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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 >> Thum v Thum [2018] EWCA Civ 624 (12 July 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/624.html Cite as: [2019] 2 WLR 127, [2018] EWCA Civ 624, [2019] 1 FLR 380, [2019] Fam 226, [2018] 3 FCR 568, [2018] WLR(D) 444 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [View ICLR summary: [2018] WLR(D) 444] [Buy ICLR report: [2019] Fam 226] [Buy ICLR report: [2019] 2 WLR 127] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM
Mr Justice Mostyn
High Court of Justice
Family Division
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Lord Justice David Richards
and
Lord Justice Moylan
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Oliver Thum (Appellant) |
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Catja Marion Thum (respondent) |
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Mr Martin Pointer QC/Mr Stephen Rubin QC and Mrs Rebecca Carew Pole (instructed by Schillings International) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 15th March 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Moylan
Introduction:
""
"1 A court shall be deemed to be seised:
at the time when the document instituting the proceedings or an equivalent document is lodged with the court, provided that the applicant has not subsequently failed to take the steps he was required to take to have service effected on the respondent; or
if the document has to be served before being lodged with the court, at the time when it is received by the authority responsible for service, provided that the applicant has not subsequently failed to take the steps he was required to take to have the document lodged with the court."
Only sub-paragraph (a) is relevant in this appeal. The issues raised by this appeal are (i) what steps is a petitioner "required to take to have service effected" of a divorce petition issued in England and Wales for the purposes of Article 16 and (ii) whether the wife in this case has failed to take such steps.
(i) The judge's interpretation of the effect of the proviso in Article 16(1)(a) was wrong;
(ii) The judge was wrong to conclude that the wife had not failed to take the steps she was required to take to have service effected.
Background
Mostyn J's Judgment
"… subject to that, it seems to me, rightly or wrongly, that the only formal requirement imposed by the law on a petitioner for divorce is to serve the petition at some unspecified point in the future. I agree with Gloster J that I cannot read the words "forthwith" or "as soon as possible" into rule 7.8. The furthest I would go would be to infer a requirement of acting reasonably promptly and that promptitude should be informed in a broad way by the (extendable) time limits in CPR r.7.5".
The Legal Framework
"1. Where proceedings relating to divorce, legal separation or marriage annulment between the same parties are brought before courts of different Member States, the court second seised shall of its own motion stay its proceedings until such time as the jurisdiction of the court first seised is established …
3. Where the jurisdiction of the court first seised is established, the court second seised shall decline jurisdiction in favour of that court".
"In the interests of the harmonious administration of justice it is necessary to minimise the possibility of concurrent proceedings and to ensure that irreconcilable judgments will not be given in different Member States. There should be a clear and effective mechanism for resolving cases of lis pendens and related actions, and for obviating problems flowing from national differences as to the determination of the time when a case is regarded as pending. For the purposes of this Regulation, that time should be defined autonomously."
"(1) After an application for a matrimonial or civil partnership order has been issued by the court, a copy of it must be served on the respondent and on any co-respondent".
"An application may be served by one of the following methods –
(a) personal service in accordance with rule 6.7;
(b) first class post, or other service method which provides for delivery on the next business day, in accordance with Practice Direction 6A; or
(c) where rule 6.11 applies, document exchange."
There are also provisions dealing with service by the bailiff (r.6.9) and service on a solicitor within the jurisdiction or in any EEA state (r.6.11).
"(3) Where the applicant wishes to serve an application form … on a respondent out of the United Kingdom, it may be served by any method –
Provided for by –
rule 6.44 (service in accordance with the Service Regulation);
rule 6.45 (service through foreign governments, judicial authorities and British Consulate authorities); or
permitted by the law of the country in which it is to be served."
Rule 6.44 sets out the procedure which must be followed for service in accordance with the Service Regulation:
(1) This rule applies where the applicant wishes to serve the application form, or other document, in accordance with the Service Regulation.
(2) The applicant must file -
(a) the application form or other document;
(b) any translation; and
(c) any other document required by the Service Regulation."
The documents are sealed or otherwise authenticated and sent to the Senior Master of the Queen's Bench Division.
Submissions
"I have to say that a divorce petition does not stand in the same position as a writ in a civil action; a divorce petition is dealing with the status of parties and is subject to the rules set out in the Matrimonial Causes Rules 1977; it ought not to state that a marriage has broken down irretrievably if that is not the instructions of the client; and it ought to be served as soon as practicable after filing. It is not appropriate in the Family Division for petitions to be filed and held in secret and not served until it suits the petitioner. Having said that, however, in my view nothing turns on that aspect."
