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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 >> H (Deceased), Re [2020] EWHC 1134 (Fam) (07 May 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2020/1134.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 1134 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
In Re: H (Deceased)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
SH |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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NH KH |
1st Defendant 2nd Defendant |
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NH and KH – in person
Hearing dates: 24 April, 7 May 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Cohen :
Introduction
Chronology
The size of the estate
i) The deceased's interest in the family home which was jointly owned by him and his wife, C's mother. This has been valued in the past at in excess of £900,000 but two recent valuations put it at around £700,000. I am invited on behalf of C to assume a valuation at the higher figure but I can see no basis for so doing.ii) There is approximately £127,000 in accounts which were held jointly by the deceased and C's mother.
iii) After payment of expenses and the executor's costs of these proceedings and of dealing with the estate there is approximately £142,000 standing in the executor's account in the deceased name.
The position of the parties
C says that she has a series of needs to be met which I shall deal with in the order of priority which she adopts. First, she says that she needs a home. She is living in a two-bedroom rented flat, the rent of which is currently £590 per month. It is on an estate which is being emptied by the landlord and C says that she faces persistent low-level harassment from the landlord and his agents. The accommodation is plainly less than ideal, comprising as it does a small bedroom which the children share by use of bunkbeds and her own bedroom and a living room. She says that she would like to buy a two-bedroom flat. In her statement she put the cost of this at £375,000 - 500,000 but curiously only produced property particulars for properties in the bracket £450,000 - 525,000. When I said that I required particulars in the lower part of the bracket I was provided with a number of property particulars which included two at £380,000, one with two bedrooms and one with three bedrooms, which C readily accepted would meet her needs.
C's mother
C's brother
i) There are perfectly satisfactory properties in the lower part of the bracket that C put forward; andii) The extent of the financial support that C received from her parents after 1990 was much less than her statements implied and covered only the period 2007-2011.
C's health
The law
i) Did the will make reasonable financial provision for C;ii) If not, what reasonable financial provision ought now to be made for C?
That those two tests are the correct approach was re-emphasised in Ilott v The Blue Cross and others [2018] AC 545.
a) The financial resources and financial needs which the claimant has or is likely to have in the foreseeable future;
b) … (immaterial);
c) The financial resources and financial needs which any beneficiary of the estate of the deceased has or is likely to have in the foreseeable future;
d) Any obligations and responsibilities which the deceased had towards any applicant for an order under section 2 or towards any beneficiary of the estate of the deceased;
e) The size and nature of the estate of the deceased;
f) Any physical or mental disability of any applicant for order under the said section 2 or any beneficiary of the estate of the deceased;
g) Any other matter, including conduct of the applicant or any other person, which in the circumstances of the case the court may consider relevant.
"There can be nothing wrong, in such cases, with a judge setting out the facts as he finds them and then addressing both questions arising under the act without repeating them".
"Such financial provision as it would be reasonable in all the circumstances of the case for the applicant to receive for his maintenance".
"… the word "maintenance" connotes only payments which, directly or indirectly, enable the applicant in the future to discharge the cost of his daily living at whatever standard of living is appropriate to him. The provision that is to be made is to meet recurring expenses, being expenses of living of an income nature. This does not mean that the provision need be by way of income payments. The provision can be by way of lump sum, for example, to buy a house in which the applicant can be housed, thereby relieving him pro tanto of income expenditure. … "
"19. For all other claimants [other than spouses], need (for maintenance rather than for anything else, and judged not by subsistence levels but by the standard appropriate to the circumstances) is a necessary but not a sufficient condition for an order. Need, plus the relevant relationship to qualify the claimant, is not always enough. In In re Coventry the passage cited above was followed almost immediately by another much-cited observation of Oliver J at page 475:"It cannot be enough to say 'here is a son of the deceased; he is in necessitous circumstances; there is property of the deceased which could be made available to assist him but which is not available if the deceased's dispositions stand; therefore those dispositions do not make reasonable provision for the applicant.' There must, as it seems to me, be established some sort of moral claim by the applicant to be maintained by the deceased or at the expense of his estate beyond the mere fact of a blood relationship, some reason why it can be said that, in the circumstances, it is unreasonable that no or no greater provision was in fact made.
