18 February 2026

When “50/50” Isn’t Equal: Pensions, Needs and the Myth of Forensic Accounting

The decision in JK v LM [2026] EWFC 32 is a quietly instructive reminder of how the Family Court actually approaches fairness in a mid-range “needs” case — and why arguments about micro-accounting, add-backs and pre-marital assets so often miss the point.

On paper, this was not a complex case. The parties were both 50. Two children aged 11 and 9. Total assets of around £2.3 million. No business structures. No trusts. No inherited estates.

Yet over £200,000 was spent on legal costs.

And in the end? The non-pension assets were divided 50.8% / 49.2%.

But the pensions were divided 65% / 35% in the wife’s favour.

Why?

  1. A “Needs” Case With Enough — But Not Surplus

The court was clear: this was a needs case, not a sharing case driven by surplus wealth.

Both parties needed:

  • Housing near the children
  • Stability for school and commuting
  • A workable clean break

The wife was the primary carer. She needed a three-bedroom property in the local area. The husband needed a suitable two-to-three bedroom home nearby for contact.

The judge’s approach was orthodox — following the principles summarised by Peel J in WC v HC — computation first, then distribution, with needs dominating.

Even pre-marital rental properties were included in the pot because, realistically, both parties would have to rely on them to meet housing needs.

This is an important practical lesson: Non-matrimonial arguments often collapse in medium-asset needs cases.

  1. The Add-Back That Went Nowhere

The wife advanced an “add-back” claim of almost £200,000, alleging dissipation and post-separation imbalance.

The court rejected it entirely.

The judge reiterated the high threshold for add-back: it must involve clear, wanton or reckless dissipation. Poor financial decisions or uneven interim contributions do not suffice.

Crucially, the court declined to conduct a forensic accounting exercise covering the separation period. That exercise was described as artificial and futile.

This is a message many litigants need to hear. The court will almost always take the asset position as it stands at final hearing, unless there is truly egregious conduct.

Trying to “rebalance” every mortgage payment and bill rarely succeeds — and frequently inflates costs.

  1. Soft or Hard? Family Loans Matter

The wife owed money to her mother under written agreements, with interest, and had been making repayments.

Applying the guidance in P v Q [2022] EWFC 9, the court treated this as a hard obligation.

That reduced the wife’s available capital.

Family loans are often dismissed as “soft”. This case shows that properly structured, documented and enforced loans — even from elderly parents — will be recognised.

  1. The Real Interest: Pension Apportionment

The most interesting feature of the case lies in the pensions.

The wife had:

  • Two entirely pre-marital pensions
  • A current employment pension built partly during the marriage

The husband argued for full equalisation of pension income.

The wife sought to ring-fence her pre-marital pensions.

The court’s solution was nuanced:

  • The two wholly pre-marital pensions were excluded entirely.
  • The current employment pension was shared in full (without complex marital apportionment).
  • The result: roughly 65% of overall pension capital remained with the wife, 35% with the husband.

This reflects two key themes:

(a) Pensions are treated differently from housing capital

Housing needs are immediate. Retirement needs are decades away.

The court was unwilling to invade clearly pre-marital pensions to meet a future, non-pressing need.

(b) Fairness does not mean identical retirement outcomes

The husband argued that he had invested less into pensions during the marriage because he expected rental properties to fund retirement.

The court gave that argument some weight — but not enough to justify equality.

Instead, it struck a balance between:

  • The non-matrimonial origin of part of the wife’s pension wealth
  • The husband’s future earning capacity
  • The clean break
  1. The Outcome: Almost Equal Capital, Unequal Pensions

Non-pension assets:
50.8% / 49.2%

Pensions (CETV basis):
65% / 35% in wife’s favour

This was not a departure from fairness. It was fairness applied differently to different asset classes.

That distinction is often misunderstood.

  1. The Human Reality

One of the most telling passages in the judgment notes that both parties were fundamentally honest, decent, likeable people.

Yet they pursued tiny historic expenditure claims dating back to 2012. Filed four conduct statements. Made allegations about jewellery. Had disputes about children’s accounts. Spent over £200,000 in costs.

The court’s final division was almost equal.

The judge observed that this case “should not have been difficult to resolve.”

Key Takeaways for Clients and Practitioners

  1. In needs cases, pre-marital property is vulnerable — especially housing assets.
  2. Add-back claims rarely succeed.
  3. Family loans must be properly documented to be treated as hard debts.
  4. Pensions are not automatically equalised.
  5. Retirement fairness is contextual — not mathematical.
  6. Litigating micro-contributions almost never changes the outcome.

Final Reflection

This case is a textbook example of how English family law actually works:

Not punitive.
Not forensic.
Not obsessed with exact equality.

But pragmatic.

Fairness is not about who paid which bill in 2016. It is about ensuring both parties — and especially the children — emerge from the litigation housed, secure and able to move forward.

And sometimes, after two years of hard litigation, fairness looks remarkably close to 50/50.

23 June 2025

Dissipation in a Modest Pot: Add-Back in MNV v CNV [2025] EWFC 176 (B)

When we think of asset dissipation and the “add-back” principle, we often picture yachts, casinos, or private jets. But in MNV v CNV [2025] EWFC 176 (B), Deputy District Judge Bradshaw dealt with these concepts in a far more relatable setting: a modest Midlands home, a VW van, and a husband who moved abroad to care for his elderly mother—taking a substantial slice of the matrimonial assets with him.

This case is a masterclass in how serious the consequences of financial decisions can be, even in low-asset cases. And it clarifies how the courts handle claims of dissipation and the potential for add-back when the matrimonial pot is small.

The Setup

The parties were long-term LGV drivers with a 14-year relationship and a teenage son. Their principal asset was the former matrimonial home, valued at around £181,000, with equity of £138,814. At separation, the husband held various assets—savings, a van, and a motorbike—amounting to approximately £50,000.

Post-separation, he transferred £17,000 to his brother abroad, later recovered it, sold the van for £27,000, and moved permanently to Country X to care for his mother, bringing the money (and some chattels) with him. The wife argued he had dissipated those funds and should not receive a further share of the remaining matrimonial assets.

The Add-Back Argument

The judge applied the established authorities on add-back, including Martin v Martin [1976], Norris v Norris [2003], Vaughan v Vaughan [2008], and MAP v MFP [2016]. From these, the following modern test was distilled:

  1. Was the expenditure reckless or wanton?
  2. Did it disadvantage the other spouse?
  3. Can the add-back be applied without frustrating the court’s ability to meet needs?

The judge found that the husband’s removal of £47,000 was:

  • Reckless: He took the only liquid assets while knowing there were none left for his wife or child.
  • Wanton: He prioritised his mother’s needs (post-separation) over those of his spouse and child.
  • Disadvantageous: His actions left the wife with no accessible funds.

Yet, the court did not add the £47,000 back into the schedule for distribution. Why? Because this was a “needs” case, and doing so would have left the husband with no ability to meet his own housing need. Still, the judge notionally treated the £47,000 as received for purposes of fairness—not to be repaid, but to calibrate how much more (if any) the husband should receive.

The Result

The husband received a modest lump sum of £6,500 to help rehouse himself in Country X—where property prices were far lower—and the wife retained the FMH. She was not ordered to pay ongoing maintenance, and a clean break was achieved.

Had the wife not raised dissipation and add-back arguments effectively, the result may have looked quite different.

Key Lessons for Practitioners

  • Dissipation can be found even in modest cases—it’s not just for HNW disputes.
  • “Add-back” is a powerful tool, but not always one that leads to pound-for-pound redistribution.
  • Judges may recognise dissipation but still decline a strict add-back if doing so would frustrate fairness or needs.
  • Evidence of reckless or wanton conduct must be clear—but moral culpability is not always enough (see MAP v MFP).
  • Consider proportionality of legal costs: here, the judge adjusted the husband's debt to reflect overspending on legal fees, citing YC v ZC [2022].

Final Thought

MNV v CNV demonstrates that even modest financial decisions can carry disproportionate consequences—and that the family court will examine behaviour with just as much scrutiny in a £150,000 case as in a £15 million one. For litigants and advisors alike, the message is this: the smaller the pot, the bigger the impact of each mistake.

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