Discussion and Determination
"59 In the absence of any such duty to effect prior service, it would have to be concluded that the investigating magistrate … was seised at the time when the complaint … was lodged at that court, provided however that (the complainants) did not omit to take the measures which they were, again under the applicable national law, obliged to take to ensure that the document lodged should thereafter be served on the defendants" (my emphasis).
There is no reason why the same approach would not apply to the identical provisions in Article 16, a conclusion supported by MH v MH (paragraph 25: see below).
"73. … in any event, it does not seem to me that my conclusion as to the reasonableness of UBS' behaviour is of any relevance. It cannot be appropriate that, under Article 30, the relevant court has to conduct an enquiry as to whether, applying some wholly uncertain subjective criteria, it regards the issuing party as having inappropriately delayed the service of process. That would introduce the very uncertainty that Article 30 was apparently designed to avoid. The only criterion has to be that the issuing party has subsequently 'failed to take the steps he was required to take to have service effected on the defendant'."
"24 I do not accept Mr Keith's submissions as (to) the correct interpretation of article 30(1) or on its application to the facts of this case. I agree that the Czech proceedings were lodged in the Czech court before the English proceedings were issued and served. The problem is the legal effect, under the proviso to article 30(1), of SSPF's non-payment of the court fee before the English proceedings were issued and served. It only becomes necessary to consider the effect of that article when the courts of another member state (in this case the English court) appear on the litigation scene. When there are two sets of pending proceedings there will be an issue under articles 27 and 28 as which courts are first seised of the pending proceedings. The proviso to article 30(1) makes it necessary to consider the domestic law of the member state (in this case Czech law) to see if there has been a failure to take the required step to have service of them effected on the defendant and, if so, what is the legal effect of that failure.
25 In this case the consequence of SSPF's non-payment of the Czech court fee was that service of the Czech proceedings was not and could not be effected on DCL or ENIC. I agree with the judge that, from the date of the lodging of the Czech proceedings on 15 April 2009 until 6 August 2009, there was a continuing failure by SSPF to perform its legal duty, which arose on its lodging of the proceedings, to pay the Czech court fee. Payment of the court fee was a required step for the service of the Czech proceedings. SSPF did not take that step. It was established by an opinion of the Czech Supreme Court of 29 September 1988 (No 2/1989) that the court shall not serve the proceedings on other parties before the fee has been paid. SSPF's evidence and submissions on the possible procedural consequences under Czech law of that failure upon the proceedings (whether they are stayed, or dismissed or cease to be valid) are irrelevant. What matters are the consequences for being seised of proceedings under the Judgments Regulation, which simply looks at whether or not there has been a failure to take a required step to effect service of the proceedings."
43 … article 30 specifies a moment as the time when a court is seised of proceedings, but subject to a proviso whose application depends on a subsequent failure by the plaintiff to take steps he is required to take. One of the issues is what is meant by failure to take steps in this context. It cannot refer only to the fact that the plaintiff has not yet taken the relevant steps. Otherwise, in practice, the court would only be seised once the required steps had been taken, even if they were taken promptly. That is clearly not the result that article 30 is intended to achieve. The failure must be, in some sense at least, a culpable failure. Thus, the proceedings in which the present appeals arise, issued on 12 June 2009 and served on SSPF on 29 June 2009 (or at latest on 4 August 2009), were pending in the High Court as from 12 June 2009. The claimants took the steps that they were required to take to have service effected on SSPF, and did so within the time allowed by English procedural rules.
44 It was argued that, on this reading, a culpable failure at an early stage might mean that the relevant court was not and could never again be seised of proceedings which had in fact been commenced before it, even if the culpable failure had been remedied later. I would not accept that. The starting point (in an English or a Czech case) is the date when the document is lodged with the court. At that moment, in principle, that court is seised of the proceedings. The position may change, if the proviso comes to apply. If it does then, at that moment, the court is no longer seised of the proceedings. However, it may be that the failure is later remedied, as in the present case when the Czech court fee was paid. If so, then the court is again seised of the proceedings.
48 Thus the obligation to pay the fee had arisen on 15 April 2009, and there was no impediment to the discharge of that obligation. Nor was it an obligation to be performed within a specified period, so that SSPF could not be said to be in breach of the obligation until after the expiry of that period (unlike, for example, provisions allowing a period within which service of a claim form is to be effected).
