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Variation of Lump SumsAll Change on Costs Allowances
Coram Chambers
Michael HortonRichard Yorke
21 March 2013
1.5 CPD points
Introduction
1. Today’s talk will cover:
C A brief introduction to the decision in Hamilton v Hamilton [2013] EWCA
Civ 13;
C When can the court vary an order for the payment of a ‘single’ lump sum,
and what difference does the presence of a default provision make?
C Can the court make an order for the payment of money over time as ‘lump
sums’ (not variable) or must such orders be for the payment of a ‘lump
sum payable by instalments’ and thus variable?
C How to tell apart an order for lump sums from an order for lump sum
payable by instalments
C Drafting consent orders in the light of the Hamilton decision
C The provisions of the Legal Aid Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders
Act 2012 on ‘costs allowances’
A brief introduction to the Hamilton decision
2. Mr and Mrs H agreed to the terms of a consent order in late 2007. It was made
on 18 January 2008. The relevant provisions were:
(1) The Wife shall pay or cause to be paid to the husband the following lumpsums:(i) £150,000 within 7 days of the date of this order(ii) £150,000 by 30 April 2008
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 2-2-
(iii) £50,000 by 30th April 2009(iv) £50,000 by 30th April 2010(v) £50,000 by 30th April 2011
And it is directed that interest shall be payable by the Wife at the rateapplicable for the time being to a High Court judgment debt on the saidlump sums from the dates on which the said lump sums are respectivelydue to be paid.
In the event that the Wife shall sell her interest in [company] before sheshall have paid to the Husband all the said lump sums, she will pay to theHusband all the outstanding lump sum or sums within 14 days aftercompletion of the said sale has taken place.
(2) The Husband shall transfer to the Wife simultaneously with the paymentto him of the first lump sum referred to in paragraph 1 above all his legaland beneficial interest in the [former matrimonial home].
(4) Upon completion of the transfer of [the former matrimonial home] and thepayment of the first sum provided for in paragraph 1(i) ... [the usualdrafting dismissing all the parties’ life and death claims against eachother].
(6) There be liberty to apply as to the implementation and timing of the termsof this order.
3. In short, W paid the first £150,000. She paid £90,000 of the second £150,000, albeit
5 months late. She failed to pay the remaining amounts. Having agreed to pay
a total of £450,000, she paid only £240,000 and therefore still owed £210,000 plus
interest.
4. In 2008, W sought permission to appeal out of time/ to set aside on a Barder
basis. That application was dismissed. H then took enforcement steps, including
serving a statutory demand (the precursor to a bankruptcy petition). W’s
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 3-3-
company was placed into administration in 2010, despite having had assets of c
£2m on the balance sheet shortly before the consent order was agreed and ‘cash
at bank’ of over £1m. W had remained in the fmh with the children, who had
contact with H. With nothing left in the company, H’s target for enforcing his
lump sum was the fmh.
5. In late 2009 (ie about 18 months after her first default) W made two applications:
C to vary the consent order, on the basis that para 1 was in fact an order for
a lump sum payable by instalments and thus variable, and thereby to
eliminate her obligation to pay the remaining £210,000 plus interest;
C in the alternative, provision under Schedule 1 to the Children Act 1989,
effectively to defer payment of any remaining sums deferred until the
children reached 18 or finished university.
6. Parker J held:
C the order was an instalment order;
C any order for the payment of money over time was always an instalment
order
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 4-4-
C an order for lump sums was only possible where the payment of the
subsequent lump sum(s) was contingent on a particular event (eg
inheritance falling in).
7. Parker J refused to ‘write off’ the remaining £210,000 plus interest, but varied the
order by giving W more time to pay, albeit in a complicated fashion by providing
that interest would run on the sums before they were payable. She therefore
dismissed the Schedule 1 claim.
8. H appealed. His appeal was dismissed. The Court of Appeal held:
C the decision that any order for the payment of money over time must be
an instalments order was wrong;
C it was therefore possible for the court to make a non-variable order for the
payment of lump sums;
C but the order in this case was for a lump sum payable by instalments.
