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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> G v G [2009] EWHC 494 (Fam) (17 March 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2009/494.html Cite as: [2009] 2 FLR 795, [2009] EWHC 494 (Fam), [2009] Fam Law 787 |
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MR JUSTICE SINGER
This judgment is being handed down in private on 17th March 2009. It consists of 103 paragraphs and has been signed by the judge. The judge hereby gives leave for it to be reported in anonymised form only: see [3] below.
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 |
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B e f o r e :
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G |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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G |
Respondent |
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Martin Pointer QC and Katharine Davidson (instructed by Alexiou Fisher Philipps) for the Respondent Husband
Hearing dates: 4, 5, 7, 11 and 12 February 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Singer:
Preamble
Background
The employment history of the parties
Capital position: real property
H | W | |
NW8 former matrimonial home | £520,000 | |
W9 investment property | £134,000 | |
W's Dublin home | £615,000 | |
The Spanish company/flat | £66,750 | £66,750 |
H's NW8 home | £667,000 | |
Netted off adjustments re CGT (paras 39 and 40 above) |
£1,575 | (£1,575) |
Total | £1,389,325 | £680,175 |
Balancing payment to W | (£354,575) | £354,575 |
Leaving each with | £1,034,750 | £1,034,750 |
The EBTs
Pension provision
Costs paid and outstanding
Other assets
Motor vehicles
Other peripheral issues
The house that Mr H bought
W's trust entitlements
W's relationship with L
[9] Nor do I think that the decision of this court in Atkinson v Atkinson calls for revisitation in the light of whatever social changes there may have been over the course of the last 15 years or so. The judgment of Waterhouse J on the point of principle is broadly expressed. His conclusion that cohabitation is not to be equated with marriage remains as sound today as it was then. Equally it seems to me that the direction that the court, in assessing the impact of cohabitation, should have regard to the overall circumstances, including financial consequences, remains the proper course to be followed. Of course, in a case such as this, where the length of cohabitation is now greater than many a marriage that comes before a court for assessment, the range of discretion given to the judge enables him or her to place considerable weight on that circumstance. There is no indication that His Honour Judge Michael Taylor did not regard the continuing cohabitation as other than a central feature of the case.
[10] The statutory distinction between remarriage, which terminates financial obligation (by virtue of s 28 of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973), and cohabitation, which does not, would fall for Parliamentary consideration if the Government's present plans to legislate rights and responsibilities for same-sex partners were extended to cohabitees.
That was a case of over five years of settled and uninterrupted relationship. Making every possible allowance for lack of candour or even downright dishonesty on the part of W, her relationship with L is some way off from that.
The fruits of post-cohabitation endeavour
[83] In my view the position changes when the marital partnership ends. This is because the joint venture and participation of the parties as equal partners in that marital partnership whose contributions to it are to be assessed in a non-discriminatory way ends. After that termination the focus is no longer on the effects of the contributions of the parties as equal partners in assessing the product of their partnership but with the effects of their separate contributions as the source of the husband's income in the future.
[84] In considering the position after the termination of the marital partnership in my view it is the role and contribution of a wife during the marital partnership that forms the basis of the element of the husband's earning capacity and future income (i.e. his enhanced income or earning capacity) that can be said to be a fruit of that partnership. As Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead points out in para [85] in Miller and McFarlane the spadework for rewards received towards the end, and after the end, of the marital partnership has been done during it. The wife's role and contributions have enabled the husband to create a working environment which has produced greater (enhanced) rewards of which she should have a fair share.
[85] However, in my view the balance of his future income and earning capacity is the product of the husband's talents, energy and good fortune, notwithstanding that he has been supported by the wife, and they have been applied, expended and enjoyed during the marital partnership.
[86] I, of course, accept that a wife who continues to act as the primary caretaker of the children of a marriage in a separate household continues to make a contribution to the family (my emphasis), or the marriage, after the end of the marriage (see for example Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead at para [85]). In my view so does the husband who continues to meet their financial needs. But as this is looking at the position after the marriage is over, these contributions, whether described as being to the family or the marriage, are not, in my view, contributions to the marital partnership because that is over.
[87] I do not accept that such contributions by a wife to the family after the end of the marital partnership can generally be said to warrant a conclusion that a proportion of the husband's future income continues to be attributable to the wife's domestic contribution and thus a fruit of the marital partnership.
Re gift to siblings | £27,000 |
Maintenance pending suit adjustment | £70,000 |
Re 2001 EBT | £9,000 |
Re 2003 EBT | £110,500 |
Total | £216,500 |
His illustrative share from real property | £1,034,750 |
Re 2001 EBT | £18,000 |
Loyalty bonus balance | £86,000 |
Total | £1,138,750 |
Maintenance provision
In conclusion