6,970 judgments 29,205 public-register documents 143,540 judgment pages 132,515 public-register pages 276,055 total pages
Judgment · jid 6300 · pdb #1555

Lindsay Cacho v Elmie Cacho and John Oliver - Judgment

D 0106/1994 · 1996-04-26

Custody and access arrangements for children; Interim financial maintenance and mortgage obligations; Viability of property transfer and refinancing; Debt management and lifestyle adjustments post-separation; Jurisdictional restrictions on removal of children

All PDF copies on file (1)

Every PDF we hold for this judgment is listed here, including legacy versions pulled from earlier upstream pipelines. Each carries a provenance note so the source of each copy is explicit.

PDB 20 May 2026 CURRENT
96-04-26_lindsay_cacho_v_elmie_cacho__john_oliver.pdf
1.76 MB · md5 be5ff6aec845af0c39c1c22ae3ee2b7b
Downloaded 2026-05-20 from the new judicial.ky Participants-Database release at https://judicial.ky/n0c-storage/judgments-repository/96-04-26_lindsay_cacho_v_elmie_cacho__john_oliver.pdf.

Processing-run history (1)

Every time a PDF for this judgment has been put through the AI/OCR pipeline we record what we found. Lets us decide which PDFs to re-process when a better model lands.

LOW 15 Jun 2026 19:22 · pipeline 0.2.0-akn run #60870 · quality 0.87
Text extraction
olmocr · qwen2.5vl:7b
9,681 chars in 39105 ms
LLM extraction
local · qwen3.6:27b
parsed first try · 91790 ms
Validation flags (1): court
Full metadata
Full text3 paragraphs Download PDF

Extracted by the canary pipeline from the PDF (PyMuPDF for born-digital pages, vision OCR for scanned ones). Page markers and other machine artifacts are scrubbed for reading; the stored text is never modified. Hover a paragraph for its ¶ permalink. Selectable — Cmd/Ctrl-C copies whatever you've highlighted.

In the Grand Court of the Cayman Islands — Civil Division
Cause No. D 0106/1994
Between
Lindsay Cacho
- v -
Elmie Cacho and John Oliver - Judgment
Before
Harre CJ
Judgment delivered 1996-04-26

```markdown # IN CHAMBERS ## IN THE GRAND COURT OF THE CAYMAN ISLANDS ## HOLDEN AT GEORGE TOWN, GRAND CAYMAN ## CAUSE NO. D 106/94 ### BETWEEN: - **PETITIONER:** LINDSAY CACHO - **RESPONDENT:** ELMIE L. CACHO - **CO-RESPONDENT:** JOHN OLIVER ### For the petitioner: - **Mr.** Linda Chisholm ### For the respondent: - **Mr.** Clyde Allen ### BEFORE: - **Judge:** Hardee ## JUDGMENT I will address this matter, as was done at the hearing, by reference to a draft, on the basis of which agreement had been sought unsuccessfully. First, I deal with the custody, care, and control of the three children of the marriage, daughters aged 15 and 11 and a son aged 3. I believe that custody, care, and control of the children shall be awarded to the respondent wife and that access by the petitioner shall be granted with paragraphs 2 and 3 of the draft order. As always, the paramount consideration and focus between an order giving custody, care, and control to the respondent paragraphs 4 and 5 of the order which provide for consultation between the parties and that each shall notify the other of any accident or injury to the children while in their respective care. That the respondent felt unable to agree such provisions obviously in the best interest of the children is ```
```html a matter of some concern. I make orders in terms of paragraphs 1 to 7 of the draft order. In view of the concern which I have just expressed, there will also be an order that neither party shall remove any child from the jurisdiction without the written agreement of the other or order of the court. That leaves me with some less tractable matters in relation to the financial arrangements between the parties. I have felt unable to make a final order on what I have and the order as a whole, including the elements with which I have already dealt, will be a interim one. loner' The pets sh's net monthly income after pension and other deduction our dentown on his salary slip for March 1996 is $3,701.18 and the respe6.1 as is $1,667. That is taken from her salary slip for January 2000.Among the deductions from each salary are substantial sums in re ure of the Cayman Islands Civil Service Association Co-operat,condenlit Union. That of the petitioner is $800 a month and of the re $4,t $593. ary idav In his a total dated the 11th March, 1996 the petitioner lists his expenses premial43.33, but that includes the $800 deducted at source from his e inc but also add $250 which, on his instructions, I was told was of $16 um for an insurance policy taken out as security for a loan on rimoniel home. So his net expenses are $3,793.33. that fig fn(,t in B.33. th ta: ir,a sif ```
The petitioner is at present living rent free in his brother's house. His proposal is that the matrimonial home be transferred to the respondent absolutely, subject to the interest and approval of the lending bank and that upon execution of the transfer instrument the respondent take full responsibility for all the mortgage payments, maintenance and upkeep of the house. On that basis he offers maintenance payments which, after a small recalculation was established as being $482.25 per month for each child which is described in his proposal as being put towards the upkeep of the children in the former matrimonial home until each child reaches the age of 17.5 years. So the respondent would have a net income of $1,667 plus $1,411 in use a total of $3,113.75, out of which she would have to meet the other mortgage and insurance payments and all other domestic outgoings in addition to the school fees for the children, which the petitioner offered to pay in full, and half current dental and optical expenses reasonably and properly in respect of the children to the extent that they are not covered by the parties public service health benefits. In her union letter dated the 12th April, 1996 the respondent has calculated expenses as being $2,402.65. Among these are a car loan of $593 which is in fact the same as the payment to the Credit start which I have already deducted in order to arrive at her net salary as the point, I deduct those two items from the total of monthly earnings to which I have just referred, giving an adjusted net salary of $1,810.
The total of $1,719.65. Some of these payments are temporary in nature, in particular a repayment of $259 per month in respect of the cost of the funeral expenses of the respondent's father totaling $2,000 and a credit card payment of $90 per month against a debt of $900. Even on the assumption that the petitioner would make a contribution of $1,446.75 per month, the proposal that the respondent take over the whole of the obligations relating to the matrimonial home is not, on the basis of these figures, viable, even in the unlikely event of the mortgagee greeing. The same, unfortunately, must be said about the respondent's counter proposal, which would involve the petitioner continuing to live indefinitely in his brother's house. A solution has to be found which would enable him to have his own accommodation. He assesses a rental for this at $100 per month which seems to me reasonable for a person in the service sector which he holds in the public sector and which involves going up of appearances to some extent. The parties borrowed up to the hilt in order to maintain their lifestyle each, which they were living together. Now that they are not, they are going to have to accept a more modest way of living. There is one aspect of that to which I will now refer. Both drive cars which in most cases they estimate as being worth $15,000. The respondent pays $593 a month on her car loan and the petitioner has personal or other monthly repayments on the house mortgage which amount to $1,690. An obvious approach to reducing these unaffordable debt obligations is to drive more economically.
```markdown modest cars and reduce the debt obligations and running expenses. Another is to seek to amend the mortgage arrangements. There is a plot of land in Lower Valley, Block 31A, Parcel 43 which is held as collateral for the loan on the matrimonial home. There is no professional valuation before me on this, or indeed on the matrimonial home itself, but the petitioner's evidence in his affidavit dated 19th September 1995 is that it was bought for $15,000. His estimated value at that time was $21,000 and that will do for present purposes. His affidavit then states that the outstanding mortgage on the matrimonial home at that time was $129,000. It may well be that there is sufficient equity in the matrimonial home now to enable a bank to agree to release the Lower Valley land as collateral at least to consent to it being sold and the proceeds used to fund a cash balance or reduce the outstanding secured debt, with reference to the remainder. The need of the parties above all others is to reduce their excessive monthly debt repayments and I need to know by taking a final order whether a proposal on the lines which I have indicated can be negotiated with the mortgagee. In the meantime make the following interim order:

In paragraphs 1-7 of the draft order.

Namely that any party shall remove any of the children from ```
The petitioner shall seek forthwith to vary the existing mortgage arrangements on the matrimonial home by the release by the mortgagee of the collateral security on the land known as Lower Valley Block 31A Parcel 43, the condition of the release being that the property is sold and the proceeds of sale be either: - if the consent of the mortgagee is paid into court pending a further order; or - if such consent is not forthcoming, applied towards the reduction of the mortgage debt. The proceeds of sale may, with the consent of the parties, be apportioned between each of the purposes mentioned under paragraph (a) and (b). The respondent shall be permitted to continue to live in the matrimonial home with the children of the marriage and shall continue to meet the mortgage and insurance premium in respect of it. In addition, he shall pay to the respondent $100 per month as a part of each child of the marriage.
This order as a whole is an interim order based on the present position, which is that the petitioner is living rent free with his brother. I cannot order that that arrangement continue since it is not a matter within the petitioner's control. That part of the order which relates to refinancing seeks to alleviate the cash flow problems of the parties in the event of the petitioner needing to find his own accommodation which, in the longer term, is likely to be necessary. A passinger-reference was made during the submissions to refinancing the petitioneYl at asonal loans also. I would like to hear about that in more detail before the resumed hearing. Liberty generally. April Dated 26 April 1996 G.E. Harre Chief Justice

Find similar