9. We set out below how (we think) the Court of Appeal reached that last
conclusion!
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 5-5-
Variability of single lump sum orders
10. In this section, we will look at two different orders.
Order A
(1) The husband do pay a lump sum of £200,000 to the wife by 4pm on 1 June 2013.
(2) Save as aforesaid, [dismissal of all claims]
(3) Liberty to apply as to implementation and timing
Order B
(1) The husband do pay a lump sum of £200,000 to the wife by 4pm on 1 June 2013.
(2) In default of payment of the lump sum in accordance with paragraph 1 above,
the husband’s property at [address] shall forthwith be placed on the market for
sale and the net proceeds divided as to 90% to the wife and 10% to the husband.
(3) Upon compliance with paragraph 1 or, as the case may be, paragraph 2 above,
[dismissal of all claims]
(4) Liberty to apply as to implementation and timing
11. Can order A be varied? The answer must be no. Provided the decree has been
made absolute before 1 June 2013
C Interest will start to run at 8% from 1 June 2013
C W is free to take enforcement action by whatever means she chooses
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 6-6-
12. What about Masefield v Alexander (Lump Sum: Extension of Time) [1995] 1 FLR 100?
The order in that case was more like order B above:
C H was due to pay W £100,000 by 1 January 1994
C A default provision provided for sale of H’s property with W getting
61.24% of the net proceeds
C H applied to extend time on 31 December 1993
C The DJ refused the application on the basis of lack of jurisdiction on 12
January 1994
C On 3 February 1994 H tendered payment of £100,000 plus interest
C On appeal, the judge held there was jurisdiction to extend time but
declined to exercise that jurisdiction and ordered the sale of the property
C The Court of Appeal allowed H’s appeal, holding that H should be
allowed to pay the lump sum and interest and not have to sell the house
13. The relevant passages from the judgment of Butler-Sloss LJ are:
(1) the relevance of a ‘liberty to apply’ clause: “There is provision in the
consent order under review for liberty to apply, but as Lord Meston has
argued (correctly in my view) it begs the question whether there is
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 7-7-
jurisdiction. If there is otherwise no jurisdiction, the parties cannot give
such jurisdiction to the court” (at p 102);
(2) what is the test? At p 103: “it is necessary to look at the purpose and effect
of the application to extend time to see whether in truth it is intended to
strike at the heart of the lump sum order or whether it is a slight extension
... of no great importance, which does not go to the main or substantive
part of the order”;
(3) on the facts, H’s failure to have the money available did not materially
change the parties’ positions, was not blameworthy and did not
substantially prejudice W. The application to extend time did not go to
the substance of the order;
(4) what about the default provision: at p 105: “In my view, the default clause
in para 2 does not affect the issue of jurisdiction although it is highly
relevant to the exercise of discretion”;
(5) on the issue of discretion, ‘if the period for payment was a crucial,
substantive part of the agreement, or the delay was for a period and for
reasons which demonstrated fault’ on H’s part, those factors would tell
against exercising the discretion to extend time;
(6) was the obligation to pay the lump sum imposed with time being of the
essence: As ‘a matter of construction, [the order for the lump sum
payment] does not appear to have been made with time of the essence’.
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 8-8-
14. Masefield is not necessarily straightforward to understand. In one sense, the court
did not vary the lump sum. H still had to pay the lump sum, and interest from
the date of payment, but the court declined to enforce the default provision.
Conclusions re variability of order A and order B
15. Notwithstanding Masefield and the fact that, according to (4) above, the default
provision does not make a difference, it is difficult to see how Masefield could be
used by the husband in our order A to seek an extension of time.
16. In order B, Masefield would allow H to seek ‘relief from sanction’ in the sense of
not enforcing the default provision, provided:
C the delay is relatively short;
C the applicant is not (especially) to blame for the delay;
C the applicant can pay the lump sum plus interest from the date payment
was due.
