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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> KW v DW [2003] ScotCS 112 (12 February 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2003/112.html Cite as: [2003] ScotCS 112 |
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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION |
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F24/01
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OPINION OF LORD BRODIE in the cause K W Pursuer; against D W Defender:
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Pursuer: McNair, Q.C.; Drummond Miller WS
Defender: Hayhow; Turcan Connell
12 February 2003
Introduction
The Parties' Cohabitation, Marriage and Present Circumstances
1. £716,650 in cash for the whole of [the defender's] shareholding in [the Company]
2. £106,300 in cash by way of a depreciatory dividend.
3. £37,630 in cash by way of an additional dividend.
4. £66,540 in cash by way of a pension contribution.
5. £30,000 by way of cash being a tax free redundancy payment.
6. £9,500 by way of [the defender's] company car. Any tax to be paid by [the Company]
Reference is made in the letter to the possibility of the purchaser making a contribution to the defender's transaction costs. The defender's understanding, as explained by him in evidence, was that the making of a depreciatory dividend was in place of a higher value being attributed to the shares.
The net value of the matrimonial property
"The net value of the matrimonial property shall be the value of the property at the relevant date after deduction of any debts incurred by the parties or either of them - (a) before the marriage so far as they relate to the matrimonial property and (b) during the marriage, which are outstanding at that date".
In terms of Section 10(3) "the relevant date" means the earlier of, subject to Section 10(7), the date when the parties ceased to cohabit, and the date of service of the summons in the action of divorce. Here the relevant date is 20 November 1999. My task has been made the easier by parties, through their counsel, entering into a Joint Minute of Admissions, Number 15 of Process, agreeing the extent and net value of specified items of matrimonial property at the relevant date. I am grateful to them for having done so. I have found it convenient to set out the information as to the value of the matrimonial property which appears in the Joint Minute in tabular form. I have employed the numbers and letters used in the Joint Minute of Admissions to identify the individual items of matrimonial property.
ASSET OR LIABILITY |
DEFENDER |
PURSUER |
1. a. The former matrimonial home in Douglas, Isle of Man, in name of defender |
£182,000 |
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b. The whole paid up share capital of Bluegate Limited owned by the defender, the only asset of which was the house now occupied by the pursuer in Edinburgh, having a value at the relevant date of £190,000. The company had a net deficit of liabilities over assets of £9,443 as at the relevant date. |
- £9,443 |
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c. The defender's director's loan to Bluegate Limited |
£199,827 |
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d. Sums held in the Royal Bank of Scotland International Limited in the name of the defender. |
£611,428 |
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e. The defender's interest in the William Nimmo & Co Limited 1980 EBP pension scheme with Royal & Sun Alliance at transfer value. |
£3984 |
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f. The defender's interest in pension schemes with Scottish Provident referable to period of marriage at transfer value. |
£113,272 |
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g. An endowment policy in the name of the defender. |
£4132 |
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h. The pursuer's interest in pension schemes with Friends Provident referable to period of marriage at transfer value. |
|
£3285 |
2. VISA debt |
- £3881 |
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TOTALS FOR EACH PARTY |
£1,101,319 |
£3285 |
TOTAL VALUE OF MATRIMONIAL PROPERTY |
£1,104,604 |
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I should note that the Joint Minute of Admissions and therefore the above table, does not include values for the furnishings of the respective houses in which the parties live. The Joint Minute does not bear to be definitive as to what the matrimonial property includes and therefore does not exclude consideration of whether items (whether assets or liabilities) additional to what appears in the Joint Minute might properly be regarded as falling within matrimonial property. The pursuer conceded that the second-hand value of the furniture in the house in Edinburgh might be £3000. There was no evidence as to the value of the furniture in the house in Douglas, Isle of Man but there was evidence that it was furnished. The approach to valuing the furniture in the respective houses which was suggested by Mr Hayhow, on behalf of the defender, and accepted by Mr MacNair QC, counsel for the pursuer, was that the Court should proceed upon the basis that the furnishings in the house in Edinburgh were worth £3000 more than the furniture in the house at in Douglas, Isle of Man. Given the common position of counsel, I shall adopt this approach to the extent of bearing the fact in mind (the fact being that the house in Edinburgh is better furnished than the house in Isle of Man to the extent of some £3000 of value in furnishings) but, as both counsel accepted, this has to be viewed as a minor matter in the context of the agreed total value of the rest of the matrimonial property. Another element of what might be taken into account in valuing matrimonial property was the subject of submissions by counsel. I reserved an objection made on behalf of the pursuer to the leading of evidence on behalf of the defender that as at the relevant date he had a liability to pay income tax in the sum of £11,661.60, as appeared from production 7/19. He has since paid this debt but should this evidence be admissible it would serve to reduce the total value of matrimonial property at the relevant date. Mr MacNair objected timeously to the admissibility of this evidence on the ground of absence of record. He renewed the objection in the course of his submissions. He submitted that this was a case where the pursuer would suffer actual prejudice if the evidence was admitted. She and her advisers did not know how the income subject to tax had arisen. One could not, on the one hand, exclude the relevant income and yet, on the other, include the tax liability arising from it. This is what Mr Hayhow was attempting to do. In response, Mr Hayhow accepted that there was no record for this item being taken into account in determining the net value of the matrimonial property but he urged me nevertheless to admit the evidence and to take it into account. He submitted that it was not appropriate to view the pleadings in a divorce action with the same stringency as might be adopted in other proceedings. Now the information was before the court it would be inequitable and undermining of the purpose of Section 10 (1) of the Act to ignore it. I considered that while there was force in Mr Hayhow's submissions, a party in an action for divorce where there is a conclusion for financial provision is entitled to fair notice of what the other party contends constitutes the matrimonial property and what is its net value, insofar as these matters can reasonably be ascertained by the other party. Here there is no question but that the extent of his liability to pay income tax as at the relevant date was a fact within the knowledge of the defender and his professional advisers. It was not within the knowledge of the pursuer, and she and her advisers had no reason to make enquiry about debts which the defender had not disclosed. The extent of the liability, while relatively modest in the context of the total for matrimonial property, was not entirely insubstantial. No explanation was given for the omission of reference to this liability in the pleadings. I take it that it was simply overlooked, as might very easily happen for one reason or another, but no blame attaches to the pursuer or her advisers and I cannot be satisfied that there would necessarily be no prejudice to the pursuer by reason of admitting evidence of a debt where she has had no notice of that evidence in the pleadings. I therefore uphold Mr MacNair's objection with the result that I do not take this liability into account with a view to reducing the total of net value of the matrimonial property as is brought out in the Joint Minute.
