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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Legg v Legg [2002] EWCA Civ 1517 (14 October 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/1517.html Cite as: [2002] EWCA Civ 1517 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE BLACKBURN COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE SMITH)
Strand London, WC2 Monday, 14th October 2002 |
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B e f o r e :
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AUDREY LEGG | ||
-v- | ||
ROBERT CHRISTOPHER LEGG |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The Respondent did not appear and was unrepresented.
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Crown Copyright ©
Monday, 14th October 2002
"The respondent husband seeks leave to appeal, out of time, the order of District Judge Law made on 19th July, 2000, that is over 12 months after the making of the order.
The order was made after a contested hearing at which the wife and the husband both gave evidence and at which various affidavits were put before the District Judge which he read and considered. At the conclusion of that hearing, the District Judge told the respondent husband that if he wanted to appeal he had 14 days in which to do so.
The reason for the delay in seeking an appeal of the District Judge's order has been ventilated in my court this morning. I have asked the respondent, in person, directly, why it is that over a year later he seeks to appeal an order when he was told in terms that he had 14 days in which to present an appeal. His explanation is wholly unconvincing. There is, in short, no explanation at all as to why it is that all this time has elapsed before he seeks an order from a higher court altering the terms of the order of the District Judge.
In deciding whether to grant leave to appeal out of time, of course, I have got to have one eye on the potential merit of any such appeal, I have read the District Judge's judgment and he quite clearly took a very poor view of the respondent. He did not believe his evidence and he did not accept that what he said in his affidavits or statements was accurate.
If leave were to be granted for an appeal, the Circuit Judge would have to respect the District's Judge's findings as to the respondent's credibility and, indeed, his findings generally as to the facts put before him. I say that because the respondent, when asked whether or not he had any new material to demonstrate that his wife had committed perjury at the time of the hearing in July, 2000, did not (radio interference) and did not refer me to any such evidence. The respondent in his application merely repeats that his wife did not tell the District Judge the truth.
He complains about the effect of the order upon him. He complains about the quality of the evidence before the District Judge, namely that the District Judge was acting on accounts which related to 1997, but insofar as he might have a complaint there -- and I am not sure whether he has at all -- the District Judge, of course, was doing the best that he could in the circumstances and it was open to the respondent, indeed, to provide the Court in July, 2000, with more up to date accounts. That is something which he neglected to do so he can hardly complain that the Judge was acting on the most recent evidence that he had as to the prosperity or otherwise of the" [that may be "company" or "partnership", I suppose] "he was considering." [It may possibly be a reference to Mr Legg.]
His Honour Judge Smith went on:
"There is no proper reason at all here why the Court should grant leave to appeal out of time against the terms of the order made by the District Judge. Accordingly, the application is dismissed with costs."
"I do not have a partner or any intentions to re-marry or cohabit."
In her second, on 4th October 1999, she said:
"I commenced another relationship a month after I left the Respondent and it is untrue to say I had been having an affair with my boss at work since December 1997. I live alone and have no intentions of co-habiting."
So what took place in July 2002 is not evidence that the affidavits were wrong.
"The question I must determine is one of the Petitioners conduct. Respondent contends adultery to the extent that he has suffered. I am not satisfied in law even if adultery were to have taken place that this would be sufficient to defeat Petitioners claims. There is no evidence of adultery - no witness although a witness summons could have been issued. I am required to consider all matters contained in Sections 23 to 25 of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973. I do consider those matters and wife's requirements for a property free of mortgage if achieved and of husband's rehousing needs."
He then went on, in the light of his findings as to the respective positions and assets of the parties, to make the orders relating to property transfers. I should add in this connection that the witness statement from Colin Bowes, even if it had evidential value (which in my judgment it does not have) on the issue of cohabitation, was not actually permitted to be put in front of the District Judge, no doubt because Colin Bowes was not called and nor was the policeman who took the statement. Mr Legg said he could not set about getting anyone to come because he was on baiul at the time. So the District Judge was on any view right to say he had no evidence of adultery, but he also indicated that it would not have made any difference if there had been evidence and if he had found that there was adultery.