17. Presumably H would now have to address the factors set out in FPR rule 4.6 on
relief from sanction in his application to extend time.
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 9-9-
Variation of lump sums involving money being paid over time
Some law
18. First of all, we set out the relevant provisions of ss 23 and 31 of the Matrimonial
Causes Act 1973:
23 Financial provision orders in connection with divorce proceedings, etc(1) On granting a decree of divorce, a decree of nullity of marriage or a decree
of judicial separation or at any time thereafter (whether, in the case of adecree of divorce or of nullity of marriage, before or after the decree ismade absolute), the court may make any one or more of the followingorders, that is to say—...(c) an order that either party to the marriage shall pay to the other
such lump sum or sums as may be so specified; ...(3) Without prejudice to the generality of subsection (1)(c) or (f) above— ...
(c) an order under this section for the payment of a lump sum mayprovide for the payment of that sum by instalments of suchamount as may be specified in the order and may require thepayment of the instalments to be secured to the satisfaction of thecourt.
31 Variation, discharge, etc, of certain orders for financial relief(1) Where the court has made an order to which this section applies, then,
subject to the provisions of this section and of section 28(1A) above, thecourt shall have power to vary or discharge the order or to suspend anyprovision thereof temporarily and to revive the operation of any provisionso suspended.
(2) This section applies to the following orders under this Part of this Act, thatis to say—...(d) any order made by virtue of section 23(3)(c) or 27(7)(b) above
(provision for payment of a lump sum by instalments);”
19. We have set out the bare bones of the Court of Appeal decision in Hamilton
above. The court rejected the notion that any order for the payment of money
over time must be an instalment order.
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 10-10-
20. So, it can be seen that:
C the court can make an order for a single lump sum
C the court can make an order for a plurality of or series of lump sums
C any lump sum can be divided up into instalments
C if it is the payer can be ordered to provide security for their payment
C an order for a single lump sum (without any instalments) cannot be varied
under s 31
C an order for lump sums cannot be varied under s 31
C only an order for a lump sum payable by instalments can be varied under
s 31
21. Following Tilley v Tilley (1979) 10 Fam Law 89 and Westbury v Sampson [2002] 1
FLR 166, the conventional view is that, where the court has the power to vary an
instalment order, it can:
C vary the timing and amount of instalments
C vary the arrangements for security or impose new such arrangements
C and also vary the total amount payable under the instalment order. There
is no reported case of the total sum being increased under s 31. The only
reported cases deal with payers who agree to pay a sum by instalments
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 11-11-
and subsequently apply to vary on the basis that they can no longer afford
to pay the later instalments.
22. In the Court of Appeal in Hamilton, H sought to argue that the conventional
view was wrong and that the court cannot ever vary the total amount payable
under a lump sum payable by instalments. The court considered that, Parker J
not having varied the overall quantum, the issue did not arise, and no oral
submissions were heard on the issue. Baron J nevertheless commented “In any
event (although it is not directly relevant in this appeal) I cannot see how the
basic argument can be correct. The section is widely drafted. The Court is given
the power to vary a lump sum and it stands to reason that that power must
extend to quantum as well as timing.” Until the question of jurisdiction is put
squarely in issue, the conventional view remains the law of the land.
23. As a result, where agreement is reached for the payment of money over time:
C payees are generally considered to want orders drafted as ‘lump sums’
and not instalment orders to prevent the possibility of the payer
subsequently seeking to vary (either as to timing or overall amount);
C payers are generally considered to want orders drafted as instalment
orders so that they can seek to vary the timetable for payment and/or
reduce the total amount payable if things do not turn out as hoped. This
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 12-12-
is the case even though an instalment order opens up the possibility of
security being ordered, either at the time of the original agreement, or
subsequently if an instalment is late or unpaid.
The hard part
24. Having seen the order made in Hamilton, it might be considered surprising that
the court considered that this order was an instalment order. After all, the Court
of Appeal held that Parker J had applied the wrong test, but nevertheless got the
right answer.
25. There are two competing approaches:
C construe the order; or
C search for the ‘true underlying basis of the agreement’.
26. The judgment of the Court of Appeal in effect tries to have it both ways.
Construing the order
27. This was the argument that H made in the Court of Appeal. We learn how to
draft consent orders because the drafting is important to give effect to what the
parties have agreed. Some of us take precedents to court so that we can more
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 13-13-
accurately reflect in the court order what has been agreed. If we get the drafting
wrong, our insurance policy might well be in play. So:
C a consent order is akin to a compromise agreement;
C the interpretation of a document which contains the entire contract
between the parties is a matter of law, and so the interpretation of a
compromise agreement is also a matter of law;
C the negotiations between the parties are generally inadmissible to the
construction of a contract;
C without prejudice discussions are inadmissible to the construction of the
contract (in the absence of a claim for rectification of the contract);
C in fact, once the court makes an order, under de Lasala v de Lasala [1980]
AC 546, the legal effect of the consent order is derived from the court
order and not from the agreement. The argument that the construction of
a financial remedy consent order must be a matter of law is therefore all
the stronger;
C so, what the parties agreed or thought they had agreed is irrelevant – it is
simply a question of construing the order, by looking at its terms, its
language, and the words used in the context of all of the provisions;
C the procedural background, and the applications before the court, are part
of the objective factual matrix which will inform the court’s construction
of the order, as in Dinch v Dinch [1987] 1 WLR 252: Lord Oliver said at p
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 14-14-
257C-D that ‘their Lordships know nothing of what negotiations then took
place between the parties’ respective legal advisers,’ but it was clear some
took place because a hand-written draft order was handed in to the court
on the day in question. The issue in that case was ‘simply and solely one
of the proper construction of the consent order’, and the House of Lords
concluded: “In the instant case, the consent order, on its face and in the
light of the issues which were clearly before the court, is not, in my
judgment, capable of being construed in any other sense than as finally
and conclusively determining the rights of the parties in the property.”
28. Baron J says at paragraph 41: ‘Ordinarily the language of the order will settle
matters.’ However, this sentence continues: ‘but, in the event of a dispute as to
the nature of the agreement, the court is entitled to look at the surrounding facts
and circumstances which bear upon the terms as drafted.’
The nature of the true underlying agreement
29. To understand Baron J’s comment, it is helpful to see her conclusion first:
“there was sufficient evidence upon which [Parker J] was able to conclude that,
in this case, these parties had agreed a lump sum of £450,000 which was to be
paid in instalments over time. This finding was open to her despite the wording
of the order.”
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 15-15-
30. The reasoning appears to be:
C in financial remedy proceedings, the parties cannot by agreement seek to
oust the jurisdiction of the court;
C the parties’ agreement is not the end of the matter because the court has
a duty to exercise its discretion to make an order in accordance with
statute;
C the court order is the relevant document which enshrines the parties’
obligations in law;
C the difficulty arose in this case ... from different perceptions of what was
agreed;
C the judge was entitled to search for a conclusion as to the true underlying
basis of the agreement and what was objectively intended by the terms of
the original order which purported to give expression to the parties’
agreement;
C it was wrong to say that the court cannot seek to discover/ interpret
whether the order as drafted accurately reflects the underlying agreement
that was approved by the judge;
C where there is disagreement as to whether the terms of the order are, in
reality, correct then the Court retains jurisdiction and must assess what
the parties agreed against the objective factual matrix of what occurred
during the relevant period.
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 16-16-
31. So, if the parties are agreed that the order is an order for lump sums and that is
what they agreed, there is no difficulty. It is only a problem if one party says
they agreed to an order for lump sums and the other says they agreed to an
instalment order. There is therefore a dispute as to whether the order is correctly
drafted. It is in relation to how the court should approach this dispute that Baron
J commented:
“Ordinarily the language of the order will settle matters but, in the event of a
dispute as to the nature of the agreement, the Court is entitled to look at the
surrounding facts and circumstances which bear upon the terms as drafted. This
investigation is perfectly proper because it is evidence of the stages that preceded
the perfection of the Court order. To be clear, the test is objective as the court is
not looking to assess the subjective beliefs of the parties rather it is looking at the
objective factual matrix to interpret what was agreed in the light of the words
used and communications that passed.”
32. Some obvious objections might be raised to this approach:
C it is one thing for the court deciding whether to approve a consent order
to enquire whether the order it is being asked to approve is properly
within the court’s powers and accurately reflects what has been agreed.
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 17-17-
It is another thing entirely for a later court to embark on this exercise in
the absence of any application to correct the allegedly erroneous drafting
of a consent order approved by the court many years ago;
C what is the point of taking the book of precedents to court if the court can
several years later decide that it is not the carefully crafted order that is
relevant but the ‘true underlying agreement’.
Drafting consent orders in the light of the Hamilton decision
‘Single lump sums’
33. What of the single lump sum? It will be rare where a party will insist on a default
provision taking effect if the lump sum plus interest is tendered. Nevertheless:
C suppose W agrees a deal to receive £200,000 by 1 June 2013
C W makes it plain that she regards this on the low side, but she is willing
to accept this sum if paid by 1 June 2013.
C W also makes it plain that it must be paid by 1 June 2013 as otherwise she
will miss the chance to acquire a property at a favourable price
C So, what can W do to ensure she gets her money by 1 June 2013?
34. One way is simple lump sum order as in order A, with no default provision.
There can be little chance of H being able to seek an extension of time. The
downside is that W will then have to apply to enforce, eg to obtain a charging
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 18-18-
order and then seek an order for sale. If time is tight, not having a default
provision might be particularly costly for her.
35. However, a simple default provision might be the worse of both worlds, as it
might leave the door open to H to be able to seek an extension of time. Based on
Masefield, the following are suggested:
C (assuming the lump sum is payable under paragraph x) a recital to the
effect that the parties are agreed that time is of the essence in relation to
H’s obligation under paragraph x;
C a recital to the effect that any application to extend the time for the
payment of the lump sum would strike at the heart of the lump sum order
and any extension, however slight it may seem, would go to the main or
substantive part of the order;
C a recital to the effect that W has only agreed to the terms of the order on
the basis that the lump sum payable is in fact paid by the time set out
there, and for that reason the parties have included the default provision
contained in para y and expect that provision to be carried into effect if the
lump sum is not paid in accordance with para x.
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 19-19-
Instalment orders vs lump sums
36. Baron J concluded her judgment in Hamilton by saying ‘in future, parties may
consider that a recital at the beginning of an order which sets out the basis of the
agreement in terms of a potential variation would put disputes of this type
beyond doubt.’
37. So, in relation to an order that is intended to be non-variable and thus an order
for ‘lump sums’:
C a recital might be included along the lines of: Whereas the parties have
specifically agreed to the terms of paragraph x below and to the form of
paragraph x below as an order for ‘lump sums’ within s 23(1)(c) of the
Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 so as to ensure that neither party will be
able to apply under s 31 of the 1973 for it to be varied in any way
C the lump sum order might be expressed as being ‘Pursuant to s 23(1)(c) of
the 1973 Act (and not s 23(3)(c))’;
C the order might be expressed, as the order in Hamilton, as separate lump
sums, avoiding reference to the total amount payable;
C it is probably better to avoid ‘liberty to apply as to timing’ in case this is
used as a basis for construing the order as an instalment order – if the
timing can be varied surely that this must mean it is a variable instalment
order? So, if the lump sums are ordered in paragraph x of the order, the
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 20-20-
clause might read ‘There be liberty to apply as to timing (save in relation
to paragraph x) and as to implementation’;
C be careful with ‘concertina clauses’ – in Hamilton W had to pay by
specified dates or within 14 days of the sale of her company if earlier. If
such a provision is required, it may be better to draft as follows:
C Whereas ‘the relevant date’ shall be fourteen days after the sale of
the Wife’s company
C W do pay H £100,000 by the earlier of 1 April 2013 or the relevant
date.
C W do pay H £150,000 by the earlier of 1 April 2014 or the relevant
date ...
C be careful with trying to have your cake and eat it! It is not possible to
have a series of truly separate lump sums, such that the obligation to pay
each is separate from the obligation to pay the others, and at the same
time have a clause along the lines of: “Provided that, if the Husband shall
fail to pay any of the above sums by the dates set out above, the remaining
sums shall thereupon become immediately payable and shall bear interest
from that date’
38. In contrast, an order for instalments is likely either to use the word instalments,
or to refer to a whole sum payable as follows, eg:
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 21-21-
C H do pay W a lump sum of £450,000 payable by the following instalments,
or
C H do pay W a lump sum of £450,000 payable as follows;
C if instalments are intended, there is no harm in a recital to that effect;
C likewise, the paragraph containing the lump sum might begin ‘Pursuant
to s 23(3)(c) of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 (payment of a lump sum
by instalments) H do pay W a lump sum of £450,000 payable by the
following instalments ...
39. What of the future family court’s powers? The Crime and Courts Bill 2012, which
has almost completed its passage through Parliament would give the family
court the following powers:
C new s 31F(5) of the Matrimonial and Family Proceedings Act 1984: where
the family court has the power to require the payment of money, an order
of the court made in exercising the power may allow time for payment or
order payment by instalments, and where the court has ordered payment
by instalments and default is made in the payment of any one instalment,
proceedings may be taken as if the default had been made in the payment
of all the instalments then unpaid;
C new s 31F(6): the family court has power to vary, suspend, rescind or
revive any order made by it ...
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 22-22-
Some case studies
40. We invite you to consider two other scenarios.
Scenario E
Assets:
C 51% shares in construction business (valued at £1m) of which H has day-to-day
management (25.5% owned by each);
C £500,000 bonds owned by H;
C FMH (jointly owned).
Order E:
(1) H to transfer legal and beneficial interest in FMH to W by 1 April 2013;
(2) H shall pay or cause to be paid the following lump sums to W:
(a) On or before 1st May 2013 £100,000;
(b) On or before 1st June 2013 £100,000;
(c) On or before 1st July 2013 £100,000;
(d) On or before 1st August 2013 £100,000;
(e) On or before 1st September 2013 £100,000.
(3) Provided 2(a) to (d) complied with in full, on payment of the final lump sum
provided for in 2(e) above, W to transfer her shareholding in Co to H.
4. Save as aforesaid, full clean break etc
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 23-23-
Analysis – is this an order for lump sums or an instalment order?
C No reference to s 23(1)(c)
C No recital re not intended to be variable
C £500k over 5 months – does shorter time period make a difference to what the
parties truly intended??
C NB W will presumably get dividends for as long as they are being declared and
the shares are not transferred to H
C H won’t get the shares until he pays up – this ‘informal security’ does not make
it an instalment order
C How relevant is the source of the monies? Is it a cashflow/ liquidity/ tax issue?
What if the bonds mature in 100k tranches over the 5 months so that each lump
sum is paid out of the maturing batch of bonds? Does this make it more ‘lump
sums’ than ‘instalment order’?
Scenario F
Assets
C FMH (with £300k equity) (jointly owned)
C Pre-marital family business (W) unknown valuation; little liquid assets but
making big profits
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 24-24-
Order F:
WHEREAS the Parties have agreed to the specific terms set out below so as to reflect
their intention that neither party shall be entitled to apply under s 31 of MCA 1973 for
it be varied
(1) W shall pay or cause to be paid to H the following lump sums pursuant to
s 23(1)(c):
(i) On or before 1st April 2013 £100,000;
(ii) On or before 1st October 2013 £100,000;
(iii) On or before 1st April 2014 £100,000.
