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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> AB v FC [2016] EWHC 3285 (Fam) (19 December 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2016/3285.html Cite as: [2017] 1 FCR 467, [2016] EWHC 3285 (Fam), [2018] 1 FLR 965, [2017] WLR(D) 24, [2017] 4 WLR 35 |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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AB |
Petitioner |
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- and - |
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FC |
Respondent |
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Stewart Leech QC (instructed by Withers LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 23rd and 24th November 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Roberts :
A. Introduction
"Our client is looking for [rented] properties in the North, North West and Central London areas. Accordingly, we enclose property particulars for three properties in the St John's Wood area in relation to which our client is arranging urgent viewings, as examples of the types of properties that she hopes will be suitable to meet her and [A's] interim housing needs.
These properties, that are up to a 55% reduction in square footage to their current home, are an average of c.£1,925 per month to rent, given London prices. As our client is going to have to make immediate enquiries to seek to view and secure a property on this basis, your client having prematurely served notice on her current home, please confirm that your client will agree to cover her rent at this level and the deposit required."
B. The asset base
Capital
(i) a modest property in France worth c.£500,000 with an equity, after costs of sale, of c.£86,000 (c.£30,000 on his case). It is currently an illiquid asset since it was purchased before the marriage as a home for his mother (who is divorced from his father);(ii) a flat and two parking spaces in Gex, France in which there is no equity but a mortgage of c.£200,000. This, too, is a pre-marital asset which produces no more than a very modest rental income;
(iii) a condominium in Miami which is still under construction and which H bought 'off plan' prior to the marriage for US$963,900. Under the terms of the purchase agreement with the developer, he has paid more or less one half of the purchase price. The balance of some US$482,000 is due by the end of 2017 when construction will be complete. Should he default on this payment, he will forfeit the sum he has already paid. Thus, on the assumption that the purchase price is equivalent to value on completion in 2017 (and that may or may not be a sound assumption), there is equity of some £374,000 in the Miami condominium albeit that such value is extinguished by the corresponding obligation to fund the second instalment in 2017.
Income
- the maintenance award required to support that level of mortgage borrowing is £26,500 per month (or £318,000 per annum); and
- W has no other liabilities; and
- W will have a sufficient deposit so as to ensure a maximum LTV ratio of 65%.
Although a potential "niche" lender is identified by the financial adviser, there is nothing more concrete in terms of a sound evidential basis for this level of borrowing capacity and, in any event, it presupposes that W has cleared all existing liabilities (including, presumably, her very substantial liability in respect of legal costs) and will thereafter retain sufficient capital to put down a 35% cash deposit. It is clear from the first letter from the financial adviser that the approach to the mortgage adviser was anchored to a target purchase price of £1.7 million. The letter records the following:-
"This would fit with your requirement of £1.1M against a price of £1.7m. Due to the complexity of the case the perceived risk is higher to the lender and the rate offered higher than in the high street market .. I have been given a potential variable rate of 3.25% initially with a reversionary rate of 5.49%."
C. What the parties seek in this litigation
The wife's position
(i) the balance of the net proceeds of sale from the Hale property of just over £95,000 will be paid to W;(ii) H will pay the balance due on completion of the Miami condominium (US$482,000) on completion of the project in 2018 and there will be an immediate onward sale to a third party purchaser with 80% of the net proceeds being paid to W. If a sale does not achieve a sufficient price such that W receives at least £650,000, H will be required to make up any shortfall. In other words, she will receive the greater of £650,000 or 80% of the net proceeds;
(iii) subject thereto, each will retain such assets as they have and each will be responsible for their own liabilities, including costs;
(iv) H will pay periodical payments to W in the sum of £23,500 per month (£282,000 per annum) until the first to occur of:
(a) death;(b) W's remarriage;(c) A reaching the age of 18 years or completing tertiary education, whichever is later; or(d) further order of the court.However, there is to be no s28(1A) bar and W is to be entitled to extend the term provided an application is made before the term expires.(v) H is to pay £36,000 per annum by way of child support including all his private educational costs from nursery fees to the costs of full-time tertiary education;
(vi) No order as to costs on the basis of the usual clean break provisions.
"[H] and I enjoyed an exceptionally high standard of living during our marriage and throughout our entire relationship. This included regular luxury international holidays which often cost in excess of £30,000 just for the two of us, before [A] was born. I would also take regular trips to Paris, sometimes as many as three times a month just for an extended weekend to see family and to go shopping, which [H] would always pay for.
[He] would regularly surprise and treat me with expensive gifts, including £5,000-£10,000 handbags and jewellery in excess of £10,000. In addition I have been able to spend freely on designer clothes and accessories. I have a large collection of shoes and handbags from Christian Louboutin to Chanel, some of which I haven't worn more than once.
