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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 >> Abuchian v Maksoud [2014] EWHC 3104 (Fam) (19 September 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2014/3104.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 3104 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
B e f o r e :
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MELINA O. ABUCHIAN | Applicant | |
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SHEIKH ABDUL MAKSOUD | Respondent |
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MRS. R. CAREW POLE (instructed by Schillings) appeared on behalf of the applicant/wife.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE HOLMAN:
"Pursuant to rule 4.4(1)(c) of the Family Procedure Rules on the ground that the applicant has failed to comply with, and is in breach of, the order of Sir Paul Coleridge dated 13th May 2014."
"(e) Disclosure shall be by way of questionnaires directed to the issue of the beneficial ownership of [certain property]."
Pausing there, it is to be noted that that part of the order of Sir Paul, which indicated, or directed, that disclosure shall be by way of questionnaires, did not itself contain any kind of time limits.
"(c) that there has been a failure to comply with a rule, practice direction or court order..."
The case and argument of the husband was very fully set out in a skeleton argument prepared for today by his leading counsel, Mr Tim Amos QC, dated 18th September 2014, and is, as one would expect, robustly argued. In fact it is not possible to say in relation to the supply of answers to the questionnaire that there has been any failure to comply with a rule, practice direction or court order since, as I have already explained, the court order did not itself fix any timetable within which the questionnaire should be answered. The highest that it can be put in this case is that the wife supplied her answers later than the date that she had agreed to do so in inter-solicitor correspondence. There has, of course, been a failure to comply with a court order in relation to filing and service of the points of claim and of the reply. As I have indicated, the first failure was one of two days, and the second one of one-and-a-half days. These parties were married (in fact twice, for they divorced and re-married) for around 33 years. The mother bore two children, although sadly one of them later died. She is currently resident in a very valuable property in North London. It is said (although I do not have the slightest idea as to the truth of the matter) that her husband is a wealthy man. He is now aged 89; she is aged 63. Subject to the success or otherwise of the husband's application to set aside the grant of leave or permission to apply for financial remedies under Part III of the 1984 Act, her other claims are effectively her only remedies for seeking to establish her financial position for many years to come. It would, frankly, be utterly disproportionate and unjust to strike those claims out on the basis of aggregate slippage of three-and-a-half days.