The Children Act has more than stood the test of time

I wrote here back in March about the thirtieth anniversary of the Children Act. My modest celebration of that event has now been joined by another, emanating from a rather more illustrious source: the President of the Family Division, Sir Andrew McFarlane.

The President chose the anniversary as the subject for The Nicholas Wall Memorial Lecture 2019, given on the 9th of May. For those who don’t know, Sir Nicholas was the President himself between April 2010 and December 2012, when he retired for health reasons. Sadly, Sir Nicholas suffered from dementia, and he took his own life in 2017.

In my earlier post I gave a brief outline of what the Act did, and I refer readers who don’t know to that post. Here, I just wanted to give a flavour of Sir Andrew’s speech.

Sir Andrew used the speech to point up three areas within the Act’s provisions which he said “justify comment or consideration as we mark its 30th anniversary.” The three areas came under the headings “Making Contact Work”, Child Protection and Secure accommodation. As the second and third of those are unlikely to be of particular interest to readers of this blog, I will concentrate upon the first.

Sir Andrew set out the efforts since the passing of the Act to “make contact work”, including in particular enhancing the court’s enforcement powers and changing the terminology from ‘residence’ and ‘contact’ orders to ‘child arrangements’ orders. He then asked whether these changes made a positive difference, and concluded that: “in terms of the numbers of separated parents who still turn to a magistrate or judge to sort out the arrangements for their children after parental separation, the answer, depressingly, would seem to be ‘no’.”

However, Sir Andrew did not consider this to be the fault of the Children Act, or the law that has developed under it. He said:

“The law is plain that each parent has full and equal parental responsibility and all that the court is doing when determining an application is fixing the practical arrangements for a child’s care … The courts have been plain that it is the responsibility of parents, and not judges, to determine issues that may arise between them and that this ‘responsibility’, difficult and burdensome though it may well be, is just as much part of their responsibility to do what is best for their child as some of the happier parental tasks may be.”

In other words, the law is clear that the responsibility to sort out post-separation arrangements for children lies with the parents, and the courts will only intervene if it can be shown that without a court order the child’s welfare would suffer. Or as Baroness Hale said: “To emphasise the practical reality that bringing up children is a serious responsibility, rather than a matter of legal rights, the conceptual building block used throughout the [Act] is ‘parental responsibility.’”

The Children Act, said Sir Andrew, was “essentially sound”, even if “the manner in which the delivery of dispute resolution following parental separation often falls short, or, worse, compounds the potential for harm.” That this is so, he said, demonstrates the fact that the law can only go so far in resolving what are essentially relationship difficulties within families.

Sir Andrew concluded his look at the Act with the following glowing endorsement:

“On any view, and in the view I am sure of every Family lawyer, the Children Act 1989 was ground breaking to a very high level on the seismic scale. It changed the world of children’s law and it has more than stood the test of time. Such amendments that there have been, and there have been many, have built upon, rather than removed the core structure of the Act. There is no clamour, yea not even a whisper, that the basic concepts of child law now need further reform. The architects of the legislation, and its draftsmen, simply got it right. That that is so has been, and continues to be, to the great benefit of the children and young people whose needs it was aimed to meet.”

Like Sir Andrew, I’m sure most of us can agree with that.

I recommend that you read the full speech, which you can find here.

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Author: John Bolch

The perils of being too eager to recover what you believe you are due

All family lawyers will be familiar with the phenomenon of the client who has a strong sense of what they are ‘due’ or entitled to when it comes to financial remedies on divorce. Now, there is nothing intrinsically wrong about believing you are entitled to something, whether it be money or property, but a really strong sense of entitlement can sometimes cloud the judgment. Sometimes, for example, that party can be rather too eager to recover what they believe they are due, and end up incurring costs in a forlorn pursuit of their ‘entitlement’.

I’m not saying that the applicants in the two quite different recent cases to which I am about to refer suffered from this phenomenon, but certainly the cases act as a useful reminder of the perils of being too eager to recover what you believe you are due.

Both cases are recent judgments of Mr Justice Mostyn.

