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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 >> Besharova v Berezovsky [2016] EWCA Civ 161 (22 March 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/161.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Civ 161 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
FAMILY DIVISION
Mrs Justice Roberts
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE VOS
and
SIR STEPHEN RICHARDS
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Galina Alexeevna Besharova |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Boris Abramovich Berezovsky |
Respondent |
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Stephen Moverley Smith QC and Elizabeth Weaver (instructed by Holman Fenwick Willan Llp) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 1 March 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Stephen Richards :
"In the event that the applicant receives any sum or sums due to her under paragraph 2 of the Order following the sale of [the property] and distribution of the proceeds of sale …, the amount of any such receipt or receipts shall be set off in reduction or extinguishment of the amount payable to the applicant pursuant to paragraph 3 of the Order …."
The wife brings this appeal against that part of the judge's order. The relief sought is the amendment of the declaration by the insertion of "not" between "shall" and "be set off".
The Order
"2. As soon as is reasonably practicable the Respondent shall sell, or cause to have sold, [the property], and the following provisions shall apply:
a. The property shall be sold for the best price reasonably obtainable being such price that the parties agree or in default of agreement at a price determined by the Court.
b. Both parties shall have conduct of the sale.
c. The gross proceeds of sale shall be applied as follows and in the following order:
…
iv. £16,000,000 to the Respondent …
v. The balance of the net proceeds to the Petitioner.
3. The Respondent shall pay to the Petitioner a lump sum or lump sums to be calculated as follows:
a. The sum or sums, as appropriate, that shall be equivalent to 20% of any and all monies that the Respondent receives (excluding costs Orders), whether by way of settlement or court award on an interim or a final basis, in relation to the determination of one or more of the actions
b. Provided that:
i. The sum received by the Petitioner pursuant to paragraph 2 above shall be credited against and deducted from the figure of 20% calculated as above; and
ii. In no circumstances shall the total provision for the Petitioner under paragraphs 2 and 3 above exceed £200,000,000.
Thus, by way of explanation, If the litigation settles/the net award is £500,000,000, then the Petitioner's share would be £100,000,000 to which credit would be given for any money received from [the property] (say £54,000,000) in which case the Petitioner should be paid £46,000,000 net. If the litigation settles/the net award is £100,000,000, the Petitioner's 20% share would then equate to £20,000,000 and in such circumstances the Petitioner would only receive the net proceeds of [the property] (assuming that the Petitioner's net share from [the property] is more than £20 million) (less the £16,000,000 payable to the Respondent and the sum required pursuant to paragraph 2(b)(i)-(iii) above).
The following provisions shall apply
c. The sum or sums shall be paid to the Petitioner within 10 working days of receipt by the Respondent of all and any net monies received by him, whether by way of settlement or court award on an interim or a final basis, in relation to the determination of one or more of the legal proceedings.
4. In the event that the Respondent shall have paid to the Petitioner a lump sum or sums of £200,000,000 pursuant to paragraph 3 of this order prior to completion of sale of [the property] pursuant to paragraph 2 above, then paragraph 2 of this order and the freezing Order of 1 July 2008 … shall be discharged and the following provisions shall apply:
a. The Petitioner shall assign any interest she has in [the property] to the Respondent and shall not thereafter be entitled to any interest in the said property
b. The Petitioner shall consent to her removal as a beneficiary of any relevant trust.
5. Upon completion of sale of [the property] and division of the net proceeds in compliance with paragraph 2 of this order AND (conjunctive) payment of the lump sum or sums in paragraph 3 the order of 1 July 2008 … shall be discharged.
6. Until the receipt by the Petitioner of the net proceeds of sale of [the property] pursuant to paragraph 2 of this order or sooner compliance pursuant to paragraph 4 of this order or sooner payment of at least £54,000,000 pursuant to paragraph 3 of this order, the order of 20 July 2009 shall continue in force and as such the Respondent shall pay or cause to be paid to the Petitioner maintenance pending suit pending decree absolute and thereafter interim maintenance at the rate of £60,000 per month.
7. Upon receipt by the Petitioner of the net proceeds of sale of [the property] pursuant to paragraph 2 of this order or receipt of the lump sums pursuant to paragraph 3 or 4 (whichever shall occur first), the Respondent shall be released from [certain undertakings]."
Events since the Order was made
The parties' cases on the issue of construction
Roberts J's judgment
"66. It has to be said that the consent order is indeed an unhappy document. Its terms are, in part, wholly impenetrable and apparently inconsistent with one another. Nevertheless, with some reluctance it has to be said, I have come to the conclusion that, as a matter of construction, the set-off in paragraph 3(b) of the consent order cannot have been intended to operate in the manner contended for by the wife ….
…
69. Taking all these factors carefully into account, I have come to the conclusion that on the balance of probabilities the parties' intentions and the import of paragraphs 2 and 3 of the consent order were that her primary entitlement to the gross proceeds of sale from [the property] as defined in paragraph 2(c)(v) was qualified by the mechanism for set off provided in paragraph 3(b). The words in line one of paragraph 3 clearly anticipate the necessity for a calculation to be performed in due course. That calculation cannot be undertaken unless and until the figures are known. Whilst they may have crystallised now in relation to the intended source of the lump sum payment(s) due to the wife, they remain completely unknown in terms of the source of the balance of the award (i.e. the sale proceeds which will be achieved when a purchaser is found for [the property]). Ingenious and persuasive though the arguments advanced by Mr Marks might be, I am unable to accept them as providing an opportunity to determine the full extent of the wife's entitlement at the present time. That determination will have to await another day when the property has been sold …."
Discussion
Lord Justice Vos :
The President of the Family Division :