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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Wodehouse v Wodehouse [2018] EWCA Civ 3009 (29 November 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/3009.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Civ 3009 |
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ON APPEAL FROM EASTBOURNE FAMILY COURT
(DEPUTY JUDGE AUSTIN)
HB14D00710
The Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(SIR ANDREW McFARLANE)
LADY JUSTICE KING
LORD JUSTICE COULSON
Between:
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ELLEN ELIZABETH WODEHOUSE | Appellant | |
- and - | ||
HENRY WYNDHAM WODEHOUSE | Respondent |
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165 Fleet Street London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr N Barnes (instructed by Warrens Law and Advocacy) on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice King :
Background
"There is no question of an advance of capital being made ... of any amount for many reasons, not least because first, the potential for any outstanding debts after clearance of the loan be charged against Mr Wodehouse's putative share in the fund, the interests of the life tenant, the interest of the other beneficiaries."
"140. I am not surprised that the Trustees very properly chose to be joined in these proceedings, and oversee and protect their position, but I consider that the Trust, save in its role as commercial mortgagee, is not relevant to this dispute between husband and wife. The plain fact is, that the applicant and respondent have no serious challenge to the amount claimed by the Trust. No attacks upon the validity of the Charge can be sustained. The Trustees of the Kimberley Trust [the Wills Trust] are completely blameless in this matter. They are joined simply to state the position of the Trust.
In my judgment, the position of the Trustees on all these aspects and, indeed, in this case generally, is unimpeachable."
"147. The respondent's pension payments were far from substantial and greatly exceeds any pension entitled by the wife which is minimal. The respondent does have support from a partner who has been unwilling or reluctant to participant or particularise. It can only be right that the wife shares in his pension and in my judgment a proportion of 50% would be fair."
"I propose to order as follows:
There shall be a clean break;
The house should be sold forthwith for the best possible price;
The net proceeds of sale should be divided equally between the parties, deducting from the husband's share a sum equivalent to the loans recited in the chronology at February 1998 (£30,000), January 2000 (£11500) and 11 August 2018 (shortfall to Northern Rock, £97,000 app)
Both parties being impecunious, the husband's pension should be divided equally by way of a pension sharing order;
There should be no order as to costs as between the applicant wife and the respondent husband."
"9. The respondent shall pay or cause to be paid to the applicant a lump sum of £138,500 by the completion date of the sale of the family home provided for below AND IT IS DIRECTED THAT if the respondent fails to pay all or any part of this lump sum by the completion date of the sale of the family home provided for below:
9.1 simple interest shall accrue on the outstanding balance of the lump sum from the completion date of the sale of the family home provided for below, until payment in full at the rate applicable at the time being to a County Court judgment debt; and
9.2 The third party shall pay or cause to be paid from the respondent's interest in the Trust upon the death of the Dowager Countess, or any earlier distribution of the Trust capital, the balance of the lump sum outstanding including all interest thereon prior to distribution to the respondent. For the avoidance of doubt, in the event that the respondent's interest is insufficient to pay the lump sum or such part that remains unpaid and any interest thereon full, it shall be paid to the applicant in part towards the respondent's lump sum liability."
"The respondent's interests are known and foreseeable and a quantum can be calculated from the Trust's own disclosure. It is a foreseeable asset. It is foreseeable that it could cover the balance of the sums the judgment says are due to the applicant at some foreseeable future date. It is an asset/resource. It follows, especially since the Trust itself intervened in these proceedings and became a party, that it can be ordered to pay, from the respondent's interests and not from the interests of anyone else, the balance of the sums due to the applicant. This presents and avoids future litigation and all parties know where they stand. It avoids the applicant not receiving sums found to be owed to her due to the effluxion of time or any limitation date or exhaustion of the capital by the respondent prior to the applicant receiving it. It promotes and ensures clarity and a fair outcome. It does not mean that the applicant will receive anything more than what she is entitled to or that any other beneficiary's interests are affected."
The Appeal
"Well, in terms of whether it is right or wrong in principle to be ordering a third party to pay a lump sum.
MR BARNES: It is a third part debt order effectively which is perfectly permissible.
[THE JUDGE]: It is not, it is a lump sum between -- I can tell you that a District Judge or any judge dealing with it has no jurisdiction to make such an order. It can only make orders under the ancillary relief between husband and wife.
MR BARNES: He can make a third party order, I mean just purely under the enforcement regime he can make a third party order.
[THE JUDGE]: That is if you are enforcing. The jurisdiction is to make property adjustment orders or lump sum orders between the parties."
"Well for the all the reasons set out by the learned Deputy District Judge it seems to me that he is simply making a lump sum order payable at some point in the future. That in itself is not an impermissible thing to do. Indeed, it makes it more likely to be enforced and as it says in the judgment it makes less likely that there is going to be future litigation between the parties. Therefore, for all of these reasons I am not of the view that this is a wrong decision."
Pensions
Outcome
Lord Justice Coulson:
The President of the Family Division:
Epiq Europe Ltd hereby certify that the above is an accurate and complete record of the proceedings or part thereof.
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400
Email: [email protected]