The first case is Purvis v Purvis, which concerned a rather unusual application by the husband. He was apparently convinced that the wife may have been hiding assets in the USA, which obviously should have been taken into account in any divorce settlement.

The facts of the case given in the judgment are rather ‘bare bones’, as the judgment did not require full details. Essentially, the parties began a relationship in this country in 1992, in 2001 they purchased a property in Florida, and they were married in January 2004. In July 2004 they acquired a cafeteria business also, I assume, in Florida, to which they moved at some point in that year. In December 2005 the marriage broke down and the husband returned to this country. Divorce proceedings were eventually commenced in this country in 2009, although they have yet to be finalised.

The husband made a financial remedies claim within the divorce proceedings. Obviously, both parties were required to make full disclosure of their means. However, the husband was not satisfied that the wife had provided sufficient explanation as to what had happened to the property and business in Florida. He claimed that the house is worth $250,000 and the business was profitable, with a turnover of $750,000. The wife was in sole control of both. However, the house was foreclosed in November 2008 and the company ceased to be registered in 2013.

The husband therefore applied for an order that a letter of request be issued to the authorities of the United States of America for the wife to be examined in Florida and to produce documentation to disclose the true nature of her financial resources. Mr Justice Mostyn refused the application, which he considered to be nothing more than a “fishing expedition”. The husband had no evidence as to the existence of any of the residue of the assets, he was merely “fishing” for that evidence.

The second case is Gladwell v Gladwell. This concerned an application by a husband to set aside a writ of control issued by the wife to recover a debt that was not yet due (a writ of control authorises a court enforcement officer to seize goods of a debtor in order to recover the debt).

The relevant facts of the case were that the court had made a consent order, setting out the financial settlement agreed by the parties. A term of the order was that the husband should pay to the wife the sum of £5,889 in lieu of her claims against his pension, from his share of the proceeds of sale of the parties’ timeshares in Malta.

Clearly, the payment was not due until the timeshares were sold. However, despite this, the wife issued the writ to recover the payment before the sale took place. On the 28th of March 2019 enforcement officers attended at the home of the husband. The enforcement officers’ costs had increased the debt to £8,304.72. That sum was paid by the husband on his credit cards.

The husband then applied to have the writ set aside. Without going into detail, Mr Justice Mostyn found that the writ was unlawful, and that the monies had been wrongly taken from the husband. He therefore set aside the writ and ordered that the monies be returned to the husband.

In both of these cases the applications had been misguided, quite possibly because of the applicants being too eager to recover what they believed they were entitled to. The result, however, was that the applicants had failed, and could well have incurred considerable costs for their efforts. The moral is: think hard (and preferably take the best available advice) before you act!

You can read the full report of Purvis v Purvis here, and of Gladwell v Gladwell here. As far as the latter is concerned, a word of warning: in family cases the party who was originally described as the ‘applicant’ can subsequently become the ‘respondent’, and vice versa, if the original respondent later makes an application of their own. Unsurprisingly, this can sometimes lead to a little confusion, so please bear it in mind if you read the Gladwell judgment.

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Author: John Bolch

In re Marriage of Kent

(California Court of Appeal) – Held that a California family court lacked jurisdiction to modify a North Carolina child custody and child support order. Reversed the decision below.


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A public and bitter divorce battle, there is another way

“Embroiled in a bitter divorce battle” “estranged wife wins bitter £1.4m divorce battle…”

We have all read the tabloid headlines as another super-rich or celebrity marriage ends. High-profile divorce cases come with their own unique issues (scrutiny by the public and media and complex assets to start with) but they do not have to end in a bitter, drawn out, not to mention expensive, court case.

We asked Julian Hawkhead, Senior Partner, to join us on the blog to look at alternative options to help high-profile couples keep their marriage and their business out of the public domain.

This weekend I read how a certain celebrity baker and his estranged wife were destined for a courtroom showdown.

According to the article, friends of Mrs Alex Hollywood said that she was finding the whole process of divorcing her husband Paul exhausting and conflicts over money distressing. No doubt a feeling shared by both parties involved.

There are plenty of salacious rumours around the causes of the marriage breaking down, allegations of scenes in car parks and abuse being thrown around. None of this is unusual, anger is a key stage of the grieving process and to vent emotion is healthier than bottling it up. It enables you to move on with your own life. It is, of course, difficult when every incident, every alleged insult thrown is aired in the public domain.

However, what particularly caught my eye was the suggestion that mediation had failed, and the couple were destined to end up in Court. Another newspaper reported it would be an “epic court showdown”. Now I don’t tend to rely on this media source for a true account of what is happening in the world.  However, what disappointed me but did not surprise me, was that the media appeared to present the stark choices of mediation or an epic courtroom battle. Whereas this is simply not true and there are lots of different options available.

Any divorce litigation is exhausting, expensive and often acrimonious. Lawyers are trained to seek solutions but when agreements cannot be reached, the next step is to achieve your desired outcome in an arena where somebody else, most commonly a Judge, decides that outcome for you.

So, you embark on building your case, identifying issues where you can discredit the other party, sling enough mud and some of it is bound to stick and gather evidence that supports your arguments that what you are asking the Judge to decide upon is perfectly reasonable.

It can turn into a war of attrition, trench warfare where you are firing your best weapons at each other and it can sometimes get you the result you wanted. However, if you are media-worthy it will be ventilated, warts and all, in the public domain.

So, what other options exist where a negotiated settlement seems to have hit a wall?

Firstly, there are private FDRs but what is an FDR?

An FDR is a Financial Dispute Resolution hearing which divorce couples would usually come upon if they found themselves in financial court proceedings because of their divorce.

At this hearing, a Judge will:

(1) consider all proposals made by both parties, even those made on a without prejudice (or private and off the record) basis

(2) listen to any further arguments in support of each party’s proposals

(3) will encourage both parties to put their cards on the table to identify what the issues are, what is and is not agreed and consider compromise as a better course of action to facing further costs and uncertainty

(4) express a view to both parties as to what the FDR Judge considers would be the outcome if the case was to be decided at a final hearing. This view is not a binding decision, it is merely an expression of an opinion, albeit carrying the gravitas of coming from a Judge. This should help the parties entrenched firmly in the view that they must be right, reach an agreed settlement.

These FDR hearings are what can otherwise be called Early Neutral Evaluations.

Early – because the intervention is at the earliest stage in a Court process once all the facts and figures are known (and importantly before a final hearing when a Judge does make a binding decision on both parties);

Neutral because that is what any Judge is expected to be and when you have two lawyers jousting and pronouncing that they are right, fair and reasonable and the other party is wrong then you need somebody neutral to help give an independent evaluation or assessment of what is a fair outcome.

However, avid readers of all things family justice will be aware that the Court system is under pressure. There are long delays in waiting for hearings in many Courts. Sure, there are reforms on the horizon particularly with the specialist Family Court programme that is being rolled out but will this succeed on a national level or will we just see pockets of success.

There is the risk in the meantime that the Judge you come before for your FDR is not an experienced family lawyer. They may have practised in a completely different area of law when they were a solicitor or barrister before becoming a Judge so their experience and ability to give you an informed opinion may be based on limited knowledge of the relevant law.

That is the context of FDR hearings within the Court system. Private FDRs involves the same process, but you go private, you pay for an experienced lawyer, often either a retired senior Judge or a practising senior barrister or solicitor to conduct the FDR hearing for you.

The venue is not a courtroom but a place of your choosing, it might be the barrister’s chambers or the lawyer’s offices or a completely neutral venue such as a dedicated meeting room or a hotel. Whatever the option, it is infinitely more comfortable than being in a Court building surrounded by other litigants.

You also get as much time as you want. Your Private FDR Judge will dedicate their entire day to your case, giving you as much time to negotiate as you want or as much time in the hearing as you need.  In the Court system, you are constrained by opening and closing times and by the fact that the Judge has a full list of other cases to get through leaving your time restricted.

In some courts, one often finds several FDR hearings listed at the same time in the hope that some will settle easily. This leaves the Judge to juggle a number of cases, all with different facts and figures where their ability to give the matter full attention is then naturally impaired.

