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In addition to the assets and liabilities of the relationship, financial and non-financial contributions, other considerations such as future needs, income earning capacity as well as maintenance concerns will be taken into account when determining a property settlement.
No, you do not have to wait to be divorced.
You can apply for Orders concerning your property or children as soon as you separate.
But, when your divorce is granted, you will then have only 12 months to seek property settlement Orders. After this time you need to apply to the Court for special permission to issue proceedings.
Your client who is going through a matrimonial/de facto property settlement may say to you that their particular contribution to the accumulation of the asset pool was ‘special’, by which they mean that:
In this article, we review the current law on ‘special contributions’ and how you might respond to your client’s claim.
The second step of the ‘4 Step Process’ for determining how the assets of the marriage ought to be divided between the parties includes consideration of the contributions of the parties.
Contributions may be:
A party may claim that they made a ‘special’ direct financial contribution which warrants them receiving a greater share of the asset pool.
Examples of ‘special contributions’ include contributions made by:
The existence of a ‘Doctrine of Special Contribution’ was recently reviewed, and rejected, in the decision in Kane v Kane by the Full Court of the Family Court [2013].
The parties had been married for 30 years. The issue in dispute was the weight to be given to their respective contributions to their self-managed superannuation fund. The husband sought a greater share of the fund based on his ‘special contributions’, being ‘the application of his acumen to investment decisions which caused the fund to prosper’ (from $540,000 in 2008 to $1,850,000 in 2012). The husband, with the wife’s consent, purchased shares using matrimonial savings. The shares were registered separately in the name of the husband or the wife, with different rates of growth in their respective portfolios. The husband asserted that this separation evidenced the parties’ shared intention to benefit individually and not collectively, from their respective portfolios only. The wife asserted that the husband had merely invested their savings and they should benefit equally in the overall growth. The husband took principal responsibility for the investments and the wife was content with this (not unusual) arrangement although in evidence she conceded that she was unenthusiastic about the husband’s wish to invest in a particular share purchase. The husband asserted that he carefully researched each investment before deciding to purchase and that the success of the investment was due to his judgment and not mere chance or a random lottery win.
The trial judge held that ‘the evidence in the present proceedings permits a rational conclusion that the acquisition of those shares was no fluke. The husband’s diligent research of that corporation and his decision to invest the parties’ funds in it was an inspired investment decision, manifesting considerable expertise. His decision is all the more remarkable given that he knew he was making that investment decision without the support of his wife. I am satisfied that, without the husband’s skill in selecting and pursuing the investment in Company 1 shares, the parties’ superannuation interests within R Investments would currently be worth substantially less. It follows that the husband’s contributions to those superannuation interests were substantially greater than those of the wife. I reject the wife’s submission that her contributions were equal to those of the husband. The real difficulty is evaluating the parties’ contributions in mathematical terms.
The trial judge split the funds’ two-thirds to the husband and one-third to the wife.
On appeal by the wife to the Full Court of the Family Court, it was held that the trial judges’ disproportionate division of the Fund could not be justified.
On the claim of ‘special contribution’ by the husband, His Honor Deputy Chief Justice Faulks stated:
Family lawyers now have the benefit of a very clear message from the Full Court of the Family Court:
The rejection of the existence of a ‘Doctrine of Special Contribution’ will be most keenly felt by parties with a high-value asset pool which they believe is the result of their ‘special contribution’ over and above the other parties’ contributions.
If your relationship led to you spending time out of the paid workforce and you were contributing to the relationship by caring for children or performing domestic tasks, then you have no need to feel disadvantaged. A property settlement takes into account both financial and non-financial contributions made by each party in the relationship.
The Family Law Act recognises that many relationships operate so that one party takes time out of the paid workforce in order to perform domestic tasks or care for children. These contributions are for the most part considered equal to the financial contributions.
Sometimes both parties continue in the paid workforce, but one party may perform the majority of the domestic tasks. This contribution will also be considered in property settlements.
The best way to divide property is by coming to an agreement on your own. Many couples are able to work out an agreement by themselves or with the help of an objective person, like a mediator. In this way, you control exactly who gets what – the house, cars, furniture, savings accounts, and debts – without a judge intervening.
If you sign an agreement, you can bring it to the court to receive consent orders. A standard “Application for Consent Orders” must be filled out and signed and then submitted to the court along with the agreement. Once the court grants the consent orders, the agreement is binding on you and your spouse and has the same legal status as any other order the court gives.