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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 >> Maughan v Wilmot [2020] EWHC 885 (Fam) (16 April 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2020/885.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 885 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Viki Natasha Maughan |
Applicant/Wife |
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- and - |
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Richard Michael Edmund Wilmot |
Respondent/Husband |
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Stephen Meachem, (solicitor-advocate of Law Tribe) for the respondent/husband
Vernon Dennis (of Howard Kennedy LLP) for the receiver
Hearing date: 8 April 2020
the hearing was conducted remotely by Zoom
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mostyn:
"If the total value free of charges or other securities (unencumbered value) of the Respondent's assets restrained by the preceding paragraph exceeds £400,000, the Respondent may dispose of or deal with those assets so long as the total unencumbered value of his assets restrained by the preceding paragraph whether in or outside England and Wales, remains above £400,000."
It was obviously implicit in that order that if the husband made a disposition of his assets, he would have to give notice of that fact and explain how his remaining unencumbered assets exceeded £400,000. The figure of £400,000 was later reduced by me to £300,000.
"Just to confirm, we established at court on September 29th that the monies transferred to Curtis Banks are not subject to any freezing order or attachment. Please contact Mr Bowen to confirm."
There is no transcript of what was said to me on 29 September 2015. However, Mr Swift has located his draft of the proposed order for that day. This provides:
"12. The freezing order dated 5 December 2013 (as varied on 12 December 2013 and 15 April 2014) and extended on 19 March 2015 relates to a total unencumbered sum of £300,000 and is not to be reduced whether for legal and /or living costs and paragraph 25 of the said freezing order is discharged."
Mr Swift argues that this must reflect the decision I made on that day, and that must be right. The inaccessible funds left at Aegon would not qualify as "unencumbered". They may not have been subject to formal charges, but they were literally encumbered by their inaccessibility. Therefore, it was not true to say that the monies transferred to Curtis Banks were not subject to the freezing order.
"In particular, I would draw to the Court's attention the following:
19.1 the benefit request form signed by the Respondent on 14 July 2015 (the "Benefit Request Form") (pages 38-43);
19.2 the payment of f71,394.20 to [Isle of Man] account number 12871621 [in the name of the husband] on 30 September 2015 shown on the Curtis Banks Transaction Log (the "September 2015 Drawdown Payment") (page 15);
19.3 the monthly payments [of £3,500] to account number 12871621 from November 2015 to January 2019 shown on the Curtis Banks Transaction Log (the "Monthly Drawdown Payments") (pages 15-18);
19.4 the payment of £40,000.00 to account number 12871621 on 06 August 2016 shown on the Curtis Banks Transaction Log (the 'August 2016 Drawdown Payment") (page 16);
19.5 the payment of £15,300.00 to account number 12871621 on 19 July 2017 shown on the Curtis Banks Transaction Log (the "July 2017 Drawdown Payment") (page 17)."
"Curtis Banks Limited shall not pay any amount of funds received from Scottish Equitable plc to the Respondent or any other party save in accordance with the terms of this order or further order."
i) in favour of the wife £42,098 (inclusive of VAT) in respect of incurred costs and £2,040 in respect of future implementation costs; andii) in favour of the receiver's incurred costs £4,613 (with credit for £1,443 held on client account, giving a net award of £3,170) together with £21,000 for future implementation costs.
i) the husband will pay the wife's costs of £42,098 pursuant to my October 2019 judgment;ii) The husband will pay the wife's costs of £43,529 incurred since my October 2019 judgment;
iii) the husband will pay the receiver's costs of £26,499 which have been incurred (the sum of £3,170 referred to above is subsumed within this figure); and
iv) the sum of £25,620 will be set aside in respect of the future costs of the receiver. If this sum is not fully spent the residue will be returned to the husband.
These sums total £137,746. The receiver's costs referred to above are those of his solicitors as specified in the schedule which has been filed. They do not include the cost of the receiver's own work which he is entitled to charge, and recover, under the terms of the receivership order.
i) I do not accept that Mrs Judd's hourly rate of £340 is excessive. She is a senior solicitor and the work that had to be done was of a complex nature.ii) I do not accept that the work done by Mrs Judd from 17 October 2019 does not justify the cost claimed by her. On the contrary, I am satisfied that the work that she did was necessary and proportionate to the task in hand.
iii) The claim for 3.7 hours at court including drafting orders with counsel is well justified. Drafting orders is almost invariably a collaborative exercise between solicitors and counsel.
iv) I am satisfied that the claim for 236 units in respect of work on documents is well justified given the complex nature of the problem that had arisen.
v) I am satisfied that Mr Swift's fees are reasonable and proportionate. They reflect the complexity of the task in hand.
vi) I am satisfied that it would have been necessary for Mr Swift to have given advice both by telephone and in conference given the complex nature of the problem that had arisen.
vii) I do not accept that it would have been reasonable for Mrs Judd to have hived off part of the work to a more junior member of staff. Mrs Judd has been in control of this case throughout and it would have been a false economy to have tried to get a more junior member of staff familiar with the issues.
viii) In my judgment Mrs Judd has sufficiently detailed the correspondence and telephone calls that she undertook. On the facts of this case it was not necessary for her to break down such correspondence and calls by correspondent.
ix) In my judgment the schedule produced by the receiver provided ample specificity. No complaint was made about it during the hearing.
x) Again, in my judgment the receiver sufficiently detailed the correspondence and telephone calls that he undertook.
Note 1 https://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2019/2765.html [Back]