Most importantly the private FDR is private, it is away from the public gaze. One often finds the media wandering around the Central Family Court in London looking for a story or you run the risk of other litigants in Court seeing you. A Private FDR gives you a truly confidential and safe place to sort out your issues with the other party. You are paying for it but with that, you get a better-quality experience, and this must increase the prospects of you reaching a financial agreement.

In the next instalment, Julian will look at arbitration, another route to resolving divorce financial issues in private.

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Author: Julian Hawkhead

A guide to prenup agreements

A prenup agreement is a formal, written agreement between two partners prior to their marriage. It sets out ownership of all their belongings including money, assets and property and explains how it will be divided in the event of the breakdown of their marriage.

Considered by many as unromantic, practical by others at Stowe we like to think of them as a type of insurance policy.

Read why in the guide below (and they are not just for the wealthy).

Considered by many as unromantic, practical by others at Stowe we like to think of them as a type of insurance policy.

Read why in the guide below (and they are not just for the wealthy).

 

 

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Author: Stowe Family Law

Divorce: Should you sell the house?

So, you’ve decided to move forward with divorce. This will impact your life in many ways, and one of the most significant changes will be to your finances. You will have to adjust your lifestyle and make other changes in order to suit your new situation. Despite these things, you may want to try and keep your family home in your divorce.

Your house is probably the most valuable asset you and your spouse have. Deciding what will happen to the house is one of the most common sources of disagreement in a divorce, but you may think that it will be best for you and your children to remain in the home. If this is the right choice, there are multiple things you will want to consider before you move forward.

Things to think about before buying

You probably have a strong emotional attachment to your family home, but that doesn’t necessarily mean you should try to keep it. You will need to consider your post-divorce income and whether you can afford things like taxes, upkeep, HOA payments and more. If you can afford to do so, you may be able to try and buy out your spouse’s share of the family home. 

Buying out your spouse’s share is possible, but it can be a complex situation to navigate. First of all, your spouse will probably need to agree to that. After that, you may be able to negotiate payment in lieu of other assets, a lump-sum payment or other means. Additional factors to consider include:

  • Mortgage – Do you know what kind of mortgage you will need and how much payments will be? Do you have preapproval?
  • Equity – How much equity is in the home? This will determine how much you owe your spouse.
  • Interest – Have interest rates changed since you originally purchased the home? It is possible this could change your payment amount.
  • Refinancing – You may be able to refinance your home in only your name after the divorce process is final. 

It’s smart to consider the financial implications of all the choices you make during your divorce process. If you want to keep the family home, it’s smart to be certain that this will truly be best long-term. Before you agree to anything or move forward with an important decision, you may want to discuss your case with an experienced Texas family law attorney.


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Author: On behalf of Katie L. Lewis of Katie L. Lewis, P.C. Family Law

Mother who abducted child and then tried to hide her ordered to return her to Australia

As any regular reader of this blog will be aware, reports of cases involving children are usually anonymised to protect the privacy of the child. However, there are occasions when the court decides that it is appropriate to release full details of the case. One such occasion is when the whereabouts of the child are unknown and the court decides to release details in an effort to locate the child.

That is what occurred in the recent case Uhd v McKay, which concerned an application by a father for the summary return of his three year old daughter Ruby to Australia.

There is quite a lot going on in this case, but I don’t need to discuss it all for the purposes of this post. I will not therefore be going through all of the details of the case, but if you are interested you can read the full judgment here.

The essential facts of the case were as follows. The father is an Australian national. The mother is a British national but has lived in Australia for about the last 22 years. They began cohabiting in November 2012 and married in April 2013. Their daughter, Ruby, was born in December 2015, although by that time the marriage had broken down and the parents separated.

On the 22nd of September 2018 the mother removed Ruby from Australia without the father’s consent, and brought her to England. She then bought a camper van and proceeded to tour the country with Ruby, eventually ending up in the Outer Hebrides, where she lived for two months during October and November 2018.

The father eventually found out that the mother had brought Ruby to this country. He therefore commenced proceedings under the Hague Convention on Child Abduction for Ruby’s summary return to Australia. As Ruby’s whereabouts were not known, Mr Justice Keehan made an order permitting details of the case to be reported in the media, in an effort to locate her. After extensive media coverage, Ruby was located, and the father’s application was set down for hearing.

