that is the only confirmation which the Court has, that the agreement is fair and reasonable. Since the Court has a duty, which is set out clearly in the case of Rennell -v- Le Miere (5th April 1995) Jersey Unreported to establish that an agreement is fair and reasonable before ratifying it, it seems to me that, as in the Braid -v-Barnes case, it is a relatively simple matter for the Court, at a later date, to override the very simple process undergone at the time of ratifying the agreement.
19. In the United Kingdom the process is different in that a Form M.1. "Statement of Information under F.P.R. Rule 2.61 in support of information for financial relief" has to be submitted to the Court at the time any application is made for an order by consent. No such requirement is in place in Jersey, where, in most cases, not even the parties' lawyers, let alone the parties themselves, have to appear before the Greffier or Court in order to satisfy him or the Bailiff that an agreement is reasonable before it is ratified.
20. In this case I have no background knowledge of events, and know nothing about the means of the parties which led to them signing the agreement. I only have the counter-signatures of their lawyers, Mrs Canavan and Advocate Fitz.
21. In my opinion, the agreement can be varied by the Greffier alone, because the Court in the Braid -v- Barnes case, remitted the case to the Greffier with an exhortation to deal with the case himself, hearing further evidence if necessary, according to his discretion. It would be not so if the Court had dealt with the Mesher order and the conditions to be imposed with it. Curiously enough, in the event, the parties finally agreed an immediate sale after all, and the Greffier ratified an agreement to that effect.
22. It is, therefore, I would suggest, as compared to the United Kingdom procedure, a simpler matter to satisfy the Court or Greffier, at a later date, that it is just to vary an agreement, solely on the ground that insufficient material was available to the Greffier to satisfy himself as to the fairness of the agreement.
23. That is not to say that agreements are not worth the paper they are written on. Matrimonial agreements should not be displaced unless injustice would be done by holding parties to an agreement. This is clear from the case of Edgar -v- Edgar [1981] 2FLR 19.
24. That case dealt with a party's application to vary an earlier agreement not to apply for a lump sum. A quote from the head note of the case reads:-
25. When I come to hear the application, these are criteria which I will have to consider in relation to the facts of the case.
26. As for the Court's further order not to entitle either party to make further application in this case, I take the view, like Mrs Canavan for the husband, that this is not actually a "further application", and Article 32 is not mentioned in the list of Articles proscribed by the order.
27. The substantive order made in December 1998 was a Mesher Order. The Mesher Order remains. No further application in that regard is necessary. The variation requested falls, in my opinion within the scope of Article 32 of the Law. It amounts to a variation as to the implementation of the Mesher Order.
28. Having considered the matter, I agree with Mrs Canavan that it is within the powers of the Greffier to vary both matters: the child maintenance and the provisions which allow the sale of the former matrimonial home. I have, therefore fixed a date for hearing that application.