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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 >> R v K [2020] EWHC 841 (Fam) (27 February 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2020/841.html Cite as: [2020] WLR(D) 531, [2020] EWHC 841 (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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R |
Applicant |
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- and – |
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K |
Respondent |
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Mr David Walden Smith (instructed by Nockolds) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 28 January 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Deputy High Court Judge Ambrose:
I permission to appeal is to be given under s69 of the 1996 Act?
II the Award should be set aside for serious irregularity under s68 of the 1996 Act?
III an order under s25 of the 1973 Act should be made in the terms of the Award?
Factual background
Procedural background
"IMPORTANT
Parties should be aware that:
…
- Arbitration is a process whose outcome is generally final. There are very limited bases for raising a challenge or appeal and it is only in exceptional circumstances that a court will exercise its own discretion in substitution for the award."
"6.4 We understand and agree that any award of the arbitrator appointed to determine this dispute will be final and binding on us, subject to the following:
(a) any challenge to the award by any available arbitral process of appeal or review or in accordance with the provisions of Part 1 of the Act;
(b) insofar as the subject matter of the award requires it to be embodied in a court order (see 6.5 below), any changes which the court making that order may require;
(c) insofar as the award provides for continuing payments to be made by one party to another, or to a child or children, a subsequent award or court order reviewing and varying or revoking the provision for continuing payments, and which supersedes an existing award;
(d) insofar as the award provides for continuing payments to be made by one party to or for the benefit of a child or children, a subsequent assessment by the Child Maintenance Service (or its successor) in relation to the same child or children.
6.5 If and so far as the subject matter of the award makes it necessary, we will apply to an appropriate court for an order in the same or similar terms as the award or the relevant part of the award. (In this context, 'an appropriate court' means a court which has jurisdiction to make a substantive order in the same or similar terms as the award, whether on primary application or on transfer from another division of the court.) We understand that the court has a discretion as to whether, and in what terms, to make an order and we will take all reasonably necessary steps to see that such an order is made.
6.6 We understand and agree that although the Rules provide for each party generally, to bear an equal share of the arbitrator's fees and expenses (see Art 14.4(a)), if any party fails to pay their share, then the arbitrator may initially require payment of the full amount from any other party, leaving it to them to recover from the defaulting party."
(1) Lump sum:
H suggested 50/50 split of the lump sum, less a deduction of £10,000 for W.W asked for 100%.(2) Maintenance:
H suggested stepped spousal maintenance, initially £1147 pcm until 2023, then £574pcm until the son finishes school.W asked for £4k per month for life or until the end of their son's tertiary education.(3) Pensions:
H proposed sharing contributions made during the marriage.W asked to equalise current values, with a sharing order for 33.75% of H's largest fund.
"At paragraph 52 it is suggested that H can build up his pension. Please could further explanation or calculations be provided as to how this could happen, in light of (a) the maintenance obligations; (b) the school fee obligations; (c) the need to re-build capital in light of the division of capital".
a) It was common ground that this was a needs case.
b) As the son is spending exactly 50% of his time with each parent it is important that he does not notice a significant disparity in the standard of the two homes and the style of living enjoyed by each parent. It would be wrong for him to feel comfortable taking his friends to his father's house but embarrassed to take them to his mother's house.
c) He determined the parties' assets, liabilities, income, pensions, expenditure and housing needs under separate headings.
d) He concluded that both parties' housing needs would be met by a house costing around £350,000.
e) He decided that "in order to meet W's liabilities of £47,623 and her housing need she will need to receive a disproportionate amount of the net sale proceeds". W was to take £298,000 of the proceeds of £319,000 from the former matrimonial home.
f) Although W was out of work, she had an earning capacity of £35,000 gross and would within a short period of time be able to find a mortgage of £100,000. With this and the lump sum she would be able to cover her debts of £48,000 and meet her housing needs.
g) In view of H's net income, he would have no trouble whatsoever in obtaining a substantial mortgage, even assuming his gross income was only £200,000. If only his gross basic draw was utilised he would still be able to achieve a mortgage far in excess of the £350,000 that he would need to buy a house.
h) H was to pay periodical payments of £3,500 per month until the son leaves tertiary education. "This is because I have found that W could earn £35,000 gross in a relatively short period of time". The periodical payments order would mean that she is able to meet her expenditure which he found to be £60,000 per annum, leaving her with £10,000 per annum to purchase capital items.
i) The arbitrator concluded that "Based upon H's net income there will be ample funds for him to meet his outstanding liabilities, school fees, pay a substantial mortgage and pay into his pension. I have taken into account his obligation to pay maintenance."
j) On pensions he concluded that as this was "very much a needs case", there should be no separate treatment of that part of H's pension that was accrued prior to the marriage. He adopted the view of the single joint expert report, namely that the simplest way to implement a sharing order for equal income is to share 35.94% of H's large Aegon UK pension with W.
k) H was ordered to pay the arbitrator's fees but no other order was made as to costs.