49 As Mummery LJ says, it is said to be common practice in the Czech courts not to pay the fee on issue of the proceedings, and instead to wait until the court demands the fee, and to pay within the time set out in the court's demand. That is what happened in the present case, and the fee was paid within the period stipulated by the court. We do not have to consider what might be the position if the plaintiff really does not know how much the fee is on issue of the proceedings, or really does not know to what bank account to pay the fee (if it has to be paid by bank payment rather than by the use of fee or duty stamps). In such a case it might be argued that the plaintiff cannot be said to be under an obligation which it has failed to comply with unless and until it is told what to pay and how and by when to pay it. In the present case, SSPF knew how much was payable from the start, and it could be paid (as it later was) by using stamps.
50 On that basis, it seems to me that SSPF's failure to pay the court fee was a culpable failure under Czech law, rather than a mere omission or the taking of a period of time to do something which is permitted or allowed for under the relevant law. That failure had started and was still continuing on 15 June 2009. For that reason, I agree with the judge and with Mummery LJ that the Czech court was not at that time seised of the proceedings commenced by SSPF, within the meaning of the Judgments Regulation, that therefore the High Court was the court first seised, for the purposes of the Regulation, when the present proceedings were issued on that date, and that accordingly the jurisdiction appeal should be dismissed."
"59 In my judgment, "failure" in article 30(1) is a failure to comply with a duty imposed by the procedural law of the jurisdiction in question. SSPF failed to comply with its duty to pay the Czech court fee. Its duty had arisen as soon as it lodged its claim with the Czech court. As a result of that failure, DCL had not been served when this court became seised with the present proceedings. It follows that for the purposes of the Judgments Regulation, the English court was first seised."
"22 As regards the purpose of the rules of lis pendens in art.19 of Regulation 2201/2003, the Court noted that those rules are intended to prevent parallel proceedings before the courts of different Member States and to avoid conflicts between decisions which might result therefrom. For that purpose, the EU legislature intended to put in place a mechanism which is clear and effective in order to resolve situations of lis pendens (see judgment of 6 October 2015 in A v B (C-489/14) [2016] ILPr 10, [29]).
23 As is apparent from the words "court first seised" and "court second seised" in art.19(1) and (3) of Regulation 2201/2003, that mechanism is based on the chronological order in which the courts concerned have been seised.
24 In order to determine when a court is deemed to be seised and thereby establish which is the court first seised, it is necessary to refer to art.16 of that Regulation, entitled "Seising of a Court."
25 The Court has held, in para.[30] of the order of 16 July 2015 in P v M (C-507/14) EU:C:2015:512, that that article contains an autonomous definition of the time when a court is deemed to be seised. The EU legislature adopted a uniform concept of the time when a court is seised, which is determined by the performance of a single act, namely, depending on the procedural system under consideration, the lodging of the document instituting the proceedings or the service of that document, but which nevertheless takes into consideration whether the second act was in fact subsequently performed. Thus, pursuant to art.16(1)(a) of Regulation 2201/2003, the time when the court is seised is the time when the document instituting the proceedings or an equivalent document is lodged with the court, provided that the applicant has not subsequently failed to take the steps he was required to take to have service effected on the respondent (order of 16 July 2015 in P v M (C-507/14) EU:C:2015:512, [32]).
26 The Court stated that, for the court to be deemed seised, art.16(1)(a) of Regulation 2201/2003 requires the satisfaction not of two conditions, namely that the document instituting the proceedings or an equivalent document must have been lodged and service thereof must have been effected on the respondent, but merely of one – that of lodging the document instituting proceedings or an equivalent document. Pursuant to that provision, the lodging of the document of itself renders the court seised, provided that the applicant has not subsequently failed to take the steps he was required to take to have service effected on the respondent (order of 16 July 2015 in P v M (C-507/14) EU:C:2015:512, [37]).
27 The Court observed, in respect of that condition, that its objective is to ensure protection against abuse of process. Thus, for the purposes of checking compliance with that condition, account would not be taken of delays caused by the judicial system applicable, but only of any failure of the applicant to act diligently (order of 16 July 2015 in P v M (C-507/14) EU:C:2015:512, [34])."
"Thus in order to justify the interpretation for which the defendants contend, it would be necessary, since there are no express words to that effect, to conclude that the provisions of rule 7.4 … clearly imply that rule 7.6 is to apply to the particulars of claim as well as to the claim form".
"… It cannot refer only to the fact that the plaintiff has not yet taken the relevant steps. Otherwise, in practice, the court would only be seised once the required steps had been taken, even if they were taken promptly. That is clearly not the result that article 30 is intended to achieve."
Lord Justice David Richards:
Lady Justice King: