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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> SR v CR [2008] EWHC 2329 (Fam) (03 October 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2008/2329.html Cite as: [2009] 2 FLR 1083, [2008] EWHC 2329 (Fam) |
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This judgment is being handed down in private on 3rd October 2008. It consists of 84 paragraphs and has been signed by the judge. The judge hereby gives leave for it to be reported.
The judgment is being distributed on the strict understanding that in any report no person other than the advocates or the solicitors instructing them (and other persons identified by name in the judgment itself) may be identified by name or location and that in particular the anonymity of the children and the adult members of their family must be strictly preserved.
Mr Justice Singer
FAMILY DIVISION
Strand. London. WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
SR |
Petitioner |
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- and - |
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CR |
Respondent |
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(ancillary relief: family trusts) |
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Miss Lucy Stone QC and Miss Sarah Phipps (instructed by Alexiou Fisher Philipps) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 9 to 13 June
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Singer:
Total | H | W | W |
Joint Funds | 988,979 | 494,489 | 494,489 |
W Funds | |||
Bank accounts | 116,372 | 116,372 | |
Liabilities | (5,187) | (5,187) | |
H Funds | |||
Proceeds home sale | 7,621,184 | 7,621,184 | |
Bank accounts | 2,194,670 | 2,194,670 | |
Other assets | 121,835 | 121,835 | |
Liabilities: offshore banks | (2,946,894) | (2,946,894) | |
Other liabilities | (207,485) | (207,485) | |
Total current assets | 7,883,473 | 7,277,799 | 605,674 |
Unpaid litigation costs | (409,662) | (429,436) | (429,436) |
10. No allowance has been made for income or for any capital growth since October 2006. As can be seen, these trusts predominantly hold liquid assets and realisable investments, totalling together $170m.
11. MR as settlor of the FGroup trusts has made his aspirations concerning their method of operation known to TrustCo by means of a series of Letters of Wishes, of which the latest is dated 30 June 2006. MR's primary wishes relevant to this application are:
During my Lifetime
3. Subject to [requests relating to his current spouse] I will ask you to distribute capital or income to me or the other beneficiaries of the trusts as I request and I would also ask you to consult with me on all matters concerning the management and administration and investment policy of the various trusts.
After mv Death
7. Subject to paragraphs [dealing with provision for his current spouse if she survives him, and for the education of his grandchildren] I wish you to deal with the remainder of the assets in the trusts... as set out in paragraphs 8 to 14 below.
8. In asking you in the following paragraphs to make a division of assets between members of my family, it means that you will need to liquidate assets. In the case of most assessors will not be difficult but there are certain assets (with which you will be familiar) that will require more careful handling and I ask you to ensure that the liquidation of those assets is handled in a proper and orderly fashion.
9. In making a division of assets between my four children as set out in paragraph 10 below there are two important matters that you should bring into account before making those divisions. The matters are: -
(a) please bring into account the notional account balances for each of the children with which you are familiar
(b) ...
10. Subject the points I make above I wish you to make a division of the assets in the trusts equally between my four children... Please be guided by the wishes of each child in relation to each one quarter part of the trust funds and I wish you to deal with the relevant assets in the manner that each of them indicates. If one or more of the children wishes part or all of his or her part of the trust funds to be distributed to or for his or her benefit then please act in accordance with these wishes but equally if one or more of the children wish the trusts to continue in relation to his or her part then please establish a separate fund or funds within the trust structures and act in accordance with that child's wishes.
….
15. I have made provision in my Wills for my estate to pass to the MR Will Trust which was established some years ago and the funds you receive after my death in that trust should be treated as part of the overall trust funds available for the beneficiaries.
16. For the purposes of considering the wishes set out in this Memorandum I would ask you as far as possible to treat all the trusts as a single family trust and the wishes I have expressed in his Memorandum are intended to cover all the assets in the various trusts including the MR Will Trust but subject to the special provisions relating to the [grandchildren's education trust].
…..
19. The above notes are set out as a guide to my wishes. I stress that this Memorandum does not created any legally binding obligation but is a note to you of my wishes in relation to these trusts.
Section 25
(1) It shall be the duty of the court in deciding whether to exercise its powers ... and, if so, in what manner, to have regard to all the circumstances of the case, first consideration being given to the welfare while a minor of any child of the family who has not attained the age of eighteen.
(2) As regards the exercise of the powers of the court under section 23(l)(a), (b) or (c), 24, [24A or 24B] above in relation to a party to the marriage, the court shall in particular have regard to the following matters-
(a) the income, earning capacity, property and other financial resources which each of the parties to the marriage has or is likely to have in the foreseeable future, including in the case of earning capacity any increase in that capacity which it would in the opinion of the court be reasonable to expect a party to the marriage to take steps to acquire;
(b) the financial needs, obligations and responsibilities which each of the parties to the marriage has or is likely to have in the foreseeable future;
(c) the standard of living enjoyed by the family before the breakdown of the marriage;
….
(f) the contributions which each of the parties has made or is likely in the foreseeable future to make to the welfare of the family, including any contribution by looking after the home or caring for the family; ...
On an application for reduction of the maintenance granted to a wife when she divorced her husband, the court, in fixing the reduced maintenance, has no jurisdiction to make an order that would leave the husband without sufficient to live on with a view to putting pressure on trustees, holding a trust fund on discretionary trusts, to exercise their discretion in favour of the husband as an object of the discretionary trust. It is only when the husband is receiving regular payments from the trustees under the discretionary trust that these payments can be taken into account as part of the husband's means.
[Counsel] informed the court that seemingly the basis of the learned judge's decision was that he took the view that if he made an order of this kind the effect would be to bring pressure on the trustees to make to the husband an allowance out of the settlement income. If that was the object of this order, it was, in my opinion, entirely wrong in principle. Trustees who have a discretion are bound to exercise it, and if they do so nobody can interfere with it. In my opinion there is no jurisdiction in the Divorce Court to make an order which will leave the husband in a state of starvation (to use rather picturesque language) with a view to putting pressure on trustees to exercise their discretion in a way which they would not have exercised it but for that pressure.... What has to be looked at is the means of husband, and by 'means' is meant what he is in fact getting or can fairly be assumed to be likely to get. I must not be misunderstood. It is, of course, legitimate (as was done in this case) to treat a voluntary allowance as something which the court can, in proper circumstances, infer will be likely to continue and make an order on that basis.
... where a spouse enjoys access to wealth but no absolute entitlement to it (as in the case, for example, of a beneficiary under a discretionary trust or someone who is dependent on the generosity of a relative), the court will not act in direct invasion of the rights of, or usurp the discretion exercisable by, a third party. Nor will it put upon a third party undue pressure to act in a way which will enhance the means of the maintaining spouse. This does not, however, mean that the court acts in total disregard of the potential availability of wealth from sources owned or administered by others. There will be occasions when it becomes permissible for a judge deliberately to frame his orders in a form which affords judicious encouragement to third parties to provide the maintaining spouse with the means to comply with the court's view of the justice of the case. There are bound to be instances where the boundary between improper pressure and judicious encouragement proves to be a fine one, and it will require attention to the particular circumstances of each case to see whether it has been crossed.
... the guidance to be derived from the various authorities to which Waite LJ has referred. Those which are the most helpful in this case are, in my view, the decisions of this court in O'D v O'D [1976] Fam 83, B v B (1982) 3 FLR 298 and Browne v Browne [1989] 1 FLR 291. From these authorities I derive the following principles:
(a) Where a husband can only raise further capital, or additional income, as the result of a decision made at the discretion of trustees, the court should not put improper pressure on the trustees to exercise that discretion for the benefit of the wife.
(b) The court should not, however, be 'misled by appearances'; it should 'look at the reality of the situation'.
(c) If on the balance of probability the evidence shows that, if trustees exercised their discretion to release more capital or income to a husband, the interests of the trust or of other beneficiaries would not be appreciably damaged, the court can assume that a genuine request for the exercise of such discretion would probably be met by a favourable response. In that situation if the court decides that it would be reasonable for a husband to seek to persuade trustees to release more capital or income to him to enable him to make proper financial provision for his children and his former wife, the court would not in so deciding be putting improper pressure on the trustees.
In relation to the facts of the present case, I would apply these principles to the family company as if it were a trust, and the shareholders (the husband, his mother and brother) the trustees.
Both settlements are potential sources of capital for the wife and are, therefore 'other financial resources', though not under her absolute control. Some assessment must be made of the worth of these potential sources of capital to her, not necessarily in valuers' terms, but in terms of the practical realities of life, or in terms of reasonable expectations. As Lord Merrivale said in 7Vv7V(1928) 44 TLR 324, p. 327, the ecclesiastical courts 'showed a degree of practical wisdom. . . . They were not misled by appearances . . . they looked at realities.' Much the same was said by this court in O'D v O'D [1976] Fam. 83, p. 90. Looked at in this way the potential of the 1951 settlement may be small, but that of the 1965 settlement is great. The wife herself was the settlor, settling her own money on herself for life, for her own purposes, and retaining a power of revocation subject only to the consent of the trustees. It is not to be supposed that the trustees would withhold their consent if the wife wished to free capital for any reasonable purpose, more especially when the other beneficiaries are already amply provided for.
Balancing the financial resources of each party and their respective needs, giving full weight to the wife's exceptional needs, particularly in the future, it is impossible to regard a lump sum of £50,000 as an unreasonable sum for the purposes of ss. 23 and 25 of the 1973 Act.
The next question, and it is often the crucial question in these cases, is practicability. It is at this stage that the court has to consider such problems as liquidity, the cost of raising money on mortgage or overdraft, the effect on a business of withdrawing a substantial capital sum and so on. These are practical matters and must be approached realistically, 'penetrating to the underlying realities' (O'D v O'D (above)), and 'not being misled by appearances' (N v N (above)).
In this case the question is, 'Is it practicable for the wife to raise the sum of £50,000?' To start with she has £28,300, plus accumulated interest, from the sale of 9 Clumber Crescent North on deposit or in cash. There remains a balance of £21,000. In a case such as this it is distasteful, and ought to be unnecessary, to look at the wife's personal possessions, but the attitude of her trustees make it unavoidable. She could, undoubtedly, but painfully, raise such a lump sum from her stamps (which in this case are real assets, if not investments) and her jewellery, or she could borrow it (at great and unnecessary expense) by way of mortgage. Alternatively, she could withdraw a relatively small part of the 1965 settlement fund with the consent of her trustees. The consequent loss of income would not be significant, and could be made good by reinvesting part of the fund which will, or may, involve some capital gains tax.
The judge concluded that the trustees would, reluctantly no doubt, give their consent to enable her to comply with the order, but it is pointed out by Mr Jackson that one of the trustees gave evidence before the judge which indicated that the trustee's policy was not to consent to the withdrawal of any more funds from the settlement. This produces a somewhat invidious situation which becomes positively embarrassing when the trustee in question is also acting as the wife's solicitor in bitterly contested matrimonial proceedings. It makes it difficult to know what weight to attach to his expression of intention. One might expect that the trustees would wait to see the outcome of the proceedings before exercising their discretion under the settlement.
….
The result is that we think the judge was right on the question of practicability. The wife can raise the balance of £21,000 and it would be unjust to the husband to make him bear the consequences if the trustees refused to permit the wife to raise the required sum out of the settlement fund.
and after referring to the facts of Howard, Ormrod LJ concluded:
The judge at first instance [in Howard] had made an order for periodical payments against the husband, apparently expressing the intention of putting pressure on the trustees to exercise their discretion in the husband's favour, and fixing a rate of payment which left the husband with little or nothing to live on if the trustees did not apply the income of the trust-fund by paying it to him. Not surprisingly, this court expressed strong disapproval of such an exercise of discretion by the judge below. Had the court had to consider the factual situation with which we have to deal, the judgments might have been expressed in less uncompromising language. We do not think that the judge was putting or attempting to put pressure on the trustees; on the contrary it could be said that the trustees were attempting to put pressure on the court. She was dealing in practical terms with the realities of the case and refusing to be misled by appearance.
[12] There has been some debate at the hearing of this appeal as to the nature of the central question which, in this not unusual situation, the court hearing an application for ancillary relief should seek to determine. Superficially the question is easily framed as being whether the trust is a financial "resource" of the husband for the purpose of s. 25(2)(a) of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973, "the Act of 1973". But what does the word "resource" mean in this context? In my view, when properly focused, that central question is simply whether, if the husband were to request it to advance the whole (or part) of the capital of the trust to him, the trustee would be likely to do so. In other cases the question has been formulated in terms of whether the spouse has real or effective control over the trust. At times I have myself formulated it in that way. But, unless the situation is one in which there is ground for doubting whether the trustee is properly discharging its duties or would be likely to do so, it seems to me on reflection that such a formulation is not entirely apposite. On the evidence so far assembled in the present case, as in most cases, there seems no reason to doubt that the duties of the trustee are being, and will continue to be, discharged properly. In his written argument in this court Mr Pointer Q.C. on behalf of the wife at one point referred to the possible "unity of interest" between the husband and Codan; and in his written argument before the judge he tentatively described Codan as "quasi-agents" of the husband. Both phrases imply that Codan is not asserting, or would not assert, the independence that its duties require of it; and in my view, on the present evidence, it was wise of Mr Pointer in oral argument to withdraw them. A trustee - in proper "control" of the trust - will usually be acting entirely properly if, after careful consideration of all relevant circumstances, he resolves in good faith to accede to a request by the settlor for the exercise of his power of advancement of capital, whether back to the settlor or to any other beneficiary.
[13] Thus in effect, albeit with one small qualification, I agree with the suggestion of Butler-Sloss L.J. in this court in Browne v. Browne [1989] 1 FLR 291 at 239 d - e that, in this context, the question is more appropriately expressed as whether the spouse has "immediate access to the funds" of the trust than "effective control" over it. The qualification relates to the word "immediate". In that case the trial judge knew that, if he was to proceed also to order the wife to pay the husband's costs, she would be unable to comply with his orders for her swift payment of a lump sum and costs without recourse to the off-shore trusts over which he found her to have "effective control": see 295 b - c. So the question in that case was whether her access to their funds was immediate. In principle, however, in the light of s.25 (2)(a) of the Act of 1973, the question is surely whether the trustee would be likely to advance the capital immediately or in the foreseeable future.
This was not a case in which it was appropriate to make an award outside the assets and income of the husband. Funds belonging to the husband's parents could not, on the evidence in this case, be included in an assessment of the husband's resources under s 25(2)(a). If the court were satisfied, on the balance of probabilities, that an outsider would provide money to meet an award that a party could not meet from his own absolute property, it could make an award that applied pressure on persons who had historically provided bounty. But, if it were clear that the outsider, being a person who had historically supplied bounty, would not, whether reasonably or not, come to the aid of the payer, the court would not make such an award.
This [the Esteem] exposition sets out with clarity the very different nature of, on the one hand, the relationship between a fiduciary and his beneficiary; and, on the other, that of mere donor and donee. If the court makes a reasonable request of trustees to make funds available to meet an ancillary relief award then it can assume that ordinarily the trustees will accede to such a request. The same cannot be assumed of a request of a mere donor, for it is his prerogative to be unreasonable, if that is his inclination.
and at [101] (in relation to what would in this case be MR's bounty from his own resources) he added:
The correct view must be this. If the court is satisfied on the balance of probabilities that an outsider will provide money to meet an award that a party cannot meet from his absolute property then the court can, if it is fair to do so, make an award on that footing. But if it is clear that the outsider, being a person who has only historically supplied bounty, will not, reasonably or unreasonably, come to the aid of the payer then there is precious little the court can do about it.
Mr Mostyn's final word on this issue is at [109] and [110]:
I do not believe that it would be proper or principled of me to make an award that ranges outside the assets or income that are H's as of right. So far as H's income is concerned I take the entitled figure to be £83,000, even though this is dependent on his father's generosity. Nobody has suggested that this is going to be altered.
The question is whether it would be proper to appropriate the entirety of his entitled assets and income on the footing that CL and Mary will provide his support for income and housing from their resources. I do not believe that this would be proper. This would be improper pressure on CL and Mary.
- In 1988, shortly before their marriage, MR gave about £320,000 with which their first owned home was purchased
- Between October 1995 and May 1996 MR gave H £1.7m Between October 1996 and about June 1997 MR lent £150, 000, and between December 1997 and March 2000 another £400,000 to develop the parties' Spanish holiday home (which loans H repaid)
- Between January 1999 and March 2000 H received $10m, $6.6m of which was a distribution from a number of the FGroup trusts (of which £3.7m was paid into DTrust, as to which see below); and $3.4 m from MR
- From these monies in March 2000 H repaid the £400,000 loaned by MR, as well as repaying a commercial loan of £433,700 also utilised on the Spanish holiday home In January 2002 FGroup advanced £2m outright to DTrust
- In December 2004 MR gave H £150,000 in lieu of salary when he undertook the task of day-to-day monitoring of the FGroup, and indeed of MR's personal finances In February 2006 MR made H a gift of £250,000
... really the only point which my client wanted me to get across forcibly today is, he understands the position he and his wife are in, that they have a pot of resources. In fact he is not contributing to it any longer and it is therefore dwindling. He knows, and he knows that his wife knows, that their continued prosperity is going to depend to a good degree on the goodwill of his father.
'…. ultimately (after the death of me and my wife) it is my intention that each of my four children (and their children) should benefit equally. This does not mean that I would expect the Trustees to distribute the assets to my four children but rather hold them for the benefit of those children and their issue.'