The mother opposed the application, relying on the exception provided by Article 13(b) of the Convention, namely that to order the summary return of Ruby to Australia would result in a grave risk of exposure to physical or psychological harm, or otherwise place Ruby in an intolerable situation. In seeking to make good that exception, the mother made extensive complaints regarding the conduct of the father during the course of their relationship, and thereafter within the context of extensive proceedings in Australia relating to Ruby’s welfare, which proceedings remain ongoing in that jurisdiction.

The matter was heard by Mr Justice MacDonald in the High Court. His conclusions were quite clear. He said:

“I am satisfied that the mother’s actions in removing Ruby from the jurisdiction of Australia represented a blatant and premeditated act of child abduction. That conclusion is reinforced by the fact that having abducted Ruby from the jurisdiction of Australia, the mother sought to go to ground in the Outer Hebrides in an effort, I am satisfied, to avoid detection … this court is also left with the strong impression that thereafter the mother sought before this court to distort and misrepresent the facts in this case with the aim of bringing herself within the exception provided by Article 13(b) of the 1980 Convention.”

The mother’s Article 13(b) ‘defence’ was not made out, and therefore Mr Justice MacDonald ordered the summary return of Ruby to the jurisdiction of Australia. Any disputes between the parents regarding Ruby’s welfare would be determined by the courts of Australia, the jurisdiction of Ruby’s habitual residence.

Hopefully, this case will act as a warning against parents seeking to avoid the law in the way that the mother did here. The arm of the law is long, and such actions are ultimately only likely to make matters worse.

I should point out that Mr Justice Keehan’s order did not mean that this final judgment need not be anonymised. However, Mr Justice MacDonald took the practical view that, having regard to the extensive information that had already been placed in the public domain by that order, he was satisfied that this judgment should be published without being anonymised.

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Author: John Bolch

Do we really need an inquiry into the ‘secret family courts’?

It is, it would appear at least for now, an academic question, after the Prime Minister rejected calls for it at Prime Minister’s Question Time on Wednesday, but it is still worth asking: do we really need a public inquiry into the so-called ‘secret family courts’?

First let’s just remind ourselves who asked for an inquiry, and why. On the 15th of May a group of 123 MPs from across the House of Commons wrote a letter to the Secretary of State for Justice David Gauke informing him that they are “campaigning for a simple amendment to the Children’s Act, which would remove the automatic parental rights of those who have fathered a child though rape.” They went on: “None of us want to believe that the rule of law and the justice system in this country, of which we are proud, can be used as a weapon to traumatise victims.” And then they got to their point:

“The lack of transparency in the family courts, while essential in maintaining the privacy of families and children, does not allow scrutiny and masks decisions that are made contrary to the interests of victims of domestic abuse, rape and violence, or their children. We are therefore calling for an independent inquiry into the treatment of victims of domestic abuse and violence in the family courts to establish the extent of the problem [i.e. of courts granting contact to parents who are known to be abusive] and if more fundamental reform is required to address the issue.”

The letter was referred to by the BBC’s Victoria Derbyshire current affairs programme as part of a special investigation into the family courts that it ran last week, and was mentioned in a story on the BBC News website, under the heading “Call for inquiry into abusive parents’ access to children”. The story also mentioned another eye-catching fact: “At least four children have been killed by a parent in the past five years after a family court granted access.”

Informed readers will spot three errors in the above. Two of them may be considered minor: it is the ‘Children Act’ not the ‘Children’s Act’, and the term ‘access’ has long since been replaced by the term ‘contact’. However, the third error could be rather more significant: there is no such thing as ‘parental rights’. This is important, as it is a very common misconception that parents have ‘rights’ in connection with their children, in particular a right to have contact with them. They do not. Whether or not a court orders that a parent should have contact with their child is determined solely by reference to what is best for the welfare of the child, not by any ‘rights’ of the parent. Yes, it is true that the law operates on the presumption that, unless the contrary is shown, involvement of the parent in the life of the child concerned will further the child’s welfare, but there is no ‘automatic’ right of any parent to have contact with their child.