Fair sharing of the net value of the matrimonial property
The Submissions of Counsel
"The property is a detached five bedroom bungalow with private gardens to both front and rear. It was acquired by the company in about September 1999. The house is the family house of the child of the parties' marriage. The company borrowed £199,827 from the defender to allow the purchase of the property. The defender applied certain of the proceeds which he obtained on the sale of his shares in William Nimmo & Co Ltd to the provision of said loan. Reference in this regard is made to the averments at Item (3) below."
"Item (3) below" refers to the funds, amounting at the relevant date to £611,428, held in the name of the defender with the Royal Bank of Scotland International Limited. The averments at page 13C of the Closed Record relate to these funds. At page 13C the defender avers that:
"... the funds derive from the sale by the defender of shares in a family business, William Nimmo & Co Ltd which were in each case either gifted to him by his parents or purchased by him prior to the marriage. The sum held at the relevant date represents the whole proceeds of the sale of the defender's entire shareholding in William Nimmo & Co Ltd in March 1996, together with the net free proceeds of the sale of the defender's pre-marriage home at 39 Craigmount View, Edinburgh. Neither of the foregoing sources of funds is referable to the economic efforts of the parties during the marriage. The funds remain in the sole name of the defender. The interest which they generate provides the defender with his only source of income ... Standing the source of said funds they should be excluded from the division of matrimonial assets on divorce. Reference in this respect is made to Section 10(6 (b) of the Act."
It is therefore the defender's position on averment that special circumstances of the sort identified in Section 10(6)(b) of the Act apply both to the loan to Bluegate and the balance of funds held by the Royal Bank of Scotland International Limited.
"(b) fair account should be taken of any economic advantage derived by either party from contributions by the other, and of any economic disadvantage suffered by either party in the interests of the other party or of the family;
(c) any economic burden of caring, after divorce, for a child of the marriage under the age of 16 years should be shared fairly between the parties; ..."
Mr McNair pointed to the fact that the pursuer had given up work and had remained out of employment for some seven years in order to look after the matrimonial home, the defender and C. Her present ability to obtain employment is severely restricted by reason of the need to continue looking after C and her having been out of work over that seven year period. Mr McNair referred me to the decisions in R v R supra and Cuniff v Cuniff 1999 SC 537. Mr McNair reminded me of the terms of Section 11(2) of the Act which provides that, for the purposes of section 9(1)(b), the court shall have regard to any balancing of economic advantage and disadvantage as between the parties and the extent to which any resulting imbalance has been or will be corrected by a sharing of the value of matrimonial property. This, he explained, was to avoid any double-counting of the same factor. Mr McNair also drew my attention to Section 11(3) which required the court to have regard, for the purposes of Section 9(1)(c), of various factors bearing upon the burden of child care. As Lord Eassie had correctly observed at page 49 and paragraph 7-43 of his Opinion in R v R supra, "the simple payment of aliment is not the whole story". A number of aspects of the burden of child care would fall upon the pursuer in the present case.
Decision
"The Act sets out in considerable and almost clinical detail the nature of the property with respect to which orders may be made, the principles which are to be applied and the factors which are to be taken into account. ...But despite all the detail much is still left to the discretion of the court. This is clear from an examination of s. 8 (2), which provides that the court shall make such order, if any as is justified by the principles set out in s. 9 and reasonable having regard to the resources of the parties. The concept of sharing the net value of the matrimonial property fairly, the flexibility which is given to the expression 'special circumstances' in s. 10(6) and the repeated references in s. 11 to all the circumstances of the case serve to emphasise that, despite the detail, the matter is essentially one of discretion, aimed at achieving a fair and practical result in accordance with common sense."
"(6) In subsection (1) above 'special circumstances', without prejudice to the generality of the words, may include -
......(b) the source of the funds or assets used to acquire any of the matrimonial property where those funds or assets were not derived from the income or the efforts of the parties during the marriage;"
Periodical Allowance and Aliment for Cameron
Further Procedure