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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 >> C v C [2004] EWHC 742 (Fam) (02 April 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2004/742.html Cite as: [2004] Fam 141, [2004] 2 WLR 1467, [2004] EWHC 742 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
PRINCIPAL REGISTRY
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
C |
Petitioner |
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- and - |
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C |
First Respondent |
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Mr Timothy Scott Q.C. and Mr Christopher Wagstaffe (instructed by Messrs Bolt Burdon) appeared on behalf of the First Respondent husband.
Dates of hearing: 1, 2 and 3 March 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
SECTION A: INTRODUCTION
(a) the features which made the settlement nuptial were subsequently removed from it, with the result that it cannot now be varied under s.24(1)(c); and, in any event,(b) any jurisdiction to vary it is solely vested in the courts of Jersey.
(a) it recited the husband's mother as the settlor;(b) it appointed a Jersey trust company as the trustees;
(c) it was a discretionary trust for the benefit of named persons, viz. the husband's mother, the husband, the wife and the only child of the marriage living at its date, and also of such other persons as the trustees might add;
(d) it conferred upon the trustees a power to add and remove persons to and from the class of beneficiaries but it subjected their exercise of that and other major powers to the consent in writing of the trust's protector;
(e) it appointed the husband and the wife as the joint protector of the trust during their joint lives;
(f) it empowered the husband, acting alone, to remove and appoint trustees;
(g) it provided that "this Trust is established under the laws of the Bailiwick of Jersey and the rights of all parties and the construction and effect of each and every provision hereof shall be governed and construed only in accordance with the law of Jersey, which shall be the proper law hereof" ("the proper law clause"); and
(h) it provided that "this Trust shall be subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the Royal Courts of the Bailiwick of Jersey which shall be the forum for disputes relating hereto" ("the exclusive jurisdiction clause").
"Hickory Holdings Limited is a company and discretionary trust established in the late 1980s or early 1990s by my mother who is a wealthy woman in her own right. My father died 6 years ago; he was a property owner and had substantial assets. Neither my wife nor I are beneficiaries under the discretionary trusts. Neither my wife nor I have put any assets into the company, and neither of us have any details as to its holdings. The company is not controlled by either myself or my wife."
The husband appended a letter from the Maltese trust company dated 18 January 2001 which stated that "neither [of the parties] are beneficiaries" of The Hickory Trust. By a statement also dated 31 January 2001 the wife confirmed that she had read the husband's statement and concurred with its contents.
SECTION B: THE NUPTIAL FEATURES OF THE SETTLEMENT
"Is it upon the husband in the character of husband or [upon] the wife in the character of wife, or upon both in the character of husband and wife…. It should provide for the financial benefit of one or other or both of the spouses as spouses and with reference to their married state."
Mr Scott moves to the speech of Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead in Brooks v Brooks [1996] 1 AC 375 at p.391G:
"So, broadly stated, the disposition must be one which makes some form of continuing provision for both or either of the parties to a marriage…"
I have underlined the words in both passages upon which Mr Scott places emphasis. But there was nothing in the facts of those cases to lead the judges to choose language sensitive to a change which could be said to have removed from a settlement the features which had made it nuptial.
(a) Dormer v Ward [1901] P.20. The question in that case was whether the court had jurisdiction to vary a settlement which was ante-nuptial, i.e. of which a subsequent valid marriage was a prerequisite, in circumstances in which a decree absolute of nullity had rendered the voidable marriage retrospectively void. The Court of Appeal's answer was affirmative: it was enough that, at the time of the pronouncement of the decree, the marriage would have been said to have a valid existence.(b) Prescott (formerly Fellowes) v Fellowes [1958] P. 260. By a deed described as a "Settlement on Marriage" the intended wife agreed to give £15,000 to the intended husband (which, following the marriage, she duly gave to him) and to make him an interest-bearing loan of £20,000 in the event that he should become a member of Lloyd's (which he never became, with the result that she never made the loan). Upon divorce the wife sought return of the £15,000 by way of variation of settlement. But the Court of Appeal held that at the date of the decree absolute there was no settlement in existence: the gift was not a settlement and the loan, which might have amounted to a settlement, had never been made.
(a) Under the Deed of Settlement the parties remain its joint protector and must so remain during their joint lives. In parenthesis I ask: can one readily conceive a provision of a trust which demands variation upon divorce more obviously than this?(b) (i) Under that deed the husband, acting alone, continues to have power to replace the trustees; and
(ii) indeed such is a power which he has exercised twice during the last few years.(c) At any stage the trustees may (with the consent of the protector) add the husband (or the wife) back into the class of beneficiaries.
(d) (i) The power of the trustees to lend money to the husband (or the wife), even without interest, is independent of his (or her) status as a beneficiary; and
(ii) indeed prior to 2000 there was a pattern of such lending to the parties as then apparently gave rise to a debt of £2,185,000.(e) (i) The power of the trustees to invest in companies or lend money thereto for the indirect benefit of the husband (or the wife) is also independent of his (or her) status as a beneficiary; and
(ii) indeed, shortly after execution of the deed dated 8 January 2001, the trustees lent £250,000 to a company in order that the husband could operate a business through it.(f) There is no evidence that the power to make a payment to or for a beneficiary has ever been exercised and the identity of those in the class of beneficiaries from time to time does not appear to have been relevant to the operation of the trust to date.
"In the disposal of the property for the benefit of each child the respondent wife has been given a voice both as trustee and under a power of appointment, even though it is the husband who provides all the money… A settlement can settle on parties to a marriage power over the disposal of property as well as over the property itself."
SECTION C: THE JURISDICTION OF THE COURTS OF JERSEY
" Article 6
A trust shall be governed by the law chosen by the settlor…
Article 8
The law specified by Article 6 shall govern the validity of the
trust, its construction, its effects and the administration of the
trust.
In particular that law shall govern –
…
(h) the variation or termination of the trust; …
Article 11
A trust created in accordance with the law specified by
[Article 6] shall be recognised as a trust…
Article 15
The Convention does not prevent the application of provisions of the law designated by the conflicts rules of the forum, in so far as those provisions cannot be derogated from by voluntary act, relating in particular to the following matters –
…
(b) the personal and proprietary effects of marriage; …"
(a)(i) are designated by this court's conflict rules; and(ii) cannot be derogated from by voluntary act;
(b) relate in particular to the personal and proprietary effects of marriage.
I note at once that, so long as the provisions are of the type required by (a)(i) and (ii), it is not essential that they qualify under (b). The listed matters in article 15, including the personal and proprietary effects of marriage, are in the nature of an aide-mémoire of the subject-matter of provisions which might prevail over the proper law of the trust by virtue of the general introductory words. In paragraph 139 of the Report von Overbeck says:
"It should be emphasised that the enumeration of the first paragraph of article 15 is by way of example. Mandatory rules in matters which are not listed may therefore also override the trust's rules".
"The intent was to preserve above all the forum's substantive law in cases where its conflicts rules designated its own law…"
English law chooses no substantive law other than its own for the despatch of applications for ancillary relief following divorce, even though belatedly it is beginning to recognise the need, in a case with foreign connections, for a sideways look at foreign law as part of the discretionary analysis required by its substantive law (Otobo v Otobo [2003] 1 FLR 192). Since, therefore, English substantive law is designated for the purpose of (i), the question is whether, for the purpose of (ii), there can be no derogation from it by voluntary act. In my view English law clearly decrees that there can be no such derogation. Parliament has conferred jurisdiction upon the court to make provision for a spouse following divorce in a variety of ways, including variation of a nuptial settlement; and, in its profoundly influential decision in Hyman v Hyman [1929] AC 601, the House of Lords held that there was a public interest in the making of fair provision for a spouse following divorce, with the result that a wife's agreement not to apply to the court for maintenance could not oust the jurisdiction conferred upon it. Even nowadays, notwithstanding the law's growing respect for properly negotiated pre-nuptial agreements, it is unarguable that they can succeed in ousting the jurisdiction of the court (M v M (Prenuptial Agreement) [2002] 1 FLR 654).
a) in The Conflict of Laws by Dicey and Morris, 13th ed., at p.1093 the editors submit that the Act does not affect the power under s.24(1)(c) and suggest in a footnote that if necessary article 15 could be invoked to achieve that result; and
b) in Private International Law by Cheshire and North, 13th ed, at p.1043 the editors suggest that it would certainly seem undesirable that the power should be limited by the Act and that its preservation might well be supported by the reference in article 15 to the proprietary effects of marriage; however
c) in Law Relating to Trusts and Trustees by Underhill and Hayton, 16th ed., at p.1044-5, the upshot of four somewhat difficult paragraphs is, I think, that the editor takes a more equivocal stance.
42. The only direct consequence of my conclusion that the Act has no application to the wife's claim under s.24(1)(c) is that, if this court both has and chooses to exercise jurisdiction to entertain it, it will apply English law to it. Where, then, does my conclusion leave Mr Scott's submission that this court lacks such jurisdiction? It leaves it for despatch by reference to basic principle. For more than a century this court has assumed jurisdiction to vary a nuptial settlement of which the proper law is foreign: Nunneley v Nunneley (1890) 15 P.D. 186. Although, as in The Hickory Trust, a proper law clause is often attended by an exclusive jurisdiction clause in favour of the courts of the state in which the proper law obtains, Mr Scott concedes that there is no reported authority on the effect in this context of an exclusive jurisdiction clause. For the reasons given in paragraph 36 I hold that such a clause cannot derogate from the jurisdiction of this court under s.24 (1)(c). I hasten to add that there may be circumstances in which this court will decline to exercise jurisdiction upon the footing that it would be better exercised in the courts of the state identified in an exclusive jurisdiction clause; or perhaps more likely, circumstances in which this court, while resolving in principle to exercise jurisdiction, will decline to make an order until satisfied that the courts of that state will recognise and enforce it. But such circumstances do not exist in the present case. The Hickory Trust no longer has Jersey trustees; there is nothing to indicate that it still holds assets in Jersey; and indeed the trust asset which is the primary target of the wife's application is held in England. In such circumstances it is inapt to burden the courts of Jersey with this case in any way.