[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Ray v Sekhri [2014] EWCA Civ 119 (14 February 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/119.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 119, [2014] 2 FLR 1168 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT FAMILY DIVISION
Mr Justice Holman
FD12D04003
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MCFARLANE
and
LORD JUSTICE VOS
____________________
RAY - and- |
Appellant |
|
SEKHRI |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Patrick Chamberlayne QC (instructed by Sears Tooth Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 28 January 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice McFarlane :
Domicile: The legal context
"The court shall have jurisdiction to entertain proceedings for divorce or judicial separation if (and only if)-
a) the court has jurisdiction under [Council regulation (EC) No. 2201/2003- "Brussels II Revised"] or
b) no court of a Contracting State has jurisdiction under the Council Regulation and either of the parties to the marriage is domiciled in England and Wales on the date when the proceedings are begun."
"The following principles of law, which are derived from Dicey, Morris and Collins on The Conflict of Laws (2006) are not in issue:
(i) A person is, in general, domiciled in the country in which he is considered by English law to have his permanent home. A person may sometimes be domiciled in a country although he does not have his permanent home in it (Dicey, pages 122 to 126).
(ii) No person can be without a domicile (Dicey, page 126).
(iii) No person can at the same time for the same purpose have more than one domicile (Dicey, pages 126 to 128).
(iv) An existing domicile is presumed to continue until it is proved that a new domicile has been acquired (Dicey, pages 128 to 129).
(v) Every person receives at birth a domicile of origin (Dicey, pages 130 to 133).
(vi) Every independent person can acquire a domicile of choice by the combination of residence and an intention of permanent or indefinite residence, but not otherwise (Dicey, pages 133 to 138).
(vii) Any circumstance that is evidence of a person's residence, or of his intention to reside permanently or indefinitely in a country, must be considered in determining whether he has acquired a domicile of choice (Dicey, pages 138 to143).
(viii) In determining whether a person intends to reside permanently or indefinitely, the court may have regard to the motive for which residence was taken up, the fact that residence was not freely chosen, and the fact that residence was precarious (Dicey, pages 144 to 151).
(ix) A person abandons a domicile of choice in a country by ceasing to reside there and by ceasing to intend to reside there permanently, or indefinitely, and not otherwise (Dicey, pages 151 to 153).
(x) When a domicile of choice is abandoned, a new domicile of choice may be acquired, but, if it is not acquired, the domicile of origin revives (Dicey, pages 151 to 153)."
At paragraphs 10 to 15 of her judgment in the Barlow Clowes case Arden LJ expanded upon the intention required for a domicile of choice, which is principle (vi) in her list. As issues relating to domicile of choice are to the forefront in the present appeal I will reproduce that section of Arden LJ's judgment in its entirety:
"10. The intention of residence must be fixed and must be for the indefinite future. It is not enough for instance that at any given point in time its length has not been determined.
11. In the leading case of Udny v Udny (1869) LR 1 Sc & D 441, the issue was as to the domicile of the respondent's father at the time of his (the respondent's) birth. His father had been born in Scotland but had left Scotland and taken a lease of a house in London. He had a castle in Scotland but that was not habitable. He visited Scotland frequently but had no residence there. In 1844, he sold the lease and his personal possessions and left London for France to avoid his creditors. But he did not intend to reside permanently in France. His first wife died in 1846, and he formed a liaison with the respondent's mother who, in 1853, gave birth to the respondent in London. He married her and went back to Scotland thinking that he would thereby legitimise the respondent, avoid his creditors and bar the entail on his estates. He intended to stay in Scotland because he thought he would be safe from his creditors.
12. The House of Lords held that the respondent's father had lost his domicile of choice in England and that his domicile of origin had revived. One of the issues was whether revival of his domicile of origin was precluded by the fact that he had a possible intention to leave Scotland again if his creditors pursued him there. At 449, Lord Hatherley L.C. held that this possible intention did not mean that he could not have a domicile in Scotland if he had decided that Scotland would be "his chosen and settled abode". Lord Hatherley held that the acquisition of a domicile of choice was best described as "settling" in a place:
"A change of [a person's domicile of choice] can only be effected animo et facto -that is to say, by the choice of another domicile, evidenced by residence within the territorial limits to which the jurisdiction of the new domicile extends. He, in making this change, does an act, which is more nearly designated by the word "settling" than by any one word in our language. Thus we speak of a colonist settling in Canada or Australia, or of a Scotsman settling in England, and the word is frequently used as expressive of the act of change of domicile in the various judgments pronounced by our Courts."
