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 High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> S v S [2008] EWHC 519 (Fam) (19 March 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2008/519.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 519 (Fam), [2008] 2 FLR 113 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
This judgment is being handed down in private on 19/03/08 It consists of 12 pages and has been signed and dated by the judge. The judge hereby gives leave for it to be reported.
The judgment is being distributed on the strict understanding that in any report no person other than the advocates or the solicitors instructing them (and other persons identified by name in the judgment itself) may be identified by name or location and that in particular the anonymity of the children and the adult members of their family must be strictly preserved.
FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
THE PRESIDENT OF THE FAMILY DIVISION
____________________
S |
Applicant |
|
- and - |
||
S |
Respondent |
____________________
Jane Rayson (instructed by Symons & Gay) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 11/10/2007
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir Mark Potter, P :
Y/E 5 April 05: £178,200 (net: £113,912) 5 April 06: £93,300 net: £59, 781) 5 April 07: £242,300 (net: £145, 380)
"It is common ground … that this is not a clean break case and I have come to the conclusion that it would be risky and unfair to both parties to make findings as to their long-term future incomes… I have come to the conclusion that [the wife] is unlikely to earn more than £15,000 p.a. gross (say £12,000 p.a. net) in the foreseeable future, say during the next two or three years, but she may do so; and that the husband will probably leave the City within two or three years, but that he may not do so. To attempt to see further than this into the future and make a term periodical payments order, I think would or might result in unfairness to one or both of them, if my findings turned out to be wrong. I consider that it would be fairer to both parties to make a joint lives order on the basis of their earnings for the next two or three years, and leave it to them to come back to court if and when their respective circumstances change. I think the expense and nuisance of having to come back to court is potentially less damaging than the risk of making an irreversible order that turns out to be based on incorrect figures."
At paragraph 10 of his judgment he added:
"The husband acknowledges that in order to live in the country he will have to re-train. I should have thought (although this is, of course, entirely a matter for him) that his plan would be to stay in the city for two or three years and accumulate enough money to live on in reasonable comfort while he re-trains. I therefore think it reasonable that he should stay in the city for the next two or three years, it would be short-sighted to leave too soon and that, should he leave too soon this should not, without the fullest enquiry, be allowed to affect the wife financially."
"[8} The 2008 bonus may not be as much as that for 2007, which was £145,380 net but, doing the best I can, I think that he must have a reasonable chance of getting at least as much as his lowest bonus for the last three years i.e. the 2005 bonus, which was £114,000 net which, giving him the benefit of the doubt, I will round down to £100,000 net."
"In any event, the wife does not want a 9-5 job, because this would not give her enough time with her horses. I am not qualified to say whether or not it is because she has no children that she is so devoted to her horses, but it is clear that she is devoted to them. She said: "Horses are my family. I see them everyday. When the older ones see me they whinny at me. You form a very close bond with horses". The husband very fairly said: "I agree that her major activity outside work is her horses".
The judge continued:
"[13] I do not think that this [is] one of those cases where the wife has to go out to work all the hours she can, or re-train for a job which she does not particularly enjoy, simply to lessen the burden on the husband. I think that for the next two or three years at least, and I can not look further ahead than that, she is entitled to share in the husband's success, and live as nearly as possible in the way in which she lived during the marriage, see [16] below. If at the end of two or three years, the husband has been made redundant, or has given up working in the City because he cannot stand the pressure any more, then both of them will have to expect to reduced standard of living even if her interior design work is successful.
[14] The quality of life for both parties is an important consideration. While the husband works long, demanding – but rewarding – hours in the City, he is entitled to enjoy what he earns and live in a £900,000 flat in London but then, in my judgment, the wife is equally entitled to live in the house of her choice, with immediate access to her horses – which requires a few acres of land – rather than having them at livery. I think that a reasonable sum for her to spend on house and land would be £1 million. This would leave her with £400,000.00 to invest i.e. a Duxbury income of say £20,000.00 p.a.
[16] The wife's budget is just under £80,000 p.a. including her horses, and the husband's just over £80,000 excluding his horse. I do not consider either budget to be unreasonable… I do not think that this is a needs case. I take into account that the parties' high standard of living during the marriage – the husband said that they spent about £140,000 to £150,000 p.a. – and I do not think that £50,000.00 p.a. is too much for the wife. This would give her a net income of £82,000 p.a., leaving the husband with £110,000 year net, plus his investment income from that part of his share of the £1,400.000 which he does not spend on a house or flat in London. If, as he would like to do, he spends £900,000 on accommodation, he is left with a Duxbury of £500,000, say £25,000 a year, giving him a net income of £185,000 p.a. including bonus or, after paying his wife £50,000, £135.000 p.a. Even if I am over optimistic in finding that he is likely to get £100,000 bonus for 2008, he will certainly get a bonus, and if I allow him, say £75,000 bonus (half his 2007 bonus), he will never the less earn £160,000 p.a. so that, after paying the wife £50,000 he will be left with £110.000 p.a. I am satisfied that in any event his net income will be more than the wife's for the next two or three years, and I think that periodical payments of £50,000 are entirely reasonable."
"[2] My intention was that [the wife] should have £50,000.00p.a., provided that her total net income, which I put at £82,000.00 p.a. was not more than [the husband's] I did, in fact, round £114,000.00 down to £100,000.00, and considered an even lower figure i.e. £75,000.00 because of the amount of speculation involved. [This was a reference to the italicised passage in his judgment to which I have referred]. If I take [the husband's] bonus as £60,000.00 this gives him an annual net income of £60,000.00 salary plus £60,000.00 bonus plus £25,000.00 Duxbury income – total - £145,000.00 so that, if he pays [the wife] £50,000.00 p.a. she gets £82,000.00 p.a. and he is left with £95,000.00 p.a., which is not as much as I thought he would have, but nevertheless 54% as compared with her 46% which, particularly bearing in mind this order is likely to be reviewed in the next few years is, I think, entirely fair."
"… a powerful encouragement towards securing the court's objective by way of lump sum and capital adjustment rather than by continuing periodical payments. This is good practical sense. Periodical payments are a continuing source of stress for both parties. They are also insecure. With the best will in the world, the paying party may fall upon hard times and not be able to keep them up [130] … it is also the logical consequence of the retreat from the principle of the lifelong obligation. Independent finances and self-sufficiency are the aims." [133].