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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 >> Stait v Cosmos Insurance Ltd Cyprus [2022] EWCA Civ 1429 (01 November 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/1429.html Cite as: [2022] EWCA Civ 1429 |
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ON APPEAL FROM DISTRICT JUDGE GRIFFITH
HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
KING'S BENCH DIVISION,
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
CASE NO: G90BM160
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Vice-President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division)
LORD JUSTICE POPPLEWELL
and
LADY JUSTICE WHIPPLE
____________________
Robin Stait |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Cosmos Insurance Limited Cyprus |
Respondent |
____________________
Alistair Mackenzie (instructed by Weightmans LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 6 October 2022
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Whipple:
INTRODUCTION
FACTS
THE SBA
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
Recast Regulation
"1. An insurer domiciled in a Member State may by sued:
(a) in the courts of the Member State in which he is domiciled;
(b) in another Member State, in the case of actions brought by the policyholder, the insured, or a beneficiary, in the courts for the place where the claimant is domiciled; or
(c) if he is a co-insurer, in the courts of the Member State in which proceedings are brought against the leading insurer."
"Articles 10, 11 and 12 shall apply to actions brought by the insured party directly against the insurer, where such direct actions are permitted."
"…. To deny the injured party the right to bring an action before the courts for the place of his own domicile would deprive him of the same protection as that afforded by the regulation to other parties regarded as weak in disputes in matters relating to insurance and would thus be contrary to the spirit of the regulation."
"In order to determine whether a party is domiciled in the Member State whose courts are seized of a matter the court shall apply its internal law."
Domicile for Jurisdiction Purposes
"The Working Party therefore requested the United Kingdom and Ireland to provide in their legislation implementing the 1968 Convention … for a concept of domicile which would depart from their traditional rules and would tend to reflect more the concept of 'domicile' as understood in the original states of the EC".
Domestic Law
"(2) An individual is domiciled in the United Kingdom if and only if-
(a) He is resident in the United Kingdom; and
(b) The nature and circumstances of his residence indicate that he has a substantial connection with the United Kingdom."
THE APPEAL
The Judgment Below
"21. … That is the place where he lives in accommodation with his family, where his children go to school, where he works and where he receives his primary medical care. If a member of the public were simply asked where he or she thought the Claimant resided, I feel they would inevitably say Cyprus. Of course, he did have a settled pattern of life in England until the move to Cyprus but once he moved there he ceased to be resident in England or indeed the United Kingdom. Although he may at some point re-establish a pattern of life in England, and that is his stated intention, it is both uncertain on the evidence and irrelevant to the question of whether he had one at the relevant time."
(The references to Cyprus in that extract are to be understood as meaning the SBA, which is of course located on the island of Cyprus, but distinct from the Republic of Cyprus.)
Grounds of Appeal / Response
a. the fact that Mr Stait had been resident in England and Wales until at least 2016 and had not abandoned his residence,
b. the fact that it is possible to have more than one residence,
c. the unusual factors arising out of Mr Stait's employment with the RAF,
d. the consequence of his ruling, which is that members of the British armed forces lose the jurisdictional rights associated with their residency within the UK when posted abroad, and thereby face unfair restrictions of their rights.
a. that the existence (or not) of an intention to return to the jurisdiction is immaterial to the question of residence (as opposed to the issue of substantial connection),
b. that insofar as a distinct break from or abandonment of previous residence is required, Mr Stait's voluntary taking up of a position abroad and establishing a clear and settled pattern of life there satisfies that requirement, and
c. the test of residence (and domicile) is applied in the same way to members of the armed forces as to other persons and there is no special or distinct category of persons to whom the test is applied differently.
DISCUSSION
The meaning of "residence"
Leading Authorities
"My Lords, the word 'reside' is a familiar English word and is defined in the Oxford English Dictionary as meaning "to dwell permanently or for a considerable time, to have one's settled or usual abode, to live in or at a particular place." No doubt this definition must for present purposes be taken subject to any modification which may result from the terms of the Income Tax Act and Schedules; but, subject to that observation, it may be accepted as an accurate indication of the meaning of the word 'reside'. In most cases there is no difficulty in determining where a man has his settled or usual abode, and if that is ascertained he is not the less resident there because from time to time he leaves it for the purpose of business or pleasure."
"The first principle is that a man can have two residences. He can have a flat in London and a house in the country. He is a resident in both. The second principle is that temporary presence at an address does not make a man resident there. A guest who comes for the weekend is not resident. A short-stay visitor is not resident. The third principle is that temporary absence does not deprive a person of his residence. If he happens to be away for a holiday or away for the weekend or in hospital [I would emphasise that phrase], he does not lose his residence on that account.
…
I think that a person may properly be said to be 'resident' in a place when his stay there has a considerable degree of permanence."
"I also would begin, when considering what is meant by the word 'reside', by observing Viscount Cave's acceptance of the definition in the Oxford English dictionary…namely 'to dwell permanently or for a considerable time, to have one's settled or usual abode, to live in or at a particular place'. That definition is coloured and enlarged by numerous references in the authorities, such as by Lord Coleridge C.J. in Barlow v Smith [1892] 9 T.L.R. 57 where he speaks of a man's residence as being where he lives and has his home. There are other references to a man's home, references which I find helpful, because, although I recognise that the word is in some ways an ambiguous word, I think it nevertheless follows that a man cannot be said to reside in a particular place unless in the ordinary sense of the word one can say that for the time being he is making his home in that place. … It is imperative to remember in this context that 'residence' implies a degree of permanence. In the words of the Oxford English dictionary, it is concerned with something which will go on for a considerable time. Consequently a person is not entitled to claim to be resident at a given town merely because he pays a short, temporary visit. Some assumption of permanence, some degree of continuity, some expectation of continuity is a vital factor which turns simple occupation into residence."
