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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 >> T v M [2013] EWHC 1585 (Fam) (23 April 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2013/1585.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 1585 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
B e f o r e :
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T |
Appellant |
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M |
Respondent |
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MS. NICHOLA GRAY (instructed by Sebastians) appeared on behalf of the Respondent Wife.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE COLERIDGE:
"(1) Except in proceedings to which Parts 12 to 14 apply, the court may strike out a statement of case if it appears to the court –"(a) that the statement of case discloses no reasonable grounds for bringing or defending the application;"(b) that the statement of case is an abuse of the court's process or is otherwise likely to obstruct the just disposal of the proceedings …"
I do not think anybody is arguing the case on the basis of ground (b) and I do not detect that that was the basis upon which the district judge approached his task.
"… it is absolutely essential in ancillary relief cases that the court should be able to put a stop to applications seeking to reopen matters already decided by a court, whether by consent or after a contested hearing, if the court is satisfied that no useful purpose will be served by reopening the matter."
That summary of the court's approach, I think, is useful because it demonstrates a rather more broadly based approach to applications of this kind in this division than might perhaps be applied in other divisions of the court in relation to different types of litigation. Ancillary relief litigation, or financial remedy litigation as it is now called, is always concerned with trying to establish in a snapshot the financial resources of the parties at a particular and given time in circumstances where in the real world, of course, their finances alter and the figures dance around almost from day to day.
"The nub of Mr. Molyneux's case, and I think this is the way he puts it, is that the wife's income is very much greater than it was at the time of my judgment, so much greater than the earning capacity that I assessed, that that would be likely to amount to a change of circumstances under s.31, which would provide a strong prima facie case in favour of a variation. That has to be judged, I note, in the context of the fact that the husband's income, since my assessment seems to have risen substantially. His basic salary is something £1,000 a month more than I assessed, although in Euro terms it is not very different. The bonus that I talked about in assessing his income, and I remind myself of that, it is at page 11 of my judgment, I said this:
"'The husband has told me he is well behind his personal targets thus far. He feels he will receive a lower bonus in March 2011 than he has done in previous years. The last three years have produced bonuses of approximately €126,000 per annum gross, or approximately €81,000 per annum net, or approximately £5,678 net.'"That would work out at £68,000 per annum. I am told that his bonus in March 2011 was in fact £143,000 per annum net, so that he received more than twice as much bonus as he was predicting that he would have received - more than £70,000 more than the figures I was working on. As far as the income arising from share sales (share options etc) there was a table at page 13 of my judgment which prepared by the husband's counsel Miss Cowton and adopted by me, which showed that there was a range of possibilities for the husband's income each year from sales of shares which depended on the XY Limited share price. I am told today that the XY share price is above $40 at the moment, and on that basis we are towards the top end of Miss Cowton's scale with a net income from that source in 2011 of over £250,000. So it looks to me as though the husband must be earning (from all three sources) at the moment at something like the rate of £600,000 per annum net, and it is against that sort of figure that the spousal maintenance figure of £147,000 was set."
That was the way in which the district judge dealt with the husband's income position as he found it in September, having heard about it in the previous year. So he goes on at para.14, and again this is a core paragraph:
"So against those figures for the husband's income, and any chances since my initial assessment, that any court dealing with a variation application would have to assess the extent to which the husband had persuaded the court that the wife's income had changed since the judgment. As I have said, the wife's income position and its entanglement with EC Limited was very much something that was litigated in detail in the course of the hearing in September last year, and I made certain findings. I have looked carefully at all of the additional points that the husband seeks to put before me now to persuade me that something very significant has changed. I have considered all of the information that my attention has been drawn to in the affidavit from Mr. P, and all of the comments and extracts from the statements and affidavits that the wife made, and the suggestion that she has not been frank in her assessment, I would say two things to that. First, whilst I did assess her as having an earning capacity of £13,000 per annum net, and I felt that that would probably come from D Limited it was, of course, no part of my judgment to say that she must work for D Limited; it was always open to her to work for EC Limited or whoever else she liked. So the mere fact that she did take up some work with EC Limited does not, it seems to me, change anything, the important thing is the quantum. On what I have read there really is no available evidence that she is earning anything significantly different from my earning capacity assessment from last year. It seems to me very likely indeed that allowing this application to proceed to a final hearing would produce substantial further costs, but that it is very unlikely that it would result in any finding that the wife's income or earning capacity has changed in the short period since my initial judgment, certainly changed sufficiently to give good grounds for a variation application in all the circumstances and in particular in the circumstances where the husband appears to have done well rather than badly."
It is, as I say, really in the context of those findings and arguments set out in those two paragraphs that the district judge disposed of the application. I think that his judgment in relation to these matters was careful and incapable of serious fault. He unquestionably fully grasped the points which were being advanced to him and fully considered the arguments which were advanced by Mr. Molyneux then and advanced before me today.