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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 >> M v M [2004] EWHC 688 (Fam) (29 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2004/B72.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 688 (Fam), [2004] Fam Law 496, [2004] 2 FLR 236 |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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M |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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M |
Respondent |
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L. Marks QC and A. Lyon (instructed by Withers LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 22 25 March 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Baron DBE :
The Factual Matrix.
"a lively and happy boy, slightly immature in his behaviour but lacking social skills. This is evident in the class, free time and in play situations. The school also found behaviour in the formal situation, like mealtimes, very difficult to keep within accepted boundaries. His behaviour often lapses to babylike, attention seeking, which did not endear him to his peers. When he joined [the local private school] he became aggressive particularly, kicking, biting, losing his temper with others ."
" Q also shows
. mixed clinical features of Asperger's syndrome and autistic spectrum disorder. From the available research it is well known that children with autistic continuum have a very variable outcome
the only clear predictor of outcome in almost all the studies is the IQ level
.. the outcome amongst those of a high IQ is
variable and less predictable. Useful speech in early childhood
is also a good predictive of a better outcome.
Q has shown significant improvement over the years. His language developed early and he was able to communicate by school entry. He subsequently progressed with his speech and language and communication skills, and now has fairly significant abilities in these areas
These features support that Q will have a better outcome in the long run from the available research information.
The most experienced authors in the field have come across quite a number of children who appear to grow out of autism. The majority of [? these] children actually make some progress in their social skills functioning and hence may not be regarded as suffering from autism at a later stage. However, the majority of children remain socially severely restricted as adults. Q has shown a similar improvement over the years, but he still continues to have major difficulties with social skills especially with his peer group.
It is somewhat difficult to accurately predict [sic] Q's long-term outcome, but the available research indicates that Q possibly has a better long-term outcome as he has a significantly high IQ and early development of language. He has also shown significant progress over the years, but despite this, he continues to carry significant impairment with his social skills, especially his peer group. This will have a significant impact on future life, finding employment, developing relationships and facing a wider challenging world".
The Assets
46.1. The former matrimonial home has an agreed net value of £2.425 million. The works required to complete the project may enhance its value somewhat. It is a substantial property, has state of the art facilities and is in excellent condition (subject to the minor, outstanding works). It is agreed that it will be transferred into the Wife's sole name.
46.2. The Spanish property the parties' holiday home will be retained by the Husband. It is worth some £420,000 net of mortgage and Spanish sales tax.
46.3. There are no liquidity problems as quoted shares and cash amount to some £6 million. The deferred shares total just over £3 million. Both these sums include the monies earned in 2002 and 2003. The total pot is now some £12,405,550 of which the pre-separation assets total £6.971 million and the post-separation assets total £5.434 million.
The witnesses
49.1. The Wife struck me as a devoted mother, who has had to bear the brunt of the responsibility for the children throughout the marriage as a result of her husband's workload and his attendant absences. She will undoubtedly continue with this role until the children achieve independence. In Q's case, her duties in this regard may be life-long. She told me that, in comparison with the other children, Q takes a great deal of extra care. Recently, she has been considering specialist boarding schools for Q (for which she produced 2 brochures). They did not seem to me to be ideal and she acknowledges that further investigation is needed. However, Q may board in the future which would lessen her load. In any event, she should have extra help in house. Indeed, she should have had it over the past 2 years but was unable to have a trained mother's help because of the Husband's failure to provide sufficient finances. I find that this must have added to her burden in the recent past.
49.2. She was questioned about her budget and some inroads were made because she accepted that (i) some running costs should have been apportioned to the children, (ii) some costs were over-estimates and (iii) some expenditure was "one-off". She did not appear to wish to live extravagantly.
49.3. She said that her Husband's attitude to the litigation and the lack of funds had caused her to feel under pressure. She did not consider that he had been fair to her or the children in the interim. I accept her evidence on this point.
49.4. She told me that she wanted to study psychology in order to improve her mind. It was suggested that she might wish to use this type of qualification to earn money but I do not consider that she needs to work or should be obliged so to do. If she chooses to then, that will be a matter for her.
49.5. She says that, whereas the Husband may retire from his job, she has no such option. Accordingly, she asserts that her contributions to the welfare of the family have not and will not cease as a result of the divorce because she will have to continue to fulfil her marital role as a mother albeit that she will no longer be a wife. She wants this continued contribution to be marked particularly as her "job" does not bring any financial reward. It is her case that, whereas potentially, the Husband will be able to continue to earn huge sums, she has no such option. She believes that the tax structure which he invented during the marriage should, in fairness, be regarded as a marital asset from which she should benefit for the next 7 years (in reality, 10 years because of the 3 year earn-out in respect of the deferred shares).
50.1. The Husband is a man of talent who is devoted to his work in fact, to date, it has been all-consuming. His dedication has cost him the marriage and, to some extent, his health. He exhibited clear evidence of stress during his evidence. He was obliged to take beta blockers (for they have to be taken every 3 hours) whilst in the witness box, he looked fatigued and his hands shook throughout. He said that he has suffered from a loss of sensation in his hands and skin. The doctors have told him that they believe this is probably stress induced but it may be the onset of Multiple Sclerosis.
50.2. Despite advice to slow down, he has continued to undertake a punishing schedule with little consideration for its long term effects on his health. He said that he felt obliged to work in this way because he wanted to ensure financial security for the whole family.
50.3. He said that he had continued his enormous workload since the separation because he felt that he would then have sufficient funds with which to deal with the financial ramifications of the divorce.
50.4. He did not consider that the Wife should have 50% of the post separation assets he felt that 31- 33% was a generous proportion. More importantly, he did not consider it to be fair that she should have any part of his future earnings. He said that he did not know whether he would be able to earn the sums which he had earned in the last 3 years because (i) he remained pessimistic about the longevity of his tax structure and (ii) he did not believe his health could continue to withstand the rigours of his current schedule. Moreover, he said that he would have no incentive to work in this way if he were to lose 40% of his earnings. He told me that the possibility of a large bonus (whatever it might be) was a real incentive but, if he learned that whatever his effort, he would only receive 60% of it then he would not continue. He was cross-examined extensively on this point. I was wholly convinced by his answers and demeanour in the witness box and I am clear that he would not be prepared to work as he has heretofore if there were to be any "charge" on his future earnings.
50.5. The Husband told me that he was 44 years old and that he did not feel that he had the energy to continue working as he had in the long-term. On the other hand, I accept that he does have an option to continue for a few years and, if he does, the financial rewards may be great.
50.6. I am of the clear view that the Husband sees his success and, ultimately, his status in terms of his overall capital worth. Thus, he may well feel "compelled" to continue working for the few years if, for no other reason, than to seek to re-coup the monies that he will pay out as a result of the divorce. Despite this, I am equally sure that any on-going payment would be a huge (perhaps complete) disincentive to him. Moreover, I do not believe that very high earnings are assured in the medium to long-term.
The Law and its application in this case.
"Self-evidently, fairness requires the court to take into account all the circumstances of the case. Indeed, the statute so provides. It is also self-evident that the circumstances in which the statutory powers have to be exercised vary widely. As Butler-Sloss LJ said in Dart v Dart [1996] 2 FLR 286, 303, the statutory jurisdiction provides for all applications for ancillary financial relief, from the poverty stricken to the multi-millionaire. But there is one principle of universal application which can be stated with confidence. In seeking to achieve a fair outcome, there is no place for discrimination between husband and wife and their respective roles. Typically, a husband and wife share the activities of earning money, running their home and caring for their children. Traditionally, the husband earned the money, and the wife looked after the home and the children. This traditional division of labour is no longer the order of the day. Frequently both parents work. Sometimes it is the wife who is the money-earner, and the husband runs the home and cares for the children during the day. But whatever the division of labour chosen by the husband and wife, or forced upon them by circumstances, fairness requires that this should not prejudice or advantage either party when considering para (f), relating to the parties' contributions. This is implicit in the very language of para (f): '... the contribution which each has made or is likely ... to make to the welfare of the family, including any contribution by looking after the home or caring for the family'. If, in their different spheres, each contributed equally to the family, then in principle it matters not which of them earned the money and built up the assets. There should be no bias in favour of the money-earner and against the home-maker and the child-carer. There are cases, of which the Court of Appeal decision in Page v Page (1981) 2 FLR 198 is perhaps an instance, where the court may have lost sight of this principle.
Thus, as matters stand, there is a degree of confusion. I venture to think this has arisen because the courts have departed from the statutory provisions. The statutory provisions lend no support to the idea that a claimant's financial needs, even interpreted generously and called reasonable requirements, are to be regarded as determinative. Another factor to which the court is bidden to have particular regard is the available resources of each party. As my noble and learned friend Lord Hoffmann observed in Piglowska v Piglowski [1999] 2 FLR 763, 782, [1999] 1 WLR 1360, 1370, s 25(2) does not rank the matters listed in that subsection in any kind of hierarchy. The weight, or importance, to be attached to these matters depends upon the facts of the particular case. But I can see nothing, either in the statutory provisions or in the underlying objective of securing fair financial arrangements, to lead me to suppose that the available assets of the respondent become immaterial once the claimant wife's financial needs are satisfied. Why ever should they? If a husband and wife by their joint efforts over many years, his directly in his business and hers indirectly at home, have built up a valuable business from scratch, why should the claimant wife be confined to the court's assessment of her reasonable requirements, and the husband left with a much larger share? Or, to put the question differently, in such a case, where the assets exceed the financial needs of both parties, why should the surplus belong solely to the husband? On the facts of a particular case there may be a good reason why the wife should be confined to her needs and the husband left with the much larger balance. But the mere absence of financial need cannot, by itself, be a sufficient reason. If it were, discrimination would be creeping in by the back door. In these cases, it should be remembered, the claimant is usually the wife.
Hence the importance of the check against the yardstick of equal division.
There is much to be said for returning to the language of the statute. Confusion might be avoided if courts were to stop using the expression 'reasonable requirements' in these cases, burdened as it is now with the difficulties mentioned above. This would not deprive the court of the necessary degree of flexibility. Financial needs are relative. Standards of living vary. In assessing financial needs, a court will have regard to a person's age, health and accustomed standard of living. The court may also have regard to the available pool of resources. Clearly, and this is well recognized, there is some overlap between the factors listed in s 25(2). In a particular case there may be other matters to be taken into account as well. But the end product of this assessment of financial needs should be seen, and treated by the court, for what it is: only one of the several factors to which the court is to have particular regard. This is so, whether the end product is labelled financial needs or reasonable requirements. In deciding what would be a fair outcome the court must also have regard to other factors such as the available resources and the parties' contributions. In following this approach the court will be doing no more than giving effect to the statutory scheme."
54.1. a medium length marriage/cohabitation [of 16 years];
54.2. a "big money" case where assets could (and in my view should) be said to exceed needs [£12.4 million]; but with
54.3. the possibility that the Husband will be able to accumulate very significant further assets through future work. [Specifically, as Mr Mostyn asserts, given that in the last 3 years the Husband's average bonus (per appendix 2) has been US$5.1 million / £2.789 million net (at £=$1.853)].
55.1. The Parties are aged 44 [the Husband] and 42 years old [the Wife]. Thus, they are middle aged. The Husband in particular may have many years of working life left and the Wife will have to continue her "job" of caring for the family until the children reach independence and perhaps until her death because of Q's needs.
55.2. Each party made an extraordinary but equal contribution to the marriage. In their own way, each has had to make a special sacrifice for the family the Husband by working harder than most and the Wife by caring for the children especially Q as if she were a single parent. In the light of the Authorities , particularly Lambert v Lambert [2003] 1 FLR 139 I do not regard either as having made a special contribution such that it sounds in the level of award or in the right to retain a larger share of the assets.
55.3. After the divorce each party will cease to make any contribution as a spouse. However, each will continue to make a valuable continuing contribution as a parent. The Wife will have the day to day care of the children with the added responsibilities that Q brings as such she will make a continuing and valuable contribution as a mother. The Husband will continue to make substantial financial contributions because, apart from periods when the children are with him (and at the present rate that will only be some 50 days per annum), he will make his contribution as a father by providing periodical payments.
55.4. For the avoidance of doubt, I order him to pay for all the children's schooling (including reasonable extras), to provide full medical insurance, to pay the children's usual medical and dental expenses (save to the extent that they are already reflected in the wife's budget) and periodical payments at the rate of £35,000 per annum net for Q and £25,000 per annum for each of the 2 younger children. That is a total of £85,000 per annum net payable monthly in advance from the 1st March 2004 by way of standing order. These payments will be indexed linked. In the case of Q the payments will continue into adulthood on the basis of his special needs. Indeed, his periodical payments may need to be increased beyond inflation. In respect of the younger children, the payments will continue until they cease tertiary education (that is to the end of a 1st degree only). When these go to university (or other training), the amount paid to their mother for the roof element will become the then equivalent of £10,000 per annum (as adjusted for inflation). The remaining sum will be paid directly to the child in respect of his/her allowance and university fees. If this latter sum is insufficient to cover proper expenses, then it will be a matter for direct negotiation between father and adult "child" (or, failing agreement, Court order). These sums are predicated on the basis that that the Husband's annual income from all sources is not less than £350,000 net per annum. If it falls below this figure, then the periodical payments may need to be adjusted.
55.5. The relationship to which I shall have regard lasted 16 years I do not draw any distinction between the years of co-habitation and those of the marriage in this case. I take fully into account the precise wording of the Statute but I am clear that in modern society it is a couple's commitment to each other by co-habiting that is the relevant start date for consideration in most cases. Indeed, I consider that it is the norm for most couples to live together for a period before marriage. In this case, the parties are Catholic by religion but even they did not consider their religious tenets to be any impediment to a life together without the formality of marriage. That was, as I find, because they assumed that marriage was inevitable. I am well aware of the decision in Foley v - Foley 1981 3 WLR 284 and the dicta of Eveleigh LJ at page 290. There are many other old cases dealing with the importance of the married years per se but I consider that society has moved on and it would be old-fashioned (indeed, senseless) to ignore the manner in which people now choose to order their lives. I prefer the modern view and draw a measure of comfort from GW v- RW [2003] 2 FLR 108 in which Mr Mostyn Q.C (sitting as Deputy High Court Judge) rightly said:-
"[Foley]
. is now nearly 22 years old. The case of White v White has emphasised that the law in this area is not moribund but must move to reflect changing social values. I cannot imagine anyone nowadays seriously stigmatising pre-marital cohabitation as 'living in sin' or lacking the quality of emotional commitment assumed in marriage. Thus, in my judgment, where a relationship moves seamlessly from cohabitation to marriage without any major alteration in the way the couple live, it is unreal and artificial to treat the periods differently. On the other hand, if it is found that the pre-marital cohabitation was on the basis of a trial period to see if there was any basis for later marriage then I would be of the view that it would not be right to include it as part of the 'duration of the marriage'. This was the finding made in the recent case of F v F (unreported) 14 January 2003 by Hartmann J in the High Court of Hong Kong, which decision contains some valuable insights on this and other aspects of the law of ancillary relief. There is no basis for such a finding in this case, and I therefore include the 18 months of pre-marital cohabitation here as part of the 'duration of the marriage'
55.6. In fact, I doubt that the nice distinction which Mr Mostyn sought to draw will be capable of identification in most cases. He added (at Paragraph 40)
"I do not shrink from saying that this is a difficult issue. The logic deployed by Mr. Pointer has obvious force. But on the other hand it seems to me that to adopt it requires me to put a blue pencil straight through the statutory criterion of the duration of the marriage. The failure of the judge in L v L (Financial Provision: Contributions) [2002] 1 FLR 642 (Lambert) to give sufficient weight to this factor was specifically criticised by the Court of Appeal. It seems to me that the assumption of equal value of contribution is very obvious where the marriage is over 20 years. For shorter periods the assumption seems to me to be more problematic. I am not attracted to a formulaic solution, as suggested by John Eekelaar, but I do in essence accept his proposition that the entitlement to an equal division must reflect not only the parties' respective contributions but also an accrual over time".
55.7. Although not without academic controversy, I consider that this point is well made. It seems to me that there ought to be an acknowledgement in the level of award to take account of this factor. I regard this marriage as in the lower end of the bracket of medium to long term, which means that an equal division is not necessarily to be regarded as almost automatic.
55.8. As the asset schedule makes clear, the financial resources are substantial and liquid. As set out above, they have increased very significantly since the parties separated. I find that it is probable that, for next 2 years or so, the Husband will continue to earn a significant bonus albeit that this cannot be guaranteed. However, I find it impossible to predict the level of the Husband's future earnings. I doubt that he will be able to continue working at his current pace. Moreover, I accept his evidence that the financial climate is such that his "structure" is likely to end within the foreseeable future. Accordingly, I would not expect his bonus to continue to grow in the exceptional and exponential manner that it has over the last 3 years. His potential future income (at whatever level) is a financial resource but it does require real future effort to bring to fruition and it is not certain.
55.9. Since the 1980s these Courts have striven to provide a clean break upon divorce to enable parties to conduct their future lives separate and apart. It has only been cases of real need that periodical payments have been ordered because, without them, one party (usually the wife) would not be able to adjust without undue hardship.
55.10. It would seem to me that it is in the public interest to strike a balance between any future connection (with possible, attendant litigation) and the need to protect a party who needs financial support. If it can be attained, it is better for there to be a clean break. Moreover the mischief is the same whether the periodic payment is called maintenance or is termed a series of proportionate lump sums (since both are to some extent variable). More importantly, such orders mean that the parties are still connected and the Wife is still dependant on her former husband. An instant clean break is always preferable if it can be achieved.
55.11. In this case Mr Mostyn has sought to argue that the current assets of £12.4 million are not sufficient to cover his client's needs. Indeed, in his final submissions he produced a series of figures which showed that, on the basis that (i) the Wife "needed" a budget of £150,000 per annum net and (ii) no capital was amortised, she required a total of £8.37 million. Even a Duxbury calculation at this level of income showed a "need" for £6.6 million some £455,000 more than a 50% split of the current assets.
55.12. On the other hand, Mr Marks produced a series of calculations which showed that, in reality, the Wife's budget was £111,000 per annum after deduction of the expenses which were truly referable to the children and the removal of "one off" items that had, he submitted, been incorrectly included. His alternative Duxbury calculations showed that the Wife only "needed" a lump sum of £1.5 million in addition to the transfer of the house because such sum would provide her with either (i) an annual income of £106,000 until 2016 (and £86,300 thereafter) or (ii) if she sold the former matrimonial home in 2016 thereby releasing £1 million a total income for life of £108,000 per annum net.
55.13. Of course, I am only too well aware that, calculations can be put forward to support any contention thus, I treat each Counsel's figures with a degree of caution. I find that the Wife needs a home and, on the basis of generosity, she should be able to stay in the former matrimonial home if that is what she wishes (it is worth £2.525 million inclusive of its contents). She needs £150,000 to finish the works to that house and she needs her current car (worth £15,000).
55.14. Her budget, as adjusted to remove the children's expenditure and the one off costs that she accepted in her evidence, to my mind shows a need for no more than £125,000 per annum.
55.15. She will be in receipt of £85,000 per annum for the children. Those monies cannot be used to fund her reasonable budget but they will augment her expenditure because they contain a roof element.
