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Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions >> Black v. McKeever or Black [2010] ScotSC 18 (16 December 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotSC/2010/18.html Cite as: 2011 SLT (Sh Ct) 157, [2010] ScotSC 18, 2011 GWD 2-95 |
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SHERIFFDOM OF GRAMPIAN HIGHLAND AND ISLANDS AT DINGWALL
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JUDGMENT
by
CHARLES NORMAN STODDART, Temporary Sheriff Principal
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in |
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APPEAL |
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in the cause |
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MURRAY BLACK (Assisted Person), presently residing at c/o 20 Seymour Street, Dundee. |
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Pursuer and Appellant
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against
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ANITA McKEEVER or BLACK (Assisted Person), residing at 19 McKenzie Place, Avoch, Ross-shire, IV9 8QW. |
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Defender and Respondent
___________________________
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For the Appellant: Mr Harold Joseph, Solicitor, Glasgow.
For the Respondent: Mrs Helen Forbes, Solicitor, Civil Legal Assistance Office, Inverness.
DINGWALL, 16 December 2010.
The Sheriff Principal, having resumed consideration, FINDS AND DECLARES that the house at 19 McKenzie Place, Avoch, Ross-shire, IV9 8QW is a matrimonial home as defined in Section 22 of the Matrimonial Homes (Family Protection) (Scotland) Act 1981; quoad ultra REFUSES the appeal; ADHERES to the interlocutor pronounced by the Sheriff on 17 June 2010; REMITS to the Sheriff to proceed as accords; FINDS no expenses due to or by either party in respect of the appeal.
NOTE:
Introduction
[1] In this action
Murray Black ("the Appellant") craved two orders under the Matrimonial Homes
(Family Protection) (Scotland) Act 1981 ("the 1981 Act") in which he sought (1)
to enforce his right to occupy the matrimonial home in Avoch which, until May
2010, he occupied with his wife Mrs Anita Black ("the Respondent") and (2) to
protect his occupancy rights in the home by means of an interdict against her
from preventing him (in various ways) from such occupation. These craves were
respectively brought under sections 3(1)(b) and 3(1)(e) of the 1981 Act. The Respondent
is the tenant of the matrimonial home, while the Appellant is a non-entitled
spouse under the Act. The parties have one son, now aged 17, who continues to
live with his mother.
[2] The case called
before the Sheriff on 17 June 2010 for a hearing on interim orders sought by the Appellant
under section 3(4) of the 1981 Act in respect of both of these craves. Having
heard parties, he refused to grant both interim orders and added a comprehensive
Note to his interlocutor explaining his reasons. It is against that refusal
that the present appeal has been taken.
[3] While the appeal was
pending, the original Note of Appeal appears to have been amended by the Appellant's
former agent and it was this amended Note which came before me at the hearing
of the appeal in Dingwall on 26 November 2010. At the commencement of the hearing I dealt with a
motion made at the bar on behalf of the Appellant to add a new crave 1 with a
supporting plea-in-law, seeking declarator that the house in which the Respondent
resided was indeed a matrimonial home as defined in the 1981 Act. This amendment
was not opposed on behalf of the Respondent and I granted the relative motion.
Submissions for Appellant
[4] Mr Joseph confined his
submissions to the new first ground of appeal and the renumbered second and
third grounds. He explained that his client suffered from mental illness, which
took the form of a bi-polar disorder. The action had been raised because,
after his client had undergone a period of hospitalisation, he had returned
home to find that his wife had changed the locks. He then took me through section
3(3) of the 1981 Act, which set out the test for applications under section
3(1). This made it clear that a court might make such final order under section
3(1)(b) or 3(1)(e) as appeared to be "just and reasonable" having regard to all
the circumstances of the case, including the list of matters set out in subparagraphs
(a) to (e). So when a court came to consider an order under section 3(3), the
existence of that list did not preclude other circumstances from being taken
into account. But section 3(3) related to the grant of a final order and was
to be contrasted with section 3(4), which set out the test for an interim order
under section 3(3); such an order had to be "necessary or expedient" in
relation to three matters listed, which included "(a) the residence of either
spouse in the home to which the application relates". The term "expedient" was
defined in the Shorter Oxford Dictionary as:
"advantageous; fit, proper or suitable to the circumstances of the case"
while in Cassell's Dictionary it was defined as:
"promoting the object in view; advantageous; convenient; conducive to personal advantage".
