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(SHEILA
MAHITANI |
PETITIONER |
BETWEEN |
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(AND
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(MURLI
MAHITANI
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RESPONDENT
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Supreme
Court
Action No. 77 of 1980
23rd November, 1982.
Moe, C.J.
Mr. G.
Godfrey for the Petitioner.
Mr. O. Sabido with Mr. D. Lindo S.C. for the Respondent.
Maintenance
following divorce - Assessment of gross annual income of
Respondent - Lump sum payments and periodical installment
payments - Power of court to order both payments - Section
169 of Supreme Court Ordinance - Meaning of "means"
in maintenance applications.
J
U D G M E N T
The Petitioner
seeks from the Respondent a lump sum payment or such sums
of maintenance for herself as may be just, and maintenance
for her child Maya Meera. The parties were married in India
on 12th December 1963 and there are two children of the marriage,
Maya being born on 12th March 1967 and Umesh Murli born on
23rd October 1964. On 23rd October 1980 the Petitioner started
divorce proceedings on grounds of the Respondent's desertion
and his frequent adultery with two women. The Respondent did
not defend the proceedings in any way. The Petitioner obtained
a decree nisi on the 18th March 1981 and was granted custody
of child Maya. The decree was made absolute on the 8th July
1981.
The parties
after the marriage lived together in Belize from 1966 first
at Craig Street where the Petitioner still resides. The Respondent
left the Petitioner in 1973 and has not provided any maintenance
to her for about 8 to 9 years. While still living with his
wife, he lived with another woman with whom he had a child
and whom he left about February 1974. He then lived with another
woman with whom he had 5 children and to whom he presently
provides $85.00 per week or $340 per month. She is living
in a house that he owns. He is presently living with a woman
from El Salvador. He pays $175.00 per month for rent of the
premises where the Petitioner resides, $25.00 per week for
the maintenance of the child Maya and her school fees and
other school expenses amounting to about $105-$110.00 per
month. The Respondent is a businessman and is concerned with
the following business: -- (1) Maya's Belize City dealing
in electronic equipment; (2) Casa Economica, Orange Walk,
a general dry goods store; (3) Liberty Store, Belize City,
a general dry goods store. He has three banking accounts,
one with the Royal Bank of Canada, Orange Walk and one with
the Bank of Nova Scotia, Orange Walk. He is the owner of four
properties, one at Corozal Road, Orange Walk, and at Gravel
Lane, Orange Walk, One at San Francisco Street, Orange Walk
and one at Albert Street Belize City.
There
was great divergence in the evidence of the parties as to
the income of the Respondent. The Petitioner set out in her
petition that to the best of her belief the income is $40,000
per month or more. In her evidence she explained that that
figure represents takings or receipts from the businesses
concerned. Of that, she estimated $7,000 to $8,000 per week
was from Maya's or about $32,000 per month. She based this
on her experience while working with the Respondent for about
five years and managing Maya's store at which time the other
stores were then being built up. The Respondent on the other
hand sought to establish that his income was $833 per month
or about $10,000 per annum. I did not accept this as a true
picture of the Respondent's financial means. He put in evidence
that the amount on which he was assessed for tax by the Income
Tax Department for the years 1978, 1979 and 1980 was $20,000.00.
That he has to pay $4,655.97, $4,123.67 and $3,300 tax in
respect of the said years and invest $6,000 yearly back into
his business under some agreement with his father.
I must
state first that I was not satisfied that $6,000 for investment
should be deducted from the assessable income for these purposes.
If it is a genuine debt or business commitment that should
have been taken into account in arriving at the assessable
income. If it is not a binding commitment and something the
Respondent wishes to do from year to year, that investment
would have to be done after he maintains those whom he is
obliged to maintain. Secondly the figure of $20,000 was a
figure agreed on between the Respondent and the Income Tax
Department. Not surprisingly there was difficulty in arriving
at the true position because the Respondent keeps no books
of account. The very documentation presented by the Respondent
shows that the department originally assessed him for 1978
at $34,000 and for 1979 at $40,000; there was no mention of
the original assessment for 1980 but the department agreed
to assess for the three years as already mentioned.
Further,
I related both the figures originally assessed and finally
agreed upon other evidence before me. The Respondent has three
mortgages, one on each of 2 properties in Orange Walk for
$60,000 and $50,000, and one property at Albert Street for
$30,000.00. A total of $140,000.00. No evidence was given
as to the repayment schedule on these mortgages but calculating
that the amount has been loaned to be repaid with interest
at a rate of 10%per annum, in order to service those mortgages,
the Respondent would repay about $641.00 per month if it is
amortised over 20 years, $1,282 if it is 10 years. On the
basis that the mortgagors acted with some business sense,
they would have been satisfied that his income, allowing for
his expenses, would enable him to repay which I assume is
the lower figure of $641.00 per month. He also said his expenses
on his overdrafts amounting to $115,000 are $2,000 in interest
per month. Again I consider that the banks must have been
satisfied about the Respondent having a large enough income
to be able to manage $2,000 per month as interest. The Respondent
also gets rent from two shops located in his buildings amounting
to $600 per month. It further emerged that the house which
he is building on Albert Street will cost $200,000.00 to finish,
a sum which by itself suggests that the owner is a man of
substantial income. The Respondent finally said that normally
his three businesses Maya, Liberty and Casa Economica bring
in sums which come to about $288,000 per annum. He also said
his operating expenses on these businesses amount to about
$127,000 per annum, leaving him with $161,000 per annum. Even
allowing for further expenses and other permissible deductions
including personal allowances, for income tax purposes, even
the original assessment by Income Tax department at $34,000-$40,000
seems over generous. All this evidence is more consistent
with the Petitioner's assertion that the Respondent has a
large income than with the Respondent's contention that he
earns only a small income. On the evidence before me I take
the view that it would be reasonable to regard $50,000 per
annum as the Respondent's gross average income.
While
the Petitioner's prayer is couched in the alternative for
a lump sum or maintenance, section 169 of the Supreme Court
Ordinance Cap 5 empowers the Court to order both that the
Respondent secure to the Petitioner a gross or annual sum
and that he also pay maintenance. In determining what order
it is fit to make and what sums would be reasonable I had
to bear in mind the Petitioner's fortune, the ability of the
Respondent and the conduct of the parties. As Sir Boyd Merrman
pointed out in Chichester v. Chichester [1936] P. at
page 134, in construing identical provisions of Supreme Court
Judicature (Consolidated) Act, 1925 (U.K.) "One has got
to take all the circumstances of the case into account and
arrive at a proper solution having regard to the factors which
are mentioned in the statute." Firstly I kept in mind
the average income, which the evidence indicates that the
Respondent earns and that he hides the true amount of his
earnings. The Respondent has not been providing maintenance
for his wife for some years in whose favor there is a presumption
on the evidence that she is entirely blameless. He has been
going from woman to woman, and has one living in a house that
he owns. While he has a few properties most are mortgages
but according to the evidence one is encumbered. That property
at San Francisco Street, Orange Walk is worth $28,000.00.
I followed the dictum of Hill J. in Shearn v. Shearn
[1931] P. at page 5 "the interest of both wife and husband
have to be considered. Regard must be paid (inter alia) to
the ability of the husband. As regards the wife, the object
of the whole procedure is to provide maintenance from the
time she has divorced her husband. The court will naturally
desire to make the maintenance as secure as possible, and
in cases where it can properly be done the court will order
a husband who is possessed of ample free capital to appropriate
a sufficient part of it to secure the whole of the maintenance."
The circumstances of this case in my view demands that a gross
sum be secured to the Petitioner. I regard his San Francisco
Street property as providing sufficient free resources by
which the Respondent can secure a gross sum to his wife. The
sum decided upon will be taken into account in determining
any other sum for maintenance.
Secondly
on the issue of quantum, I kept in mind the words of Lord
Greene in Howard v Howard [1945] P. at page 4 "What
was to be looked at is the means of the husband and by 'means'
is meant what he is in fact getting or can be fairly assumed
to be likely to get." The Court must, therefore, ascertain
not only what money a husband has but what he can have if
he likes. I have already set out what I regard as his gross
average income and certain facilities at his disposal. The
Petitioner said that when they lived together the Respondent
contributed about $3,000 per month to the household and he
paid the rent. From the overall evidence this figure didn't
appear exaggerated. When she worked in his business she wasn't
paid, had use of car, bought luxury items, spent on entertainment.
She now earns from sewing about $200 per month and says that
it takes about $1,500 per month to keep her and her child
at the same level of living at which she lived with the Respondent
but it has been hard to meet expenses. But I think that no
reduction should be made on the amount to be awarded because
of the fact that the Petitioner has been presently maintaining
herself on less than she did when she lived with the Respondent.
See Sampson v Sampson [1966] P. at page 53. What the
court is really concerned with is the standard of living the
Petitioner would have enjoyed had she remained married to
the Respondent. See principle stated by Lord Merrivale in
N v. N [1928] 44 T.L.R. at page 328. There is also
no agreement or guarantee that the Respondent will continue
to pay the house rent and the child's extra expenses of about
$110.00 per month over and above normal maintenance. Payments
of these amounts are to be ensured.
Application
has been made by the Respondent for the condition of "dum
sola et castar vixerit" to be attached to any
order of maintenance made. I do not find any circumstances
emerging from this evidence which justifies attaching such
a condition to the award to be made. Taking everything in
account I think the order should be as follows: -
(a)
that the Respondent do secure to the Petitioner for her
life as from December, 1982, the gross sum of $18,000 -
manner of security to be settled before the Registrar. (This
can produce an income of $150.00 per month); and in addition
thereto,
(b)
that the Respondent do pay or cause to be paid to the Petitioner
(i) for the maintenance of herself the sum of $1,200 per
month during their joint lives until further order; and
(ii) for the maintenance and education of Maya Meera the
sum of $200 per month until further order- each of the said
sums to be paid on the 1st day of every calendar month,
the first thereof to be on December 1st, 1982.
(c)
that the Respondent pay the Petitioner her costs.
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