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High Court of Justice in Northern Ireland Chancery Division Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Justice in Northern Ireland Chancery Division Decisions >> Quinn, Re Bankrupt [2003] NICh 2 (31 January 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/nie/cases/NIHC/Ch/2003/2.html Cite as: [2003] NICh 2 |
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CAMPBELL LJ
"(1) Nothing occurring in the initial period of the bankruptcy (that is to say, the period beginning with the day of the presentation of the petition for the bankruptcy order and ending with the vesting of the bankrupt's estate in a trustee) is to be taken as having given rise to any matrimonial home rights under the Family Homes and Domestic Violence (Northern Ireland) Order 1997 in relation to a dwelling house comprised in the bankrupt's estate.
(2) Where a spouse's matrimonial home rights under the Order of 1997 are a charge on the estate or interest of the other spouse, or of trustees for the other spouse, and the other spouse is adjudged bankrupt –
(a) the charge continues to subsist notwithstanding the bankruptcy and subject to the provisions of that Order, binds the trustee of the bankrupt's estate and persons deriving title under that trustee, and
(b) any application for an order under Article 11 of that Order shall be made to the High Court.
(3) Notwithstanding any provision of the Partition Act 1868, where a person and his spouse or former spouse have a legal or equitable estate in a dwelling house vested in them jointly or as tenants in common and that person is adjudged bankrupt, in a suit for partition maintained by the trustee of the bankrupt's estate the High Court may make such order as it thinks fit.
(4) On an application such as is mentioned in paragraph (2) or in a suit such as is mentioned in paragraph (3) the High Court shall make such order under paragraph (3) or Article 11 of the Order of 1997 as it thinks just and reasonable having regard to –
(a) the interests of the bankrupt's creditors,
(b) the conduct of the spouse or former spouse, so far as contributing to the bankruptcy,
(c) the needs and financial resources of the spouse or former spouse,
(d) the needs of any children, and
(e) all the circumstances of the case other than the needs of the bankrupt.
(5) Where such an application is made or such a suit is maintained after the expiration of one year from the first vesting under Chapter IV of the bankrupt's estate in a trustee, the High Court shall assume, unless the circumstances of the case are exceptional, that the interests of the bankrupt's creditors outweigh all other considerations."
(i) Mrs Quinn is a single parent with ill health that is in part stress related.
(ii) She is unable to work and she cannot obtain a mortgage
(iii) Where she is living there is family support available to her which she would not have elsewhere.
(iv) She has five dependent children whose schools and associates are near where they are living and she is restricted in her choice of accommodation by reason of the size of her family.
"As the cases show, it is not uncommon for a wife with young children to be faced with eviction in circumstances where the realisation of her beneficial interest will not produce enough to buy a comparable home in the same neighbourhood, or indeed elsewhere. And, if she has to move elsewhere there may be problems over schooling and so forth. Such circumstances while engendering a natural sympathy in all who hear them, cannot be described as exceptional. They are the melancholy consequences of debt and improvidence with which every civilised society has been familiar."