13. At 458, Lord Westbury made the following observations about the acquisition of a domicile of choice which also emphasise the fixed nature of the requisite intention:
"Domicil of choice is a conclusion or inference which the law derives from the fact of a man fixing voluntarily his sole or chief residence in a particular place, with an intention of continuing to reside there for an unlimited time. This is a description of the circumstances which create or constitute a domicil, and not a definition of the term. There must be a residence freely chosen, and not prescribed or dictated by any external necessity, such as the duties of office, the demands of creditors, or the relief from illness; and it must be residence fixed not for a limited period or particular purpose, but general and indefinite in its future contemplation. It is true that the residence originally temporary, or intended for a limited period, may afterwards become general and unlimited, and in such a case so soon as the change of purpose, or animus manendi, can be inferred the fact of domicil is established." (emphasis added)
14. Given that a person can only have one domicile at any one time for the same purpose, he must in my judgment have a singular and distinctive relationship with the country of supposed domicile of choice. That means it must be his ultimate home or, as it has been put, the place where he would wish to spend his last days. Thus, in Bell v Kennedy (1868) LR 1 Sc and Div 307, 311, Lord Cairns, having held that it was unnecessary for him to examine the various definitions that have been given of the term "domicile", held that the question to be considered was in substance whether the appellant:
"had determined to make, and had made, Scotland his home, with the intention of establishing himself and his family there, and ending his days in that country?" (emphasis added)
15. In my judgment this test by its reference to ending one's days usefully emphasises the need for the subject to have a fixed purpose that he will live in the country of his domicile of choice."
Husband's domicile: Overview
a) If Bikas's domicile remained Indian at the date of the husband's birth, did Bikas subsequently establish a domicile of choice in England during the husband's minority with the consequence that the husband, being a dependant, would also then gain English domicile before his sixteenth birthday?
b) If, contrary to a) above, the husband's domicile remained India as he entered adulthood, did he subsequently establish his own domicile of choice in England prior to departure to Singapore?
c) If, in accordance with b) above, the husband did establish a domicile of choice in England, was that abandoned when he moved in 2010 to reside in Singapore?
Wife's domicile: Overview
The domicile of Bikas Ray
"It was very clear from the oral evidence of Mrs. Ratna Ray that nothing would have induced her to leave England and live in a flat in India, and Bikas would not leave her and do so himself."
"Left entirely to himself [Bikas], may have intended later, if not sooner, to return to India. But what shines out very clearly from all the evidence is that Bikas was first and foremost a family man, albeit quite a strict disciplinarian of his children. He loved and was completely loyal to his wife. He loved his children and would never leave them behind. It was very clear to me, from the evidence of Mrs. Ratna Ray, that the seven months in 1970 were a watershed in the lives of both of them. For her, they were a disaster. Bikas accepted then that they should return to England; and he knew, I stress knew, ever thereafter that she would never return to live in India again although she might, of course, pay visits as indeed she did. The settled intention of Bikas was to remain living with his wife and close to his children. That was his intention when they returned in November 1970. There is no evidence that he ever wavered in that intention."
"In my view, all the talk of ceasing to live in England and returning to live in India, as his home, was no more than a pipe dream after the seven month period, and he knew it. His intention, from immediately after the return in November 1970, was to live permanently and indefinitely in England, for it was here that his wife, together with their then two children, was determined to live. Practical effect was given to that intention by the purchase of [the family home] in July 1971. I am quite satisfied that Bikas had acquired an English domicile of choice by, at the latest, July 1971. That was his domicile when the husband was born in September 1971 and is accordingly the husband's domicile of origin."
a) The judge failed to give proper weight to the adhesive nature of Bikas's domicile of origin;
b) The judge failed to take into account and/or to give proper weight to a number of important factual matters;
c) The judge came to a conclusion which was not properly open to him on the evidence as a whole.
"There is a strong line of case law, binding on this court, that the domicile of origin is tenacious. Thus, for example, Lord Macnaghten in Winans v Attorney-General [1904] AC 287 at 290 held that the character of domicile of origin "is more enduring, its hold stronger, and less easily shaken off" than domicile of choice."
Mr Scott also submits that it is incumbent upon a judge hearing a case on the issue of domicile to deal with each major evidential issue that has been raised. He relies upon rule 11 of Dicey and Morris [15th Edn] which provides that:
"Any circumstance which is evidence of a person's residence or of his intention to reside permanently or indefinitely in a country, must be considered in determining whether he has acquired a domicile of choice in that country."