It was clear that "expedient" did not mean "necessary"; and that the grant of a final order under section 3(3) might be justified on circumstances different from those which might justify an interim order under section 3(4).
[5] Mr Joseph then
submitted that the sheriff had erred in paras. 3 and 4 of his Note. The net
effect of his decision had been to exclude the Appellant from the matrimonial
home, even although no exclusion order (interim or final) had been sought by
the Respondent under section 4 of the 1981 Act. A non-entitled spouse could
only be excluded by means of such a court order; the Respondent had taken the
law into her own hands by changing the locks on the matrimonial home.
[6] Further and contrary
to the views of the Sheriff, Berry v Berry 1988 SLT 650 did have some
relevance to the present case; in particular section 3(3)(a) of the 1981 Act
required to be considered. Berry made it clear that the phrase
"conduct of the spouses in relation to each other and otherwise" related
primarily to their conduct in relation to the occupancy of the matrimonial
home; here, the Respondent had changed the locks, a highly relevant
circumstance and one which alone would entitle the Appellant to succeed in the
present appeal.
[7] Mr Joseph then
submitted that both interim orders sought were merited and ought to have been
granted; in particular the test for an interim interdict in terms of the
original crave 2 was satisfied. In the discussion at paras. 4.2 and 4.3 of his
Note, the Sheriff had erred in his assessment of what was "expedient". The
need for the Appellant to receive regular medical treatment had been recognised,
but although the Sheriff had described the fact that the Appellant would
require to travel to get treatment and to see his son at Avoch as perhaps even
"a significant inconvenience", he had been wrong to hold that it was not "necessary
or expedient" for him to live in the matrimonial home in the interim; indeed
at para. 4.3 he had recognised that this would be "convenient". The term
"expedient" extended to the Appellant being with his son in the matrimonial
home; insufficient weight had been given by the Sheriff to this consideration,
as also to matters of medical treatment and travel. If the present situation
continued, the Appellant might have to live in a hostel, something not
conducive to his health.
[8] On the whole matter,
Mr Joseph moved me to grant summary decree in terms of the (new) first crave,
to recall the interlocutor of 17 June 2010, to grant the interim orders craved and thereafter to remit
to the Sheriff to proceed as accords.
Submissions for Respondent
[9] Mrs Forbes stressed
that section 3(4) of the 1981 Act gave the court a wide discretion to make an
interim order. It was not clear that any such order need necessarily be a
mirror of any final order which might be pronounced under either of the two
original craves. The Sheriff had clearly taken all relevant factors into
account and had applied the correct test by focussing on what was "necessary or
expedient". Further, the Sheriff was correct to hold that Berry v Berry
was not relevant to the present case; but even if the court did have to
consider section 3(3)(a), the conduct of the spouses in relation to the
occupancy of the matrimonial home included an incident where the Appellant had
allegedly attacked his son. This was the last straw for the Respondent, who
had then changed the locks. But Mrs Forbes accepted that the Sheriff had not
been able to come to a view on which version of the facts was to be preferred.
[10] Nor could it be
said that the effect of the Sheriff's decision was to exclude the Appellant
from the matrimonial home. His son could let him into the house, if he
wished. In any event, if I was minded to recall the Sheriff's interlocutor,
the issue whether an interim order in terms of crave 2 should be granted would
require a reconsideration of where the balance of convenience lay; it would
certainly not be convenient for the Respondent and the son to leave the
matrimonial home. In the whole circumstances the appeal should be refused.
Decision
[11] The first matter I
require to consider is whether summary decree should be pronounced in terms of
the new first crave. The relative motion was not opposed by the Respondent and
there is clearly no controversy about this. I shall therefore grant the
declarator sought.
[12] Turning then to the
substance of the appeal, I observe at the outset that regulatory orders under
section 3 of the 1981 Act appear to have been little used, compared to the
other remedies set out in the statute. I note that the Sheriff was not
referred to any case law in which the section had been used and neither was I.
This means that in construing section 3, the usual canons of statutory
interpretation have to be used, without the benefit of any guidance that might
be gleaned from previous judicial decisions.
[13] However, I can
quickly dispose of the argument about the applicability or otherwise of the
decision in Berry v Berry.
