Prenuptial agreements ‘should be legally binding in divorce cases’
1.
Pre-nuptial contracts are private agreements entered into before
marriage by both parties who wish to provide for the division of their
assets and property in the case of a divorce / on the dissolution of
their union.
Since the landmark case Radmacher v.
Granatino (2010) UK courts have been empowered to give full effect to
such agreements, although they may decide not to do so and redistribute
some of the assets as they see fit.
The Law Commission
proposes that pre-nups should be legally binding on courts provided that
/ on condition that both parties had received legal advice and revealed
all their assets to the other party when signing the agreement, but
also that the terms of the contract do not jeopardise any party’s
material needs or those of the children after the divorce.
2.
Should they be followed, these recommendations would definitely affect
the competence of UK courts as the terms of the pre-nups would then
necessarily have to be enforced. The courts’ prerogatives would then be
limited to solving disputes / claims over whether the terms of the
pre-nups infringe the fairness of maintenance payments or the financial
needs of the parties.
What do you think of these recommendations: students’ own answers…
3.
Lady Hale’s dissenting opinion in Radmacher v Granatino stems from the
very nature of marriage which, she reminded, was not only a contract
binding the spouses but also a status. In her view, pre-nups should not
be given legal force as the very purpose of these contracts goes against
/ contravenes a cornerstone of the marriage institution according to
which spouses pledge to provide for each other.
The
recommendations of the Law Commission may then be seen as a compromise
since they would allow each party to keep their own assets without
leaving the other spouse and the children destitute / penniless.
Pre-nups could then be enforced without hampering / encroaching on the
core value of marriage that requires spouses to provide mutual
assistance. Lady Hale’s argument might then be qualified.
Indian couple who lost their law firm jobs due to ‘forbidden love’ at centre of first caste discrimination tribunal
1.
The case at hand revolves around / raises the issue of caste
discrimination. An Indian couple who met at a legal firm were the
victims of wrongful dismissal and unfair constructive dismissal as
senior colleagues strongly disapproved of their union on account of the
fact that / on the ground that Vijay Begraj was from a lower caste than
his wife Amardeep.
The couple took a claim against the firm and
also convinced the Lords to insert a new provision in the law that would
recognise caste as a protected characteristic.
Since the case
took place at work / in a work context / in a work-related environment,
the Employment Tribunal is competent to hear this case.
2.
Anti-discrimination laws have protected UK residents
against discrimination since the 1960s. Today, the Equality Act 2010
consolidates previous anti-discrimination legislation that applied to
specific fields.
This act protects people against nine strands
of discrimination, namely: age, disability, faith and belief, race and
ethnicity, sex and sexual orientation, but also gender reassignment,
marriage and matrimony, pregnancy and breastfeeding. People with a
protected characteristic (but also carers of people with such
characteristics) may have a claim if they have been the victim of a form
of discrimination during the provision of public or private services,
because they belonged to a protected category or because people believed
so.
Also note that / One should also bear in mind that the UK
is also bound by Article 19 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the EU
as well as by Article 14 of the ECHR incorporated through the HRA 1998.
Lastly,
the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) supervises
the application of the Equality Act and assists complainants in legal
proceedings.
3. Students’ own answers. (The text p. 79-80 of the
booklet also sets out a list of points that students could
either corroborate and illustrate, or challenge.)
Judges warnsof pitfalls of surrogacy after mother disappears before giving consent
1. This case involves a British couple in a civil partnership who had
entered a surrogacy arrangement with a clinic in Hyderabad. After having
given birth to twin babies, the Indian surrogate mother mysteriously
failed to formally consent to the children being brought back to the UK.
The couple took legal advice and their solicitor arranged for a consent
form to be sent out to the clinic so that the gestational mother could
confirm she agreed to give up the children for adoption.
After
numerous failed attempts to obtain this document, the couple had no
other option but to bring an action before Portsmouth County Court
to be granted a parental order, i.e. a court order giving the intended
parents the custody of a child born through surrogacy.
UK law
requires that the commissioning couple should be able to establish that
the surrogate mother gives consent within six weeks after the babies’
birth. The High Court Judge (to which the case had been transferred),
however, deemed that in this particular case, the couple had acted in
good faith by trying to contact the surrogate mother by every possible
means. Mr Justice Baker thus decided to grant a parental order without
having received the gestational mother’s formal consent.
2. See booklet
3.
Students’ own answers. This case, however, invites students to reflect
upon the predicament of “stateless children”, that is children born from
a surrogate mother living in a country where surrogacy law differs from
UK law that may be left in problematic situations. Indeed, whereas in
England the legal mother is the birth mother / the woman that gives
birth to the child, the legal mother in the Ukraine, for
instance, is the commissioning mother. In such cases, British
commissioning parents may have to get involved in a legal battle to have
the child brought back to the UK and be granted custody / be granted
the custody of their child.
See the following article taken from The Daily Mail:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1093922/Couple-win-fight-custody-stateless-surrogate-twins.html
See also this second article from The Guardian:
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2011/feb/09/surrogacy-laws-children-at-risk
Gay couple threaten to sue UK government over same-sex marriage
1.
Due to delays / On account of delays in implementing parts of the
Marriage (Same-sex couples) Act 2013, a civil union may currently not be
converted into a marriage. Therefore, Michael and Paul Atwal-Brice
cannot get married unless they dissolve their civil partnership first.
They would then be compelled to argue in court that they wish to
dissolve their union in order to get married, which seems highly
paradoxical.
2. Paul is referring to the Civil Partnership
Act 2004, which provides that / according to which couples who wish to
separate must prove that their union has irretrievably broken down by
resorting to one of the following set grounds: desertion, unreasonable
behaviour, two years’ or five years’ separation. Note that the ground of
adultery does not apply to same-sex couples intending to separate.
3.
The couple claim that by failing to enable same-sex partners to get
married, the Marriage Act (2013) establishes a form of discrimination
against gay couples that contravenes / goes against / infringes the
Equality Act 2010 as well as Article 14 of the Human Rights Act (1998).
The UK Supreme Court has the power to / is competent to determine
whether the Marriage act should be reviewed to be made compatible with
British Equality and Human Rights Law. Should Parliament fail to review
its statute, Michael and Paul Atwal-Brice might decide to bring the case
before the European Court of Human Rights.
UK Judges have ability to set ‘whole-life’ sentences, appeal court rules
1.
The legal issue discussed in the article is whether UK law on ‘whole
life’ prison sentences should be reviewed to be made compatible with /
to conform to the European Convention on Human Rights. The question
arose from the Strasbourg Court’s recent ruling that UK law lacked
proper a review mechanism so that such sentences amounted to inhumane
and degrading treatment forbidden by Article 3 of the ECHR.
2.
A. Following the European Court on Human Rights’ decision, Mr Justice
Sweeney passed a minimum sentence of 40 years’ imprisonment on
McLoughlin but ruled out the possibility of handing down a whole life
sentence.
B. Do you agree with Dominic Grieve that McLoughlin’s sentence was ‘unduly lenient’? Students’ own answers.
3.
In what can be seen as a challenge to the European Court of Human
Rights’ interpretation of UK legislation, the Court of Appeal argued
that the Crime (Sentences) Act actually does provide for review
mechanisms permitting the early release of prisoners in exceptional
circumstances, so that this act actually respects Art 3 of the ECHR.
This
Court of Appeal’s decision to reassert the validity of UK statutory law
reflects the UK’s reluctance to give force to the ECHR’s
decisions which are often perceived as encroaching on Parliament’s
sovereignty.
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