"20. Oliver J's reference to moral claim must be understood … There is no requirement for a moral claim as a sine qua non for all applications under the 1975 Act, and Oliver J did not impose one. He meant no more, but no less, than that in the case of a claimant adult son well capable of living independently, something more than the qualifying relationship is needed to found a claim, and that in the case before him the additional something could only be a moral claim". (Emphasis added).
Costs
i) The calculation of damages is a matter of procedure carried out before costs are considered and has never included an element of costs;ii) To allow it would contrary to legislative policy that the losing party should not be responsible for a success fee – s.58A(6) Courts and Legal Services Act 1980;
iii) It would amount to an increase in damages by way of costs;
iv) It may put a CFA funded litigant in a better position in terms of negotiation due to the risk of a substantial costs burden;
v) It would put a claimant in Inheritance Act proceedings in a better position than, say, a claimant in a personal injuries claim.
26. I must in concluding express a real sense of unease at the remarkable disparity between the costs regimes enforced, on the one hand for Inheritance Act cases (whether in the Chancery or Family Divisions) and, on the other hand, in financial relief proceedings arising from divorce. In the latter, my understanding is that the emphasis is all on the making of open offers, and that there is limited scope for costs shifting, so that the court is enabled to make financial provision which properly takes into account the parties' costs liabilities. In sharp contrast, the modern emphasis in Inheritance Act claims …The judge then went on to observe that the potential for negotiation offers to undermine a judge's attempt to meet needs is a disadvantage to the sole litigation costs regime.
Conclusion
i) The priority must be ensuring that C's mother, the beneficiary of the estate, is able to meet her care home costs for the rest of her life; if her interest in the estate is limited purely to her entitlement to a half share of the joint bank accounts and the family home that security is at risk;ii) C's parents have had no financial responsibility for C since 1999 or 2000 when she left the family home save for the period 2007-2011 when she had been a student and first returned to London. Thereafter she has been financially independent.
iii) C had estranged herself from her parents. She told Dr S that she had not seen her parents in the last 20 years and told me that she had not done so in the last 10 years. She had accepted her parents' phone calls but had never initiated them. This was a source of great grief to them. I accept of course that the medical condition was a significant factor in her behaviour, but her estrangement is not a matter that I can ignore.
iv) C's priority need is to get well again. While she puts her housing needs as her first priority, I have concluded that it is her other needs that are the more important. Above all she needs to recover her health and to be properly financially supported over the 3 years that that is likely to take. In my judgment it is that target which the award should be aimed at.
v) It is better that I award a sum that I can be satisfied will be sufficient to meet the object of the award rather than run the risk of falling short.
i) The will did not make reasonable financial provision for C; andii) I should make an award that would constitute reasonable financial provision.
iii) That award should be calculated by reference to what C requires to meet her current financial needs. It is not a case where C should, in effect, be set up with a home or income fund for life.
i) £17,000 for the ongoing costs of therapy and psychiatric oversight, taking a mid-point figure;ii) C has an income shortfall of £1,338 per month if no contribution is received from her partner. That shortfall will reduce a little by the provision that I am making for the costs of therapy which will henceforth be otherwise funded. Her partner currently makes what I accept is an unsustainable contribution of £1,029 per month. I am sure that he is capable of making some contribution towards the household but I shall deal with it by saying that the contribution that he will make henceforth is properly set against and used to meet the additional expenses which C is unable currently to make and which might be described as non-essential but reasonably wished for, namely such matters as holidays, insurances, pension provision etc. Thus it is that these matters will be able to be afforded. 3 years' worth of the full shortfall amounts to £48,168;
iii) By reason of the award C is likely to lose the benefit of her universal credit at the current rate of £884 per month. On the basis that I am making provision for 3 years during which time it is hoped that C will complete her recovery and be able to return to work, the loss of 36 months of universal credit means that there is an additional income need of £32,000;
iv) I allow the additional sum of £15,000 for replacement of the white goods and upgrade of the car as C requests;
v) I recognise that C has housing difficulties and that she may need to move to somewhere with a more sympathetic landlord and/or space. That is likely to require a rental deposit and for that I allow the additional sum of £10,000;
vi) The sum required to meet what I regard as a reasonable CFA mark-up of £16,750.
The total of all these comes to £138,918.