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Some divorcees drag their feet in a misguided attempt to put off the hour when they must divide their assets with their ex-partners. However, a case involving a husband who caused costly delay when he asserted that he had COVID-19 showed that family judges are well able to detect and deal with such behaviour.

Ruling on the financial aspects of the man’s divorce, a judge found it highly likely that he had engaged in various delaying tactics with the aim of doing all he could to prolong the litigation and make it as difficult as possible for his ex-wife to bring the matter to a final conclusion.

The most egregious example occurred when he stated on the eve of a vital hearing that he had taken a positive lateral flow test for COVID-19 and that he was not well enough to attend remotely. The judge had no option but to adjourn the hearing, at substantial cost to the wife.

After she raised suspicions, the husband was ordered to undergo a PCR test, which came back negative. He continued to insist that he was very poorly at the time, but the judge was satisfied on the evidence that he did not have COVID-19 and that he could have attended the hearing.

The judge commented that his actions in failing to attend the hearing fitted with his modus operandi throughout the proceedings. He was not satisfied that the man’s stated health position was correct. The information that had been provided to the court was fully self-serving and had been contradicted by the PCR test.

The husband, the judge found, had failed to comply with court orders, deliberately protracted the proceedings and effectively cocked a snook at the court and the proceedings as a whole by orchestrating the adjourned hearing. To mark his litigation conduct, the judge took the rare step of ordering him to contribute £4,000 to the legal costs incurred by the wife in preparing for the adjourned hearing.

The marital assets had been eroded by the legal costs of the proceedings and were, at most, only just sufficient to meet the former couple’s needs. The judge directed a division of those assets with a view to achieving a clean break between them.

The contents of this article are intended for general information purposes only and shall not be deemed to be, or constitute legal advice. We cannot accept responsibility for any loss as a result of acts or omissions taken in respect of this article.