I Should permission to appeal be given under s69 of the 1996 Act?
"(3) Leave to appeal shall be given only if the court is satisfied-
(a) that the determination of the question will substantially affect the rights of one or more of the parties,
(b) that the question is one which the tribunal was asked to determine,
(c) that, on the basis of the findings of fact in the award-
i) the decision of the tribunal on the question is obviously wrong, or
ii) the question is one of general public importance and the decision of the tribunal is at least open to serious doubt, and
(d) that, despite the agreement of the parties to resolve the matter by arbitration, it is just and proper in all the circumstances for the court to determine the question.
(4) An application for leave to appeal under this section shall identify the question of law to be determined and state the grounds on which it is alleged that leave to appeal should be granted.
(5) The court shall determine an application for leave to appeal under this section without a hearing unless it appears to the court that a hearing is required."
- W's income and earning capacity in the foreseeable future including any increase in that capacity which it would be reasonable to expect her to take to acquire and any consequent step-down in maintenance;
- the nature of H's income and division between basic salary, bonus, loan and distribution;
- H's age, nature of employment and the length of time he may be able to continue working at this level;
- the extent to which H would be able to recover his capital position through income before retirement;
- H's housing needs, as to the specific location needs and the by virtue of his shared care commitments towards the son coupled with his commitments requiring him to commute;
- how he had taken into account non-matrimonial assets and pension;
- why H was ordered to pay the arbitrator's fees.
a) How and in what quantum should the tribunal make financial provision consequent to the divorce?
b) Did the arbitrator conduct the discretionary exercise under the 1973 Act so as to achieve a fair outcome in accordance with case law?
a) IFLA arbitration is often used by litigants as an alternative dispute resolution mechanism to relieve the burden from the public justice system and this is to be encouraged. It will be less attractive if the test for challenge is more demanding than that applying to a judgment of the court under FPR Part 30. A higher threshold would create a "private justice system" where parties contract into a substantively different regime.
b) Different considerations apply in family cases to those developed in the sphere of commercial arbitration where parties deliberately contract into a decision-making process which is faster, cheaper and more certain than litigation. This is of an entirely different nature to financial determinations under the 1973 Act.
c) The approach adopted in commercial cases is less well-suited to a dispute whose statutory footing is predicated on a quasi-inquisitorial jurisdiction involving the exercise of a broad discretionary evaluation of fairness as the overall objective.
W's case
What approach applies in deciding an application for permission under s69 in a family case?
a) The ARB 1FS form makes clear that the 1996 Act applies and that parties must be aware that challenge will only be allowed in exceptional cases. If the IFLA or parties wanted to depart from the usual requirement for permission to appeal then they could have dispensed with it under s69(2(a) (this is a feature in some standard form contracts).
b) The fact that the choice to arbitrate may have been made at short notice to avoid an adjournment due to judicial unavailability does not change the nature of the agreement. To the contrary it is consistent with the parties' positive choice to refer the matter to their chosen arbitrator, bring the dispute to an efficient conclusion and avoid more court hearings. There is no obvious reason to suggest that in family disputes finality should be a lesser priority and the parties should be placed in the same position as if they had litigated.
c) There is a public policy interest in the fair division of assets following the end of a marriage. However, that is reflected in the court's overriding jurisdiction under s25 of the 1973 Act (discussed below) which provides a safeguard. The test under the 1996 Act does not need to be adjusted.
d) The discretionary and public policy nature of decisions under s25 of the 1973 Act does not justify adjusting the test for challenge. An award can be set aside under the 1996 Act if it is contrary to public policy. Arbitrators are required to apply the law (including the priority given to the welfare of children of the family) and principles of natural justice, and can adopt an inquisitorial approach.
e) Parties who have chosen to arbitrate have not simply contracted out the hearing to an arbitrator. They are contracting into a different regime although the same substantive law applies to the allocation of assets. The ARB 1FS form highlights the broad consequences regarding finality. Whether more guidance would be helpful or encourage IFLA users is a matter for IFLA. Consumers commonly enter arbitration agreements without advice as to the distinctions between the appeal processes.
f) The statutory framework under the 1996 Act reflects the consensual nature of the process (for example the parties control who decides the case) and a preference for finality. I doubt it would be attractive to IFLA users (or their lawyers) if a separate or "mix and match" approach was adopted in family cases drawing from both the 1996 regime and that applying to appeals under FPR Part 30. Even if it might reassure some it would create substantial uncertainty.
g) The existing test is not designed or suited solely for commercial cases. Arbitration is used also in the context of consumer, partnership and employment disputes where broad evaluations of fairness and reasonableness are critical to the outcome.
