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England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) >> ABC v PM & Anor [2015] EWFC 32 (05 March 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/HCJ/2015/32.html Cite as: [2015] EWFC 32 |
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Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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ABC |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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PM |
First Respondent |
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-and- |
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JM |
Second Respondent |
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Mr David Burles for the First Respondent (instructed by Goodman Ray, Solicitors)
The Second Respondent did not appear and was not represented
Hearing dates: 3rd and 5th March 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE MOOR:-
"No disposition of the registered estate, other than a disposition by the proprietor of any registered charge registered before the entry of this restriction, is to be registered without a certificate signed by the applicant for registration or their conveyancer that written notice of the disposition was given to PM at Z property [address],."
(a) The only asset in the jurisdiction was the Z property;
(b) The Wife had caused a notice of Matrimonial Homes Act rights to be registered against the title;
(c) The Husband had failed to deliver up documents pursuant to a court order that he do so;
(d) The Wife had sought a property transfer in her petition;
(e) The Wife had issued a Form A (seeking a property transfer);
(f) The Wife had applied for a restriction in 2011 which had been registered;
(g) The Wife had obtained a number of interlocutory orders against the Husband;
(h) The Wife's opening presentation of the case made plain the nature of the allegations made against the Husband; and
(i) The Wife's opening presentation of the case made it plain that she sought an outright transfer of Z property.
(1) For the purposes of this section "financial relief" means relief under any of the provisions of section 22, 23, 24, 24B, 27, 31 (except subsection (6)) and 35 above, and any reference in this section to defeating a person's claim for financial relief is a reference to preventing financial relief from being granted to that person…or reducing the amount of any financial relief which might be so granted, or frustrating or impeding the enforcement of any order which might be or has been made at his instance under any of those provisions.
(2) Where proceedings for financial relief are brought by one person against another, the court may, on the application of the first- mentioned person:
(a) if it is satisfied that the other party to the proceedings is, with the intention of defeating the claim for financial relief, about to make any disposition or to transfer out of the jurisdiction or otherwise deal with any property, make such order as it thinks fit for restraining the other party from so doing or otherwise for protecting the claim;
(b) if it is satisfied that the other party has, with that intention, made a reviewable disposition and that if the disposition were set aside financial relief or different financial relief would be granted to the applicant, make an order setting aside the disposition;
(c) if it is satisfied, in a case where an order has been obtained under any of the provisions mentioned in subsection (1) above by the applicant against the other party, that the other party has, with that intention, made a reviewable disposition, make an order setting aside the disposition;
and an application for the purposes of paragraph (b) above shall be made in the proceedings for financial relief in question.
(3) …
(4) Any disposition made by the other party to the proceedings for financial relief in question (whether before or after the commencement of those proceedings) is a reviewable disposition for the purposes of subsection 2 (b) and (c) above unless it was made for valuable consideration (other than marriage) to a person, who at the time of the disposition, acted in relation to it in good faith and without notice of any intention on the part of the other party to defeat the applicant's claim for financial relief.
(5) Where an application is made under this section with respect to a disposition which took place less than three years before the date of the application or with respect to a disposition or other dealing with property which is about to take place and the court is satisfied –
(a) in a case falling within subsection 2(a) or (b) above, that the disposition or other dealing would (apart from this section) have the consequence or
(b) in a case falling within subsection 2(c) above, that the disposition has had the consequence,
of defeating the applicant's claim for financial relief, it shall be presumed, unless the contrary is shown, that the person who disposed of or is about to dispose of or deal with the property did so or, as the case may be, is about to do so, with the intention of defeating the applicant's claim for financial relief.
"In this case, I remain satisfied from the evidence which is before me that the solicitors knew something which should have put them on further enquiry, which would have revealed had they thought about it that the payment of their fees from the equity in Z property was in part intended to defeat the Wife's claims. By continuing they did so at their own risk."
The law as to appeals
(7) Permission to appeal may be given only where –
(a) The court considers that the appeal would have a real prospect of success; or
(b) There is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard.
(1) Every appeal will be limited to a review of the decision of the lower court unless –
(a) an enactment or practice direction makes different provision for a particular category of appeal; or
(b) the court considers that in the circumstances of an individual appeal it would be in the interests of justice to hold a re-hearing.
(2) Unless it orders otherwise, the appeal court will not receive –
(a) oral evidence; or
(b) evidence which was not before the lower court.
(3) The appeal court will allow an appeal where the decision of the lower court was –
(a) wrong; or
(b) unjust because of a serious procedural or other irregularity in the proceedings in the lower court.
Permission to appeal
The law on constructive notice
"Constructive notice is the knowledge which the courts impute to a person upon presumption so strong of the existence of the knowledge that it cannot be allowed to be rebutted, either from his knowing something which ought to have put him on further enquiry or from wilfully abstaining from inquiry to avoid notice."
"The basic concepts are "knowing something" which ought to have stimulated enquiry or "wilfully abstaining from inquiry to avoid notice". Both import that the enquiry, if made, would necessarily have revealed the knowledge, constructive notice of which is to be imported. As will be seen subsequently in this judgment it is important to distinguish this position from the position where the evidence establishes a state of affairs from which the court could infer actual knowledge, which would not necessarily be acquired by the further inquiries indicated."
"With great respect to Balcombe J, whether or not the step should be taken must, in my judgment, depend on whether the results of those enquiries would necessarily have given the bank notice of the intention on the part of the husband to defeat his wife's claims for financial relief within the provisions of s37(4). In order to have this knowledge it is necessary for the bank to know that the wife was making, or was about to make, a claim for financial relief. Once in possession of this knowledge, it might, in the circumstances of this case, be difficult for the bank to avoid a finding that they should then have realised that the husband had the intention to defeat or prejudice the wife's claims. The fact that the wife may not have any equitable or proprietary interest in the s37 application is not directly relevant, nor may I add with deference to existing authority, to the fact that the wife had or had not registered her interest."
"At the date of the mortgage, the wife was not contemplating divorce. She was content to remain in occupation of No 1 receiving support from her husband. If at that time the bank had asked her if she had an interest in the property or objected to her husband charging it by way of mortgage it must be pure speculation what her reaction would have been. For my part, I do not consider that her reaction upon the occasion when she was asked to sign the licence 3 years later and at the same time was told that the husband would not continue to support her, could be taken as a reliable indication as to what she would have done if the bank had approached her in 1980. In these circumstances, I find it impossible to say that there was any evidence upon which the judge could infer that the wife was contemplating divorce proceedings and therefore, whatever indirect motives the husband may well have had at that time, of which the bank would have had notice, one of them could not have been an intention to defeat the wife's claims for financial relief."
"Clearly she did not regard herself at that point as in a situation where she lacked any relevant element of knowledge, nor was there any aspect of doubt in her mind about the transaction such as would have made it obvious that she should consult some third-party…therefore she could not be fixed with constructive notice of the husband's intention by virtue of any failure on her part diligently to enquire further into the nature and effect of the proposed transaction….I have no evidence upon which I could form the conclusion that I doubt what (the solicitor) says, or indeed that I disbelieve her. And, I repeat, it is her state of mind which is the issue."
"The solution to this might be that in the ordinary case courts might make it clear that they would not normally exercise their discretion to set aside such transactions. That said, I have to say that in this case I would have set aside the transaction (if I had found constructive notice). For I take the view that it is unconscionable that the husband should be in a position and in effect have a blank cheque to fund his lawyers fully to the hilt of the Bentley's value. On the other hand, the Wife and her present lawyers are respectively left without the ability to offer and to receive security for the rising costs, which in present circumstances she has little option but to continue to incur so long, obviously, and so far as they are reasonably incurred, and her lawyers are prepared to take the risk of non-recovery."
Mr Warshaw's submissions
My conclusions
(a) There were serious allegations of non-disclosure against its client;
(b) The firm had previously been paid from funds in Y country;
(c) The only asset in this jurisdiction was the one that the firm proposed to secure a charge over;
(d) The Wife was seeking an outright transfer of that property;
(e) The final hearing had already commenced; and
(f) The Wife had registered a restriction against the title to the property.
"…the solicitors knew something which should have put them on further enquiry, which would have revealed had they thought properly about it that the payment of their fees from the equity in Z property was in part intended to defeat the Wife's claims".