We would always dine at the finest restaurants and stay in the best hotels. Whenever in London we would stay at my favourite hotel, the Bulgari Hotel in Knightsbridge (with basic rooms costing from approximately £560 per night), and I would often indulge in numerous beauty treatments in their luxury spa, which would cost several hundred pounds."
The husband's position
"[W] seems to believe that by marrying a top class footballer she has hit the jackpot. Her approach to this case has been categorised by a desire to spend, spend, spend on herself and on waging a hugely expensive state trial, all at H's expense."
Of W's "stockpiling" argument, he says,
"This is emphatically not about her being put in a position to be able to save over the next few years ΰ la Karen Parlour in order to fund a clean break. Rather, she insists that she should be entitled to a lavish lifestyle in the here and now."
D. The Law: discussion and analysis
"[76] . A footballer who earns £100,000 per week earns that because he is on the pitch playing football. Certainly, the skills he was born with, and the development of those skills (which may well have happened during his marriage), are all reasons why he can command his salary, but he will not get paid it unless he plays football. The footballer has to fill the unforgiving minute with sixty seconds' worth of distance run after the marriage.
..
[79] In my judgment simplicity and clarity are just as much needed in this part of the field as in the part designated 'division of capital'. Simple and fair guidance is needed so that the majority of cases can be settled. Settlement is almost always better than adjudication for a divorcing couple. And the functioning of the family justice system depends on a high rate of settlement of these cases. Save in the exceptional kind of case exemplified in Miller v Miller; McFarlane v McFarlane a periodical payments claim (whether determined originally or on variation) should in my opinion be adjudged (or settled), generally speaking, by reference to the principal of need alone. Of course needs are elastic in concept and there is much room for the exercise of discretion in their assessment. But to allow consideration of the concept of sharing to intrude in the assessment of a periodical payments award seems to me to be based on a doubtful principle, and is replete with problems of quantification by any sure standard. The sharing principle in relation to matrimonial property is simple enough: it is usually 50/50, because in the division of the marital acquest equity (or fairness) is (usually) equality. But if the concept of sharing is going to uplift above the assessment of need a periodical payments award which will be paid from post-separation earnings, how does a judge set about doing it ? Is it a third ? Or 40% ? Or 20% ? There are not even any signposts along the road to a fair award."
"I accept that figure will have to come down dramatically when he stops playing."
"[113] Subject to first consideration being given to the welfare of minor children, the principal factors which impact on the court's assessment of needs are: (i) the length of the marriage; (ii) the length of the period, additional to (i), during which the applicant spouse will be making contributions to the welfare of the family; (iii) the standard of living during the marriage; (iv) the age of the applicant; and (v) the available resources as defined by section 25(2)(a).
[114] In my view, the starting point for the assessment of needs is the standard of living during the course of the marriage. This was the view expressed by the Law Commission in its 2014 report, Matrimonial Property, Needs and Agreements (Law Com No 343)(para 2.34/2.35) in respect of "very wealthy cases": "needs are still assessed primarily by reference to the marital standard of living". This does not mean that it is either a ceiling or a floor but . it provides a benchmark or starting point against which to assess needs.
"It is a mistake to regard the marital standard of living as the lodestar. As time passes how the parties lived in the marriage becomes increasingly irrelevant. And too much emphasis on it imperils the prospects of eventual independence."
"[137] [T]here has to be some sort of rationale for the redistribution of resources from one party to another ..
[138] The most common rationale is that the relationship has generated needs which it is right that the other party should meet . This is a perfectly sound rationale where the needs are the consequence of the parties' relationship, as they usually are. The most common source of need is the presence of children . Many parents have seriously compromised their ability to attain self-sufficiency as a result of past family responsibilities A further source of need may be the way in which parties chose to run their life together All couples throughout their lives together have to make choices about who will do what sometimes freely made in the interests of them both. The needs generated by such choices are a perfectly sound rationale for adjusting the parties' respective resources in compensation."
"56. Mr Marks lays stress upon the respective ages of the parties and the likelihood that the wife will survive the husband by many years. In any event, even if the husband is blessed with a long life, his earning capacity must ultimately diminish and the level of maintenance reduce, probably during the dependence still of one or both of the children. Mr Marks submits that, as well as meeting her annual needs, payments must also be made to the wife to enable her (in his words) to "stockpile". He submits that, just as the husband has included £100,000 per annum in his budget under a heading "Pension", she needs to be able to make some similar provision of pension or stockpile for herself. In principle I accept and agree with that argument on the facts and in the circumstances of this particular case, having regard in particular to the respective ages of the husband, the wife and the children in relation to each other. If, however, there is an element of stockpile, it must of course be saved and in some way ring-fenced, so that it is indeed available for future needs and can be identified and taken into account if or when the husband's income drops and he seeks to reduce the level of periodical payments or discharge them altogether. [my emphasis]
57. In parallel with the stockpiling submission, Mr Marks submits that whatever I can make available to the wife from the currently available assets will not, he submits, be sufficient to enable her to purchase a suitable home. So he submits that she will have a need to raise a mortgage which must, of course, be funded. The evidence of her actual capacity to raise a mortgage is very slender ..