OK, so do we really need an inquiry?

Obviously the central issue is the number of ‘errors’ that the courts are making (i.e. putting a child in danger by ordering contact with an abusive parent): are they enough to warrant the expense of an inquiry? Well, I think we need a little perspective. In the last five (complete) years the family courts have made orders involving 862,304 children. Four children to have been killed during that time by a parent granted contact is four too many, but it is an extremely tiny fraction (by my calculation 0.0005%) of the number of children that the courts deal with. Obviously, there may be other deaths that have not been recorded. There will also be other cases in which children have been injured or abused by a parent who has been granted contact. But realistically, how many are we talking about?

And anyway just what more can be done to reduce the number of errors? Yes, the system can be improved – it always can. For example, further efforts can be made to ensure judges are aware of the issues. But surely most judges are already fully aware? It is not as if the risk of abusive parents has just come to light. It has been known about for many years, during which time there have been many initiatives to address it. A further initiative in the form of a public inquiry may or may not help, but any improvement is only going to be marginal.

I’m not being complacent here. The ‘welfare’ test referred to above already includes the risk of the child suffering harm. The incidence of domestic abuse is already fully recognised as an indicator of possible risk, and is therefore considered very seriously by the courts, and fully taken into account when the court makes its decision on whether to order contact, and what type of contact to order.

Yes, mistakes are made (and hindsight is a wonderful thing), but judges dealing with contact disputes face an extremely difficult task. Remember, for example, that many ‘custodial’ parents will invent or exaggerate allegations of abuse in order to deny contact. Remember also that judges are under enormous pressure to ensure that non-custodial parents are not wrongly denied contact with their children. These things will not change as a result of any reforms to the system.

And lastly there is the cost of any inquiry. The Leveson Inquiry cost £5 million, and other inquiries have cost much more. Surely, that kind of money would be far better spent on providing the system with the resources it so desperately needs to do the job it has been tasked with doing. After all, the system is now under incredible pressure with increasing workloads, which are themselves likely to increase the incidence of error.

In short, I find myself in the unusual position of agreeing with the Prime Minister: there is no evidence to suggest that a public inquiry, with the expense that that entails, is necessary.

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Author: John Bolch

A family pet or the beneficiary of your father’s entire estate…

When German designer Karl Lagerfeld sadly passed away earlier this year, the media reported that ‘many’ people were concerned about the fate of his beloved pet cat Choupette.

Well, it seems they should not have been as media reports suggest that she has been named in Lagerfeld’s will. The feline could be set to receive a portion of the estate, which is estimated to be worth more than £150 million in total.

So, we asked Theo Hoppen, our inheritance law expert to join us on the blog to look at what provision you can make for pets in your Will in England & Wales.

“I often get asked by clients whether it’s possible to leave money or property to pets in a Will. The short answer is ‘no you can’t as any gifts you make in your Will must go to a human beneficiary however, it is possible to indirectly provide financial support for a beloved pet.

You can create a gift in your Will leaving your pet to an appointed person in the same way that you might leave a family heirloom to someone.  This is because the law regards a pet as a chattel, i.e. an item of property other than freehold land, which means you can gift it to someone else.  If no one is able or willing to look after your pet, it can be left to an animal charity to look after.

When advising clients, I always recommend that they speak to the person who they want to care for the pet, so they can check that they are willing to look after them.

People can also consider providing the nominated pet owner with a cash sum or set up a Trust to cover the cost of caring for the pet. A sensible move is to make any cash gift conditional that they look after your pet when you die.  Unfortunately, they are not legally obliged to spend the money on the animal and can use the money as they ‘see fit’.

Like the Karl Lagerfeld story, you often read about people leaving their fortune to their pets but it’s not possible in this country to leave a cash gift directly or transfer assets to a pet. (It is reported this can be feasible under German law.) Thankfully this is the case, as unsurprisingly, an animal cannot open a bank account or manage the money.

If you would like to provide provision and care for your pet, you will need a Will or update your existing one to ensure they are looked after to your wishes. You can get make a quick enquiry here or use the contact details below.”

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Author: Theo Hoppen