Was the question of law one of general public importance?
Was the arbitrator obviously wrong on the question of law raised?
"reasons should be read on the assumption that, unless he has demonstrated the contrary, the judge knew how he should perform his functions and which matters he should take into account. This is particularly true when the matters in question are so well known as those specified in section 25(2). An appellate court should resist the temptation to subvert the principle that they should not substitute their own discretion for that of the judge by a narrow textual analysis which enables them to claim that he misdirected himself."
"I have to apply s25 of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973. I must have regard to all the circumstances of the case, first consideration being given to the welfare while a minor of the child. I must have regard to the factors set out in the Act at Section 25(2). I must also consider the matters set out in section 25A. Following White v White [200] 2 FLR 918 the statutory objective in all cases is fairness. Insofar as there is to be a departure from equality, there has to be a good reason for doing so."
Failure to give reasons
Overall conclusions
II Should the Award be set aside for serious irregularity under s68 of the 1996 Act?
(1) A party to arbitral proceedings may (upon notice to the other parties and to the tribunal) apply to the court challenging an award in the proceedings on the ground of serious irregularity affecting the tribunal, the proceedings or the award. A party may lose the right to object (see section 73) and the right to apply is subject to the restrictions in section 70(2) and (3).
(2) Serious irregularity means an irregularity of one or more of the following kinds which the court considers has caused or will cause substantial injustice to the applicant—
(a) failure by the tribunal to comply with section 33 (general duty of tribunal);
..
(d) failure by the tribunal to deal with all the issues that were put to it;
(f) uncertainty or ambiguity as to the effect of the award"
a) the arbitrator had failed to comply with its core duty to act fairly by failing to give consideration to various matters set out in s25 of the 1973 Act, and to take into account key aspects of the evidence;
b) the arbitrator had decided the pension sharing in a manner which neither party sought, awarding W 35.9% when she had only contended for 33.75% of the Aegon pension, and had failed to give the parties an opportunity to make representations in respect of that decision.
c) the tribunal failed in its duty to give reasons regarding the above matters but also
a) in relation to how non-matrimonial assets had been taken into account;b) why H had been ordered to pay the costs of the arbitration.
a) W's earning capacity;
b) H's housing needs;
c) The nature of H's employment, his age and the length of time he may be able to continue working;
d) The nature of H's income and its division between salary and non-guaranteed bonus and benefits.
Failure to give consideration to matters under s25
"In order to succeed under section 68 an applicant needs to show three things. First of all, a serious irregularity. Secondly, a serious irregularity which falls within the closed list of categories in section 68(2) . Thirdly, that one or more of the irregularities identified caused or will cause the party substantial injustice. The focus of the enquiry under section 68 is due process, not the correctness of the tribunal's decision: see per Hamblen J in Abuja International Hotels v Meridian SAS [2012] EWHC 87 (Comm) at [48] to [49]. As the DAC Report states, and numerous cases since have reiterated, the section is designed as a long-stop available only in extreme cases where the tribunal has gone so wrong in its conduct of the arbitration that justice calls out for it to be corrected. This point, that section 68 is about whether there has been due process, not whether the tribunal 'got it right', is of particular importance in the present case, where, upon close analysis, the claimants' real complaint is that they consider that the tribunal reached the wrong result, which is not a matter in relation to which an arbitration award is susceptible to challenge under section 68 ."
"The assertion that the arbitrator failed to take any or proper consider of the evidence could, in an exceptional case, give rise to a challenge under section 68, based on the general duty of an arbitrator under section 33 if, for example, an arbitrator genuinely overlooked evidence that really mattered, or got the wrong end of the stick in misunderstanding it. But there is all the difference in the world between such cases and in arbitrator evaluating evidence but reaching factual conclusions on it (as will happen in most arbitrations) which one party does not like. That cannot be the basis of a complaint under section 68."
