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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 >> H v H [2014] EWCA Civ 1523 (02 December 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/1523.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 1523 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE FAMILY DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
Coleridge J
FD04D08250
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KITCHIN
and
LORD JUSTICE RYDER
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H |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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H |
Respondent |
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Phillip Marshall QC and Harry Oliver (instructed by Payne Hicks Beach Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 8 October 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Ryder:
Introduction:
The background circumstances:
s 31(7)(a): "in the case of a periodical payments order made on or after the grant of a decree of divorce … the court shall consider whether in all the circumstances and after having regard to any such change it would be appropriate to vary the order so that payments under the order are required to be made or secured only for such further period as will in the opinion of the court be sufficient (in the light of any proposed exercise by the court where the marriage has been dissolved of its powers under section (7B) below) to enable the party in whose favour the order was made to adjust without undue hardship to the termination of those payments."
s 31(7B): "the court has power, in addition to any power it has apart from this subsection, to make supplemental provision consisting of any of-
(a) an order for the payment of a lump sum in favour of a party to a marriage; […]"
Submissions:
a) the wife's future annual income requirement would be £70,000 uplifted to £80,000 having regard to her previous expenditure (that is excluding her accumulation of savings) and her future needs at the time the husband is likely to retire;
b) the wife might reasonably be expected to use not only her existing savings as a capital fund to produce income but also £500,000 that she could release from the equity of her home were she to re-house from property valued at £1.75m to something more modest and valued at £1.25m;
c) the wife would be able to produce £56,250 income from a capital fund of £1.5m which if rounded down to £55,000 would leave a shortfall of £25,000 to be met from a Duxbury fund which would then be £400,000.
a) he attributed only £500,000 of the equity in the wife's home to be part of her long term capital fund for income purposes and he assumed that the wife should have the benefit of that capital fund throughout i.e. he did not assume that the fund would be amortised;
b) although he took into account the £1m she had saved he did not subject that sum to an exercise which involved its amortisation;
c) he assumed a steady state income need for the wife after the husband's retirement rather than any 'step down' thereafter;
d) he did not take into account any further savings that the wife might accrue between the date of determination and the husband's retirement; and
e) he uplifted his estimation of the wife's net income needs from £70,000 to £80,000 'to be generous'.
Findings:
"I shall approach this case on the basis that the husband has present assets worth in the region of £5.68m but in the not too distant future and over the course of the next 10 years he will be entitled to receive further and in some respects significant payments."
"The wife in this case has been properly and fairly treated thus far by the previous orders. It is entirely wrong to try and back track and reargue or reopen the provision which has been made in the then circumstances and where it has been received and accepted and there has been no appeal;"
"This case does retain a tangible, obvious compensation element which deserves recognition one way or another even at this stage. It has been factored in up to now and there is no reason why it should simply be ignored".
The judge decided that compensation would be recognised in four ways: a) only £500,000 of the value of the wife's home was to be regarded as part of the long term income fund; b) neither that sum nor the £1m of savings was to be amortised; c) there was to be no further step down in the wife's income needs after the husband's retirement; and d) the additional savings between the order and the husband's retirement were to be the wife's to keep without them being taken into account (estimated at £100,000).
Discussion:
"Duxbury calculators are based on an iterative computation, seeking the amount which if invested to achieve capital growth and income yield (both at assumed rates and after income tax on the yield and CGT on the realised gains) could theoretically be drawn down in equal inflation-proofed installments over a period (usually, but not always, the estimated actuarial life expectancy of the recipient) but would be completely exhausted at the end of the period. It is not, and never has been, an attempt to identify the sum necessary to guarantee a particular level of expenditure
[…]
The underlying 'assumptions' are (1) a uniform income yield; (2) a uniform rate of capital growth; (3) a uniform rate of inflation; (4) a consistent regime of taxation - with bands/allowances increasing in line with inflation; (5) a constant level of drawdown in real terms; (6) a consistent rate of 'churn' (the realisation of capital gains other than to fund expenditure); and that the recipient will (7) survive for precisely the expected average of her (or occasionally his) contemporaries; and (8) be or become entitled to a 'full' state pension; which will (9) increase in line with prices; while (10) the age at which a state pension is payable will not alter in the meantime. All of the assumptions are necessary simplifications which will not materialise: as Ward LJ said in B v B [1990] 1 FLR 20 'the only certainty is that it will not happen as we have predicted'. […] The assumptions include three key financial predictions - an average income yield of 3% p.a., an average capital growth of 3.75% p.a. and average inflation of 3% p.a."
"the main family asset is the husband's very substantial earning power, generated over a lengthy marriage in which the couple deliberately chose that the wife devote herself to the home and family and the husband to work and career. The wife is undoubtedly entitled to a generous income provision for herself and for the sake of the children, including sums which will enable her to provide for her own old age and insure her husband's life. She is also entitled to a share in the very large surplus, on the principles both of sharing the fruits of he matrimonial partnership and of compensation for the comparable position which she might have been in had she not compromised her own career for the sake of them all."
"I think that the principles concerning a compensation claim can properly be expressed as follows:-
i) It will only be in a very rare and exceptional case where the principles will be capable of being successfully invoked;
ii) such a case will be one where the court can say without any speculation, i.e. with almost near certainty, that the claimant gave up a very high earning career which had it not been foregone would have led to earnings at least equivalent to that presently enjoyed by the respondent;
iii such a high earning career will have been practised by the claimant over an appreciable period during the marriage. Proof of this track-record is key.
iv) once these findings have been made compensation will be reflected by fixing the periodical payments award (or the multiplicand if this aspect is being capitalised by Duxbury) towards the top end of the discretionary bracket applicable for a needs assessment on the facts of the case. Compensation ought not to be reflected by a premium or additional element on top of needs based award."
that is the decision of Sir Mark Potter P in VB v JP [2008] 1 FLR 742. Although I take one small part of the exposition in that case, the full text of the judgment deserves careful consideration if and when the issue of compensation comes to be considered by this court. At [59], the President said this:
"Second, on exit from the marriage, the partnership ends and in ordinary circumstances a wife has no right or expectation of continuing economic parity ('sharing') unless and to the extent that consideration of her needs, or compensation for relationship-generated disadvantage so require"
He continued:
"where it is necessary to provide ongoing periodical payments for the wife after the division of capital assets insufficient to cover her future maintenance needs, any element of compensation is best dealt with by a generous assessment of her continuing needs unrestricted by purely budgetary considerations, in light of the contribution of the wife to the marriage and the broad effect of the sacrifice of her own earning capacity upon her ability to provide for her own needs following the end of the matrimonial partnership"
"[95] The Court of Appeal, however, seems not to have had the distinction between needs and compensation in mind when considering the way ahead. The court appears to have treated the surplus of income over expenditure as simply a means whereby the wife could accumulate a capital reserve. But that would be to mistake the purpose of this part of the district judge's award"
and at [99]:
"But the wife's claim for compensation stands differently. Her compensation claim is not needs related; it is loss related. So the compensation element of her claim is not directly affected by the use she makes of her resources"
Lord Justice Kitchin:
Lord Justice Moore-Bick:
Footnote:
W v W (Financial Remedies) [2013] 2 FLR 359
J v J (Financial Orders: Wife's Long Term Needs) [2011] 2 FLR 280
Robson v Robson [2011] 1 FLR 751
N v N (Ancillary Relief) [2010] 2 FLR 1093
Vaughan v Vaughan [2010] 2 FLR 242
Mc Farlane (No 2) [2009] 2 FLR 1322
B v B (Ancillary Relief) [2008] 2 FLR 1627
Lauder v Lauder [2007] 2 FLR 802