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Case Number | : | |
Decision Date | : | 02 May 2002 |
Tribunal/Court | : | |
Coram | : | Woo Bih Li JC |
Counsel Name(s) | : | Imran Khwaja and Michelle Jeganathan (Tan Rajah & Cheah) for the petitioner; John Thomas and Anita Thomas (Col in Ng & Partners) for the respondent |
Parties | : | Mala Shukla — Jayant Amritanand Shukla (Danialle An, co-respondent) |
Cur Adv Vult
:
Introduction
The petitioner Mala Shukla (`Mala`) and the respondent Jayant Amritanand Shukla (`Jayant`) are Indian citizens. They were married in India on 27 August 1976 under the Hindu Marriage Act. After the marriage, Mala and Jayant (`the parties`) resided in London where Mala qualified as a chartered secretary and Jayant qualified as a chartered accountant.
They resided in India from 1984 to 1989 or 1991. In the meantime, two sons of the marriage were born: (1) Zorawar on 8 April 1985; and (2) Sikandar on 9 February 1990.
Between 1989 or 1991 to 1995, the couple and the children moved to Hong Kong as Jayant was working there as an employee of Standard Chartered Bank.
At the end of 1995 or early 1996, they moved from Hong Kong to Singapore where Jayant was still working as an employee of Standard Chartered Bank.
In June 1999, Mala`s mother passed away in India and she went to India with the two children for the funeral.
According to Mala:
Section 93(1) and (2) of our Women`s Charter (Cap 353, 1997 Ed) states:
Jurisdiction of court in matrimonial proceedings
(1) Subject to subsection (2), the court shall have jurisdiction to entertain proceedings for divorce, presumption of death and divorce, judicial separation or nullity of marriage only if either of the parties to the marriage is -
(a) domiciled in Singapore at the commencement of the proceedings; or
(b) habitually resident in Singapore for a period of 3 years immediately preceding the commencement of the proceedings.
(2) In proceedings for nullity of marriage on the ground that the marriage is void or voidable, the court may, notwithstanding the requirements in subsection (1) are not fulfilled, grant the relief sought where both parties to the marriage reside in Singapore at the time of the commencement of the proceedings.
Mala`s divorce petition in Singapore is based on the ground that both Jayant and her have been habitually resident in Singapore for a period of three years immediately preceding the filing of her divorce petition here. It seems to me that she was not habitually resident in Singapore from July 1999. After she went to India for her mother`s funeral, she continued to reside there because of her marital woes. Be that as it may, it is not disputed that Jayant was habitually resident in Singapore for a period of three years immediately preceding the filing of Mala`s divorce petition.
Although Jayant`s first prayer in his application had sought a declaration, his application was really for a dismissal or a stay of Mala`s divorce petition on the ground of forum non conveniens.
The principles of an application for a stay on the ground of forum non conveniens are not in dispute. I quote from the judgment of Chao Hick Tin JA in PT Hutan Domas Raya v Yue Xiu Enterprises (Holdings) [2001] 2 SLR 49 at [para ]16:
Unless there is clearly another more appropriate available forum, a stay will ordinarily be refused. If the court concludes that there is such a more appropriate forum, it will ordinarily grant a stay unless, in the words of Lord Goff [in The Spiliada [1987] AC 460], `there are circumstances by reason of which justice requires that a stay should nevertheless not be granted. In this inquiry the court will consider all the circumstances of the case, including circumstances which go beyond those taken into account when considering connecting factors with other jurisdictions` (hereinafter referred to as `the unless question` or `unless proviso` as may be appropriate in context). One such factor which would warrant a refusal of stay would be if it can be established by objective cogent evidence that the plaintiff will not obtain justice in the foreign jurisdiction. But the mere fact that the plaintiff has a legitimate personal or juridical advantage in proceedings in Singapore is not decisive; regard must be had to the interests of all the parties and the ends of justice. We would emphasise that in determining the `unless question` all circumstances must be taken into account, including those taken into account in determining the question of the more appropriate forum. However, in this stage of the inquiry the burden shifts to the plaintiff.
I have set out some of the undisputed facts regarding the parties. As for domicile, nothing is said in Mala`s divorce petition about the domicile of Jayant and herself. It seems to me that her domicile is India. As for Jayant, Mr Thomas said that his domicile was Singapore although this is not asserted in any of Jayant`s affidavits and it appeared to me during arguments that Mr Thomas was equating residence with domicile.
Although Singapore was the last place where the parties last lived as husband and wife, I am of the view that they were residing in various jurisdictions depending on where Jayant was working. Having said that, I was informed by Mr Thomas that Jayant has permanent resident status in Singapore.
