The general
law which I apply is as follows: i) As a matter of practice, the court will
usually embark on a two-stage exercise, (i) computation
and (ii) distribution; Charman v Charman [2007] EWCA Civ
503.
ii) The objective of the court is to
achieve an outcome which ought to be as fair as
possible in all the circumstances; per Lord
Nicholls at 983H in White v White [2000] 2 FLR 981.
iii) There is no place for discrimination
between husband and wife and their respective roles;
White v White at 989C.
iv) In an evaluation of fairness, the
court is required to have regard to the s25 criteria,
first consideration being given to any child of the
family.
v) S25A is a powerful encouragement
towards a clean break, as explained by Baroness Hale at
[133] of Miller v Miller; McFarlane v McFarlane [2006] 1
FLR 1186.
vi) The three essential principles at play
are needs, compensation and sharing; Miller; McFarlane.
vii) In practice, compensation is a very
rare creature indeed. Since Miller; McFarlane it has only
been applied in one first instance reported case at a
final hearing of financial remedies, a decision of Moor J
in RC v JC [2020] EWHC 466 (although there are one or two
examples of its use on variation applications).
viii) Where the result suggested by the
needs principle is an award greater than the result
suggested by the sharing principle, the former shall in
principle prevail; Charman v Charman.
ix) In the vast majority of cases the
enquiry will begin and end with the parties needs.
It is only in those cases where there is a surplus of
assets over needs that the sharing principle is engaged.
x) Pursuant to the sharing principle, (i)
the parties ordinarily are entitled to an equal division
of the marital assets and (ii) non-marital assets are
ordinarily to be retained by the party to whom they
belong absent good reason to the contrary; Scatliffe v
Scatliffe [2017] 2 FLR 933 at [25]. In practice, needs
will generally be the only justification for a spouse
pursuing a claim against non-marital assets. As was
famously pointed out by Wilson LJ in K v L [2011] 2 FLR
980 at [22] there was at that time no reported case in
which the applicant had secured an award against
non-matrimonial assets in excess of her needs. As far as
I am aware, that holds true to this day.
xi) The evaluation by the court of the
demarcation between marital and non-martial assets is not
always easy. It must be carried out with the degree of
particularity or generality appropriate in each case;
Hart v Hart [2018] 1 FLR 1283. Usually, non-marital
wealth has one or more of 3 origins, namely (i) property
brought into the marriage by one or other party, (ii)
property generated by one or other party after separation
(for example by significant earnings) and/or (iii)
inheritances or gifts received by one or other party.
Difficult questions can arise as to whether and to what
extent property which starts out as non-marital acquires
a marital character requiring it to be divided under the
sharing principle. It will all depend on the
circumstances, and the court will look at when the
property was acquired, how it has been used, whether it
has been mingled with the family finances and what the
parties intended.
xii) Needs are an elastic concept. They
cannot be looked at in isolation. In Charman (supra) at
[70] the court said:
The principle of need requires
consideration of the financial needs, obligations and
responsibilities of the parties (s.25(2)(b); of the
standard of living enjoyed by the family before the
breakdown of the marriage (s.25(2)(c); of the age of each
party (half of s.25(2)(d); and of any physical or mental
disability of either of them (s.25(2)(e).
xiii) The Family Justice Council in its
Guidance on Financial Needs has stated that:
In an appropriate case, typically a
long marriage, and subject to sufficient financial
resources being available, courts have taken the view
that the lifestyle (i.e standard of living)
the couple had together should be reflected, as far as
possible, in the sort of level of income and housing each
should have as a single person afterwards. So too it is
generally accepted that it is not appropriate for the
divorce to entail a sudden and dramatic disparity in the
parties lifestyle.
xiv) In Miller/McFarlane Baroness Hale
referred to setting needs at a level as close as
possible to the standard of living which they enjoyed
during the marriage. A number of other cases have
endorsed the utility of setting the standard of living as
a benchmark which is relevant to the assessment of needs:
for example, G v G [2012] 2 FLR 48 and BD v FD [2017] 1
FLR 1420.
xv) That said, standard of living is not
an immutable guide. Each case is fact-specific. As Mostyn
J said in FF v KF [2017] EWHC 1093 at [18];
The main drivers in the
discretionary exercise are the scale of the payers
wealth, the length of the marriage, the applicants
age and health, and the standard of living, although the
latter factor cannot be allowed to dominate the
exercise.
xvi) I would add that the source of the
wealth is also relevant to needs. If it is substantially
non-marital, then in my judgment it would be unfair not
to weigh that factor in the balance. Mostyn J made a
similar observation in N v F [2011] 2 FLR 533 at
[17-19].
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