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Court of Appeal explains law on notional add-back in ancillary relief proceedings In LCC v LTLA [2024] HKCA 406, the Court of Appeal clarified the law on the court’s jurisdiction to notionally add back wantonly and recklessly dissipated sums into a matrimonial pot. The judgment concerns an appeal from an ancillary relief judgment handed down on 24 June 2022 by Au-Yeung J (“Judge”), where the Husband (“H”) was ordered to pay the Wife (“W”) a lump sum of HK$292m. At trial, W said H incurred around HK$96.59m in gambling losses (“Gambling Losses”) after parties separated. W sought to have those Gambling Losses notionally added back into the matrimonial pot on grounds that H had wantonly and recklessly dissipated them. H said the Gambling Losses should not be added back because (i) W condoned his gambling; (ii) he only suffered HK$29.687m in gambling losses, not HK$96.59m; and (iii) in any event, HK$24,039,689 should be deducted from the Gambling Losses, because that amount was spent on various items, not lost to gambling. The Judge found that H’s evidence on the Gambling Losses was particularly unreliable, and rejected it. Her Ladyship went on to add back the Gambling Losses to the pot. H appealed. His appeal was primarily against the Judge’s decision to add back the Gambling Losses. Allowing the appeal, the Court of Appeal held that notional add-backs must be cautiously made, and an amount can only be notionally added back if there is clear evidence that it has been dissipated. There was no clear evidence that there had been wanton and reckless dissipation of the Gambling Losses by H. The full judgment can be viewed here: https://lnkd.in/d-iJcr9F Bernard Man SC and Cristian Tsang, instructed by Chaine Chow & Barbara Hung, acted for the Petitioner. Theresa Chow also acted for the Respondent Husband in the proceedings below.

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