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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 >> Madan v Madan [2007] EWCA Civ 517 (09 May 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/517.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 517 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM BRENTFORD COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE MARCUS EDWARDS)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE WALL
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MADAN |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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MADAN |
Respondent |
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THE RESPONDENT DID NOT APPEAR AND WAS NOT REPRESENTED.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Wall:
"An obstinate misapprehension lies at the heart of this proposed appeal. There is no need for a section 37 application unless it seems likely that in the event of success the applicant will need to have his or her award met out of the very assets thus restored to the respondent. There was no need for such an application here because even in the event of his establishing all the matters required under section 37 the husband's award would not have been met out of the assets which the wife had disposed. There would have been an adjustment or elimination of the lump sum payable by him and/or an adjustment in the division of the sale, proceeds of the home. There was no point in dealing with the issue other than notionally and in the light of the identity of the disponees the parties children and grandchildren, there is something unpleasantly mischievous as well as unnecessary about a continued assertion that the court should have considered whether actually to deprive them of what W had given."
"It is abundantly clear and there is a wealth of documentary evidence which is cross indexed in terms and the wife has taken to it, on the schedule that the sums spent by her basically came from her savings and from her savings alone and represented perfectly proper expenditure by her on a commendably generous but nonetheless reasonable basis on the parties' daughters and young grandchildren."
That is a finding of fact which, in my judgment, is unshakeable. It is one the district judge was perfectly entitled to reach and Mr Madan simply cannot be heard to come along today and say it was not open to the district judge to make that finding and that he should not have done so.
"There have now been ten hearings of four separate applications brought by the husband, all of which have failed. The wife is a lady aged 71, who has had to live with the husband, and still has to live with him, under the same roof, in circumstances of considerable stress and anxiety, while the husband has persisted in carrying forward this expensive and time-consuming litigation in an entirely inappropriate and ill-advised way, (in which I do not include Counsel for the husband on this appeal, [I think it was Mr Bogle] who has conducted his client's case with skill). These appeals must all be dismissed."
"There was no justification for the husband's deliberate non-attendance at the hearing before the district judge and it would have been quite wrong for the circuit judge and would be quite wrong for this court to admit further evidence or consider submissions which but for his wilful non attendance the husband could have presented to the district judge."
"The husband has been and is therefore unable to challenge the district judge's findings that the wife's dispositions [and he then quotes part of the passage I have already read and I will not repeat]."
He concludes:
"Having heard this application, had the section 37 application still be on foot this finding would have been defeated, would have defeated it by rebutting the presumption of an intention to defeat and/or by leading the court in its discretion to decline to set the dispositions aside."
"No part of the proposed appeal has a real prospect of success and so would not even have attracted permission for first appeal. It raises no point of principle or practice and there is no reason to hear it, compelling or otherwise. So it does not meet the specific criteria of the second appeal on the contrary it is an attempted abuse of the process of the court."
Lord Justice Ward:
"On that basis it seems to me to be clear that it is simply unnecessary, quite apart from being a disproportionate exercise in terms of time, trouble and expense for me to accede to the S.37 set aside application. Mr Madan, in the view I take of the matter, cannot conceivably in my judgment be prejudiced by these dispositions being allowed to remain in place."
"Mr Madan cannot conceivably, in my judgment, be prejudiced by these dispositions being allowed to remain in place."
Order: Application refused.