[2023] UKSC 22
On appeal from: [2021] EWHC 1791 (Fam)
JUDGMENT
Unger and another (in substitution for Hasan) (Appellants) v Ul-Hasan (deceased) and another (Respondents)
before
Lord Hodge, Deputy President
Lord Hamblen
Lord Leggatt
Lord Burrows
Lord Stephens
28 June 2023
Heard on 20 October 2022
Appellant
Michael Horton KC
Greg Williams
Srishti Suresh
(Instructed by Dawson Cornwell)
Respondent
Tim Amos KC
Andrzej Bojarski
Joe Rainer
(Instructed by Expatriate Law (London))
LORD STEPHENS (with whom Lord Hodge, Lord Hamblen and Lord Burrows agree):
Introduction
The first issue in this appeal is whether on the true construction of the Matrimonial and Family Proceedings Act 1984 (“the 1984 Act”) read with the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 (“the 1973 Act”), the power of a court in England and Wales to order financial relief after an overseas divorce can only be exercised as between living parties to a former marriage. If the court does have the power to order financial relief despite the death of one of the parties to the marriage, then the second issue is whether a claim for financial relief under the 1984 Act is a cause of action which survives against the estate of a deceased spouse under section 1(1) of the Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1934 (“the 1934 Act”).
This appeal concerns a wife’s application under section 12(1) of the 1984 Act for financial relief in England and Wales after an overseas divorce in Pakistan. On such an application, under Part III and pursuant to section 17 of the 1984 Act, the court may make any one or more of the orders which it could make under Part II of the 1973 Act if a decree of divorce in respect of the marriage had been granted in England and Wales. That means the court is able to make orders including any of the financial provision orders mentioned in section 23(1) of the 1973 Act or any of the property adjustment orders mentioned in section 24(1) of the 1973 Act.
The issue in this appeal arises because on 18 January 2021, some three weeks prior to the final hearing to determine the Wife’s application, the Husband, then aged 81 and domiciled in Pakistan, died in Dubai. The Wife seeks to proceed with her application against the Husband’s estate. On behalf of the Husband’s estate, it is said that the Wife’s rights under the 1984 Act are personal rights which only enable orders to be made as between living parties to a former marriage. Accordingly, the Wife’s right to enforce the personal obligations of the Husband ended with his death and cannot be pursued against his estate. Accordingly, the issue in this appeal is whether, where one of the parties to an application under Part III of the 1984 Act for financial relief has died, further proceedings can or cannot be taken.
Mostyn J in giving a magisterial and potentially seminal judgment, [2021] EWHC 1791 (Fam); [2022] Fam 1, stated at para 53 that he was convinced that the Wife’s unadjudicated claim for financial relief against the Husband was a cause of action vested in her and subsisting against him such that on the Husband’s death the Wife’s claim survived against his estate under section 1(1) of the 1934 Act. Section 1(1), as amended and in so far as relevant provides:
…, on the death of any person after the commencement of this Act all causes of action subsisting against or vested in him shall survive against, or, as the case may be, for the benefit of, his estate. Provided that this subsection shall not apply to causes of action for defamation.”
On the basis that the Wife’s claim survived her Husband’s death under section 1(1) of the 1934 Act, the judge considered that, unless he was constrained by authority, the Wife’s unadjudicated Part III claim under the 1984 Act could be continued against the Husband’s estate. However, the judge decided, at para 23, that he was bound by the Court of Appeal decision in Sugden v Sugden [1957] P 120 and therefore he was obliged to find that the Wife’s claim for financial relief expired with the death of the Husband even though he considered the decision in Sugden was wrong. Accordingly, he was compelled to, and did, dismiss the Wife’s application for financial relief. The judge also considered that the Court of Appeal would be bound by the decision in Sugden such that it was appropriate to grant a certificate under section 12(1) of the Administration of Justice Act 1969 enabling an application to be made to this court for leave to appeal directly from the High Court to the Supreme Court.
On 12 April 2022, the Supreme Court granted permission to appeal directly from the High Court to this court.
Changing family law principles relating to property and the legal recognition of relationships together with the terminology used in this judgment
Before addressing the issues in this appeal, it is appropriate to say something about the evolution of principles in relation to matrimonial property and as to the changes which have occurred in relation to the recognition of different family relationships between individuals.
The principles underpinning how the property of the parties to a marriage should be divided on divorce are a world apart from those which applied historically. In 1857, when the Divorce Court was established, a woman could not even own her own property: on marriage everything she owned (apart from household goods) became her husband’s. Pending divorce or after divorce, the power of the court was restricted to ordering a husband to pay maintenance to his wife. Currently, the power of the court to order financial relief on divorce is contained in the 1973 Act. That Act confers on the court wide discretionary powers over all the property of the parties to a marriage in order to achieve an outcome as fair as possible in all the circumstances. However, the discretionary nature of the power does not mean a party to a marriage is not entitled to demand an outcome as of right. A claim for financial relief under the 1973 Act does not amount to a mere hope depending on the contingency that discretion will be exercised in the claimant’s favour. Rather the judicial discretion is guided by the principle that a former spouse or a civil partner is entitled to a fair outcome. As Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead stated in Miller v Miller [2006] 2 AC 618 at para 9, “[each] party to a marriage is entitled to a fair share of the available property” (emphasis in original). Thorpe LJ in Hill v Haines [2008] Ch 412, para 57 stated that a spouse “in bringing her claim for ancillary relief does not come as a suppliant but as one seeking the quantification of her entitlement”. Munby LJ in Richardson v Richardson [2011] EWCA Civ 79 at para 19 identified the wife as having “earned her share” so that she “was entitled to have that recognised by the Family Division” (emphasis added). It is no longer appropriate to state, as Denning LJ stated in Sugden v Sugden at page 135, that “[in the Divorce Court] there is no right to maintenance, …, or to a secured provision, or the like, until the court makes an order directing it”. It is also no longer appropriate to question, as Ormrod J did in D'Este v D'Este [1973] Fam 55 at page 59, whether the rights created by matrimonial causes legislation are “rightly called ‘rights’…”.
How individuals choose to obtain legal recognition of their relationships has also changed significantly since 1857. The Civil Partnership Act 2004 created the concept of a civil partnership, which was extended to opposite sex couples following the decision of this court in R (Steinfield) v Secretary of State for International Development [2018] UKSC 32, [2020] AC 1 and subsequent amendments to the Civil Partnership Act 2004. Both same-sex and opposite-sex couples are now permitted to marry. As this case concerns a husband and a wife, those terms are used in this judgment although applications for financial relief under the 1973 Act will not always concern a husband, or indeed a wife.
Factual background
A summary of the factual background is that Nafisa Hasan (“the Wife”) married Mahmud Ul-Hasan (“the Husband”) in Pakistan on 4 September 1981. They went on to have a long marriage. There is one child of their marriage, Iman Hasan, and another child of the Wife who was treated as a child of the family, Adeela Unger, née Qureshi. Richard Sebastian Francis de Unger is married to Adeela Unger.
The Wife said that the Husband generated significant wealth during the marriage. This wealth included a property in London, bought in 1998 to be a home for the parties and a base for their children.
The Wife and the Husband separated in 2006 and the Husband obtained a divorce in Pakistan on 10 January 2012.
On 28 March 2014, the Husband married Lamya Al Shaibah, with whom he subsequently had two children.
The marriage between the Husband and the Wife having been dissolved by means of judicial proceedings in an overseas country and the divorce being recognised as valid in England and Wales, the Wife sought, and on 1 August 2017 was given, leave by Recorder Roberts under section 13(1) of the 1984 Act to apply for an order for financial relief in England and Wales under Part III of that Act. On 11 August 2017, the Wife made that application. In these proceedings and prior to the death of the Husband, Lamya Al Shaibah acted as his litigation friend as he had been diagnosed with dementia.
The Husband’s ‘Form E’ Financial Statement, dated 29 December 2019, declared capital of £7 million. The Wife said that she believed the scale of the Husband’s wealth was enormous and far in excess of that which he had disclosed. There followed several interlocutory hearings, principally about the Husband’s disclosure, and there was delay because of the Covid 19 pandemic. The Wife’s application was listed for final hearing on 8 February 2021. However, on 18 January 2021 the Husband died in Dubai, domiciled in Pakistan. Lamya Al Shaibah, the Husband’s surviving widow and former litigation friend, was appointed as executor of the Husband’s estate.
As the Husband did not die domiciled in England and Wales, it was not open to the Wife to apply to the court under the Inheritance (Provision for Family and Dependants) Act 1975 (“the 1975 Act”) on the ground that the disposition of the Husband’s estate effected by his will or the law relating to intestacy, or the combination of his will and that law, was not such as to make reasonable financial provision for her; see section 1. Accordingly, the only route for the Wife to obtain financial relief in England and Wales was pursuant to the unadjudicated Part III claim under the 1984 Act. That route would only be open to her if her claim survived the death of the Husband and could be continued against his estate under section 1(1) of the 1934 Act.
On 2 July 2021, the judge dismissed the Wife’s application, holding that he was required by Court of Appeal authority to find that the Wife’s claim for financial relief expired with the death of the Husband.
On 12 April 2022, the Wife was given leave to appeal from the High Court directly to this court. Prior to the hearing of the appeal in this court, and on 5 May 2022, the Wife died.
On 20 June 2022, the Wife’s daughter and Adeela’s husband, Richard Sebastian Francis de Unger, as personal representatives of the Wife’s estate, applied to be substituted as appellants in this appeal. This application was granted on 21 July 2022.
As both the Husband and the Wife have died since the Wife made her Part III application, the appeal has been continued by the personal representatives of the Wife’s estate, as appellants, against Lamya Al Shaibah, the executor of the Husband’s estate, as the second respondent.
The proper approach to the central issue on this appeal
The judge at para 3 of his judgment defined the “core question” as being “whether the unadjudicated claim by the [Wife] under Part III [of the 1984 Act] survives the death of the [Husband] and can be continued against his estate”.
The parties to this appeal agreed, I consider correctly, that the proper approach to such a question was set out by the House of Lords in Barder v Barder [1988] AC 20 (also known as Barder v Caluori, henceforth "Barder"). In that case, in proceedings for divorce in England and Wales, the wife was awarded what was then known as care and control of the two children. An order was made by the registrar by consent providing, amongst other things, that the husband should within 28 days transfer to the wife his legal and equitable interest in the matrimonial home. After the time limit for appealing against the order had expired, but before it had been executed, the wife killed the children and committed suicide. The husband applied for leave to appeal out of time against the consent order. When making that application the husband asserted that the consent order had been based on the fundamental assumption that the wife and children would for a substantial period require a suitable home and this assumption had been totally invalidated by the supervening event of their deaths. However, Jacqueline Caluori, as personal representative of the wife’s estate, contended that the wife’s death had caused the suit to abate with the effect that there could be no further proceedings by way of appeal against the consent order, which in turn meant that there was no jurisdiction to entertain the husband’s application for leave to appeal out of time. Jacqueline Caluori also contended that following the wife’s death the court’s only remaining jurisdiction was in relation to an application to enforce the registrar’s consent order.
The speech of Lord Brandon of Oakbrook, with which the other members of the House agreed, extensively reviewed the authorities in relation to the doctrine of abatement of a divorce suit by the death of one of the parties to it. He then proceeded to identify, at page 37 D- F, three conclusions from those authorities.
The first conclusion was:
“… there is no general rule that, where one of the parties to a divorce suit has died, the suit abates, so that no further proceedings can be taken in it. The passage in the judgment of Shearman J in Maconochie v Maconochie [1916] P 326, 328, in which he stated that such a general rule existed, cannot be supported.”
In support of that conclusion Lord Brandon referred, at pages 36 B to 37 D, to five cases in which it was held that further proceedings in a divorce suit could be taken after one of the parties to it had died.
The second conclusion was:
“… it is unhelpful, in cases of the kind under discussion, to refer to abatement at all. The real question in such cases is whether, where one of the parties to a divorce suit has died, further proceedings in the suit can or cannot be taken.”
The third conclusion was:
“… the answer to that question, when it arises, depends in all cases on two matters and in some cases also on a third. The first matter is the nature of the further proceedings sought to be taken. The second matter is the true construction of the relevant statutory provision or provisions, or of a particular order made under them, or both. The third matter is the applicability of section 1(1) of [the 1934 Act].”
Applying that approach, Lord Brandon identified the nature of the further proceedings sought by the husband to be taken as being an appeal out of time to a judge of a divorce county court against an order made in a divorce suit by a registrar of that court. He also identified the relevant provisions in relation to such an application as being rule 124(1) of the Matrimonial Causes Rules 1977, made under section 50 of the 1973 Act. The right given by the rule is therefore in effect a statutory right together with Order 13, r 4(1) and (2) of the County Court Rules 1981 (as made applicable by rule 3(1) of the Matrimonial Causes Rules 1977). Lord Brandon concluded that on the true construction of rule 124(1) and Order 13, r 4(1), the jurisdiction of a judge to entertain an appeal out of time by one party to a divorce suit against an order or decision made or given by a registrar did not lapse on the death of the other party to the suit. Accordingly, there was jurisdiction to entertain an appeal out of time by the husband against the registrar’s order notwithstanding the death of the wife. Given that there was jurisdiction on the true construction of those provisions, it was not necessary for Lord Brandon to consider, and he did not consider, the question of whether there was a cause of action within section 1(1) of the 1934 Act. This was the third matter that Lord Brandon had stated might arise in answering the question whether, where one of the parties to a divorce suit has died, further proceedings in the suit can or cannot be taken.
I consider that that sequence of questions and matters to be considered, as set out by Lord Brandon, remains the correct sequence in relation to matrimonial legislation such as the 1984 Act and 1973 Act.
Identification of the appropriate questions in this appeal applying the approach in Barder
Lord Brandon’s first conclusion was that there is no general rule that where one of the parties to a divorce suit has died, the suit abates with the consequence that no further proceedings can be taken in it.
Applying Lord Brandon’s second conclusion to the facts of this appeal leads to the conclusion that the real question on this appeal is whether, where one of the parties to an application under Part III of the 1984 Act for financial relief has died, further proceedings can or cannot be taken (“the question”).
In answering the question, the first matter is to identify the nature of the further proceedings sought to be taken. On this appeal there is no dispute that the nature of the further proceedings is the continuation of the claim for financial relief under section 17 of the 1984 Act, which involves consideration of whether to make any one or more of the orders available to a court under Part II of the 1973 Act, including any of the financial provision orders mentioned in section 23(1) of the 1973 Act or any of the property adjustment orders mentioned in section 24(1) of the 1973 Act.
In answering the question, the second matter is to determine whether on the true construction of the relevant statutory provision or provisions further proceedings in the suit can or cannot be taken when one of the parties has died. In this appeal, the relevant statutory provisions are contained in the 1984 Act and the 1973 Act. The provisions of the 1975 Act are aids to the true construction of the 1984 Act and the 1973 Act.
If, on their true construction, the statutory provisions in the 1984 and 1973 Acts create personal rights and obligations which can only be adjudicated between living parties, then the 1934 Act cause of action issue does not arise.
The judge’s approach to the central issue
I consider that Mostyn J incorrectly went straight to the third matter identified by Lord Brandon, namely the applicability of section 1(1) of the 1934 Act. He failed to consider and to make any determination in relation to Lord Brandon’s anterior second matter, namely whether, on the true construction of the relevant statutory provisions, further proceedings in the suit can or cannot be taken when one of the parties had died. On this basis, I consider that Mostyn J’s analysis, excellent as it is as far as it goes, is flawed given his failure to determine the true construction of the relevant statutory provisions.
However, in sympathy with the judge, and in agreement with the reservations in relation to this matter expressed by Thorpe LJ at para 27 and Dyson LJ at para 51 in Harb v King Fahd Bin Abdul Aziz 2005 EWCA Civ 1324; [2006] 1 WLR 578, I would observe that the answer to the third matter would be relatively straightforward if, on the true construction of the statutory provisions, these are rights in respect of which further proceedings can be taken when one of the parties has died.
Statutory interpretation
In considering the words used by Parliament, which is the primary source by which meaning is ascertained, it is appropriate to consider the words used in their particular context: see R v Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport and the Regions, Ex p Spath Holme Ltd [2001] 2 AC 349, 396. The context, as in R (Project for the Registration of Children as British Citizens) [2022] UKSC 3; [2023] AC 255, at para 29, may be the internal context, so that:
“A phrase or passage must be read in the context of the section as a whole and in the wider context of a relevant group of sections. Other provisions in a statute and the statute as a whole may provide the relevant context.”