Certain problems recur sufficiently frequently in ancillary relief
cases to justify a special mention:-
1. People often believe that the other side has hidden assets, bank
accounts or whatever which have not been disclosed. Sometimes this is
indeed the case - particularly with people who are self -employed or
who work overseas - but just as often the belief comes from a feeling
that there must be more. The sad fact, of course, is that when
a couple split up and two homes have to be provided for in place of
one the available assets do not stretch so far. Nevertheless, this belief
that there are undisclosed assets is very common. Sometimes it is a
misplaced belief and sometimes not.
What every litigant must understand, though, is that courts will only
act on evidence. If the assets cannot be found no court will
treat them as existing and a court will ignore mere speculation. It
is important to realise this because a party must assemble all the evidence
to be ready at the date of the hearing. Afterwards it is usually too
late. This must be explained to clients otherwise there is a risk they
will come out of any hearing feeling cheated. They must decide beforehand
whether it is worth going to the expense, for example, of hiring a private
investigator to try to find any undisclosed assets. If such enquiries
fail to reveal the "crock of gold" then the client must accept
that a court will ignore it. Evidence is everything in any litigation
and courts can only act on the basis of the evidence before them.
Very often it comes down to deciding how much time, effort and expense
one is prepared to spend on the issue. It is usually a trade off between
cost and possible benefit.
2. More frequently there is evidence but the other side simply refuses
to disclose it. This is a much easier problem to deal with. If, say,
a wife knows that her husband has an account at X Building Society but
her husband does not disclose this account in his affidavit of means
the first step is for her solicitor to write to the husband('s solicitors)
asking him to confirm if he does or does not have an account at a certain
Building Society. If there is such an account the overwhelming likelihood
is that its existence will be revealed at this point (mainly because
the holder of the account does not really know how much information
is in the hands of "the other side" and is frightened of the
consequences of being caught out).
The wife's solicitor will then ask to see copies of the statements
(or whatever) and the other side will probably grudgingly comply. If
there is non-compliance the wife's solicitor (in the above example)
can seek an order from the court directing that the husband provide
the information requested and such a direction (which can readily be
obtained) will perhaps have endorsed upon it what is called a "penal
notice". This warns the recipient that if he does not comply he
may be sent to prison. Naturally, most people do comply at this point
but if the refusal continues the wife's solicitor would almost certainly
bring the matter back before the court and ask for imprisonment. This
rarely happens in practice because the threat of imprisonment and the
knowledge that it will happen if the refusal continues is almost always
sufficient.
Further problems.
Please contact David
Terry at David_Terry@dterry.demon.co.uk if you need specific advice.
Ancillary relief is often the most contentious part of any divorce proceeding
and the problems above are almost certain to require the help of a solicitor
if they apply.