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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 >> Lawrence v Gallagher [2012] EWCA Civ 394 (29 March 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/394.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 394 |
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ON APPEAL FROM
The High Court of Justice Family Division
Mrs Justice Parker
FD09D00474
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MOSES
and
MR JUSTICE RYDER
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Peter Nicholas Lawrence |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Donald James Gallagher |
Respondent |
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Timothy Bishop QC and Nichola Gray (instructed by Boodle Hatfield) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 8 March 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Thorpe:
Introduction
The proceedings
The history of acquisitions
The Trial
"143. PL's proposals are very inadequate. They do not meet DG's needs for a house of reasonable standard and amenity and his need for capital to provide income; they ignore the length of the partnership, their shared lives and finances, standard of living, and the work he carried out on both country properties but especially the Amberley property. In all the circumstances it would be grossly unfair to award PL both properties and to confine DG to a smaller less attractive property, as his only asset save for his miniscule pension at the end of this partnership.
144. I approach this case on the sharing principle, but I exclude for the calculations the deferred compensation scheme, because Mr Bishop's concession that DG only seeks to share in the value of those schemes once paid, in whatever sum, and I shall deal with those assets separately. I shall not take into account at all as part of the assets to be shared the value of PL's art works and pianos which are truly personal. Other chattels will be divided by agreement. I shall also deal with the pension separately, and first.
145. I accept that there must fairly be some adjustment for the fact that the pension has grown not just by capital growth but by contribution since separation. I assess an appropriate share of £200,000 just over one third of PL's pension, plus his own pension.
146. I take the assets excluding pension and deferred compensation scheme, and art works and pianos which I do not bring into account as £3,298,857. 45% of that, which seems broadly right in the circumstances to reflect PL's initial contribution, is £1,484,485.
147. Alternatively, if I were to award DG one half of both properties and the savings and investments but give PL credit for the value of the equity in the London flat at 1997, by taking the value at £500,000 (and thus giving some allowance for inflation) but deducting the mortgage of £183,500, thus giving a net equity in 1997 of about £316,500 and also credit for the savings of £66,000 brought in by PL (although, I am aware that they could be said to be matched by the capital that DG brought in), the equity to be divided would be £1,447,033, (£1,829,533 less £382,500) of which 50% is £723,516 and the sums in total would achieve a similar figure:-
London flat | 50% net equity £723,516 |
Amberley cottage | 50% £411,000 |
Savings and investments | 50% £320,000 |
Total £1,454,516 |
148. I accept that DG should keep the Amberley cottage.
149. In my view the right overall figure including pension is £1,600,000 made up by:
Pension | £200,000 |
Amberley cottage | £822,000 |
Lump sum | £577.778 |
Total | £1,600,000 |
150. This is just under 42% of the total including the pensions but excluding the chattels and deferred compensation schemes. It will provide DG with free capital of just under £500,000 once his debts are paid, the equivalent of a Duxbury fund of about £28,000 pa, plus the pension share. The retention of the home and provision of an income is sufficient to provide for DG's needs, generously assessed. He will continue to earn and he will be able to utilise the Amberley cottage to earn an income.
151. In addition I shall award DG 45% of the deferred schemes when they come into payment. They have vested, and they are part of the assets acquired during the partnership. On current values this could achieve a further £90,000".
Submissions
"This does not mean that, when exercising his discretion, a judge in this country must treat all property in the same way. The statute requires the court to have regard to all the circumstances of the case. One of the circumstances is that there is a real difference, a difference of source, between: (1) property acquired during the marriage otherwise than by inheritance or gift, sometimes called the marital acquest but more usually the matrimonial property; and (2) other property. The former is the financial product of the parties' common endeavour, the latter is not. The parties matrimonial home, even if this was brought into the marriage at the outset by one of the parties, usually has a central place in any marriage. So it should normally be treated as matrimonial property for this purpose. As already noted, in principle the entitlement of each party to a share of the matrimonial property is the same however long or short the marriage may have been."
Conclusions
"The dicta in Miller and McFarlane assist in focussing the mind of the decision-taker about to give the melting pot of s 25 factors a stir. Such guidance highlights the underlying components which inform the intuitive notion of 'fairness', the ultimate objective of the process (White v White [2001] AC 596, [2000] 3 WLR 1571, [2000] 2 FLR 981). However, it is important, in my judgment, that these strands underlying 'fairness' do not become elevated into separate 'heads of claim' or 'of loss' independent of the words of the statute. If such an approach were to gain momentum, there would be a real danger of double counting, against which the House of Lords expressly warned in Miller. It remains the statutory criteria which ultimately guide the court's overall discretion by the exercise of which fairness is sought to be achieved."
"Clarifying the Law on Financial Provision for Couples when Relationships End.
The Law Commission is to conduct a targeted review of two aspects of the law that entitles married couples and civil partners to claim financial provision from one another on divorce or dissolution of their partnership. The Commission will examine the extent to which one party should be required to meet the others needs after the relationship has ended. It will also consider how what is known as "non-matrimonial property" (acquired by either party prior to the marriage or civil partnership, or received by gift or inheritance) should be treated on divorce or dissolution"
"We are delighted that the Ministry of Justice has asked us to undertake this very important review. When two people bring their marriage or civil partnership to an end it is vital that the law assists them to resolve their financial arrangements as quickly and fairly as possible. The current law creates too much potential for uncertainty and for inconsistent outcomes. In particular, the extent to which one party should be required to meet the others financial needs is far from clear. Likewise there is uncertainty over the treatment of property brought into the relationship or inherited by one of the parties."
Lord Justice Moses:
Mr Justice Ryder: