An analysis of Silberschmidt v Richards [2025] EWHC 2841 (Fam)
High Court (Poole J) — Appeal on set aside for fraudulent non-disclosure and delay

This is an important appellate authority on delay in set-aside applications, especially where fraudulent non-disclosure is established.
Core Issue on Appeal
The appeal concerned a narrow but significant question:
Can delay alone defeat an otherwise valid application to set aside a financial remedy order obtained by fraud?
The husband accepted (or did not seriously challenge on appeal):
- Findings of fraudulent non-disclosure
- That the original consent order was fundamentally flawed
Instead, he argued:
- The wife had waited too long
- The application should have been dismissed for lack of promptness
Factual Timeline (Critical to the Decision)
- Nov 2020 – Final consent order
- July 2021 – Wife receives suspicious documents
- Nov 2021 – Further legal advice but no action
- April 2023 – Key conversation triggers realisation of fraud
- June 2023 – Letter before action (treated as application date)
The husband’s argument:
Delay from 2021 → 2023 should be fatal.
First Instance Decision (Recorder Chandler KC)
The judge found:
- Deliberate concealment and misrepresentation by the husband
- Fraud aimed at preventing the wife from discovering the truth (
On delay:
- The wife did not fully understand the fraud until April 2023
- Once she did, she acted promptly
Therefore:
✔ Consent order set aside
✔ Delay not fatal
Grounds of Appeal
The husband argued:
- The judge misidentified the “date of knowledge”
- The judge misapplied principles of:
- finality
- promptness
The appeal focused entirely on timing, not fraud.
High Court Analysis (Poole J)
A. Starting Principle: Fraud “Unravels” Finality
The court reaffirmed a key doctrine:
- Finality is important
- But fraud strikes at the integrity of the order
A party cannot rely on finality to protect a judgment obtained dishonestly.
B. Delay: Relevant but Not Determinative
The High Court clarified:
- Delay can defeat a claim
- But only in limited circumstances
Key test:
Does the delay make a fair determination impossible?
This reframes the issue from time elapsed → practical prejudice
C. Focus on “Date of Knowledge”
A central issue was:
When should delay start running?
The court upheld the trial judge’s approach:
- Suspicion ≠ knowledge
- Documents alone did not give full understanding
- True knowledge arose only when:
- the husband’s statements confirmed deception
Therefore:
✔ Delay measured from April 2023, not 2021
D. Causation of Delay
Crucially:
- The husband’s concealment contributed to the delay
- He could not rely on delay he helped create
This is a strong equitable principle.
E. Prejudice Analysis
The husband failed to show:
- Loss of evidence
- Inability to test the case
- Any real forensic disadvantage
Therefore:
✔ No unfairness in reopening the case
Outcome
The High Court:
❌
Dismissed the appeal
✔ Upheld the set-aside order
Key holding:
Delay did not bar the claim because a fair trial remained possible and the fraud was serious.
Key Legal Principles Clarified
1. Delay is not automatically fatal
Even substantial delay will not defeat a claim unless it causes real prejudice.
2. Fraud outweighs finality (in most cases)
Final orders are important, but:
They will not be preserved if obtained dishonestly.
3. “Date of knowledge” is crucial
Delay runs from when the applicant:
- actually understands the fraud
not when they merely suspect it.
4. Prejudice is the decisive factor
The court asks:
- Can the case still be fairly tried?
- Is evidence still available?
If yes → claim proceeds.
5. A fraudster cannot rely on delay they caused
A party who conceals information:
- cannot later argue the other party was too slow.
Doctrinal Significance
This case sits within the line of authorities on:
- Setting aside for fraud
- Finality vs justice
- Promptness requirements
It clarifies that:
Promptness is
contextual, not rigid
The court’s focus is
fairness, not chronology
Practical Implications
For applicants (wives/husbands)
- Delay is not fatal if fraud is serious
- But:
- act quickly once you understand the issue
- document when knowledge arises
For respondents (alleged non-disclosers)
- Delay arguments are weak unless you show prejudice
- Especially weak where:
- you concealed information
For practitioners
This case shifts advocacy emphasis:
Instead of arguing:
“too much time has passed”
You must show:
- evidence is compromised
- trial fairness is impossible
Big Picture
Silberschmidt v Richards reinforces a core theme in modern financial remedy law:
Finality is important — but truth and fairness take priority where fraud is involved.
Delay is a factor, but: Prejudice, knowledge, and conduct drive the outcome.
For family law advice and family court representation contact Stephanie Heijdra direct access divorce law barrister via sheijdra[@]winvolvedlegal.co.uk






