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Occupation Orders

Family Law Week publishes an interesting article this week on the recent case of Grubb v Grubb which concerns an appeal against the granting of an occupation order ousting a husband from the matrimonial home. The article appears here and the transcript here. I am going to take a slightly different slant on that case than the author on FLW, who is critical of the decision of the Court of Appeal to uphold the occupation order and who suggests that the case has significance for occupation order applications without allegations of violence, a significant which he fears is in danger of passing unnoticed.

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Under s33 FLA 1996 the court has a discretion to make an occupation order even in the absence of significant harm. In exercising that discretion s33(6) directs the court to consider all the circumstances including:

(a) the housing needs and housing resources of each of the parties and of any relevant child;

(b) the financial resources of each of the parties;

(c) the likely effect of any order, or of any decision by the court not to exercise its powers under subsection (3), on the health, safety or well-being of the parties and of any relevant child; and

(d) the conduct of the parties in relation to each other and otherwise.

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The only relevance of significant harm in an application for an occupation order is that, where the court considers that the Applicant or a relevant child might suffer significant harm if no order were made, then the so-called ‘balance of harm’ test set out in s33(7) comes into play. That creates a potential obligation to make an order, rather than a mere discretion. An applicant for an occupation order may seek to make out his case either by satisfying s33(6) or s33(7)  (or both). The Grubb case was not argued under s33(7). Looked at in that light, we can see that insofar as the Grubb case is an example of an occupation order being made in the absence of any significant harm, it is not groundbreaking.

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An occupation order is of course quite separate from a non-molestation order - although they often co-exist. It may be trite to say it, but a non-molestation order deals with prohibiting acts of violence or harassment whilst an occupation order regulates the occupation of the home. Whilst there has to be a good reason to oust a party from their home there do not necessarily have to be grounds for a non-molestation order in order for an occupation order to be made. There is in fact no reference to violence or harassment in s33, although of course such behaviour would fall under ‘all the circumstances’ or ‘conduct’ or ’significant harm’. It is a mistake to think that one can oust only a violent partner, although very clearly violence or harassment are very likely to form a main plank of the grounds for many an application and it may be difficult to justify an ouster in the absence of such conduct – depending of course on the facts.

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The transcript of judgment bears further reading. Although there are a number of specific findings relating to the Husband’s conduct upon which the court of first instance relied when granting the occupation order, it is clear from the full judgment that there was a significant course of conduct of oppressive behaviour on the part of the husband which the wife experienced as putting her under unbearable pressure whilst the family all remained within the one property.

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And yet the article characterises an occupation order as a ’domestic violence remedy’ and queries whether this is really the kind of situation that it was intended to apply to. The suggestion made in the article is that a party ‘need not cite very much by way of conduct’ to justify an occupation order, and it seems to be said that cases of this kind are not what such a ‘domestic violence remedy’ was intended to cure. The writer of the article seems to me to fail to properly appreciate the extent of the Husband’s conduct as described in the judgment (and indeed the medical evidence which demonstrated the impact it was having upon the Wife), and in doing so seems (perhaps unintentionally) to minimise the significance of the non-violent conduct. In my view non-violent conduct of the kind described in the transcript falls fairly and squarely within most working definitions of domestic abuse that professionals in the field would use – which may range from controlling behaviour and mental or verbal abuse to physical attacks.

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I think that this is very much a case turning on its own facts. It may be unusual for occupation orders to be made in cases where the parties are wealthy, but that is precisely why the particular mix of factors is unlikely to be often repeated – for what the court was required to consider was whether to permit the toxic and harmful situation at home to continue in circumstances where an exercise of the court’s discretion in favour of the wife would not cause the Husband significant hardship. More often than not there is only one property and an ouster will mean the ousted party sleeping in the car or sofa surfing. There is a difficult balance to strike in such cases and often the lesser evil is leaving the parties in situ, albeit in very unpleasant circumstances. In this case the court could cure the impact of the husband’s ongoing conduct on the wife and children without causing any serious detriment or harm to him.

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Characteristic of this case was the fact that the wife did not seek to exaggerate the seriousness of the conduct of the Husband by asserting any s33(7) significant harm, and nor did she seek necessarily to oust the husband if alternative accomodation were provided by him for herself and the children. The Husband had within his control the parties substantial financial resources and had it within his power to make this happen without the need for him to leave. Had the application been for the husband to be excluded from his own home for reasons outwith his control and without recourse to suitable accomodation to meet his own needs, the outcome no doubt would have been very different, and properly so.

 

Lawyers Represented

I’ve been browsing newspapers and recent judgments this evening (yes, for fun on a Friday night). Lawyers don’t come out of it too well so far:

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At the bar we have reports of a £34,000,000 discrimination claim by one barrister against three QCs and a senior clerk. In a story that resembles stereotypical ideas and tv drama representations of the bar in too many ways to make comfortable reading for the rest of us in the profession, an Indian born barrister is claiming that her senior clerk and chambers discriminated against her in terms of the allocation of work and recovery of fees. The heads of chambers are named personally as individual defendants, and two of the three were allegedly too distracted by their affairs with the senior clerk to effectively deal with the claims of ongoing discrimination (Heads of Chambers being ultimately responsible for equal ops in chambers). I don’t know what area of practice the Claimant in this case was in before leaving the bar in 2006 but if one assumes her 34 mil claim is primarily based on loss of earnings I think we can safely rule out the possibility that she was a member of the family bar. £1m a year for the rest of her working life? Nice work if you can get it love. Who KNOWS how much more entertaining yet excrutiating detail will come from the Employment Tribunal before this sorry mess is resolved? One thing is for sure it isn’t going to do much for our reputation as a profession.

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The Times’ Lawyer of the Week piece has sparked fierce debate in our household about whether or not an alleged rapist whose conviction has been quashed should be able to sue the alleged rape victim for malicious prosecution. And it was whilst searching (unsuccessfully) on Baiili for the judgment (in which the Court of Appeal apparently ruled that such an attack was contrary to public policy)* that I came across the next course in our menu:

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Withers LLP are being sued by Marco Pierre White for damages in respect of an assortment of unusual tortious acts. If you ARE the kind of person who likes to read judgments on a Friday night I have to commend this to you. It is a magical combination of sordid celebrity intrigue and really interesting and novel legal questions, mostly explored in some detail and then abandoned without resolution as is often the way with an appeal against a strike out (I am put in mind of a small child momentarily turning a small wondrous object in his hand before casting it aside to rush to another more fascinating item). The appeal was successful. Mr White’s claim proceeds.

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To summarise brutally: Marco Pierre White sues his ex wife’s matrimonial solicitors for allegedly advising his wife to wrongfully intercept and retain documents and for themselves retaining those documents. The judgment opens up an enormously complex legal hinterland which is the interplay between family and civil law and the applicability of torts such as trespass to goods and conversion to actions which have long been to some extent sanctioned if not approved by family courts in the course of family proceedings. For the non-lawyers amongst us, the question is whether taking your exes documents to prove they are hiding the money for your divorce, and keeping hold of those documents is something which can put you at risk of having to pay damages to your ex, even though the family court would let you use them. What this judgment tells us is that it might just do that, but you’ll have to wait until the trial, and maybe you’ll have to wait for another case to get as far as the court of appeal for a full set of answers. Celebrity bunfighting, lawyers squirming in the witness box, and grave and weighty questions of public policy: great recipe Marco. It does make it rather difficult to advise clients in financial proceedings with any degree of certainty.

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Judge John Deed? Pah. You couldn’t make this stuff up.

* can anyone tell me where to find this?

Legal Costs

Short piece on ‘Today’ on Tues morning about costs in civil cases. I switched on as a clip of Lord Justice Judge opining about the state of civil justice was part way through. Evan Davis moved onto an interview with Bridget Prentice. Oh goody, I thought as I drove to court, something relevant to my line of work and NOT about banks. What struck me though was the complete failure of the piece to distinguish between court fees and legal costs. Unusually for Evan, who is pretty much always on the ball and whose faux naive questions make me chuckle, it sounded as if Evan himself had no appreciation of the distinction between legal costs and court fees (which are piffling in comparison to legal costs, at least unless you are a local authority issuing care proceedings). This was made worse by the fact that Bridget Prentice, in response to a question about ‘legal costs’, asserted that a low income claimant would know prior to issue that they would be able to be protected against paying these. It was apparent to a lawyer that she was talking about remission of court issue fees on a means tested basis but non-lawyers could have been forgiven for thinking that there was no risk of a costs order being made against a low income claimant, which of course is very much NOT accurate. Not helpful.

Did anyone else listen to this? Was it as confusing as I thought it was, or was I simply too distracted by the traffic on the M5 to listen properly to what was being said?

The Government announced its decision in respect of the family legal aid fee reforms on Wednesday this week. As a result of me seeming to have to do ever increasing amounts of work just to bring in the same amount of money I have not been able to look at the announcement in detail or to post anything about it. However, the FLBA have issued the following press release which enables me to cheat a bit:

The Family Law Bar Association (FLBA) notes the announcement made today by the Ministry of Justice about changes to the family fee proposals made last December, in particular some limited recognition of complexity in cases. However, it is a matter of regret that the Government has refused further time to the representative groups to consider the underlying data and structure of the changes announced today. The refusal of further time undermines the benefits to be derived from a more collaborative way of working between the Legal Services Commission and its stakeholders,  which the Justice Committee called for in their report on Family Legal Aid Reform, published in July.

 

The FLBA remains concerned that these changes will drive experienced practitioners away from this work, at a time when child protection cases are increasing. Those cases involving allegations of domestic violence, private law disputes and financial cases will simply be uneconomic to undertake. This will deter talented new entrants from doing this important work, which cannot be in the public interest.

I understand that the new scheme represents an improvement on the previous set of proposals, insofar as it recognises some graduation and different types of hearings. But the fundamental concern that this is work which is becoming increasingly unattractive and unviable remains, for all the shifts and tweaks. Still, I have until October 2010  to steel myself to read the proposals, if I can afford ever to take any time off again…

Another Fine Mess

Yesterday I took a breather between lever arch files to chat with colleagues about the new fee regime that we will be paid under from next October. Some of the fees are clearly better than now, largely care work. For that I suspect we have the furore arising from the Baby P scandal to thank. But whereas domestic violence injunction work used to be the poor relation in the legal aid family it is now one of the most attractive pieces of work to do, notwithstanding the fact that it is usually quite straightforward to prep and run. Fee rates appear to be more linked to whether or not something is a political hot potato than by complexity per se – domestic violence and safeguarding children being two such hotties. So, for a return date injunction (which is relatively easy to prepare and can (often) be disposed of within minutes at a 30 minute block listed appointment) the remuneration is excellent. And its one of the few kinds of case that can often be double or triple stacked without causing any professional difficulty. At £400 a pop – cher-CHING! Nice work if you can get it – we’ll be fighting over these briefs.

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But just to demonstrate that this is only a different set of swings and roundabouts, there is a whole range of other work, which currently makes up the bread and butter income for many at the family bar (particularly at the junior end), that will be paid at appallingly low rates. So in private law children (contact, residence etc) the hearing fees start at £69.55, and for equivalent hearings in ancillary relief (money on divorce) precisely 65p more at £70.20 (who knows why?). This is a gross figure, before travel expenses, and including preparation and travel time. In real terms it amounts to probably £30 a day in your pocket (family barristers income comes almost exclusively from court work unlike solicitors who bill for the work they do back in the office). Remind me again why I trained for three years post graduation and incurred at £25,000 debt?

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Hedge v Hog

What odd times we live in. The Guardian reported on Saturday that hedge fund managers are now betting on the outcome of high worth ancillary relief cases by funding the litigation costs of one party in return for a largeish chunk of the prize.

Given that this is the type of arrangement which springs up where traditional sources of funding are unavailable because of the unpredictability of a return on investment, this tells us something about the lack of legal certainty available to litigants in this area of law.

Still, its a problem most of us will never have. For most of us legal certainty means the sure knowledge that our fortune is so small it is scarcely worth the legal fees. I wish my spouse or I were wealthy enough for hedge funds to be interested in taking a punt on one of us should we ever fall out. You’ll excuse me for being such poor company – I’m still getting over the disappointment of having had four numbers in Saturday’s draw only to find that my other half had read out the numbers for Wednesday’s draw. Does that count as grounds for divorce? Can I run it as conduct? Anyone fancy my chances?

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