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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> O'Farrell v O'Farrell [2012] EWHC 123 (QB) (01 February 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2012/123.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 123 (QB) |
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FJ95/2010 |
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
MRS SUZANNE O'FARRELL |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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MR ROBERT SEAN O'FARRELL |
Defendant |
____________________
Christian Kenny (instructed by Stockdale & Reid) for the Claimant
Hearing date: 19 January 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Tugendhat :
"Freezing Injunction
4. Until the return date or further order of the court the Respondent must not remove from England and Wales or in any way dispose of deal with or diminish the value of any of his assets which are in England and Wales up to the value of €93,198 and £836.
5. Paragraph 4 applies to all the Respondent's assets whether or not they are in his own name…..
Exceptions to this order
10(1) This order does not prohibit the respondent from spending £500 per week towards his ordinary living expenses or also a reasonable sum on legal advice and representation. But before spending any money the Respondent must tell the Applicant's legal representatives where the money is to come from…".
THE ISSUES
i) Whether the Orders of the High Court are valid and enforceable.ii) Whether a Third Party Debt Order can be made against the Army, and if so whether it can be made in respect of monies referred to in the Armed Forces Act s.356.
iii) Whether the claims under the German judgments are barred by the Limitation Act 1980.
iv) Whether the orders of the German court as registered in the High Court can be enforced in respect of money that became due more than twelve months before the proceedings began without leave being obtained under the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 s.32.
v) Whether the Freezing Injunction should be discharged or varied on a number of different grounds.
THE JURISDICTION OF THE HIGH COURT
"Enforcement
Article 38
1. A judgment given in a Member State and enforceable in that state shall be enforced in another Member State when, on the application of any interested party, it has been declared enforceable there.
2. However, in the United Kingdom such a judgment shall be enforced in England and Wales …. when on the application of any interested parties it has been registered for enforcement in that part of the United Kingdom…..
Article 39
1. The application shall be submitted to the court or competent authority listed in Annex 2…
ANNEX 2
…
3. In the United Kingdom:
(a) In England and Wales, the High Court of Justice or in the case of a maintenance judgment the Magistrates' Court on transmission of the Secretary of State; …".
THIRD PARTY DEBT ORDERS
"Money due from the crown
66.7 (1) none of the following orders – (a) a third party debt order under Part 72 … may be made or have effect in respect of money due from the Crown…
(3) An application for an order under section 27 of the Act –
(a) restraining a person from receiving money payable to him by the Crown; and
(b) directing payment of the money to the applicant or another person,
may be made under Part 23".
"27 Attachment of moneys payable by the Crown.
(1) Where any money is payable by the Crown to some person who, under any order of any court, is liable to pay any money to any other person, and that other person would, if the money so payable by the Crown were money payable by a subject, be entitled under rules of court to obtain an order for the attachment thereof as a debt due or accruing due, … the High Court may, subject to the provisions of this Act and in accordance with rules of court, make an order restraining the first-mentioned person from receiving that money and directing payment thereof to that other person, …
Provided that no such order shall be made in respect of:—
(a) pay wages or salary payable to any officer of the Crown as such;
(b) any money which is subject to the provisions of any enactment prohibiting or restricting assignment or charging or taking in execution; …"
"CPR Rule 66.7 provides that a third party debt order under part 72 cannot 'be made or have effect in respect of any money due from the crown'. The Service and Personnel Veterans Agency (SPVA) is an executive agency and part of the Ministry of Defence, a central government department, and part of the Crown for the purposes of the Crown Proceedings Act 1947. I trust you will bring this letter to the Courts attention….".
"s.356 Avoidance of assignment of or charge on pay and pensions etc.,
… (3) No order may be made by a court the effect of which would be – (a) to prevent any person from receiving any relevant pay or pension; and (b) to direct payment of it to another person".
