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England and Wales Family Court Decisions (other Judges) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (other Judges) >> AI & Anor v Crown Prosecution Service [2015] EWFC B180 (10 November 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/OJ/2015/B180.html Cite as: [2015] EWFC B180 |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
AI ('the wife') | APPLICANT | |
AND | ||
MKI ('the husband') | FIRST RESPONDENT | |
AND | ||
THE CROWN PROSECUTION SERVICE ('CPS') | INTERVENER |
____________________
The wife appeared in person
The husband chose not to appear.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
HHJ Wildblood QC:
i) I find that the former matrimonial home was bought in the sole name of the husband with the intention that it would be treated as his.
ii) It is highly probable that it was bought with a deposit that was tainted (i.e. funded) by his drugs related offending. Due to that and the point that I mention at iii) below, the case of CPS v Richards [2006] EWCA Civ 849 becomes of particular relevance and distinguishes Re M.C.A. [2002] EWCA Civ 1039.
iii) Not only did this wife know 'that the husband was involved in criminal activities and [know] that from the word go' (the critical finding of Bennett J in CPS v Richards – para 9) but I also find that she knew that the family household was being funded at least in part by the husband's criminal activity. As to knowing 'from the word go' that the husband was involved in criminal activity that is beyond doubt since, the spouses having married in 1998, the husband was convicted of supplying drugs in July 1999 and received a sentence of 15 months from which he was released months before the house was bought. He was then remanded in custody in July 2001 prior to receiving a sentence of six years imprisonment for further supply of drugs. As to the wife's knowledge I deal with that in detail later but I find that she has not told the truth about her own funds (in particular as to how a car was bought for £8.5k) and, applying the logic of R v Lucas [1981] QB 720, I find that she has lied because she knows that a lawful source of the money cannot be advanced.
iv) The contentions of the wife, husband and the husband's brother that there was an express agreement in 2002 that the wife would be entitled to all or part of the beneficial interest in the property, with or without the children, are false. There was no such agreement.
v) The assumption in the 2002 confiscation proceedings that the husband had a 50% interest in the property only (with the wife having the other half) was not made by the CPS (as it was not the enforcement agency then, the HMRC was) and was made without declaration or enquiry. That assumption is not legally binding (I will cite from Re Norris [2001] UKHL 34; [2001] 1 WLR 1388 below) and it is plain that the property was not treated by the husband and wife as being jointly owned thereafter.
vi) The mortgage payments were from money tainted by the husband's criminal activities at least until the husband was again imprisoned in 2012 (therefore CPS v Richards again becomes of significance). The wife accepts that she did not make any mortgage payments until that time (i.e. 2012).
vii) Although the wife contends that she made some mortgage payments after 2012 her evidence (and that of the husband's brother) was entirely unreliable to the extent that I do not accept it and, further, there are three other factors that militate against any such payments grounding a finding that a constructive or resulting trust arose then.
3. the husband and wife must not:-
(1) remove from England and Wales any of his assets which are in England and Wales; or
(2) in any way dispose of, deal with or diminish the value of any of his assets whether they are in or outside England and Wales.
4. Paragraph three applies to all the defendant's assets whether or not the assets are described in this order or are transferred to the defendant after the order is made, are in his sole name and whether they are solely or jointly owned. For the purpose of this order the defendant's assets include any asset which he has the power, directly or indirectly, to dispose of or deal with as if it were his own…
5. This prohibition includes the following assets in particular:- i) the property known as [the former matrimonial home]…
i) On 16th July 1999 he was convicted of possessing heroin with intent to supply and was imprisoned for 15 months. This involved supplying heroin to a prisoner. I do not have the precise date upon which the husband was released from the sentence but it must have been in the year 2000, just before the former matrimonial home was bought.
ii) On 11th October 2002 he was convicted of conspiracy to import drugs for which he received 6 years imprisonment and a drug trafficking confiscation order of £24,200 was made; he was remanded in custody in relation to that offence from the 8th July 2001 and was released in about July 2004. Therefore, for that period he had no income to provide for the former matrimonial home and the wife was not working.
iii) The offence for which he is currently imprisoned (conspiracy to supply controlled drugs – E111). He was not remanded in custody, as I understand it, in relation to that offending prior to his imprisonment; thus he was on bail until 26th April 2012. That offending took place in 2009, some five years after he was released.
2004 /5 | -5171 |
2005/6 | -1880 |
2006/7 | 106 |
2007/8 | 1522 |
2008/9 | -546 |
2009/10 | 18,818 |
i) Either the document was signed by the property owner, the husband, and represents him confirming his own sole ownership of the property, or;
ii) It was signed by the wife (which I think is much more probable) and it represents her stating that she had no interest in the property.
- The house was purchased in 2000. It was purchased for the sole purpose of living in and raising a family. The house was under my sole name purely because the broker at the time told me that these were the terms from the mortgage company. Although my name is only on the property, my wife had an equal share. A deposit of around £9,000 was paid and the majority of the money was part of the Dowry and money saved from working for my father in his business.
- The conviction in 1999 for 15 months was for supplying a small amount of drugs to an inmate on a visit in prison. There was no financial gain. In 2001 I started a 6 year sentence. There was a confiscation order for the sum of £24,000 this was made up of £5,000 in cash already in the hands of the police and £19,000 was from the equity in the former matrimonial home . The total equity was £38k at the time, the CPS accepted that 50% belonged to my wife. Since then the total ownership and maintenance of the upkeep have been her sole responsibility. Between 2001-2004 whilst I was in prison, my wife and my family paid the mortgage payments. After my daughter was born in 2002 I told my wife that the family home belonged to her and the children, because, as a Muslim, it is the father's responsibility to ensure the security and welfare of the children of the family and I thought that is the least I could do after letting my family down and burdening my wife with the mortgage payments and raising the children on her own.
- After my release in mid 2004 I did contribute towards my children and general expense towards the house until 2006 when I went abroad for two years. At this point my wife was paying the mortgage and had help from DWP towards the payments.
- In 2012 I was sentenced to 11 years in prison…Since 2012 my ex wife has been paying the mortgage. The fact is that since the purchase of the family home in 2000 up until 2015, I have lived [there] infrequently out of the 15 years. In my absence all mortgage payments were met by my wife all of the time except on a few occasions help was provided from benefits and family members'.
- Since the purchase of the property, the payments were made monthly as agreed. The mortgage is a repayment mortgage. Never have any extra payments been made towards the mortgage, only monthly minimum required was met. Since the purchase no money has been spent on refurbishments or any work on the building itself. The house has been maintained by my ex wife the best she could regarding the circumstances. All various repairs to fixtures and fittings were done by her. Any value added on to the property was due to the economy. The last valuation report stated that the property is dilapidated and in need to serious work relating to damp issues in the kitchen and bathroom, which are in a very poor state and need refurbishing.
- …[[A19]Second bite at the cherry, the CPS have already taken he equity from the house once in 2002 of £19,000. Therefore I believe they should only be entitled to make an order for the difference of the current equity of £84,000 minus the £19,000 already previously taken. Therefore at the highest amount of 50% of the £65,000 should be taken (£32,500). This is based on current case law of double jeopardy rules in recent cases. Although I am firmly opposed to them taking any equity, as the property does not belong to me. This is the worst case scenario.
i) It appears that Wife relies on the following as the foundation of her proprietary claim:
a) An express agreement at the time of purchase between the husband and wife that they would hold the property in equal shares;
b) An express agreement in 2002 that Wife would be the sole beneficial owner of the property, such agreement being witnessed by Husband's brother;
c) Payment of the mortgage payments from 2001 – 2004, and from 2012 onwards.
ii) The wife is put to strict proof of her claim.
iii) a) and b) will be dealt with by evidence and cross examination. Wife's assertions are not borne out by the parties' subsequent conduct, or by the Husband's statement in the confiscation proceedings that they held the property in equal shares. In particular, in order to establish a share in the property the wife (and presumably husband) asserts that a document signed by each of them in 2009 in which they both confirmed that Wife had no legal or beneficial interest in the property was fraudulent. Tinsley v Milligan 1993 UKHL 3 prevents any party recovering a share in a property if, in order to do so, they must rely on their own illegality. Even if Wife's assertions about express intention in 2000 and 2002 were true (which is challenged) they would be superseded by an express and documented position in 2009 whereby Husband is the sole legal and beneficial owner. Wife (and presumably Husband) must rely on the fraud perpetrated in that document to establish her share and therefore her claim must fail.
iv) In respect of the mortgage payments, the wife is put to strict proof of such payments. The earlier payments (if made) similarly fall foul of the illegality problem above, and the later payments (2012 onwards) post-date the restraint and confiscation orders and cannot be said therefore to give rise in themselves to a share in the husband's tainted asset. Wife had the benefit of occupation of the property and any payments to the mortgage represent a rent for that corresponding benefit. Both parties were served with the restraint order and knew that it was not open to them, after 6-8-10, to dispose on any asset held by the husband. Thus their actions and financial dealings after that date cannot have been in contemplation of acquiring a share of the restrained house.
v) Thus the Crown Prosecution Service asserts that the sole beneficial owner is Husband, in line with the legal title for the property and the declaration to that effect signed by both parties in 2009.
vi) As to documents and statements in support, the Crown Prosecution Service relies upon the following:
a) HMRC records in respect of Husband and Wife
b) Mortgage application documents in respect of a loan with Prestige (now Melbourne Mortgages)
c) Statement of DC Ian Blunden dated 20-7-12
d) Husband's statement in response
e) Bank/mortgage statements of husband and wife
vii) All documents save the bank statements are served herewith. The content of the bank/mortgage statements is known to the parties and they will be included in the bundle rather than served herewith to avoid voluminous duplication.
i) As to the suggestion that she made savings out of income, she had no income between 1999 and 2010 save for £1637 in 06/07 and £2055 in 09/10. Given the demands on the household income and the absence of evidence of any savings I do not accept that she would have been in a position to save all of her earned income to apply towards a car in 2010. I find that the £3k came from the husband and that the wife has lied about its source.
ii) As to the money she was asked where the money had come from and could not give any sensible reply. She said that she had 'lent' money to the husband 'in dribs and drabs' and that the £5.5k represented repayment of that loan. She said that she did not keep a record of the loans that she made but did make a mental note. I do not accept what she said. It was patently untrue that this wife, in her circumstances, should have lent her husband, in his circumstances, £5.5k. I find that she had not done so. This was a further amount of cash that the husband managed to find at a time when the two underlying offences behind the conspiracy charge had occurred. It is highly likely that any money that he did have at the time was tainted because there is no explanation as to how he might have had sums of money of this magnitude.
Submission from the wife's solicitors - Shortly before the hearing started a skeleton argument was emailed to me by a solicitor, Lorna McCammon of DPP Law in Liverpool, who has assisted the wife on a 'pro bono' basis. I pay tribute to Ms McCammon for assisting the wife on that basis. I respectfully agree with her when she said, amongst other things: 'The fact that beneficial interests are being considered as part of confiscation proceedings does not result in ordinary principles of property law being disapplied. On the contrary, it has been held that determination of a third party's interest in assets deemed available under POCA will be determined, whether by the Crown Court or High Court, using the ordinary principles of contract, property, or trust law (see e.g. Larkfield v RCPO [2010] EWCA Civ 521 and Revenue & Customs Prosecutions Office v Johnson and Backhouse [2011] EWHC 1950)'.
i) I do not accept that the wife made them. That kills off the point anyway.
ii) Any payments were made after the restraint order and I do not see how there could be said to be a common intention between the spouses that a share would arise in favour of the wife where there was a prohibition against dealing with assets including the home.
iii) The payments arose after there had been the clear assertion by the husband that he was the sole owner of the property. That again is relevant as to whether there was a common intention that they should share the beneficial interests.
iv) If she did make any payments towards the mortgage they were so small as to be of no consequence ('de minimis') and certainly far less than any occupational rent might be.
.
HHJ Stephen Wildblood QC
10th November 2015