58. I will not make any identified provision in the order for funding a mortgage. I will make identified provision for stockpiling. Investing the element of stockpile in a mortgage would, in my view, be an acceptable and indeed wise way of savings and ring-fencing it. Accordingly, the amount I identify and provide for stockpiling may, if the wife so wishes, be applied in funding a capital repayment mortgage over any sensible period of years. It must be clearly understood that the stockpile is intended to enable the wife to build up funds so as to be self-supporting upon the husband's death, or if he earlier retires and his income markedly reduces. If the wife does invest the stockpile in a more valuable home by financing a mortgage, then in due course she will have to trade down so as to release funds for income. The current high levels of maintenance which I will order are not going to be available lifelong for the wife, and she must clearly understand that now."
" A luxury detached four bedroom, two bathroom family house (over 2000 Sq Ft) that has been newly refurbished throughout, located in this most sought after road. The property which has just gone through a complete renovation comprises four double bedrooms, the master with an en suite bathroom, spacious family bathroom, a huge 38'x25' open plan living space open to a stunning fully fitted kitchen, a utility space, a large entrance hallway, a separate sitting room and a delightful rear garden with patio measuring circa 86' with a covered decking sitting area. To the front there is off-street parking for at least three cars."
E. My conclusions
Unpaid legal costs £
(i) Vardags 145,000
(ii) FLIP 30,000 £175,000
(i) H will pay to W periodical payments at the rate of £164,000 per annum payable monthly in arrears by banker's standing order. Of that sum, up to £80,000 per annum shall be earmarked for mortgage repayments over an 8 or 10 year period. In terms of safeguards, Mr Southgate suggested in closing submissions that these sums could be diverted to the lender via his instructing solicitors. I can see practical difficulties with this arrangement but, if it is one which is acceptable to all the parties, I shall not interfere in those arrangements. It may be that further thought is needed before committing the arrangement to a final order of the court. The purpose will be to protect the stockpiled mortgage funds so as to ensure that W is indeed building up equity in her home and not dissipating that portion of the maintenance payments on other discretionary expenditure.
(ii) In the absence of some other agreement as to the apportionment of the global financial support to be paid to W, maintenance for A will be fixed at £36,000 per annum. In addition, H will discharge his nursery/pre-school costs and any other agreed educational costs up to the point of the seven year review. I would hope that A's transition from pre-school to junior school (which is likely to take place before the review) will not give rise to further disagreement between his parents. It is too soon at this stage to make any judgment call in relation to where he should continue his secondary school career. W told me that he can move seamlessly at the G School from pre-school to infant school. If that is the case, I would hope that H will agree to continue funding that placement. It is certainly affordable on the basis of his present income.
(iii) On this basis, the global maintenance award for W and A (excluding school fees) will be £200,000 per annum in total. These payments should be index-linked in the usual way.
(iv) W will be responsible for discharging from her periodical payments the rent on her current home and/or any other rented property to which she might move prior to the purchase of a property. If she wishes to make further savings by moving for the next 12 or 18 months to a cheaper property, she can do so but, for the reasons I have explained earlier in this judgment, I am not going to require her to do so.
(v) The payments will be expressed (a) to W on a joint lives basis but subject to the maintenance review; and (b) to A until he attains the age of 18 years the completion of his secondary education (if later) but on the basis that this period may be extended to cover the costs of his tertiary education (including his general maintenance) following the maintenance review.
(vi) H will pay W a lump sum of £32,500 to enable her to clear part of her outstanding costs. The timing of that payment will, I hope, be agreed. In addition, and on the basis that W will undertake to use the funds to reduce her liability in respect of outstanding legal costs, the balance of the Hale sale proceeds which are currently on deposit (including any accrued interest) will be paid to her forthwith upon decree absolute.
(vii) There will be an order for sale in respect of the Miami apartment following its completion. It should be marketed for sale at the best price reasonably obtainable and H will have sole conduct of the sale although W must be kept informed of all marketing advice and offers received. From the net proceeds of sale, H will pay to W the greater of 36% of the net proceeds or a lump sum of £270,000. This sum will be used to cover the cost of the deposit and stamp duty on the home which she will then be in a position to buy for herself and A.
(viii) Save as otherwise provided, there will be a clean break as between the parties on the basis that, save as above, each will retain his or her own assets and each will be responsible for their own liabilities. I did not hear any evidence in relation to chattels but I am proceeding on the basis that no further orders need to be made in this respect.
(ix) The order will provide that W shall not be required to repay the amounts paid by way of LSPO but that otherwise here will be no order for costs.
Order accordingly