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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Mr E v Mrs E [2006] EWCA Civ 843 (27 June 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/843.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 843, [2006] 2 FCR 631, [2006] Fam Law 933, [2006] 2 FLR 1228 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM
HIS HONOUR JUDGE BARRATT QC
CHICHESTER COUNTY COURT - C103P00686
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MAURICE KAY
and
LORD JUSTICE WILSON
____________________
MR E |
Appellant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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MRS E |
Appellant/ Respondent |
____________________
Annie Ward (instructed by Owen-Kenny Partnership - Solicitors) for the Appellant/Respondent
Hearing date : 27th April 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Wall :
This is the judgment of the Court.
Introduction:
(1) There will be permission granted to both parties to appeal against the order made by HH Judge Barratt QC on 7 December 2005;
(2) Each party's appeal will be allowed. The shared residence order will stand, but the division of the children's time and the order for ancillary relief made by the judge will be set aside;
(3) The applications made by each party will be re-heard by a High Court Judge of the Family Division;
(4) The applications made by each party will be listed for directions before Hogg J, one of the Family Division Liaison Judges for the South Eastern Circuit with a time estimate of one half hour on 10 July 2006 at 10.30am, in order to enable Hogg J (inter alia) to give directions and to determine when, where and by which judge of the Division the applications shall be re-heard.
(5) There will be no order as to the costs of either party's appeal to this court.
The facts
K (a boy) born on 7 March 1996;
R (a girl) born on 2 April 1997;
C (a girl) born on 8 April 2001; and
H (a girl) born on 12 March 2003.
The judgment given by Judge Barratt QC on 26 July 2004
"….. all parties are agreed that the children should, if practical, remain in the matrimonial home because of their familiarity with it, their links with the local schools and the general community network – and all the advantages that follow from seeking to change things as little as possible in the difficult circumstances which obtain in this case. "
"Throughout the life (sic) of these children the father has played a significant part on a day to day basis in their care and nurture to an extent – and I emphasise the words "to an extent" – by mutual agreement that because the mother's career prospects were good and she pursued them, as I say, very commendably successfully. Although she might have wished things differently the arrangement that they arrived at at an early stage in their marriage following his initial redundancy with Sainsbury's in 1994, was that she would pursue her career with Sainsbury's as a trainee manager and subsequently more responsible positions. The consequence of that has been in practice, by whatever degree of mutual arrangement or agreement, the father has at most been part-time in his employment, or a limited degree of employment during most of the marriage, and in consequence has paid (sic) a significant role from day to day in the care of the children. But I am very clear in my finding on the evidence that I have heard that he has not been the sole primary carer, and this has been a wholly mutual arrangement in which the role of the mother in the care of these children has remained fundamental and significant. She has succeeded in bringing up these children to become the type of children which I have described with the assistance of her husband because of the role which she has played day by day, week by week, year by year and because of the significant periods of time after the birth of each child in which she remained caring for them on maternity leave, and has continued to do since the breakdown in their relationship ….. "
"….. the real risk, if (the father) is not able to secure proper contact arrangement (sic) within West Sussex ….. he may have to go a considerable distance away from the area. While I acknowledge that it will be possible for the children to travel, I am deeply concerned, particularly given the ages of the children and the number of them, of the practical effects of that on the quality of the contact and a lack of benefit and advantage to the tiring and expensive process that that would occasion for both parents, and others assisting them."
Subsequent events
"….. contemplate the father without a job, and potentially without a home, finding himself without his children as well. That, I know, is not what the mother wants and it is something that plainly he and his lawyers have now got to work very hard to address and decide how they are going to deal with it."
The position as at December 2005
The judgment of 7 December 2005
The judge's approach to the question of Mrs E's proposed removal to Bexhill
"50. Until it is known when the mother can move to Bexhill, when and if arrangements for alternative schooling for the children can be put in place, it seems to me that the children's arrangements, or their education in Bognor, in West Sussex, certainly for the remainder of this educational year, is a strategy which should be the preferred course. That seems to me in terms of their physical, emotional and educational needs to be in their best interests in terms of their welfare, which is my paramount concern. It is certainly not at odds, as I understand it, with their wishes and feelings, at least expressed somewhat in ambivalent terms so far as R is concerned and I construe her wish and desire to go to Bexhill and her wish and desire to be sometimes at weekends with her mother, to be set alongside a complementary desire the rest of the time to be with her father. I have already referred to K's position which is in my judgment particularly important.
51. So my conclusion is that in the arrangements that the mother makes in the best interests of the children in terms of how she exercises the shared residence order for the future that she will be well advised to think very carefully about seeking to implement a change in the location of her home from Bognor to Bexhill at any time other than fits in with the best interests of her children in terms of their education and their adjustment from one home to another.
52. The consequence of that is this, as it seems to me, that the matrimonial home should be sold. That will enable the mother to choose where she lives and in what house she lives, both in terms of location, and property. Whether she succeeds in doing that before the birth of the child or not seems to me to be very uncertain at this stage given that we are now in the middle of December. Mr M may succeed in improving his own property in a matter of a month or so, whether and to what extent he then succeeds in disposing of his property, identifying another property and moving into it before the birth of the child seems to me a great deal more uncertain. But I make it clear that I do not wish to stand in the way of the mother in terms of her starting over and building a new life for herself. She has responsibilities to her unborn child, to her new partner, as well as to her four children. She should have – as she is entitled to – liberty to determine for herself when it is that the matrimonial home is sold and what she buys with the proceeds."
"… she is a deeply caring person who sets herself and others high standards and is efficient and concerned to bring her children up, as she has so far succeeded in doing, to be bright, intelligent, successful, well adjusted children, to whom certain standards and requirements are clear and required."
"At the conclusion of the current academic year and in any event no earlier than 31 July 2006, the order dated 7 October 2004 … shall be varied so as to provide that the said children shall reside with the Applicant mother other than for two thirds of all school holidays (on dates and at times to be agreed between the parties) when they shall reside with the Respondent father."
"60. What I have in mind in the future is that the children should come to stay with their father on a regular basis for a substantial part of each of the school holidays. Now this is a shared residence order that will require review and variation once the mother has decided where she is going to live and what proposals she has for the future in terms of the education of the children. But given all the problems and difficulties there have been about moving between one household and another in relation to so many different details it seems to me that the future proposal should be that the children should live with the mother in her new home during the course of school terms and that they should stay with the father for a substantial part of each school holiday. So the effect of it will be that for the greater share, both of the half terms, and the school holidays, the shared residence order will be exercised in a way similar to that which occurred in the case of Re F and the period of time which will elapse between one period of them seeing their father and another will be comparatively short. It is unlikely to be greater than a period of six weeks at a time."
The judge's financial order
Net proceeds of sale | £102,707 |
Payable to Mr E by Mrs. E | |
(1)an immediate lump sum of | £ 3,000 |
(2)a lump sum representing costs | £ 25,102 |
(3)40% of £102,707 | £ 41,082 |
Total | £ 69,184 |
(1)Sale proceeds of the FMH | £102,707 |
(2)Value of policies | £ 17,519 |
Total | £120,226 |
The choice of forum for the re-hearing
Costs
The question of the separate representation of the children
Footnote