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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 [2018] EWHC 3186 (Fam) (22 November 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2018/3186.html Cite as: [2019] 1 FLR 939, [2019] 1 FCR 745, [2018] EWHC 3186 (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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C |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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C |
Respondent |
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Patrick Chamberlayne QC (instructed by Stewarts Law LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 25 July to 27 July 2018 and 16 November 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was delivered in private. The judge has given leave for this version of the judgment to be published on condition that (irrespective of what is contained in the judgment) in any published version of the judgment the anonymity of the children and members of their family must be strictly preserved. All persons, including representatives of the media, must ensure that this condition is strictly complied with. Failure to do so will be a contempt of court.
Mrs Justice Roberts :
Introduction
Background
The parties' open positions
The husband's arguments in support of a departure from equality
Post separation accrual
- US$3.413m (£2.53m) from his supplemental compensation allowance (all of which he has saved since the parties' separation);
- £1.68m from vested RSUs;
- £1.46 m of unvested stock;
- £2.5m of general investment gains secured through his active management of the funds since the date of separation;
- US$60,000 (£45,000) of investment growth from the loan he took out in anticipation of discharging the mortgage on the former matrimonial home; and
- £54,000 of additional pension contributions which he has been making at the rate of £2,000 pcm.
By the time of closing submissions, not all of these elements were being pursued: see para 70.
(i) all RSU awards made by the Bank prior to May 2016;
(ii) the supplemental compensation allowance (SCA) awarded at the end of 2015 but payable in 2016; and
(iii) 50% of the awards in respect of both RSUs and SCA made subsequently for the 2016 service year.
These would necessarily include all RSU receipts in 2016 and 2017 (some US$4.9 million) as well as those received this year. On this basis, the payments on her case can be seen as both rewarding endeavour during the subsistence of the marriage and forming part of the immediate financial continuum in the period post-separation. She accepts that she should have no claim to any RSUs vesting after April 2016 (i.e. those awarded in February 2017 and thereafter).
Pre-Owned Assets
Post-Separation investment accruals
The Law
"In my view Miller and the subsequent decisions referred to above, in particular Jones and Scatliffe, do not support the extension of the sharing principle to an earning capacity. The sharing principle applies to matrimonial assets, being "the property of the parties generated during the marriage otherwise than by external donation" (Charman v Charman (No 4), para 66). An earning capacity is not property and, in the context advanced by Mr Turner, it results in the generation of property after the marriage."
" to allow consideration of the concept of sharing to intrude in the assessment of a periodical payments award seems to me to be based upon a doubtful principle, and is replete with problems of quantification to any sure standard if the concept of sharing is going to uplift above the assessment of need a periodical payments award which will be paid from post-separation earnings, how does a judge set about doing it ? Is it a third ? Or 40% ? Or 20% ? There are not even any signposts along the road to a fair award."
"123. Any extension of the sharing principle to post-separation earnings would fundamentally undermine the court's ability to effect a clean break. In principle, as accepted by Mr Turner, the entitlement to share would continue until the payer ceased working (subject to this being a reasonable decision), potentially a period of many years. If the court was to seek to effect a clean break this would, inevitably, require a court to capitalise its value which would conflict with what Wilson LJ said in Jones v Jones.
124. Looking at its impact more broadly, it would apply to every case in which one party had earnings which were greater than the other's, regardless of need. This could well be a very significant number of cases. Further, if that submission was correct, I cannot see how this would sit with Lady Hale's observation in Miller that, even confined to "(i)n general", "it can be assumed that the marital partnership does not stay alive for the purpose of sharing future resources unless this is justified by need or compensation" (para 144) or her observation as to the effect of "(t)oo strict an adherence to equal sharing" (para 142)."
"131. In my view it is clear from Miller and Charman alone that, as a matter of principle, the court applies the need principle when determining whether the sharing award is sufficient to meet that party's future needs. To repeat what I have said above (para 108), there must be a means of determining whether, and if so how, the sharing award does or does not meet the applicant's needs. There is no suggestion that the question of needs for these purposes is to be determined by reference to a different need principle, or more broadly, by means of a different approach. Indeed any other approach would be inconsistent with the observations made by both Lord Nicholls and Lady Hale, that there is no rule about where the court starts the exercise, and inconsistent with Charman (para 73) in which the sufficiency of the award by reference to the sharing principle is directly assessed by the award "suggested by the needs principle".
132. This does not mean that the manner in which the need principle is applied to the sharing award is inflexible, no more than the application of the need principle is itself inflexible. .. Further, as Wilson LJ observed in Jones (para 27), an earning capacity can be "relevant to a fair distribution of the assets pursuant to the sharing principle". It can be taken into account when the court is deciding whether the capital should be amortised in full, in part or not at all and when deciding what assumed rate of return to apply. However, to repeat what Wilson LJ said in Jones:
"Even if, however, an earning capacity may also sometimes be relevant to a fair distribution of the assets pursuant to the sharing principle, it does not follow that the earning capacity should itself be treated as one of those assets, still less that an attempt should be made to capitalise it."
An issue of construction: the operation and consequences of the RSU scheme rules
The Bank's scheme rules
"In order appropriately to balance risk and reward, unpaid Restricted Stock Units . may be cance[l]led if a loss occurs outside of the ordinary course of business. For a line of business, sub-line of business or division, a "loss" means a pre-tax loss for a fiscal year (as determined under U.S. generally accepted accounting principles in effect as of the close of such fiscal year). For an individual, a "loss" means that the aggregate profit and loss attributable to your activities is negative. A loss "in the ordinary course of business" means a loss resulting from a planned winding down of a business or legacy position, or a loss that is de minimis (e.g., a loss from a short-dated trading position that is within desk strategy and risk limits and which, aggregated with losses across all positions, is less than $1 million). A loss outside the ordinary course includes (without limitation) losses such as those resulting from complex or high-risk trading strategies, risk or compliance violations, deliberate or grossly negligent failures to perform your job duties, or any loss that materially impairs [the Bank's] solvency, liquidity, or capital distribution plans."
Supplemental compensation allowance
My conclusions in relation to computation
FMH (net of sale costs) | 4,947,000 | |
less mortgage | (1,877,854) | |
H's bank accounts* | 2, 585,688 | includes 50% jt account |
W's bank accounts | 206,186 | includes 50% jt account |
H's investments* | 14,465,170 | includes vested RSUs |
W's investments | 3,419,733 | |
Loan to nanny | 35,000 | treated as W's asset |
Less liabilities | ||
H's stamp duty on purchase** | (525,750) | |
Tax on realised gains | (282,969) | H and W liability |
Unpaid legal costs | (118,476) | H and W liability |
Total liquid assets | 22,853,728 | |
Deferred compensation | 3,099,868 | |
Pensions | 342,074 | treated as cash; net of tax |
TOTAL ASSETS | 26,295,670 |
*The figures given in respect of cash bank balances and the value of the husband's investments include assets/property which he contends to be non-matrimonial.
** I have included the stamp duty which the husband will pay on the acquisition of a property similar in value to the former matrimonial home. If he does not purchase a home for himself within a period of 2 years, he has offered the wife an indemnity whereby he will account to her for 50% of that sum.
I have omitted from the liabilities the figure of £198,000 which is agreed to be the sterling equivalent of the US tax which would be payable were such liability to be triggered by his reduction of the mortgage debt. It is agreed that this liability should be treated as a contingent deduction which, if payable, will either be shared or paid by the husband.
Deduct non-matrimonial elements:
awards made in 2018 | (757,852) | agreed non-matrimonial |
SCA post-separation (p/s) | (2,530,000) | |
RSUs received | (1,679,983) | pro rata post separation |
RSUs still to vest | (1,561,257) | pro rata post separation |
Adjust for: | ||
Tax (non-matrimonial element) | 24,941 | agreed balancing credit |
TOTAL DEDUCTIONS | 6,504,151 |
Does the husband's proposal represent a fair outcome in all the circumstances of this case ?
Needs
Bank accounts | 205,726 | excluding jt a/c |
Investments | 3,419,733 | |
Nanny loan | 35,000 | |
Less liabilities | (245,577) | |
Pension | 71,283 | |
Balancing lump sum | 1,781,962 | |
TOTAL | 5,268,127 |
"109. I consider that much of the tension in the judgment between the ultimate award and the judge's other calculations arises from the fact that he felt compelled to seek to apply a formulaic approach.
..
110. However, the main reason I have concluded that the judge's award cannot be successfully challenged, is that the judge independently conducted an overview of the case to ensure that his proposed award was fair. He expressly performed the alternative approach endorsed in the Jones case and which, as set out in Jones, he had to perform at some stage of the process he was seeking to undertake so as to test his other tentative conclusions or as a "cross-check" .This approach required him to assess what weight to give to the husband's pre-marital wealth when assessing the extent to which the parties' current wealth reflected marital endeavour and the extent to which it did not. The judge plainly concluded that his proposed award gave proper weight to that factor. Equally, he plainly must have concluded that a higher award, as postulated by his other calculations, would not give proper weight to that factor and, accordingly, would not be fair."
My conclusions
Children's maintenance and education costs
Costs
Order accordingly
Note 1 Rossi v Rossi [2007] 1 FLR 790; H v H [2007] 2FLR 548; CR v CR [2008] 1 FLR 323 [Back]