Anonymising Form D81 Consent Order Statements – UK GDPR-compliant anonymisation per Matrimonial Causes Act 1973
A Form D81 statement of information accompanies a financial consent order under the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973, recording both parties' net income, capital, pension provision, and cohabitation plans alongside personal details. anonym.legal pseudonymises those identifiers so the financial consent structure can be benchmarked or reviewed by a solicitor or costs expert without disclosing the parties' identities.
When this applies
This task applies when a Form D81 and draft consent order are shared with a reviewing solicitor conducting a financial-settlement audit, a costs assessor, or a legal-aid supervisor, and the reviewer requires the financial structure but not the parties' personal details.
How anonym.legal handles it
- Upload the Form D81 and draft consent order to anonym.legal.
- The engine identifies both parties' names, addresses, National Insurance numbers, solicitors' details, and any children named in the form.
- Each individual receives a consistent pseudonym; net-income figures, capital values, pension provisions, and the financial terms of the proposed order are preserved in clear text.
- Lump-sum, periodical-payments, pension-sharing, and clean-break provisions remain intact for the reviewer's analysis.
- A reversible mapping table is produced with UK data residency.
- Release the pseudonymised documents for review; restore real identities before court submission.
What you provide
- Form D81 (statement of information for a consent order)
- Draft consent order in the agreed terms
- Any pension-sharing annex (Form P)
Limitations & cautions
- The court-bound Form D81 and consent order must bear the parties' real names — the pseudonymised version is for preliminary review only.
- Pension-sharing orders reference pension scheme details; scheme names and policy numbers are preserved, but the member's name is pseudonymised.
- anonym.legal does not assess whether the financial settlement meets the s.25 Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 factors.
FAQ
Can I pseudonymise a D81 to compare its financial terms with precedent consent orders?
Yes. This is a primary use case. The pseudonymised D81 can be compared against a library of precedent consent orders without identifying the parties involved.
Are pension-sharing percentage figures preserved in the pseudonymised D81?
Yes. Pension-sharing percentage values and the pension scheme's CETV are preserved in clear text. Only the member's name is pseudonymised.
Does the tool handle a consent order with a Mesher or Martin order for the family home?
Yes. Mesher and Martin order provisions (including the triggering events and charge percentages) are preserved in clear text; the parties named in those provisions are pseudonymised.