As for Mala, she claims to be a non-resident Indian (para 41 of her affidavit filed on 13 January 2001) but she did not elaborate as to what that means given that she has been habitually residing in India since July 1999.
The assets of the parties are `internationally placed`, to use a term from the submissions of Mala`s counsel, Mr Imran H Khwaja. As derived from Jayant`s affidavit filed on 31 October 2000, and based on estimates of exchange rates, they are:
Moneys
(iii) Multiplicity of proceedings
If litigation involving the same parties and the same issues is continuing simultaneously in two different countries, this is referred to as a case of lis alibi pendens. In such cases the issue facing the English courts is not simply that of deciding to which of the alternative fora the claimant should have to go to bring his action. Instead, the choice is between, on the one hand, trial in England plus trial abroad (if a stay is refused) and, on the other hand, trial abroad (if a stay is granted). It is very undesirable to have concurrent actions in England and abroad: this involves more expense and inconvenience to the parties than if trial were held in merely one country; it can also lead to two conflicting judgments, with an unseemly race by the parties to be the first to obtain a judgment and to subsequent problems of estoppel.
At p 349:
A stay will also be refused if there is no country which is a natural forum for trial, even if this will mean a multiplicity of proceedings ... The weight to be attached to the factor of multiplicity of proceedings will depend on the circumstances of the case. It is not a decisive factor in the sense of automatically making a foreign forum clearly more appropriate and shifting the burden of proof to the claimant to justify trial in England.
In my view, existing proceedings in another jurisdiction can be a decisive, although not an automatic, factor depending on the circumstances of the case.
The proceedings in India are based on Mala`s consent, whether given voluntarily or not. Jayant is exercising his right of appeal and, indeed, he has been granted special leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of India. I accept Mr Thomas`s argument that Jayant`s proceedings are not in the initial stages even though he has not been able to proceed beyond the filing or the attempt to file the second petition. I also agree that the second petition was not filed just to show the availability of a forum other than Singapore. It seems to me that the appropriate approach is to await the outcome of the appeal to the Supreme Court of India rather than to allow Mala to race towards getting a decision from a Singapore court that might thwart the outcome of that appeal. Even though the success of the appeal will not in itself necessarily mean that a divorce will be granted by the Supreme Court of India, I do not think that the doctrine of lis alibi pendens should be construed as narrowly as Mr Imran had advocated. It is sufficient if the decision is likely to have an effect on a divorce petition filed in India in respect of the marriage of the parties and issues arising therefrom.
However, I do not rest my decision on this ground alone. Even if Jayant`s appeal is not successful, it is open to him to file a fresh petition for divorce based not on consent but on other grounds. His lawyer has suggested that he may avail himself of the ground of cruelty and/or desertion. Whether he will succeed is another matter.
In any event, the question before me is whether there is a more appropriate forum for Mala to proceed in.
Mr Imran submitted that there was no evidence before me that the courts in India would have jurisdiction to entertain a divorce petition by either of the parties although he accepted that there was no evidence denying such jurisdiction. I note that the Indian lawyers for each of the parties have given advice as to the available grounds of divorce in India. This must pre-suppose that India has jurisdiction in the first place. Moreover, Mala`s complaint is not that India has no jurisdiction but that proceedings in India take `quite long and are often delayed` and she would have difficulty in establishing in India the adultery of Jayant (paras 45 and 42 of her affidavit filed on 13 January 2001). In the circumstances, India`s jurisdiction was never in issue and it was not open to Mr Imran to suggest otherwise.
As for proving Jayant`s adultery, Mr Imran argued that the witnesses relating to Jayant`s adultery will be in Singapore as the adultery took place in Singapore and Jayant and Danialle are, or at least, were, resident in Singapore at the material time. I am not much swayed by this argument.
First, it is possible for Mala to commence proceedings in India for a divorce by consent under s 13-B of the Hindu Marriage Act since the parties have since August 2000 been living separately for more than a year. This is alluded to in an opinion from Jayant`s lawyer in India, Mr Rajesh Yadav, in his opinion dated 30 April 2001. Indeed Mr Yadav goes on to say that if Mala is unhappy with the settlement then she can revive her claim even in the Indian courts. This opinion is not disputed by Mala`s lawyers in India.
Second, Mala herself has stressed that Jayant has admitted adultery with Danialle in various e-mail from him. Indeed Mr Imran said that this is pervasive in the e-mail. The allegation of adultery has also been stated in her affidavits before the Singapore court and the adultery has not been denied by Jayant in the body of his affidavits filed in Singapore, although he has denied the adultery in his rejoinder affidavit for his appeal to the Delhi High Court. However, in an opinion dated 9 August 2001 from Mala`s lawyer in India, Sanjoy Ghose, he said that Jayant has in his own appeal to the Delhi High Court admitted to having committed adultery.
Mr Imran also submitted that a private investigator`s report about the adultery will have to be obtained by Mala, as is usually the case in Singapore, and such a report will have to be obtained by a private investigator in Singapore. However, Mala`s divorce petition in Singapore was filed without the benefit of such a report. I infer that she was confident that Jayant`s e-mail to her, in addition to her allegations of what she herself had discovered and Jayant`s alleged confession to her, were sufficient evidence and I do not see why her confidence should change if she was proceeding in India instead.
Third, there are the other issues such as division of property, custody and maintenance to be dealt with.
These issues were supposed to have been settled. To me, India is the most appropriate forum to determine whether Mala entered into the settlement voluntarily and whether the parties have acted upon the settlement, given that the settlement was with a view towards the filing of a divorce petition in India and Pranab and Mala are resident in India. Whether the settlement is unfair to Mala and, if unfair, whether it should still be taken into account, should also be determined by Indian courts.
Even if there was no settlement, these other issues should still be resolved by Indian courts.
For example, as regards division of property, Mr Imran submitted that the moneys of the parties are controlled from Singapore at the time Mala`s petition was filed here. In my view, even if the moneys are controlled from Singapore, this is because the parties were both residing in Singapore last before the events from July 1999. In any event, I find this connection with Singapore tenuous. Indeed, Mr Thomas has signed an affidavit to say that he has been informed by Jayant that Jayant has withdrawn all moneys from his bank accounts with Standard Chartered Bank in Singapore for living expenses in India. This is allegedly because Jayant has left his job with the bank since 1 July 2000 and was allegedly unable to secure alternative employment in Singapore, USA or elsewhere. I digress to say that there is no evidence as to how Jayant came to lose his job with the bank and it was not made clear to me whether he was asked to leave or whether he initiated his own departure. If the latter, it is arguable that it was done in order to frustrate Mala`s claim for maintenance. It is also arguable that if indeed he has withdrawn all moneys from Standard Chartered Bank in Singapore, and he has gone to India, this was with a view towards severing his connections with Singapore for the purpose of the present appeal. Be that as it may, even as at the date of Mala`s petition, the moneys were not located solely in Singapore.
As for Mr Imran`s argument that Jayant was working in Singapore at the time Mala`s petition was filed, Jayant was not working only in Singapore during the marriage. Also, this connection can be severed without too much difficulty and indeed it has been severed.
As for the parties` immovable property, it is evident that the one in London has been sold, there are still two pieces of immovable property in India and none in Singapore.
As regards custody of and access to the children, they are children of Indian citizens and are residing in India. India is the most appropriate forum to make orders in respect of them.
Even for maintenance, while a court may wish to consider the previous standard of living of the family in Singapore, it may also want to consider the cost of living at the place where the mother and the children are at present residing.
As Lee Seiu Kin JC said in Low Wing Hong Alvin v Kelso Sharon Leigh [2001] 1 SLR 173 at [para ]21, `it is more important that the same court consider and decide these matters [meaning the divorce and ancillary matters such as custody and access] than to divide the issues to be decided in separate courts simply because the assets are in another jurisdiction`. It also seems to me that the real reason why Mala has commenced divorce proceedings in Singapore is not so much to obtain a divorce. As she herself has indicated, it is Jayant, not her, who wanted the divorce. There is also an e-mail from Jayant stating his intention to be engaged to Danialle. In my view, Mala has proceeded in Singapore because she thinks she will get a better deal here for the division of property and maintenance.
In all the circumstances, I find that India is clearly the most appropriate forum to decide on any divorce petition, whether filed by Mala or Jayant, and questions arising from or in relation to the divorce or the failed marriage such as division of property, custody and maintenance.
However, Mr Imran sought to persuade me that even if I should make this finding, I should not order a stay otherwise Mala would lose legitimate personal or juridical advantages. Based on the opinion from Mala`s lawyer, Indira Jaising, dated 7 April 2001, these are:
Appeal allowed.
Copyright © Government of Singapore.
This judgment text has undergone conversion so that it is mobile and web-friendly. This may have created formatting or alignment issues. Please refer to the PDF copy for a print-friendly version.
Version No 0: 02 May 2002 (00:00 hrs)