(2) In the event that any lump sum provided for in 1(i) or (ii) above is not paid
within 14 days of the date by which it is due to be paid, the lump sums provided
for in each of the following sub-paragraphs shall thereupon become due and
payable forthwith.
(3) On payment of the first lump sum above, H do transfer fmh to W.
(4) Liberty to apply as to implementation.
Analysis – is this an order for lump sums or an instalment order?
C The wording: a victory for ‘fancy drafting’?
C Can the court go behind the wording when the recital makes it plain there is no
contrary ‘true underlying agreement’?
C But is para 2 consistent with truly separate lump sums?
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 25-25-
C What difference does it make if the dates for payments of the lump sums coincide
with the six-monthly pattern of dividends being declared for the company, and
both parties understood that the lump sums would be paid out of the dividends?
LASPO, ‘orders for payment in respect of legal services’, and costs allowances
41. It was generally assumed that when LASPO is generally brought into force on 1
April 2013, including the withdrawal of legal aid for most private law family
matters, the provisions of ss 49 to 54 of the 2012 Act would also be brought into
force. After all, it was thought that the wife will not be able to get legal aid any
more to pursue her financial remedy claim, so the new powers to order the
husband to pay a lump sum to contribute to her costs should be available.
42. Now it is not so clear. There are 6 commencement orders – the last of which was
made on 28 February 2013 – and a further set of regulations making transitional
provisions made on 11 March 2013, but as yet there is no sign of a
commencement order to bring into force ss 49 to 54. In addition, the FPR 2010
will need amending to deal with applications for ‘legal services payment orders’.
The new powers
43. Under new s 22ZA of the 1973 Act, the court will be able to order one party to the
marriage to pay to the other (the applicant) an amount for the purpose of
enabling the applicant to obtain legal services. Such an order may be made
Coram Chambers Seminar21 March 2013 Page 26-26-
C in proceedings for divorce, nullity or judicial separation proceedings to
enable the applicant to obtain legal services for the purpose of the
proceedings (!) or
C in proceedings under Part II of the 1973 Act for financial relief in
connection with proceedings for divorce, nullity etc. ‘Financial relief’ is
not defined in Part II of the Act, although Part II is entitled ‘Financial relief
for parties to marriage and children to family’. It might be assumed that
a lspo will be available to enable the applicant to fund any application
under Part II that is made in connection with divorce etc proceedings.
Most financial remedies applications will be covered, but of course a
Schedule 1 application, a claim under Part III of the 1984 Act, and a failure
to maintain claim under s 27 would appear to be outside the scope of a
lspo.
44. A LSPO may:
C be for a single amount to be paid by R to A
C provide for the payment of all or part by instalments
C provide for any such instalments to be secured
C allow for all or part of the sum ordered to be deferred
C be for any type of allowable legal services or limited to allow A to obtain
legal services of a specified description
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C be for legal services to be provided over any period or for only such
services to be provided in a specified period (eg between now and 1 July
2013)
C be for the whole proceedings or for the purposes of a specified part of the
proceedings (eg between now and FDR)
C be varied in the event of a significant change in circumstances since it was
made
Payment for what exactly?
45. For what services can LSPO’s be obtained to cover? ‘Legal services’ is defined in
s 22ZA(10) to mean the following types of services:
C advice as to how the law applies in the particular circumstances,
C advice and assistance in relation to the proceedings
C providing other advice and assistance in relation to the settlement or other
resolution of the dispute
C providing advice and assistance in relation to enforcement of decisions in
the proceedings or as part of the settlement or resolution of the dispute
and they include, ‘advice and assistance in the form of representation and any
form of dispute resolution, including mediation.’
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‘Legal services’ need not be supplied by lawyers!
46. Despite being termed ‘legal services’, the definition is not limited to advice or
representation by qualified lawyers. R can be ordered to pay for A to obtain
advice or representation from a professional McKenzie friend or unregulated
adviser/ advocate who asks permission to address the court. Clearly R can be
ordered to pay for A to obtain advice during the course of mediation. Likewise
R can be ordered for A to obtain advice and representation for arbitration (ie any
form of dispute resolution). It is unclear whether a LSPO would extend to R
being ordered to pay money to A so that she can cover her share of the mediator
or arbitrator’s fees – it all depends on the meaning of the words after ‘includes’.
The court’s decision making process on an application for a LSPO
47. There is a checklist of factors to be considered in new s 22ZB(1):
(a) income, earning capacity (including any increase in earning capacity
which it would be reasonable to expect the person to take steps to acquire)
property and other financial resources which each party has or is likely to
have in the foreseeable future
(b) financial needs obligations and responsibilities which each party has or is
likely to have in the foreseeable future
(c) the subject matter of the proceedings, including the matters in issue in
them
(d) whether the respondent is legally represented in the proceedings
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(e) any steps taken by the applicant to avoid all or part of the proceedings,
whether by proposing or considering mediation or otherwise
(f) the applicant’s conduct in relation to the proceedings
(g) any amount owed by A to R in respect of the costs of proceedings or other
proceedings to which they are or were both parties
(h) the effect of the order (or its variation) on R, and in particular, whether the
order would be likely to cause undue hardship to R or prevent R from
obtaining legal services for the purposes of the proceedings
48. However, A must surmount the hurdles in s 22ZA(3) and (4) before the court
may make a LSPO in her favour. The court must be satisfied that:
C without the amount, A would not reasonably be able to obtain
appropriate legal services for the purposes of the proceedings or any part
of the proceedings.
C A is not reasonably able to secure a loan to pay for the services
C A is unlikely to be able to obtain the services by granting a charge over
any assets recovered in the proceedings.
How to make the application
49. In advance of the FPR 2010 being amended, this is necessarily speculative, but
unless a new form is devised, it might be expected that the application is made
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by form D11 under Part 18 of the FPR with a statement in support. In financial
remedy proceedings, it might be included as an ‘interim order’ within rule 9.7.
50. What about the costs of the costs? It is unlikely that the application for a lspo will
be treated as ‘financial remedy proceedings’ for the purposes of FPR r 28.3. If
that is right:
C the ‘no order as to costs’ rule will not apply. The court will have a ‘blank
sheet’ in front of it, which will often lead to the result that the ‘winner’
should get their costs;
C the ‘only an open offer is admissible on costs’ rule will also not apply. R
will be able to make a Calderbank offer to attempt to protect his position
on costs.
Scope of legal services payments order
No more costs allowances in mps orders
51. The new remedy, when introduced, is intended to be the exclusive method of
providing for one party to fund the other’s costs of the main suit and financial
remedy proceedings in connection with the main suit. New s 22(2) of the 1973
Act prevents the inclusion of a costs allowance in an order for maintenance
pending suit where a lspo might be made: a mps order ‘may not require a party
to a marriage to pay to the other party any amount in respect of legal services for
the purposes of the proceedings.’
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52. However, an order for interim pp’s under s 23(1)(a) is not subject to the same
restriction. So, once decree nisi has been obtained, an order for interim pp’s may
contain a costs allowance in the current manner.
53. A costs allowance is still permissible in a mps order in respect of future private
law Children Act proceedings (which cannot be the subject of a lspo).
54. In addition, a costs allowance is still permissible:
C by way of interim pp’s in a claim under Part III of the MFPA 1984;
C by way of interim pp’s (assuming there is jurisdiction) in a claim under
Schedule 1 to the Children Act 1989;
C by way of an ‘interim lump sum’ in a claim under Schedule 1 to the
Children Act 1989.
55. Watch this space!
Michael Horton & Richard YorkeCoram Chamberswww.coramchambers.co.uk20 March 2013
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