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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Quan v Bray & Anor [2015] EWCA Civ 1253 (04 December 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/1253.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 1253, [2015] CP Rep 13 |
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ON APPEAL FROM Family Division (RCJ)
Sir Paul Coleridge sitting as a High Court Judge
FD12D03916
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LADY JUSTICE KING
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Li Quan |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Stuart Bray - and - |
1st Respondent |
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Save China's Tigers |
2nd Respondent |
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The 1st Respondent appeared in person and was unrepresented
Richard Harrison QC & Samantha Ridley (instructed by Lewis Silkin LLP) for the 2nd Respondents
Hearing date: Tuesday 10th November 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice King :
The hearing on 9 December 2013 shall be utilised to enquire into:
i) The circumstances in which the China Tiger trust was set up.
ii) The purposes of those trusts.
iii) Whether those trusts are nuptial settlements.
iv) The availability of funds within those trusts to the parties.
v) Whether the funds within those trusts can only be utilised for tiger conservation.
78. In deference to the industry of all Counsel I re-read and re-considered the draft judgment in the light of the three notes and have reached these further conclusions:
(i) The use of the Barrell jurisdiction in these circumstances and in the fashion employed by the wife is quite simply wrong and not the purpose of that process. That process is designed to allow the court to look again at particular findings or conclusions where some particular fact or evidence has obviously been omitted, overlooked or has changed since the hearing. It does not afford a party the right to invite the court to start again from scratch and "have another go" at finding for them based on an entire re-arguing of the case. If that were a permissible approach it would result in litigation without end as one Barrell application would inevitably follow upon another and then another. 99 pages of further submissions says it all.
(ii) The implication of the potential findings to all the main parties are, and always have been, patently obvious to all and have caused me to approach the husband's case in particular, with considerable caution. They have been in the fore front of my mind since the first occasion when the case came before me.
(iii) However, there is nothing that I have read in the wife's latest supporting note which causes me to revisit any of the findings or conclusions (legal or factual) which I made or amplify any of my reasoning. The findings were reached, I remind myself, after very careful consideration of the evidence and arguments before, during and after the time when the hearings took place in December 2013 and June and July 2014. Indeed, on the contrary, I am fortified in my findings and conclusions by consideration of the further notes.
(iv) To have descended into the kind of detail which the wife now seeks would hugely increase the length of this judgment on these preliminary issues for no useful purpose.
(4) The assets held within the Chinese Tiger South Africa Trust and its underlying companies are not a resource of either the husband or the wife to be considered pursuant to s25 of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973.
(5) The Chinese Tigers South Africa Trust is not a post nuptial settlement.
In the light of those declarations, the judge dismissed the wife's application for a variation of settlement order pursuant to s24.1(c) of Matrimonial Causes Act 1973. The judge made a substantial number of consequential orders.
"All this depends on the facts. I am aware that the husband filed without the court's leave a rebuttal of the appellant's grounds of appeal. I have considered his document de bene esse and am mindful of the costs already expended in this litigation. Given that one of the purposes of an OS v DS hearing is to bring clarity to the parties' negotiations so as to inform settlement or subsequent determination, I have concluded that the judge's reasoning is inadequate. It seems to me that given the judge's refusal to be drawn into further reasoning or correction of his judgment it is important and proportionate to first consider whether the court should make that request of the judge (and if so, in what terms) or whether the lack of reasoning is sufficient to send this matter to the full court."
"In the end, considering fully the points urged on both sides, I find myself in agreement with the closing submissions made by SCT UK in respect of the wife's change of stance and also the doubts surrounding her credibility and I am driven to find, overall, that she is an unreliable witness upon whom the court cannot rely…."
Lord Justice Briggs :