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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 >> Hart v Hart [2017] EWCA Civ 1306 (31 August 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/1306.html Cite as: [2018] 2 WLR 509, [2017] 3 FCR 343, [2018] Fam 93, [2017] WLR(D) 585, [2018] 1 FLR 1283, [2017] EWCA Civ 1306 |
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ON APPEAL FROM
HIS HONOUR JUDGE WILDBLOOD QC
SITTING AS A DEPUTY HIGH COURT JUDGE
FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BEATSON
and
LORD JUSTICE MOYLAN
____________________
KAREN HART |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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JOHN RALPH HART |
Respondent |
____________________
Grant Armstrong (instructed by The Law Practice UK Ltd.) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 11th May 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Moylan:
Introduction
Background
The Judgment
"although I do my best to do so the result, in this case, amounts to multiple speculation and produces a result upon which I could not sensibly rely".
This was because of a number of difficulties. These included that, although the husband "was undoubtedly wealthy when the parties met, there is no reliable evidence of (the husband's) worth then and any attempt at quantifying it is guesswork" and that there "has been mingling of assets between the parties and also between (the husband) and his sister".
(i) the "needs based approach (was) the most scientific and also the most principled":
(ii) the difference between the above figure and the "mingled" figure was not material and the latter rested on a "less secure legal foundation";
(iii) the non-matrimonial figure was a "guess" and not reliable; and
(iv) the last figure was also unreliable. It ignored the origins of the capital. When the judge conducted an "overview" in accordance with Jones, he considered that this figure was "too high".
Submissions
" the longer the marriage goes on the easier it is to say that by virtue of the mingling of the property with the product of the parties' marital endeavours the supplier of that property has, in effect, agreed to share it with his spouse".
The Legal Framework
"[26] This difference in treatment of matrimonial and non-matrimonial property might suggest that in every case a clear and precise boundary should be drawn between these two categories of property. This is not so. Fairness has a broad horizon. Sometimes, in the case of a business, it can be artificial to attempt to draw a sharp dividing line as at the parties' wedding day. Similarly the 'equal sharing' principle might suggest that each of the party's assets should be separately and exactly valued. But valuations are often a matter of opinion on which experts differ. A thorough investigation into these differences can be extremely expensive and of doubtful utility. The costs involved can quickly become disproportionate. The case of Mr and Mrs Miller illustrates this only too well.
[27] Accordingly, where it becomes necessary to distinguish matrimonial property from non-matrimonial property the court may do so with the degree of particularity or generality appropriate in the case. The judge will then give to the contribution made by one party's non-matrimonial property the weight he considers just. He will do so with such generality or particularity as he considers appropriate in the circumstances of the case."
"As the family's personal and financial inter-dependence grows, it becomes harder and harder to disentangle what came from where" (paragraph 148).
"[39] It will already be apparent that I am reluctant to encourage such disputes. It would require the courts and the parties, to adopt that well-known metaphor used by Coleridge J in G v G (Financial Provision: Equal Division) [2002] 2 FLR 1143, to 'rummage around in the attic', but worse, in my view, an even more dusty and opaque part of the attic than that being explored in G v G. Further, the more influential the factual conclusion might be seen to be in determining the outcome, the more the parties would be willing to devote time and money on the investigation with the full panoply, for example, of accountants and other valuers. It also assumes that the concepts being sought are clearly identifiable.
[40] I do not consider that this is what the House of Lords in Miller and McFarlane intended when giving the general guidance contained in that decision "
A bit later I concluded that:
"[48] a flexible approach is required to ensure that the court's focus remains on achieving a result which is fair. Of course, as the Court of Appeal said in Charman, judges must be loyal to the guidance given on a topic by the House of Lords. However, it is the application of guidance, not the rigid application of any specific formula coupled with a requirement to find clear and precise boundaries. The approach I propose to adopt is to set out the relevant factors drawn from s 25 and then to consider the principles of need and sharing, neither party having submitted that this is a case in which the principle of compensation has any application."
"My view of overall fairness to both parties, developed at an early stage and not displaced in the course of protracted subsequent reflection, is that the bracket fair to both would be between 30% and 36%".
The proposed award, being within this bracket, survived this test.
"Take a work of art or land with potential for development which a spouse has owned since prior to the marriage and which, without activity on his or her part, has substantially increased in value during it. The court would accept that the increase in its value during the marriage was as much non-matrimonial as its value at the date of the marriage: it would thereby allow for its passive growth. Passive growth is to be contrasted with growth as a result of contributions of one sort or another made during the marriage, i.e. of activity, irrespective of whether such is achieved with the assistance of a springboard already in position. An analogous approach is apt in respect of assets inherited by, or given to, one spouse during the marriage."
This reflects matrimonial property being, to repeat Lord Nicholls' description, "the financial product of the parties' common endeavour". In Jones itself, an allowance for passive growth was made by increasing the £4 million value, referred to above, by reference to a FTSE index.
"Three situations come to mind:
(a) Over time matrimonial property of such value has been acquired as to diminish the significance of the initial contribution by one spouse of non-matrimonial property.
(b) Over time the non-matrimonial property initially contributed has been mixed with matrimonial property in circumstances in which the contributor may be said to have accepted that it should be treated as matrimonial property or in which, at any rate, the task of identifying its current value is too difficult.
(c) The contributor of non-matrimonial property has chosen to invest it in the purchase of a matrimonial home which, although vested in his or her sole name, has as in most cases one would expect come over time to be treated by the parties as a central item of matrimonial property.
The situations described in (a) and (b) above were both present in White v White. By contrast, there is nothing in the facts of the present case which logically justifies a conclusion that, as the long marriage proceeded, there was a diminution in the importance of the source of the parties' entire wealth, at all times ring-fenced by share certificates in the wife's sole name which to a large extent were just kept safely and left to reproduce themselves and to grow in value."
"Where it is decided that the existence of pre-marital property should be reflected, there are two schools of thought as to how its expression should be worked out. The first is the technique of simply adjusting the percentage from 50%. This technique finds its clearest expression in Charman (No 4) at para [66] "
Then, after referring to C v C, he continues:
[11] The alternative technique is to identify the scale of the non-matrimonial property to be excluded, leaving the matrimonial property alone to be divided in accordance with the equal sharing principle."
He concludes by adhering to his view that the two-step approach is the right one "generally speaking" (paragraph 14). It is also interesting to note that Mostyn J excluded only £1 million of the husband's pre-marital wealth of £2 million on the broad basis that the marriage was long and the "moneys were well and truly mingled with marital finds" (paragraph 44), although he added that, but for needs, he would have excluded £2 million.
Conclusions
Determination
Lord Justice Beatson:
Lord Justice Lloyd Jones: