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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 >> Leman-Klammers v Klammers [2007] EWCA Civ 919 (12 July 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/919.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 919 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
FAMILY DIVISION
(MRS JUSTICE BARON)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MAY
and
MR JUSTICE BENNETT
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LEMAN-KLAMMERS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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KLAMMERS |
Respondent |
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Mr T Scott Q.C. (instructed by Messrs Charles Russell) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Thorpe:
"3. The wife was born in Singapore on 16th June 1966 (40 years old). The husband is French, having been born on 8th March 1970 (37 years old). These parties met in Singapore in 1994, where the husband was undertaking his National Service working with a French Bank. In early 1996 the husband was offered employment by that bank in London. Accordingly, the parties moved to the United Kingdom where they lived in rented accommodation in Queensgate, South Kensington. On 16th July 1996, the parties married in France, in the region of the husband's family home. In the summer of 1996, the parties purchased a property at Crown Lodge in Elystan Street, Chelsea. So far as I recall from the papers before me, that was the only property which they owned during their marriage. In early 1998, the parties moved to Tokyo where the husband took up a new job. He remained there for about eighteen months, before returning London, this time in the employment of Goldman Sachs. The parties then lived in rented property in South Kensington. However, their connection with Japan did not cease, for in April 2000 the husband was offered employment in Tokyo and the parties moved again. The only child of the marriage, Sebastian, was born there in May 2004.
"4. During 2004 (or thereabouts) it appears that the husband began an affair with another lady, as a result of which she became pregnant (giving birth to his second child on 6th June 2005). In late 2004 the husband was informed that he would be required to return to England in order to continue his employment with Goldman Sachs. The parties packed up their belongings in Tokyo and, after the wife had spent a period in Singapore, they each returned to the United Kingdom but did resume effective cohabitation because the husband decided that his future lay with his new partner. The wife has been resident in the United Kingdom since the early months of 2005. The husband continued to work in this jurisdiction for a period but he was made redundant by Goldman Sachs. Eventually he secured new employment on the basis that he returned to Japan.
"5. By this stage, of course, the marriage itself was at an end. Both parties issued proceedings on 24th March 2005 - the wife in London and the husband in Paris. Consequently, there was a dispute about which jurisdiction should deal with the divorce proceedings as each court had jurisdiction. Under the provisions of Brussels 11, the rule is absolutely clear, the court first seised should assume jurisdiction. In the light of this factual conundrum, one court had to make a preliminary decision. Either of the parties could have proceeded to the courts in England or in France for such a determination but it was the husband who moved the court in France. In essence he sought a finding that the French court was first seised and therefore should assume its undoubted jurisdiction to hear the divorce proceedings. I say "undoubted jurisdiction" because the husband as a French national, had, in accordance with their law, the entitlement to bring any issue before the French court. The judge in France determined the matter and decided that the English court was first seised with proceedings. I understand that part of his decision rested upon the fact that the judge refused to admit evidence from the husband's lawyer as to the precise time at which the petition had been lodged at the relevant court office. As I have been told, it is an evidential rule in France that your own advocate is not permitted to give evidence on your behalf in the context of proceedings.
"6. The decision was clear, the French court determined that it would not exercise jurisdiction under the terms of Brussels 11, therefore the case should proceed in England. The husband was not satisfied with that decision and took the matter, on appeal, to the relevant Cour d'Appel. That court dismissed his appeal. Consequently the matter still fell to be dealt with in this jurisdiction.
"7. On 16th October 2006 the husband's and wife's representatives appeared in front of Mr. Justice Singer. One of the applications on behalf of the husband was to the effect that the English court should make a determination on the merits as to whether it should exercise its jurisdiction to deal with the case. The learned judge decided, in my view absolutely correctly, that it would make a nonsense of inter-country disputes if -the English court failed to pay attention to the French decision. Therefore he declined to determine arguments as to whether this court was the jurisdiction first seised under the terms of Brussels 11. This court undoubtedly had fundamental jurisdiction as a result of the wife's residence during the relevant period. The decision of the learned judge given on 16th October was subject to an appeal by the husband. In the course of the learned judge's decision he made an order, inter alia, in the following terms in relation to the divorce itself. If a decree nisi is pronounced that decree shall not be made absolute until the earliest of the following: (a) the determination of the respondent's proposed appeal to the Cour de Cassation in respect of his divorce proceedings instituted in the Tribunale de Grand Instance de Paris on 24" March 2005, or (b) further order of a judge of the Family Division. The appeal from that order was dismissed by the Court of Appeal in early 2007.
"8.The matter, as I am clear, did not rest there because the learned judge then dealt with this matter in December, as I have already outlined. On that occasion he granted a decree nisi. One of the reasons that his Lordship felt it appropriate to grant a decree nisi was his concern about the delay in prosecuting the appeal proceedings in France. From paragraph 62 (onwards) of his judgment his Lordship sets out his concern about events in France. It is clear from the terms of his judgment that he had been told that the husband was going to prosecute his appeal in France timeously. In para.73 the learned judge said as follows:
'I need to set out what I have been told on instruction by Mr. Marshall [who represented the husband on that occasion] is the information he has received from the French lawyers instructed to forge ahead with an appeal to the Cour de Cassation. He has confirmed that the husband will undertake to prosecute that appeal as soon as possible. I am told that he has given instructions to that effect. It is four weeks since the Cour d'Appel judgment. We have only, for the moment, the Pourvoi.'
The "Pourvoi" being the initiating document by which the application to the Cour de Cassation is made. I note that this was lodged on 12" October, some four days before Singer J. made his determination.
He continues:
'[The Pourvoi] gives no hint of what the grounds of appeal might be. He [the husband] has apparently six months to file what is referred to as a memorandum, equivalent to a skeleton argument (that may or may not be its correct designation). The matter is then, I was told, put before a single judge (who I guess might be a conseiller) to verify if there is any serious ground for appeal. He may, if he thinks there is not, dispose of it there and then. But if he does think there may be a serious ground, it is then submitted to the Cour de Cassation for a process described to me as 'appreciation'. If the Cour de Cassation regards the case as having merit, it will admit it. If not, it will issue a certificate of non-admission du pourvoi. It will reject the petition that will be an end of the matter. If it admits it, then matter goes forward to appeal. I am told that there is no other case law on this topic, and therefore in the opinion of Maitre Piole [that is the lawyer instructed by the husband in France] the Court de Cassation may well admit this appeal. The whole process is said to take about two years, which is a wide time-frame. I would think it can only begin to run once the husband has put in his memorandum. I have no idea how long it is then before the matter gets before the single judge at which point it may come to a halt, and if it gets past him, how long before the Court de Cassation appreciates it or not.'
"In passing, I note that from October 2006 that would project a minimum timescale ending in about October 2008. If the time begins to run from the date of the memorandum the date is extended to May 2009.
"It is obvious from the context of the judgment that I have just outlined that his Lordship was of the view, and had been so informed, that the husband would prosecute this appeal in France as soon as possible. However, far from so doing, I understand that it is conceded on his behalf that he did not lodge the necessary memoir until; 4th May 2007. That being outside (albeit by a few days) the six month time limit provided in French procedural rules. I have no clear evidence before me as to whether a legal point may be taken against the admission of a memoir which is out of time."
Lord Justice May:
Mr Justice Bennett:
Order: Application allowed. Appeal dismissed.