"The passage in the judgment of Toulson J is clearly obiter since his conclusion (and thus the ratio of the decision) was that the applicant was engaged in an impermissible attack on the tribunal's findings of fact, so that the application under section 68 failed. Toulson J does not specify what sort of exceptional case he had in mind. I can quite see that in a case, for example, of an agreed or admitted piece of evidence which was ignored or overlooked, it might be possible to say that the tribunal was in breach of its duty under section 33 , so that section 68(2)(a) was engaged. However, beyond that, it seems to me that, as the present case demonstrates, the contention that the tribunal has overlooked or misunderstood particular evidence necessarily involves interference with the evaluation of the evidence by the tribunal. Whilst the applicant may contend, as in the present case, that the tribunal has overlooked a critical piece of evidence, the tribunal may not have regarded it as critical and thus may have decided that it was not worth referring to in an award which necessarily cannot set out every piece of evidence in the case. I do not see how the court can determine whether the tribunal has overlooked evidence without an analysis of the tribunal's evaluation of the evidence, which is not a permissible exercise under section 68.
…
45. The reality is that this is yet another case, of which there are already far too many ( Primera Maritime being the most recent) where a party is seeking to use section 68 to challenge findings of fact made by the tribunal. As I said at [50] of my judgment in that case:
'It is clearly not appropriate to use an application under section 68 to challenge the findings of fact made by the tribunal. If it were otherwise every disappointed party could say it had been treated unfairly by pointing to some piece of evidence in its favour which was not referred to in the Reasons or not given the weight it feels it should have been. That is precisely the situation in which the court should not intervene. Matters of fact and evaluation of the evidence are for the arbitrators.'
Deciding the pension sharing percentage on a basis other than that put forward by either side
'If an arbitrator is impressed by a point that has never been raised by either side then it is his duty to put it to them so that they have an opportunity to comment. If he feels that the proper approach is one that has not been explored or advanced in evidence or submission then again it is his duty to give the parties a chance to comment. If he is to any extent relying on his own personal experience in a specific way then that again is something that he should mention so that it can be explored. It is not right that a decision should be based on specific matters which the parties have never had the chance to deal with, nor is it right that a party should first learn of adverse points in the decision against him."
Failure to give reasons
Was the arbitrator biased?
Were the applications under ss68 and 69 barred because H had failed to ask for corrections under s57?
57 Correction of award or additional award.
(1) The parties are free to agree on the powers of the tribunal to correct an award or make an additional award.
(2) If or to the extent there is no such agreement, the following provisions apply.
(3) The tribunal may on its own initiative or on the application of a party—
(a) correct an award so as to remove any clerical mistake or error arising from an accidental slip or omission or clarify or remove any ambiguity in the award, or
(b) make an additional award in respect of any claim (including a claim for interest or costs) which was presented to the tribunal but was not dealt with in the award."
"(2) An application or appeal may not be brought if the applicant or appellant has not first exhausted—
(a) any available arbitral process of appeal or review, and
(b) any available recourse under section 57 (correction of award or additional award)."
III The application that the award not be made an order of the court
Conclusions
"In most such cases the focus is likely to be on whether the party seeking to resile is able to make good one of the limited grounds of challenge or appeal permitted by the Arbitration Act 1996 If they can, then so be it. If on the other hand they cannot, then it may well be that the court will again feel able to proceed without more to make an order reflecting the award and, if needs be, providing for its enforcement."
"An assertion that the award was "wrong" or "unjust" will almost never get off the ground: in such a case the error must be so blatant and extreme that it leaps off the page."
"Where the consent order which the judge is being asked to approve is founded on an arbitral award under the [ Institute of Family Law Arbitrators ('IFLA') Scheme] or something similar (and the judge will, of course, need to check that the order does indeed give effect to the arbitral award and is workable) the judge's role will be simple. The judge will not need to play the detective unless something leaps off the page to indicate that something has gone so seriously wrong in the arbitral process as fundamentally to vitiate the arbitral award. Although recognising that the judge is not a rubber stamp, the combination of (a) the fact that the parties have agreed to be bound by the arbitral award, (b) the fact of the arbitral award (which the judge will of course be able to study) and (c) the fact that the parties are putting the matter before the court by consent, means that it can only be in the rarest of cases that it will be appropriate for the judge to do other than approve the order." [Bold emphasis added]
"It would be the worst of all worlds if parties thought that the arbitral process was to be no more than a dry run and that a rehearing in court was readily available".
Available remedies
Procedure
Conclusion