Hamish Dunlop 3PB Barristers
Part III of the Matrimonial and Family Proceedings Act 1984 (MFPA) was enacted just over 40 years ago. The legislation empowered English Courts to provide financial relief to parties who had a substantial connection with England & Wales but had divorced abroad.
Its clear and admirable intention was to alleviate financial hardship in appropriate cases; that limited purpose being clear from the early authorities.
Since then the Courts have faced repeated attempts to extend that purpose. Applicants have instead applied under Part III in a thinly veiled attempt to obtain a more generous financial outcome than that offered by their foreign divorce court. Often their links with England are limited and recent. The milestone authorities have tended to concern the international super-rich; lending support to the criticism that Part III of the MFPA has abandoned its admirable intention.
This article looks at the developing case law and asks whether that criticism is justified.
Read the full article here.