"(4) Nothing in the provisions mentioned in sub-section (5) applies to a court exercising its powers under Section 22A or 23 of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 (financial provision in connection with divorce proceedings, etc) in respect of any benefits under a pension arrangement (within the meaning of Section 25 (1) of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973) which a party to the marriage has or is likely to have…
(5) The provisions referred to in sub-sections (4) … are – (a) Section 356 of the Armed Forces Act 2006 …".
"(4) A maintenance order registered under this section shall, for the purposed of its enforcement, be of the same force and effect, the registering court shall have in relation to its enforcement the same powers, and proceedings for or with respect to its enforcement may be taken, as if the order had been originally made by the registering court".
THE LIMITATION ACT 1980
"The time limit for actions to enforce judgments
24(1) an action shall not be brought upon any judgment after the expiration of six years from the date on which the judgment became enforceable…".
THE MATRIMONIAL CAUSES ACT 1973 s.32
"32 Payment of certain arrears unenforceable without the leave of the court.
(1) A person shall not be entitled to enforce through the High Court or any county court the payment of any arrears due under an order for maintenance pending suit, an interim order for maintenance or any financial provision order without the leave of that court if those arrears became due more than twelve months before proceedings to enforce the payment of them are begun.
(2) The court hearing an application for the grant of leave under this section may refuse leave, or may grant leave subject to such restrictions and conditions (including conditions as to the allowing of time for payment or the making of payment by instalments) as that court thinks proper, or may remit the payment of the arrears or of any part thereof.
(3) An application for the grant of leave under this section shall be made in such manner as may be prescribed by rules of court".
"Financial provision and Property Adjustment Orders.
21(1) The financial provision orders for the purposes of this Act are the orders for periodical or lump sum provision available (subject to the provisions of this Act) under Section 23 below for the purpose of adjusting the position of parties to a marriage and any children of the family with proceedings for divorce…
23 Financial provision orders in connection with divorce proceedings etc.,
(1) On granting a decree of divorce … the court may make any one or more of the following orders, that is to say – (a) an order that either parties to the marriage shall make to the other as periodical payments for such term, as may be specified in the order; (c) an order that either party to the marriage shall pay to the other such lump sum or sums as may be so specified; …".
"Under no circumstances may the foreign judgment be reviewed as to its substance".
THE FREEZING INJUNCTION
a) There was no basis for making it without notice
b) There has been material non disclosure
c) There was never any evidence of intended or actual dissipation
d) The order was too widely drawn
e) Mrs O'Farrell ought to have applied to have is discharged or varied herself when she discovered it was not necessary or in terms that were too wide (because the sums specified was too high).
Hearing without notice
"(1) The court may grant an interim remedy on an application made without notice if it appears to the court that there are good reasons for not giving notice.
(2) An application for an interim remedy must be supported by evidence, unless the court orders otherwise.
(3) If the applicant makes an application without giving notice, the evidence in support of the application must state the reasons why notice has not been given."
"(3) Except in cases where secrecy is essential, the applicant should take steps to notify the respondent informally of the application".
"10 The second principle is this. As stated in the White Book at paragraph 25.3.5, as a matter of principle no order should be made in civil proceedings without notice to the other side unless there is very good reason for departing from the general rule that notice must be given, for example, where to give notice might defeat the ends of justice. To grant an interim remedy in the form of an injunction without notice "is to grant an exceptional remedy": the authority for that is Moat Housing Group-South Limited v Harris [2006] QB 606.
11. I myself recently in the decision of FZ v SZ and others [2011 ] 1 FLR 64 had cause to comment on the practice in the Family Division of moving the court ex parte for relief and I said this at paragraph 32:
'It is worth my expressing the view that in the short term that I have been sitting as a full time judge I have been shocked at the volume of spurious ex parte applications that are made in the urgent applications list. It is an absolutely elementary tenet of English law that save in an emergency a court should hear both sides before giving a ruling. The only recognised exception to this rule (apart from those instances where an ex parte procedure is specifically authorised by statute) is where there is a well founded belief that the giving of notice would lead to irretrievable prejudice being caused to the applicant for relief. I have the distinct impression that a sort of lazy, laissez-faire practice or syndrome has grown up which says that provided the return date is soon, and provided that the court is satisfied that no material prejudice will be caused to the respondent, then there is no harm in making the order ex parte. In my opinion this is absolutely wrong and turns principle on its head'".
