BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) >> Ipekçi v McConnell [2019] EWFC 19 (04 April 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/HCJ/2019/19.html Cite as: [2019] EWFC 19 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
ANIL BURAK IPEKÇI |
Applicant |
|
- and |
||
MORGAN ALEXANDRA McCONNELL |
Respondent |
____________________
Michael Glaser QC (instructed by Family Law in Partnership) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 25-29 March 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mostyn:
"the Neil McConnell 1964 trust for Morgan McConnell was created under the 1964 trust document. There is not a separate trust instrument for this trust. This was created as an income accumulation account for Morgan's benefit. It is not a sub-account. It has its own taxpayer identification number and files its own income tax return (a subaccount would be an account which is part of the main trust and organised under the main trust's tax ID #)."
In my judgment this could not be clearer. Brandi Goldenberg is describing the position where the cestui que trust is solely and beneficially entitled to the trust assets. On 30 November 2017 the market value of this separate fund was $4.45m. The trustees pay the wife each year 2.5% of the market value of the trust and have made significant further advances of capital to her. Nobody else has benefitted.
"I do not understand your apparent puzzlement about who the beneficiaries of Morgan's trust are. The trust was created for Morgan's initial benefit, to be sure; it exists for her lifetime; and it carries her name as shorthand identification. But it is necessary for a trust agreement to specify who becomes entitled to succeed to the ownership of the trust's principal assets when the income beneficiary dies. In this instance, as previously detailed, the next takers (or "remaindermen") of Morgan's trust are her surviving descendants ("issue"), and if none, the then surviving descendants ("issue") of her father. All these people are beneficiaries of the trust, entitled to have the trustees and the courts protect their interests. There is no substantive inconsistency between Ms Goldenberg's description and mine. The provisions of the December (sic) 21, 1964 trust agreement are applicable to Morgan's trust." (emphasis added)
"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."
He continued at [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."
i) The parties specifically contracted that the agreement will be governed by New York law. The evidence of the single joint expert is that the agreement suffers from a fatal defect under New York law. This is because the agreement was not accompanied by a duly authenticated certificate that it conformed with the local law in its attestation. The opinion of the single joint expert was crystal clear. This defect would mean that the agreement would, in New York, have "minimal weight, if any". She cited a case on comparable facts where the New York Appeal Court held that the document would carry "no legal force save for the minor impact of its historical voice".
ii) It seems to me that, speaking metaphorically, if the parties have made their bed in New York they must lie in it. In my judgment it would be wholly unjust to attribute weight to this agreement when under the law that the parties elected it would be afforded no weight.
iii) Further, it is plain to me that the husband cannot be said to have had a full appreciation of the implications of the agreement when he had no legal advice at all about the impact of New York law. Further still, I am not satisfied that the solicitor who gave the advice was not compromised by virtue of having acted previously for the wife in her first divorce. It was, so it seems to me, a clear situation of apparent bias.
iv) The agreement does not meet any needs of the husband. I do not take the language used by the Supreme Court, namely "predicament of real need" as signifying that needs when assessed in circumstances where there is a valid prenuptial agreement in play should be markedly less than needs assessed in ordinary circumstances. If you have reasonable needs which you cannot meet from your own resources, then you are in a predicament. Those needs are real needs.
v) In the circumstances of this case I attribute therefore no weight to the prenuptial agreement.
i) This was a 12-year cohabitative relationship.
ii) As a result of the way that the parties organised their married life the husband has made no provision for himself from his earnings either by way of savings or pension.
iii) The standard of living, whilst not by any means a determinative factor, is relevant and was in this case reasonably high.
iv) It is in the interests of the two children of the marriage that their father has a reasonable home in which they can stay with him comfortably and that they do not perceive him as being in some way the poor relation.
v) The husband will not be making any contribution to the maintenance of the children or to their school fees they will be supported entirely by the wife save in respect of those incidental expenses met by the husband during the time that the children spend with him.
vi) In respect of the sum allowed for the husband's housing it is not necessary for all of it to be provided to him outright. There was agreement at the Bar that it would be reasonable for half of the housing sum awarded to be charged back in favour of the wife (or her estate) on the death of the husband.
House purchase |
750,000 |
SDLT |
27,500 |
purchase costs |
2,000 |
furniture allowance |
25,000 |
bank and credit card debt |
28,000 |
other debt |
5,000 |
unpaid legal fees |
99,000 |
Duxbury fund |
445,500 |
1,382,000 |
|
less Turkish property |
(48,500) |
1,333,500 |
Of this sum £375,000 will be the subject of the charge-back and so the outright cost to the wife is £958,500.
________________________________________
Note 1 This is taken from Table 10 of At A Glance, which is a UK life table. Although Mr Thorpe asserted, without producing anything, that US life tables would put the expectancy of a 76-year-old at under 7 years, it is clear that in fact under such tables the figure would be virtually the same: https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr67/nvsr67_07-508.pdf [Back] Note 2 I allow this sum notwithstanding that it does not appear as a debt in the asset schedule prepared by Mr Thorpe. It was, however, mentioned in the husbands section 25 statement. The existence of this debt was not disputed by Mr Glaser. [Back]