And from paragraph 25 of Arden LJ's in Barlow Clowes:
"Because of the width of the enquiry necessary in order to ascertain a person's domicile, the judge's judgment contains a very full statement of the facts."
Question: "Would he have ever gone without you?"
Answer: "That was the thing, he never wanted to go on his own. He thought that when he retired and I was at least nearing the retirement age and by that time the children would be old enough and he would take me. Of course I would not have lived there permanently. I would definitely, you know, have spent some time with my children over here, or wherever they lived, and part of the time over there. But I didn't want to stay in India just….on a permanent basis".
i) The husband's evidence that, in the week of his father's death, his father had said that he was "looking forward to spending more time in India" (Mr Chamberlayne submits that that phrase is incompatible with a desire to live permanently in India);
ii) The quality of the evidence from all of the husband's witnesses describing just how great a disaster the abortive trip to India in l970 had been;
iii) Evidence of what the couple did on their return to England (buying a house, having previously rented, and enrolling the children in English schools).
"…this was not an appeal against the exercise of a discretion by the lower court nor was it a case in which the lower court was applying a fairly flexible and imprecise standard involving an evaluation of all the facts. In those cases the appellate court is more reluctant to interfere with the trial judge's decision than in the case of a finding of primary fact or an inference from primary facts. This is an appeal contesting the correctness of an inference as to Andreas's relevant intentions between 1995 and 1999. The function of the appellate court is to decide whether the inference is wrong, making proper allowances for any advantages that the trial judge would have had and an appellate court would not have and not interfering with inferences which the judge could reasonably have made."
"Clarke LJ held that the approach of the appellate tribunal to findings of fact would depend on the extent to which the judge had had an advantage over the appellate court. So, where findings turn wholly or substantially on oral evidence given by witnesses at trial, an appellate court will be slow to interfere. Thus there is in general a greater latitude where the findings in issue on an appeal are not primary facts but inferences from the proved facts… If an appellate court considers that the judge has come to a conclusion that is plainly wrong and outside the ambit within which reasonable disagreement is possible, it is bound to intervene, even though the question is one of fact."
Wife's domicile
"I am in no doubt that well before December 2008 the wife had acquired an English domicile of choice. She was living here permanently, not merely in furtherance of her career but because she preferred English attitudes and the English way of life. She had formed, in the words of Arden LJ in Henwood, at paragraph 14 "a singular and distinctive relationship with this country". Her residence here was settled and not fixed for a limited period or particular purpose, but was general and indefinite in its future contemplation. But for her later falling in love with the husband, and his career move to Singapore, none of which she could have foreseen before she met him, she had every appearance, every intention and every expectation of living lifelong in England, the country of her choice".
"A person abandons a domicile of choice in a country by ceasing to reside there and by ceasing to intend to reside there permanently or indefinitely, and not otherwise."
"The crunch question is whether I believe and accept the wife's strong assertion that she herself always understood that the move was for a time limited period and that she expected and intended to return to England and resume her career here and her residence here. I do believe and accept it. I am, in particular, very clear that the wife had long ago set herself the goal of becoming a consultant at a leading London hospital and has never wavered from that goal and intention. The move to Singapore was, for her, no more than a pause and an episode or as she put it in one email, "a breather". I am thus not satisfied that when she first moved to Singapore, or at any time whilst she remained there, the wife ceased to intend to reside permanently and indefinitely and long term in England. She has never abandoned her English domicile of choice."
a) The judge erred in law in treating December 2008, when the parties met, as the cut off date for considering whether the wife had acquired a domicile of choice in England. Evidence of subsequent acts and omissions was relevant to whether or not she acquired an English domicile of choice at all and there is extensive evidence in the period between 2009 and 2012 which contradicts the wife's claim that she ever intended to live permanently or indefinitely in England;
b) Given that the wife's statements upon which the judge relied as to her own intentions were self-serving, the judge placed excessive weight upon this material;
c) In like manner, the judge erred in accepting the wife's self-serving evidence as to her intention to move to Singapore for only a limited period, when the overwhelming evidence from the husband was that she can have been in no doubt that this was an open-ended, indefinite posting;
d) The judge ignored many key factual matters which would have indicated that the wife either did not have, or had abandoned, a domicile of choice in England.