"All that is necessary is that the purpose of living where one does has a sufficient degree of continuity to be properly described as settled."
"Although there was some discussion before us on what is meant by the word 'resident' in section 41 of the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982, it seemed to me that the parties were really little apart on this aspect of the case. The leading case is Levene v Commissioners of Inland Revenue. Although this was a tax case, it is clear that the meaning given to the word in that case was its ordinary meaning, uncoloured by the fact that it was used in a revenue context.
…
On the basis of Levene it seems to me that a person is resident for the purposes of section 41(3) in a particular part of the United Kingdom if that part is for him a settled or usual place of abode."
"14. Since 1928, if not before, it has therefore been clear that an individual who has been resident in the UK ceases in law to be so resident only if he ceases to have a settled or usual abode in the UK. Although, as I will explain in para 19 below, the phrase 'a distinct break' first entered the case law in a subtly different context, the phrase, now much deployed including in the present appeals, is not an inapt description of the degree of change in the pattern of an individual's life in the UK which will be necessary if a cessation of his settled or usual abode in the UK is to take place."
"20. It is therefore clear that, whether in order to become non-resident in the UK or whether at any rate to avoid being deemed by the statutory provision still to be resident in the UK, the ordinary law requires the UK resident to effect a distinct break in the pattern of his life in the UK. The requirement of a distinct break mandates a multifactorial inquiry. … The distinct break relates to the pattern of the taxpayer's life in the UK and no doubt it encompasses a substantial loosening of social and familial ties; but the allowance, to which I will refer, of limited visits to the UK on the part of the taxpayer who has become non-resident, clearly foreshadows their continued existence in a loosened form. 'Severance' of such ties is too strong a word in this context."
"63. There is an obvious attraction in keeping the test as simple as possible, especially as taxpayers are now responsible for self assessment when making their returns. But the underlying principle that the law has established is that it must be shown that there has been a distinct break in the pattern of the taxpayer's life in the UK. The inquiry that this principle indicates is essentially one of evaluation. It depends on the facts. It looks to what the taxpayer actually does or does not do to alter his life's pattern. His intention is, of course, relevant to the inquiry. But it is not determinative. All the circumstances have to be considered to see what light they can throw on the quality of the taxpayer's absence from the UK. ..."
First Instance Cases
Authorities: Summary
Grounds 3 and 4: different treatment for servicemen?
Grounds 1 and 2: resident in the UK?
a. Mr Stait was working full-time in the SBA throughout this period. The reason Mr Stait went there was that he volunteered for the posting. He was not compelled to go there. Therefore his situation is similar to any other person who moves abroad for work reasons. Such a person is normally considered to have changed residence (see Viscount Cave in Levene, second illustration).
b. His contract was for 5 years, which is a relatively long period of time. By October 2020, he had been living and working at the SBA for 4 years.
c. Mr Stait was only physically present in this country for a very short time during that period. His statement says that the RAF funded him to come home with his family once a year, and the inference is that this was for a week. He was unable to do so during restrictions imposed during the COVID pandemic. This means that during this period, he was an infrequent, even occasional, visitor to the UK, spending a tiny proportion of his time here.
d. When he came home he did not stay in his own house in Cumbria, which was rented out to tenants throughout this time. It was not a home available for his use or used by him during this time.
e. While in the SBA, Mr Stait and his family lived in accommodation provided by the RAF, as a family unit, enjoying the normal incidents of family life: children going to school there, making friends there and having a social life there. Their pattern of life had moved there completely.
a. He intended to return to the UK and he has in fact returned. (I accept that an intention to return is relevant.)
b. He kept a house in the UK. (This too I accept. But that house was rented out and was not available for his use during the time he was living in the SBA, see above.)
c. He went to the SBA with the RAF and was in the service of the Crown during his time abroad. (This too I accept. But his posting was voluntary. If he had been sent abroad under some compulsion, this factor might have weighed more heavily in the balance.)
d. He was only away for 5 years which is a relatively short time in the context of his adult lifetime or considered as a proportion of his total career with the RAF. (I accept that 5 years is a relatively small proportion judged by reference to a whole career. But it is a relatively long time to be away from the UK and is easily enough time to become resident abroad. It is not so short that the temporary nature of the absence is a dominant feature.)
e. He did not build up any community ties with Cyprus, given that he did not speak the local language or make friends in that country. (His ties with Cyprus are not in point; rather it is the quality of his ties with the SBA which are relevant.)
f. His salary was paid into his UK bank account and his financial affairs remained in the UK. (I accept this as a factor connecting him with the UK.)
g. He was treated by the NHS. (This too I accept but medical care in the SBA is afforded via the NHS, a product of the SBA's status as an overseas territory).
a. He continued to pay tax in the UK. (The basis for that was not explored at the hearing. It may be a consequence of section 23 of the Income Tax (Earnings and Pensions) Act 2003 relating to UK based earnings when an employee is not resident in the UK. Either way, this tends to suggest that he retained links to the UK, it does not assist on the factual test of whether he was resident in the UK for jurisdiction purposes.)
b. He continued to vote in the UK and remained on the electoral register. (The basis for this was not explored at the hearing either. It may well be that he is permitted to remain on the electoral register as a serviceman working abroad by operation of statute. I am not persuaded this factor carries much weight, for similar reasons: it demonstrates his continuing links to the UK but does not assist on the factual test of whether he was resident in the UK.)
Wider arguments
CONCLUSION
Lord Justice Popplewell:
Lord Justice Underhill: