7 April 2026

Sham Trusts, Family Money and Divorce: When the Court Looks Behind the Paperwork

Financial remedy cases often involve more than just dividing assets between spouses. Increasingly, they draw in wider family members, informal arrangements, and documents that do not always say what they appear to say.

The decision in KI v SI (Sham trusts and intervenor proceedings in financial remedy claims) [2026] EWFC 73 is a striking example. It highlights how the court deals with alleged family “gifts”, competing trust documents, and claims that assets have been moved to defeat a spouse’s entitlement.

At its heart, the case is a reminder that the court will look beyond paperwork to the reality of what was intended.

The Background: Competing Claims to Family Land

The case concerned farmland purchased in the wife’s name, but funded in large part by her father. Over time, the land increased significantly in value due to development potential.

When the marriage broke down, three competing positions emerged:

  • The wife and her mother argued that the mother held the beneficial interest under a trust deed.
  • The father argued that he had funded the purchase and retained a substantial beneficial interest.
  • The husband challenged the mother’s claim and supported the father’s position.

This led to a classic (and increasingly common) scenario: third-party intervention in financial remedy proceedings, with family members asserting ownership of key assets.

The “Home-Made” Trust That Failed

A central feature of the case was a trust document in favour of the wife’s mother.

The court found that this trust was:

  • backdated,
  • lacking credible evidence of creation at the relevant time, and
  • inconsistent with how the parties actually behaved afterwards.

In blunt terms, the judge concluded that the document was a sham — not reflecting the true intentions of the parties.

This is significant. In family cases, parties sometimes seek to rely on documents created during or after relationship breakdown to “explain” ownership. This case shows that such documents will be closely scrutinised.

What Is a “Sham” — in Simple Terms?

The court applied the well-known principle that a document is a sham if:

  • it gives the appearance of creating legal rights,
  • but the parties never intended those rights to exist in reality.

Here, the judge found that:

  • the wife continued to behave as if she owned the property,
  • the mother never asserted genuine ownership at the time, and
  • the document appeared to have been created later, when the relationship broke down.

In other words, the paperwork did not match reality.

The Father’s Position: Not a Gift After All

A particularly interesting aspect of the case concerns the father’s contribution. The wife argued (in effect) that the money provided by her father was a gift. The court disagreed. Instead, it found that:

  • the father had provided the purchase money,
  • there was a clear understanding he would benefit, and
  • he therefore held a beneficial interest in the land.

Even if the formal trust had not been valid, the court would have found a constructive or resulting trust in his favour.

The Key Point: Family Money Is Not Automatically a Gift

This is one of the most important practical points for clients. Just because money comes from a parent does not mean it is legally a gift.

The court will ask:

  • What was intended at the time?
  • Was there an expectation of repayment or return?
  • Was there an agreement to share in the value?

If the evidence suggests the money was an investment or joint venture, the court may recognise a legal interest — even without formal documentation.

Attempts to Re-Write History Rarely Work

Another striking feature of the case was the court’s concern that the trust in favour of the mother had been created to defeat claims by the husband and the father. The judge rejected that attempt.

This reflects a broader principle seen across financial remedy cases: You cannot rewrite the financial history of a relationship once it has broken down.

The court will look at contemporaneous evidence — emails, solicitor notes, financial records — rather than documents created after the event.

Credibility Matters

The judgment also turned heavily on credibility. The court found:

  • inconsistencies in witness evidence,
  • lack of independent support for key assertions, and
  • a tendency to advance a narrative not supported by documents.

By contrast, the father’s evidence was preferred.

This is a common theme in financial remedy litigation: where the paperwork is unclear, the judge’s assessment of credibility can be decisive.

The Outcome

The court ultimately found that:

  • the trust in favour of the mother was invalid and a sham,
  • the father held a significant beneficial interest, and
  • the remaining interest was shared between the spouses.

Costs consequences were also likely to follow, reflecting the failed claims.

Practical Lessons for Clients

This case offers several clear lessons:

  1. Document family arrangements properly
    “Home-made” agreements are risky, particularly where significant assets are involved.
  2. Be clear whether money is a gift or an investment
    Ambiguity will almost always lead to dispute later.
  3. Do not assume documents will be taken at face value
    The court will look at what actually happened, not just what is written.
  4. Avoid trying to restructure ownership after separation
    Courts are highly alert to attempts to defeat claims.

Final Thought

Cases like KI v SI show how quickly financial remedy proceedings can become complex when family money and informal arrangements are involved.

What may have started as a straightforward divorce can evolve into a multi-party dispute involving trusts, property law and credibility findings.

The consistent message from the court is clear: Transparency, proper documentation and early legal advice are far more effective than trying to fix problems after the relationship has broken down.

9 February 2026

Farming, Partnerships and Divorce: When the Farm Isn’t a Matrimonial Asset – T v T [2025] EWFC 395

Farming cases occupy a distinctive corner of family law. Assets are often valuable, illiquid, generational, and emotionally charged. Add informal business structures, historic accounting practices and land held within families for decades, and it is easy to see why disputes arise. T v T [2025] EWFC 395 is a textbook illustration of these tensions — and a powerful reminder that use of land in a farming business is not the same thing as ownership.

The background

This was a long marriage, with a seamless relationship of some 25 years. The husband farmed in partnership with his father. There was no written partnership deed. The parties lived in the farmhouse for several years and had invested sale proceeds from a former jointly owned home into improvements.

The wife argued that the farmhouse, land and buildings — worth potentially £8–9 million — were partnership assets, giving the husband a substantial beneficial interest which should be brought into the financial remedy pot. If correct, the implications for the wife’s claim were enormous. If wrong, she faced the stark prospect of those assets being entirely out of reach.

The preliminary issue

The court was asked to determine a single but critical question: which assets used by the farming partnership were actually partnership property, giving the husband an interest for divorce purposes?

District Judge Humphreys answered that question decisively: the farmhouse, land and buildings were not partnership assets at all. They belonged solely to the husband’s father, notwithstanding their use by the partnership and their appearance in the accounts.

Accounts are evidence — not destiny

A central plank of the wife’s case was that the land and buildings appeared in the partnership accounts as tangible or fixed assets. But the judgment reinforces a vital principle, particularly relevant in agricultural cases: accounts are not conclusive.

Drawing on authorities such as Ham v Bell and Wild v Wild, the court stressed that accounting treatment may reflect historic practice or tax convenience rather than any legal intention to transfer ownership. Farmers, as the judge noted, “are not paper people — but they know who owns what.”

Here, the land and buildings were consistently shown in the father’s capital account, not shared between the partners. There was no revaluation, no capital gains tax event, and no evidence of any agreement — express or implied — to introduce the land into the partnership.

Intention is everything

The judgment repeatedly returns to one theme: the subjective intention of the partners. One partner cannot unilaterally convert personal property into partnership property. Nor does long use of land for farming purposes achieve that result by osmosis.

The evidence from the husband, his father, the sister/bookkeeper and the long-standing accountant was consistent and compelling. By contrast, the wife ultimately accepted she did not know how or when the assets could ever have been transferred. The burden of proof rested with her — and it was not discharged.

A cautionary tale on changing positions

An uncomfortable feature for the wife was that she had previously brought (and settled) a claim against the father on the basis that he owned the farmhouse outright, receiving £150,000 in compensation. The court did not need to determine issue estoppel, but the shift in position undermined her credibility and weakened her case.

Wider lessons for farming divorces

T v T underlines several recurring themes in farming cases:

  • Use does not equal ownership: land can be essential to the business without ever becoming a partnership asset.
  • Generational farms are treated with realism: courts recognise how families operate and how assets are deliberately kept out of reach of business risk.
  • Informality cuts both ways: the absence of written deeds does not mean courts will infer dramatic transfers of wealth.
  • Needs still matter: while ownership issues may limit the sharing exercise, housing and income needs remain central at the final hearing.

Final thought

For spouses of farmers, this case is a sobering reminder that living and working on a farm does not guarantee an interest in it. For farming families, it confirms that clear intention — even if unwritten — will be respected. And for advisers, it reinforces the importance of identifying and resolving ownership issues early, before expectations harden into litigation.

In farming divorces, the land may feel like the heart of the case — but as T v T shows, the law will always start by asking a simpler question: who actually owns it?

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