"It needs to be clearly understood, however, that to grant an injunction without notice is to grant an exceptional remedy. There is a useful discussion of the topic in Zuckerman's Civil Procedure (2003), paras 9.133-9.136, … He says, correctly, at para 9.133, that:
'Notice of an application for an interim injunction must be given to the respondent as a matter of elementary justice.'
He goes on to cite a passage in the judgment of the High Court of Australia in Thomas A Edison Ltd v Bock (1912) 15 CLR 679, 681 (a case which is also cited in the section on ex parte injunctions in Spry, The Principles of Equitable Remedies (5th Edn, 1997) at p 511):
'There is a primary precept governing the administration of justice, that no man is to be condemned unheard; and therefore, as a general rule, no order should be made to the prejudice of a party unless he has the opportunity of being heard on defence'".
"The Applicant believes that this application should be heard in private and without notice because if the Respondent was told that the application was to be made he would do his best to dispose of, conceal or dissipate his assets before being formally notified of or served with an injunction".
Non-disclosure
Risk of dissipation
Width of the order
"What is to be emphasised is that in this country, unlike some other countries on the continent, we do not have a system of general saisie conservatoire whereby assets are automatically frozen pending the determination of a divorce claim".
"The freezing injunction is a remedy which exists for the purpose of restraining a judgment debtor or potential judgment debtor, from committing the abuse of dissipating or hiding assets that the judgment debtor might lawfully attach for the purposes of satisfying a judgment given, or likely to be given in his favour… it is an interim remedy granted to protect the efficacy of court proceedings (domestic or foreign), in particular, to prevent a defendant dissipating his assets with the intention or effect of frustrating enforcement of a prospective judgment. It is not granted to give a claimant advance security for his claim, though it may have that effect…". (emphasis added)
"In a given case, a freezing injunction preventing the defendant from dealing with assets up to a certain amount could have very serious consequences for him unless he had access to other funds. For example it could have the effect of preventing him from running his business (and perhaps even force it collapse), from paying his living and other routine expenses, from meeting unexpected bills (e.g. medical costs), and through paying legal expenses incurred by the action. The purpose of a freezing injunction is to prevent the defendant evading the due process of execution by hiding assets or otherwise making himself judgment proof. Where the court is satisfied that the defendant requires money for a purpose which does not conflict with the underlying purpose, the court should qualify the injunction (by insertion of an appropriate order in the original order or on the defendant's subsequent application) to allow the defendant to deal with assets subject to restraint which are not subject to a proprietary claim for such purpose. Clearly, where in a given case, the respondent uses his assets for these purposes as permitted by the terms of the order, the effect may be to reduce the value of the assets remaining to a level below that required to meet the claimant's claim" (emphasis added).
"Exceptions to this order
11.
(1) This order does not prohibit the Respondent from spending £…… per week towards his ordinary living expenses and also £'s [or a reasonable sum] on legal advice and representation. [But before spending any money the Respondent must tell the Applicant's legal representatives where the money is to come from].
[(2) This order does not prohibit the Respondent from dealing with or disposing any of his assets in the ordinary and proper course of business"].
Variation at the request of Mrs O'Farrell
"It is the duty of the party having benefited the Freezing Injunction to ensure that it does no more than is necessary to protect the claim which that party has. If it later appears that the claim is in a lower amount than is covered by the Freezing Injunction, the claimant should agree to reduce the amount: Willetts v Alvey [2010] EWHC155(CH) (Norris J)".
CONCLUSION