Like the Sheriff, I have no doubt that an interim order under section 3(4) of
the 1981 Act is quite unlike an order under section 19 relating to an action of
division and sale. The respective criteria for the grant of the two orders are
expressed in wholly different terms; as the Sheriff says at para. 3.1 of his
Note, in the case of orders under section 19 the court is directed specifically
to have regard to the matters set out in paras. (a) to (e) of section 3(3),
which is not so in the case of interim orders under section 3(4). Berry v
Berry has no relevance to the situation in the present case.
[14] The remaining issue
is whether the Sheriff misused his discretion in refusing the interim orders
sought under section 3(4). It is important to remember that the Sheriff
considered not just the Appellant's averments and the submissions by both
sides, but also a number of affidavits from various witnesses and letters by
the respective doctors for each party. In his Note he explains what he made of
all this material, identifying only a small amount of common ground. This is
set out in para.1.4 of his Note where he records a history of marital disharmony
between the parties culminating in their separation when the Appellant had to
go into hospital. The Sheriff records that the Respondent visited the Appellant
in hospital and advised him then that he was no longer welcome in the
matrimonial home; she changed the locks before his return. The Sheriff then
explains his conclusion in respect of the facts alleged, which was that (apart
from that common ground) he found it impossible to form a view as to which
version of events was to be preferred but that on the view he took, he did not
require to prefer either version. He was entitled to come to that view, for
the matter turns on whether the two interim orders sought were "necessary" or
"expedient" in relation to the residence of either spouse in the home to which
the application related.
[15] Like the Sheriff, I do not propose to look at section 3(4) from any technical standpoint and neither party before me suggested that I should. I am clear that the Sheriff asked himself the correct question on the correct basis: whether the test in section 3(4) was met on its own terms. I agree with him that an interim order under section 3(4) is not an interim version of an order under section 3(3); if it was, there would be no need for any of the subparagraphs of section 3(4), which clearly point to a different test. Further, the Sheriff did not make an order which contravened section 3(5); he did not exclude the non-applicant spouse from the matrimonial home.
[16] It is to his
analysis at para. 4.2 of his Note that attention requires to be given; and I
cannot find in that analysis anything which amounts to a misuse of discretion.
There was no error of law, no failure to take into account a material fact and
nothing to suggest that immaterial facts were taken into account. The Sheriff
has explained why he did not think an interim order was either "necessary or
expedient" and has not misunderstood the meaning of these terms. Nor do I think
that the Sheriff's decision can be described as "plainly wrong" or "wholly unwarranted"
as these terms have been used in the copious authorities on discretionary
judgments, such as Britton v Central Regional Council 1986 SLT 207. Whether
I would have come to the same decision as the Sheriff is neither here nor there.
[17] I reject the
contention that by refusing to enforce and/or protect his occupancy rights, the
Sheriff has (in effect) granted an interim exclusion order against the Appellant.
If that were so, it is hard to see how orders for enforcement or protection
could ever be refused (either at the interim or final stage), at least where
the other spouse was residing in the matrimonial home.
[18] Finally and on the
question of whether either interim order would be "necessary or expedient", the
rights of a non-entitled spouse to the occupation of the matrimonial home and
to the protection of his occupancy rights cannot be seen in some sort of
vacuum; as the Sheriff says, at the interim stage orders have to be seen as fit
and proper as a means of achieving an end in particular circumstances. I could
well understand why regulatory orders might be necessary or expedient where
occupancy rights have been threatened by a third party (such as a squatter) in
a situation where both spouses have been living together in harmonious circumstances,
but in the present case it is implicit in the Sheriff's judgment that to grant
the orders sought would not be conducive to peaceful relations between the
parties. Further, the term "expedient" cannot just mean "expedient from the
standpoint of the Appellant"; that is not what section 3(4) says. Section 3 of
the 1981 Act makes it clear that regulatory orders competent thereunder are a
matter of discretion and that occupancy rights are not unqualified. Here and at
the very least, the circumstances of the case leave room for the view that the
interim orders sought are neither necessary nor expedient. Whether final orders
ought to be pronounced must await proof and the application of a different
test.
Disposal
[19] For these reasons I
shall grant the declarator sought in crave 1, but otherwise refuse the appeal
and adhere to the interlocutor complained of. The case will be remitted to the
Sheriff to proceed as accords.
Expenses
[20] I was told that
both parties were in receipt of legal aid. In these circumstances, I will make
no finding of expenses due to or by either party in respect of the appeal.