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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Tattersall v Tattersall [2018] EWCA Civ 1978 (26 July 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/1978.html Cite as: [2018] 3 FCR 470, [2018] EWCA Civ 1978, [2019] 1 FLR 470 |
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ON APPEAL FROM
THE CENTRAL FAMILY COURT
Strand, London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MOYLAN
and
LORD JUSTCE LEGGATT
____________________
TATTERSALL | Appellant | |
- and - | ||
TATTERSALL | Respondent |
____________________
The Respondent appeared in Person
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE MOYLAN:
Introduction
(1) The provisions in the order of HHJ Wright of 23 September 2014 (a) giving the wife (as I will call her) permission to enforce arrears of periodical payments which were over 12 months old and (b) requiring the husband to pay at least part of the total arrears;
(2) The order of HHJ Tolson QC of 1 June 2015, by which he ordered the husband to pay the wife a lump sum "in substitution of her claims to periodical payments", in other words, to capitalise the periodical payments; and
(3) The order of HHJ Tolson of 11 January 2016 directing the payment to the wife of the sum of approximately £7,600 held by conveyancing solicitors pursuant to the order of 23 September 2014.
Background
Proceedings
"And upon the wife
1. Establishing by evidence that the husband has failed to pay periodical payments in accordance with the terms of existing orders and
2. Giving details of the highly unusual nature of the husband's conduct of past litigation and lack of regard for orders of the court.
And upon the court being satisfied that the husband had deliberately not paid periodical payments and would be highly unlikely to pay in future, and is likely to attempt to take any steps open to him to frustrate the wife's claims and entitlements to ancillary financial relief.
And upon the court considering that, in principle, the husband should continue to pay periodical payments at the levels fixed by … the order dated 10 December 2012, until 1 September 2020 as the order provides and … then discounting the sums payable in future to account for early receipt."
(i) that the resolution of the variation application was "critical" to HHJ Wright's assessment of the arrears; and
(ii) that the first step in any application to capitalise periodical payments would be for the court to consider any application to vary.
In saying the latter King LJ no doubt had in mind what Thorpe LJ had said in Pearce v Pearce [2003] 2 FLR 1144, to which I return below. King LJ's permission judgment sets the parameters for the scope of the husband's appeals.
Determination
(1) Order of 23 September 2014
(i) the court erred in law in determining the wife's application to enforce prior to the determination of his variation application;
(ii) the wife had not made any formal application for permission to enforce arrears more than 12 months old; and
(iii) non-payment was reasonable because the order was still subject to a stay granted by the Court of Appeal.
"... we think it is important to emphasise that a variation application should not inevitably lead to an adjournment of any enforcement proceedings; the appropriate action will depend on the circumstances of each case."
That observation was based on concerns which had been expressed in consultation responses (as referred to in paragraph 2.45).
(2) Order of 1 June 2015
"Both as a matter of principle and as a matter of good practice, in my opinion the judge had to decide three questions in the following sequence. First he had to decide what variation to make in the order for periodical payments agreed in 1997... The judge's second task was to fix the date from which the increased order was to commence. That would dispose of the past and present account between the parties. Then, and only then, should he have moved to the future, substituting a capital payment calculated in accordance with the Duxbury tables for the income stream that he was terminating."
Importantly for the purposes of this appeal, Thorpe LJ went on to say:
"38. Of course I do not seek to put the trial judge in a straightjacket. He exercises a broad discretion at the first stage. Equally at the third stage he exercises a discretion, albeit a narrower one, in departing from the mathematics of the Duxbury tables to reflect special factors which individual cases will regularly generate.
39. I believe that this discipline is necessary as a safeguard against the temptation to further adjust the capital division between the parties to reflect the factors which were not foreseen or which did not pertain at the date of the original division. This abstinence is required not only by authority but also as a matter of policy. Families with not inconsiderable assets are obliged to achieve division, by one means or another, once the marriage has foundered. They are entitled to know that that obligation once completed does not revive. In cases where a complete clean break cannot be achieved at the date of redistribution of the family assets it is important that the parties should be encouraged to take advantage of any subsequent developments that permit the dismissal of the outstanding periodical payments order. The court has its duty under section 31(7A). Therefore a relatively simple, certain and predictable method for the calculation of the capital sum that can fairly be substituted for the periodical payments order is of great importance. It enables parties to see where they stand and to weigh the relative advantages and disadvantages of finality. It contributes to the compromise of the issue and thus to a reduction in contested cases."
"The judge correctly recognised that the issue whether the husband should be ordered to pay a lump sum to the wife under s.31(7B) of the Act, by way of capitalisation of any obligation to continue to make periodical payments to her, fell to be resolved by application of the principles set out in the decision of this court in Pearce v. Pearce ... It is a decision which has rightly received wide approbation, no doubt because, in the words of Thorpe LJ, at [39], it identifies 'a relatively simple, certain and predictable method for the calculation of the capital sum'. So the first enquiry is to identify the level of periodical payments which should in principle continue to be made by the payer to the payee (including, in the present case, whether they should continue to be made at all and thus whether the payee can – within the meaning of s.31(7)(a) – adjust without undue hardship to their termination): per Thorpe LJ, at [37]. If the result of the first enquiry is a conclusion that periodical payments at a specified level should in principle continue to be made, the second... is to calculate their capital equivalent according to the Duxbury formula: per Thorpe LJ, again at [37]. For the sake of completeness, I would add that the court must finally survey whether it is fair to both parties to capitalise the periodical payments and, no doubt in particular, whether it is reasonably practicable for the payer to pay the capital sum rather than to make the periodical payments. At all events the court has, thank goodness, only a narrow discretion to arrive at a capital sum otherwise than by application of Duxbury formula and it should exercise it in order only to reflect special factors ..."
(3) Order of 11 January 2016.
LORD JUSTICE LEGGATT:
LORD JUSTICE FLAUX: