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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 >> N v N [2010] EWHC 717 (Fam) (28 April 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2010/717.html Cite as: [2010] 2 FLR 1093, [2010] Fam Law 791, [2010] EWHC 717 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Applicant |
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N |
Respondent |
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James turner QC (instructed by Charles Russell LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 1 to 4 February 2010
Draft circulated 11 March 2010
Judgment
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Crown Copyright ©
Charles J :
Introduction
My approach in law
i) a part of the proper exercise of the sharing principle in respect of assets where there is a good reason to depart from equality involves a consideration of how those assets should be shared, andii) this can be done without re-introducing a detailed consideration of what is or is not the matrimonial acquest, and the extent and value of the assets in respect of which the "good reason" to depart from equality exists, because, as explained in paragraph 67 of Charman (No 4), this can be done with whatever degree of detail is apt in the given case.
i) an analysis or comparison by reference to the sharing principle, or a cross check by reference to a conversion of all the assets to cash based on hypothetical sales, loses some of its force and relevance, and in my view the overall exercise should includeii) a comparison of the respective positions of the parties post award by reference to that premise and therefore the likely reality. Such a comparison will, for example, look at income and capital yields of relevant assets and the proposed award.
The Assets
i) The apartment in New York that has been transferred to the wife. There are some uncertainties relating to the capital gains tax (if any) on the transfer to the wife and the knock on effect of that on capital gains tax (if any) on its sale by the wife. During the hearing a solution to those uncertainties was arrived at, namely that the husband would indemnify the wife against the relevant tax (if any).ii) A property in South America owned by the wife and occupied by her mother.
iii) There were small differences on the values put on these properties which were valued in US $ and converted. I take their values at £1.6m and £36,000 respectively.
iv) A sum advanced by the parties to the wife's brother in connection with a purchase by him of a house in Australia. There was a dispute as to whether this was a loan or a gift. This too was solved during the hearing on the basis that any repayment would be shared equally between the parties and this possible asset (about £166,000) therefore fell out of account. The order should of course reflect this agreement. As I understand it, the loan (if there is one) is to be treated on the basis that it was a joint loan and either of the parties could seek repayment on the basis that any recovery is to be divided 50/50.
v) Bank accounts. There is a small difference in the competing schedules (£2,500) and I take the amounts as: husband £1.129m and wife £420,000 (of which approximately £378,000 represents her half share of joint accounts): total £1.549m.
vi) Other investments / insurance policies. The husband: £233,000.
vii) Pensions. Again there is a small difference on the schedules (£2,628) and I take these as having a value of £354,000.
viii) Bonuses. The husband has accrued bonuses for 2009 and 2010, payable over the years 2010 to 2013, which, on assumptions as to tax rates and interest, were estimated at a total of £769,296 (net).
ix) Chattels. The difference between the schedules relates (save for £1,000) to a car that the husband says was sold, and I accept that it was. The wife has jewellery valued at £13,775. It is agreed that she is to have a small number of items from the husband's home and all the contents of the property in New York. No figures were put on those chattels and sensibly they were left out of account. In my view, (a) the wife's jewellery, and (b) about £35,000 of the husband's chattels (household furniture, jewellery, sporting equipment, outside effects and cars) should also be left out account. This leaves a significant quantity of chattels owned by the husband, described in his schedule of assets as inherited antiques. These include furniture, paintings, a library, and other items, having a gross value of £968,002 (inherited chattels) and photograph albums (gross value £1,665,000). There are small differences in the gross value figures for these items asserted by the wife. Less capital gains tax I take these assets as having net values of respectively £900,000 and £1.4m.
x) The husband owns 49.46% of the issued shares in REC, the Company. The most relevant, and certainly by far the largest, difference between the parties on the value to be put on assets relates to this shareholding. The final difference was about £4.95m.
xi) The husband is also the tenant of S Hall. His long tenancy was not valued. Whether he could assign it was not looked into. He intends to remain living there as the tenant. As appears later, issues relating to marriage value arise in respect of any sale of S Hall.
2005/6 | 2006/7 | 2007/8 | 2008/9 | |
Bank net | £582,982 | £881,654 | £834,293 | £162,510 |
REC net | £20,896 | £36,642 | £36,498 | £17,043 |
REC div net | £46,980 | £36,642 | £36,498 | £234,900 |
Totals net | £650,858 | £937,625 | £887,603 | £414,453 |
The liabilities
A Table
Asset | H | W | Total |
New York Apartment | £1.6m | ||
South American house | £36,000 | ||
Property | £1.636m | £1.636m | |
Bank accounts | £1.129 | £420,000 | |
Investment | £233,000 | ||
Cash / investments | £1.362m | £420,000 | £1.782m |
Declared bonuses | £796,296 | £796,296 | |
Pensions / insurance | £354,000 | £354,000 | |
Photograph albums | £1.4m | ||
Inherited chattels | £900,000 | ||
Inherited chattels | £2.3m | ||
Totals | £4.81m | £2.05m | £6.86m |
Liabilities | £48,000 | £60,717 | |
Unpaid costs | £135,189 | £137,959 | |
Liabilities/costs | £183,189 | £198,676 | £381,865 |
Net | £4.63m | £1.85m | £6.48m |
If the photograph albums and the inherited chattels are removed the position becomes:
H | W | Total |
£2.33 | £1.85 | £4.18 |
If the bonuses are removed the position becomes:
H | W | Total |
£1.56 | £1.85 | £3.41 |
The evidence of the parties
REC and S Hall
i) The husband: 2349 shares, being 49.46%.ii) A discretionary trust of which the husband is the settlor and the present class of beneficiaries is made up of the parties' children and the husband's brother (who was added in 2008) Trust A: 900 shares, being 18.96%.
iii) A discretionary trust of which the wife is the settlor (she having been given 900 shares by the husband for this purpose) and the present class of beneficiaries is made up of the parties' children, Trust B: 900 shares, being 18.96%.
iv) The oldest child, N: 600 shares, being 12.63%.
i) this property was regarded by the wider family shareholders as the family home,ii) the wider family respected the wish of the husband's grandparents that it should be occupied by one of the family, and indeed by the husband and his family, and
iii) the wider family shareholders (all of whom were later bought out by Company purchases of their shares) accepted this approach to the management of the Company and its assets.
i) S Hall plus 11 acres: (a) Vacant possession £4m, (b) Tenanted £2m, andii) S Hall plus 11 acres and neighbouring 150 acres: (a) Vacant possession £5.25m, (b) Tenanted £3m.
When the neighbouring 150 acres is added to the sale, the increased marriage value has three (rather than two) constituents namely the two freeholds and the leasehold interest of the land apart from the additional 150 acres. There is possibly, a further ingredient if the husband has a right to acquire the freehold or a new lease of S Hall.
i) the husband would be paid his marriage value, andii) the Company would be paid the balance.
i) in 2007 the Company sold 4.5 acres of land in East London for £18.4m. This provided the Company with very considerable liquidity in place of land that had been subject to long (around 30 year) leases and which had provided a rental income. This sale resulted from an approach to the Company and the price was probably enhanced by the fact that the Olympics are soon to be in London. It took place before the last round of buy outs and was a catalyst for them; andii) in the years to March 2008 and 2009 the Company sold land in Bromley in two tranches for residential development for a total of nearly £2m. This resulted in a significant adjustment to the value placed on (I think) the second tranche of this land in the 2007 schedule. (The adjustment was £1.547m (sale price) less £30,000 (valuation) and costs of sale and tax = £1.078m).
These two sales give rise to the question whether there are other pieces of land owned by the Company that have real prospects of being sold for development. In particular, the second sale is a pointer to the conclusion that the development value of the land in Bromley was not assessed or assessed correctly in the 2007 schedule.
i) S Hall and the 150 acres of surrounding land referred to earlier, andii) two residential properties in London occupied respectively by the husband's parents and his aunt (and a friend), on the basis that those occupants are elderly and that when the relevant leases end the properties can be sold with vacant possession at values greatly in excess of the values put on them in the 2007 schedule. The uplift was about £820,000, after tax on the gain at 28%.
Mr Atkins said in his oral evidence that the potential of those two residential properties was reflected in the valuation used. This was not pursued with him and the amount of the uplift raises a query as to whether it was done appropriately.
i) Properties with a gross value of about £16m,ii) Investments with a gross value of about £700,000,
iii) A balance of creditors over debtors of about £400,000, and
iv) Cash of about £4m.
This gives a total of about £21m gross.
i) questions relating to the best and most practicably available methods of achieving the best value for assets (and in particular shares in a private company) should always be considered in the context of their valuation, andii) cases should not be prepared and presented by reference to a method of valuation that does not represent this.
i) the legal questions relating to aspects of company law (see, for example, the approach and discussion set out in Re Bird Precison Bellows [1984] 3 AER 444, and Irvine v Irvine [2006] 4 AER 102, on quasi partnerships and a discount on the value of minority shareholdings, and see Gore Browne on Company Law Chapter 19 and O'Neill v Phillips [1999] 2 BCLC 2, on prejudicial conduct and just and equitable winding up), andii) the reality of the negotiating position between a shareholder who holds less that 75% of the shares and the other shareholders in connection with the passing of the relevant special resolution which in turn brings in the points (a) that shareholders can act in their own interests, (b) that trustee shareholders must act in accordance with their fiduciary duties and (c) that this court will look at what such shareholders and trustees are likely to do (e.g. Thomas v Thomas [1995] 2 FLR 668).
i) his and the family's strategies in respect of the Company buying in shares over the years,ii) his intentions and strategy in creating the trusts and making the gift to his eldest son,
iii) the position of the existing members of the class of discretionary beneficiaries under the trusts (his children and brother) all of whom are adults,
iv) any discussions he has had with the new trustee, and
v) by reference to the above, and more generally, the information he would be providing to that trustee to enable him to understand the background to the proper exercise of his fiduciary duties.
i) there were funds available, andii) a buy out would not have a detrimental impact on the respective percentages of the respective family interests, then
as and when each family interest wanted to raise cash from its shares it would be bought out at a non-discounted price. In my view this founds an equitable expectation that underlies, or is equivalent to that which underlies, a quasi partnership if those qualifications are satisfied.
i) looks at the position purely from the perspective of the financial interests and position of the beneficiaries, which coincides with the approach to be taken by trustees, andii) it ignores the likely view of the present adult members of the class towards their parents.
As to (ii), the evidence was to the effect that they all had a good relationship with both of their parents, and would wish to help and support them, whilst (on advice and in any event) having an eye to their own interests. As it is likely that only one of the children will ever "take over" S Hall, and it is not known who that child might be, their present financial interests are to maximise their "cash benefits" from the trusts in the medium term.
i) the possibility of varying the trusts as post nuptial settlements, orii) adding the wife as an ex spouse or widow to the trust created by the husband (Trust A).
Both possibilities were raised on behalf of the wife for the first time during the hearing, but were not pursued.
A home for the wife
The wife's relationship with, and intention relating to, Mr B
The wife's budget and her case on need
The wife's argument on sharing
i) the deductions from the net assets figure of £23,331,845 that should be made are (a) a capital provision for pension (£1,127,000), and (b) a general percentage adjustment for changes in property values since 2007 (£567,000),ii) no addition should be made for the revaluation of the two London houses occupied by elderly family tenants,
iii) it is arguable / negotiable that an addition of about £750,000 should be made to the net assets in respect of inherent corporation tax. This is a round figure and alterations to it by plus or minus £50,000 will have only a small impact on the resultant percentage division, and
iv) the husband's shares should be valued at 49.46% of the resultant net assets figure without any discount because it is a minority interest.
That gives a net assets figure, of £23,331,845 minus £1,694,000 (£1,127,000 + £567,000) = £21,637,845, or £22,387,845 if the inherent tax (at £750,000) is added, and results in values for the husband's shares of £10,702,078 or £11,073,028.
A different approach to sharing – the inherited and gifted assets – the bonuses and post separation earnings
i) an approach by reference to the circumstances of the case (e.g. the input during the marriage and the source of the asset as it now is) to assess the extent of the departure for good reason from equality in respect of assets to which such a departure may be applicable, andii) an approach that compares the respective positions of the parties against the likely reality of their respective positions after the award (and thus, here on the bases that not all of the assets will be sold, and that the husband will retain shares in the Company and live at S Hall as its tenant).
I shall return later to (ii).
i) over the years the Company has been a source of financial help to members of the husband's family, through salary (to those working for the Company), dividend, the provision of housing through tenancies and some loan finance (e.g. to the parties for their earlier matrimonial home), andii) the move to live at S Hall was always a source of tension and division between the parties, because the wife was never happy living there, whereas the husband loved the house and very much wanted to live there. Indeed, a common theme of the history was that the husband was very keen to take over S Hall as the person in his generation who loved and lived at his family home and enjoyed its contents, whereas the wife would not have chosen that life and would have remained living in London. Her objections, unlike those of her mother in law, did not however, to her credit, lead her to refuse to move to and to make S Hall her matrimonial home and the home of the children.
i) The net assets value of the Company, on the basis of a sale, has to be adjusted by subtracting (a) a value to be attributed to the husband's lease, (b) the capitalised pension £1.127m, and (c) the general percentage adjustment to the 2007 schedule (£567,000). I have taken £1.25m as the value to be attributed to the husband's long lease, which gives a vacant possession value of £4m for S Hall and the additional neighbouring land. Coincidentally (but helpfully for assessing the net asset value of the Company) this is one of the values used in the alternatives contained in Mr Walton's last report. The net value of property included in Mr Walton's last report, on the basis that S Hall (without the additional land) had a value of £4m, is £3,098,800. In his earlier report the net value included for S Hall (and the neighbouring land) was £2,520,671. This results in an increase in the net assets of £577,329 to approximately £22.6m (based on the net assets in the earlier report £22,018,000 + £577,329). Deducting (£1.27m for pension + £567,000 for property value adjustment) gives a net assets value of £20.9m, (49.46% of that being approx £10.34m gross).ii) I have then added back the negotiable figure of £750,000 in respect of the inherent tax (see paragraphs 133 and 134 above). On this basis I have arrived at a net asset value of about £21.65m for the Company. This gives a gross value for the husband's shares of £10.71m and a net value, after deducting capital gains tax at 18%, of £8.78m (say £8.8m). (In this calculation, it seems to me that it is not appropriate to adopt the approach taken on behalf of the wife, which was to allocate a 25% tax rate to some of the shares, because the husband is likely to sell them to the Company. This is because I am only carrying forward into figures my views on sharing set out above.)
iii) I have not deducted any tax from the £1.25m that I have attributed to the husband's lease (whether this assumption is sound probably does not matter for this purpose, because this value is shared 50/50 in the calculation).
iv) I have taken the declared bonuses at a non discounted figure, which in my view is optimistic. A discount in the amount received will not however have a major impact on the percentage division of all the assets.
Asset | H | W | Total |
New York Apartment | £1.6m | ||
South American house | £36,000 | ||
Property | £1.636m | £1.636m | |
Bank accounts | £1.129 | £420,000 | |
Investment | £233,000 | ||
Cash / investments | £1.362m | £420,000 | £1.782m |
Declared bonuses | £557,407 | £238,889 | £796,296 |
Pensions / insurance | £354,000 | £354,000 | |
Photograph albums | £1.4m | ||
Inherited chattels | £450,000 | £450,000 | |
Inherited chattels | £2.3m | ||
Lease | £625,000 | £625,000 | £1.25m |
REC shares | £6.6 | £2.2 | £8.8 |
Totals | £11.16m | £5.57m | £16.918m |
Liabilities | £48,000 | £60,717 | |
Unpaid costs | £135,189 | £137,959 | |
Liabilities/costs | £183,189 | £198,676 | £381,865 |
Net | £11.16m | £5.37 | £16.53 |
67.5% | 32.5% |
I naturally accept that this result is based on rounded figures, and a calculation could be done excluding the add back for inherent tax, or including less than £750,000 for it. Also, my estimate of the value of the husband's lease (and marriage value) is not based on direct evidence but is an extrapolation from the valuations. But in my view, on the information that I have, for the purpose of carrying forward into a percentage of the whole my views set out above on the sharing of individual assets, this approach is appropriate. To my mind, this percentage division of all the assets fits much more easily than the split urged by the wife (somewhere between 60/40 and 50/50) with the divide of the net assets between those in respect of which there is good reason for departing from equality and those where there is not.
The award sought by the husband and his budget and his case on future income requirements
i) in a sense the wife has, through the trusts, had the benefit or pleasure of setting up trusts for the children, andii) the proposed capital award exhausts the assets representing the marital acquest, in the sense of the assets as to which no good reason exists to depart from equality in the application of the sharing principle.
What award would provide the wife with complete financial security during the remainder of her life and be fair, having regard to the lifestyle enjoyed during the marriage and the plans of the parties relating to their retirement?
i) in my view the failure of the husband to provide projections and properly supported estimates of future income means that he cannot complain if I find, as I do, that his estimates (and those of Mr Atkins) are very cautious and are therefore significant under estimates,ii) as to salary, the more work the husband does the less would need to be paid to others to do the work that he would take over, and therefore it seems to me that a salary of more than £60,000 would be justified, and
iii) there is a balance to be struck between salary and dividend, that takes account of the amount and value of the work done, and the interests of the shareholders as a whole.
i) income he could earn by utilising his considerable expertise as a consultant, or non executive director, following retirement from his present full time and very time consuming job at the Bank,ii) his ability, if he does not use his available cash to meet the wife's award, to look to that cash on an amortised or unamortised basis to supplement his income, and to look to the photograph albums to provide capital (on a very rainy day),
iii) in the early years, his accrued bonuses which are (subject to the risk I have acknowledged of claw back) for the 2009 bonus the net sums of £152,512, £153,700 and £158,040 (payable in June 2010, 2011 and 2012), and for the 2010 bonus £101,675 (payable in June 2011, 2012 and 2013), and
iv) the possibility in the early years, that he might continue in his present job beyond June 2010.
i) what the husband will be likely to be able to earn gross in retirement,ii) his ability in the future to release capital, and
iii) his ability in the future (a) to set the position as to occupation of S Hall for the rest of his life, and during the next generation, and also (b) to put in place a fair distribution amongst the children (including, if this is one of the them, the next occupier of S Hall),
would involve a number of uncertainties and crystal ball gazing. A wish to achieve the possibly conflicting results referred to in point (iii) may inhibit or prevent further buy backs of shares, or capital extraction, following the award to the wife. It may therefore mean that, although the husband will retain capital and the wife will have a decreasing capital fund, the husband's access to his capital (if S Hall and family assets are to be passed on) will be inhibited. But these possibly conflicting results concerning the next generation flow from the nature of the gifted assets and the expectations of the parties in respect of their retirement. Also, I record that the possibility that the wish to bring them about might have this effect on the use of capital does not in my view detract from the arguments set out earlier in respect of the interests of the beneficiaries and the approach of the trustees to the issue whether there should be a discount in respect of the husband's shares.
i) an income on an amortised basis in the range of £110,000 to £125,000 per annum, and an ability to raise capital in later years on a sale of her home, would provide the wife with complete financial security and a fair and appropriate lifestyle assessed by reference to the lifestyle enjoyed during the marriage and the expectations of the parties on retirement, andii) it is likely that, from a combination of sources, the husband's gross income in retirement would match the range identified in (i) if the £4m cash that is held by the Company is used to buy back a percentage of his shares (which would provide him with £3m net).
Conclusions
i) my approach in law to the facts found,ii) the strength of the argument that it would be unfair to make an award that was likely to result in a sale of all the shares in the Company and of S Hall,
iii) the expectations of the parties in respect of their lives together after the husband retired from full time employment in the Banking sector,
iv) the reflection of that argument and those expectations in the premise underlying the award (and thus the common approach) that a significant part of the award would be funded by a buy back of shares,
v) the nature of the gifted assets and their value when compared with all of the assets, and
vi) the strength of the argument that an application of the need principle should not be based on an income need of the amount urged on behalf of the wife.