55.16. The figure of £125,000 per annum net is generous given the manner in which the parties lived during the marriage. That annual income need would produce a "Duxbury" figure in very general terms in the order of £3.25 million. Thus, her needs viewed on a generous basis are:-
House £2,425,000
Contents £ 100,000
Payment for works £ 150,000
Car £ 15,000
Duxbury £3,250,000
£5,940,000
55.17. The Husband has not sought to put forward any figures for his capital needs. Therefore, I assume, given his tendency to parsimony, that his needs will be covered by a similar or lesser sum to that set out above.
55.18. The Husband's health must give rise to real, long term concerns. He has already suffered a breakdown in his health due to stress. I do not consider that he was exaggerating his current problems and it cannot be good for a relatively young man to be taking beta blockers on a regular basis. He has suffered from a loss of sensation and I do have concerns for his well being unless he reduces his workload in the relatively near future. The Wife has no such worries for her own health. Of course, Q's problems are real and profound and I take them fully into account.
The Claim.
" The Matrimonial Proceedings and Property Act 1970 made a fresh start. The powers of the court were greatly extended. The relevant provisions in the 1970 Act were re-enacted in substantially similar terms in Part II of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973. Sections 23 and 24 of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 empower the court, on granting a decree of divorce and in certain other circumstances, to make financial provision orders and property adjustment orders. Financial provision orders, under s 23, include orders that one party to the marriage shall make payments to the other party. The payments may be periodical, either secured or unsecured, or lump sums. Property adjustment orders, under s 24, include orders that one party to the marriage shall transfer property to the other party. Section 24A empowers the court to make ancillary orders for the sale of property.
Section 25, as substituted by s 3 of the Matrimonial and Family Proceedings Act 1984, sets out the familiar list of matters to which the court is to have regard in deciding how to exercise these powers.
"As originally enacted in 1970, in s 5(1) of the Matrimonial Proceedings and Property Act 1970, the list of factors to be taken into account contained a tailpiece. The tailpiece declared what should be the objective of the court when exercising the statutory powers to make financial provision orders and property adjustment orders. The court was so to exercise these powers:
'
as to place the parties, so far as it is practicable and, having regard to their conduct, just to do so, in the financial position in which they would have been if the marriage had not broken down and each had properly discharged his or her financial obligations and responsibilities towards the other.'
'This tailpiece was later deleted from the legislation, and nothing inserted in its place. In consequence, the legislation does not state explicitly what is to be the aim of the courts when exercising these wide powers. Implicitly, the objective must be to achieve a fair outcome. The purpose of these powers is to enable the court to make fair financial arrangements on or after divorce in the absence of agreement between the former spouses: see Thorpe LJ in Dart v Dart [1996] 2 FLR 286, 294. The powers must always be exercised with this objective in view, giving first consideration to the welfare of the children.
Post-separation accrual
[21] However, perhaps his more realistic submission was that the true ratio of the speech of Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead is that the judge's objective is fairness rather than equality. Even applying equality as a cross-check to the provisional award there were in this case sufficient considerations justifying departure from equality to enable us to dismiss the appeal. The considerations identified by Mr. Pointer were:
The stellar quality of the husband's contribution.
The judge's finding that the husband held shares in the four companies as trustee or protector for Jeffrey.
The fact that much of the husband's wealth had been generated since the separation in 1994 by his shrewd insistence on shares in Baco Ltd as part of the consideration for the sale of HD Plastics.
Neither fairness nor equality would be achieved by awarding the wife a lump sum equalling the difference between the value of what had been transferred to her and one half of the value of the family assets. Careful consideration had to be given to the character of individual assets contributing to the overall total.
[70] All the above considerations are capable of inclusion in a review of the respective needs, responsibilities and/or contributions of the parties. They cover three of Mr. Pointer's four submissions summarised in [21] above. The third, namely that much of the husband's fortune was generated in the 6 years post-separation, receives no reflection because in my opinion it is inherently fallacious. The assessment of assets must be at the date of trial or appeal. The language of the statute requires that. Exceptions to that rule are rare and probably confined to cases where one party has deliberately or recklessly wasted assets in anticipation of trial. In this case the reality is that the husband traded his wife's unascertained share as well as his own between separation and trial, particularly committing those undivided shares to the investment in Baco. The wife's share went on risk and she is plainly entitled to what in the event has proved to be a substantial profit. If this factor has any relevance it is within the evaluation of the husband's exceptional contribution.
Sharing in the Husband's future bonuses
"
.. I see no force in the criticism of the judge's acceptance of the wife's budget. In this field of litigation budgets prepared by the parties often have a high degree of unreality - usually the applicant wife's budget is much inflated. Most unusually, in this case the wife's budget seems to have been rather understated in many respects. It is true that one of the major items on the budget was substantial monthly expenditure for rent or mortgage. It is true that that could be said to be a superfluous item once the substantial lump sum was ordered. But the essential task of the judge is not to go through these budgets item by item but stand back and ask, what is the appropriate proportion of the husband's available income that should go to the support of the wife? This was a husband with £66,000 a year gross, £50,000 a year net, and of that available net income it simply could not be contended that £14,400 a year for his wholly dependent wife was excessive.
The Overseas position.
72.1. An earning capacity developed and nurtured during a marital relationship is a thing of value which falls to be fairly or equitably shared at the end of the relationship;
72.2. A non-working party can validly claim by virtue of her domestic contributions to have contributed substantially to the creation and development of this earning capacity;
72.3. In determining the extent of the sharing the court must not be falsely confined by "needs", "reasonable requirements" or "marital standard of living";
72.4. The sharing can be effected by means of augmenting the capital award or by means of a direct spousal periodical payments award;
72.5. Rather the court should recognise that marriage is an "economic partnership" or "an economic unit which generates financial benefits" or "a joint endeavour" where the "partners should expect and are entitled to share [its] financial benefits";
72.6. In determining the extent of the sharing the court should have regard primarily to principles of compensation and in particular should have regard to the sacrifices and economic disadvantages suffered by the non-working spouse. The principle of non-discrimination requires this. This process "seeks to recognize and account for both the economic disadvantages incurred by the spouse who makes such sacrifices and the economic advantages conferred upon the other spouse".
72.7. "Furthermore, great disparities in the standard of living that would be experienced by spouses in the absence of support are often a revealing indication of the economic disadvantages inherent in the role assumed by one party"
73.1. A loading of the present order in favour of the Wife. This is an Australian technique and is, according to Mr Mostyn, is what (in wholly different circumstances) Munby J effected in B v B 2003 2 FLR 285. Its advantages are said to be that it is more consonant with an immediate clean break (although, it is asserted that, the agreed Wells sharing in this case undermines the need to be concerned with this point). The disadvantages are that loading requires the court to act arbitrarily in fixing the additional lump sum now against future unknown resources. The risks of such an approach were criticised in Wells - indeed a significant adjustment now in W's favour could well be unfair to H in the long term.
73.2. By making an award of a lump sum by instalments or a series of lump sums for a period of time. This is variant on the first but would meet any liquidity argument advanced by H.
73.3. By making an award of periodical payments in a fixed amount. This has the advantage that if things do not turn out as expected then one or other party can apply to vary. The problems are (1) this is contrary to a clean break (2) the cases of M v M and J v J indicate that periodical payments should be principally for "maintenance" and (3) that they would end on remarriage.
73.4. A series of "inchoate" or floating lump sums for a period of time. This was a course adopted by Wilson J in R v R 2003 EWHC 3197 (again in wholly different circumstances so as to enable a mortgage to be repaid; when a husband had no present capital with which to make the necessary repayments). This is the method which is advocated on behalf of the Wife because it is stated that the advantages are that the sums are flexible (being a proportion) and this meets the uncertainty argument. Moreover, they end after a period of time and so a clean break eventually comes into effect. The disadvantages are that it requires continual disclosure, the clean break is deferred and there is a risk that the paying party will cease to work because he is dis-incentivised.
Conclusion.