"(1) First, the question under the 1975 Act is whether Andreas was domiciled in England and Wales at the date of his death. Although it is helpful to trace Andreas's life events chronologically and to halt on the journey from time to time to take stock, this question cannot be decided in stages. Positioned at the date of death in February 2003 the court must look back at the whole of the deceased's life, at what he had done with his life, at what life had done to him and at what were his inferred intentions in order to decide whether he had acquired a domicile of choice in England by the date of his death. Soren Kierkegaard's aphorism that "Life must be lived forwards, but can only be understood backwards" resonates in the biographical data of domicile disputes."
and at paragraph 51:
"…the division of Andreas's life in England into periods of time led the deputy judge to divorce the post-1995 events, from which he drew an inference of an intention to make a permanent home in England, from the pre-1995 events from which he correctly declined to make that inference. He should have considered, as at the date of Andreas's death, the whole of Andreas's life in retrospect in order to see whether an inference could be made that he intended to make his home permanently or indefinitely in England."
"In a case in which the judge has had the benefit of oral evidence from the witnesses, has made findings of fact which are rationally explained, has described in detail his assessment of the respective witnesses as regards their reliability, and where his findings of fact differentiate with care as to what evidence from which witness is accepted in relation to which part of the history, no one witness being accepted as wholly reliable or rejected as wholly unreliable, an appellant who seeks to show that the judge's findings of fact, or some of them, are unsustainable faces a seriously difficult task… It has been said many times…that an appellate court can hardly ever overturn primary findings of fact by a trial judge who has seen the witnesses give evidence in a case in which credibility was in issue."
"As regards his assessment of particular passages in the evidence, it seems to me that in the present case the court must be even more than normally wary of a proposition that the weight of a witness' evidence can properly be judged from the written record of what was said. That is always a dangerous assumption, if credibility is in issue."
a) That the judge found that all three of the husband's witnesses had not given reliable evidence and had "collaborated" (judgment paragraph 21) in compiling their witness statements. That finding of collaboration was made against the firm denials of each of those three witnesses.
b) The judge found against the husband's evidence on key issues of fact in relation to the wife's state of knowledge around the decision to depart to Singapore. He decided against the husband's case and found the wife "completely credible".
c) The judge was right to rely upon the husband's tax returns which, in particular, did not claim non-domicile status with respect to the six properties that he owns in England. The judge rejected the husband's claim simply to have signed the returns without having read them closely.
Wife's domicile: discussion
a) It was entirely permissible for Holman J to take December 2008 as a point of reference. In doing so, there is no indication that he was doing any more than 'halting on the journey to take stock' in the manner endorsed by Mummery LJ in Agulian. At all times it is clear that the judge had the target of August 2012 as the key date and his review of events after December 2008 was nothing other than full;
b) Even if the judge had effectively determined the issue as at December 2008 so that, as Mr Scott submits, the burden was then put on the husband to prove a change in domicile of choice thereafter, it is plain that the judge did not approach the case by looking to the husband to discharge such a burden. His decision on the post-December 2008 material turned almost entirely upon his being satisfied that the wife was telling the truth as to her knowledge and intentions during that period;
c) The judge expressly cautioned himself as to the need for care when evaluating the wife's self-serving evidence. He was, however, able to find support for his finding from other, albeit, limited material (emails and the insurance policy) and from the wife's clear focus upon, ultimately, pursuing her career in England and Wales;
d) I do not regard the evidence as to the permanence of the husband's posting to be as overwhelming or unequivocal as Mr Scott suggests. By common acclaim this husband is a very talented and ambitious international lawyer. It would be impossible for anyone to predict whether any posting at any level for such an individual in a dynamic and global law firm would be 'permanent'. The statements contained in the firm's literature as to permanence really take the matter no further as they would be unlikely to indicate anything to the contrary;
e) The wife's search for jobs in Singapore at a time which would have compromised her applications for indefinite leave to remain in the UK and for UK citizenship could only attract weight if there was clear evidence that she acted in that manner despite clearly understanding the adverse immigration consequences. There is no such evidence; in fact, it is clear that once the husband had provided immigration advice to her, the wife gave priority to securing her UK immigration status in a manner which counts against the husband's case;
f) This most experienced judge plainly had a firm and full grasp of the detail of the evidence before him. He had been exposed to the careful analysis, which has been rehearsed before this court, presented by leading counsel on each side. In the circumstances it was neither necessary nor appropriate for the judge slavishly to list every single factual issue or pointer in the course of his judgment. The process of evaluating the volume of micro-points in any case is the inevitable precursor to the preparation of a final judgment within which the judge analyses those factual matters which are prominent and crucial to the decision before coming to a conclusion. In this regard, the judgment of Holman J in the present case is above criticism.
Lord Justice Vos
Lord Justice Rimer