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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> R (A Child), Re [2001] EWCA Civ 1344 (20 July 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/1344.html Cite as: [2002] Fam Law 9, [2001] EWCA Civ 1344, [2001] 2 FLR 1358, [2002] 1 FCR 170 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE BRIGHTON COUNTY COURT
(His Honour Judge Kemp)
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
and
LADY JUSTICE HALE
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RE: R (a Child) |
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Smith Bernal Reporting Limited
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel: 020 7421 4040 Fax: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr M Valks (instructed by Messrs Atfield Mullaney, Eastbourne) appeared on behalf of the Respondent Mother.
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Crown Copyright ©
"Incidentally we should point out to you that [G] is known as [GR] and not [L] as in the court papers."
"I have to apply the welfare checklist. The welfare of the child is paramount ... his recent experience is `[R]' rather than `[L]' - though there is no specific evidence of this. I have to look at the future. His circumstances are about to change dramatically. I have to consider the likely effect of change, age, sex and background, harm, capability, range of orders. I have to consider the `no order' principle, but to make no order is not an option. The matter cannot rest in limbo.
I have to consider the educational and other needs of the child in these peculiar circumstances. The child is about to start a new stage in his life. The proposed choice of names is unusual in that it is not the surname of a partner or husband or of any other child in the family. Whatever its origin, should he be singled out with a different name, thus making life potentially more awkward? I have heard no evidence regarding life in Spain and I, therefore, consider it to be similar to life in England. It is in his overriding interests to be known by the same name as the rest of the family unit. His long-term interests are in favour of the change of name. I have no doubt that father will continue to have contact. I permit the change of name from `[L]' to `[R]'.
Of course, I bear in mind that this is only a brief and rough note of what the judge said. I also bear in mind that this is a very experienced judge, particularly in this field. But he did not have the opportunity of hearing from the parties and perhaps exploring what was really going on in the family; what was really the motivation of the mother and the motivation of the father. He was in no better position than we to make an assessment and to arrive at a proper conclusion.
There are a number of factors which seem to me to militate against the judge's conclusion. The first and most obvious is that the surname of R has a relatively insecure foundation. It is a name that the mother has adopted of choice since G's birth. It is a name that her mother uses of preference, but not for all purposes. Further, it is a name that the mother has adopted for G without any consultation with the father, and during a period when he has been having regular contact. Whether it is a name that she herself will bear in the long-term is obviously an open question. I also regard the proposed move to Spain as being a neutral factor in the debate. It is strongly relied upon by Mr Valks in the sense that he contends that the move to Spain will require considerable adjustment, and that to ask G to adapt to a general and social use of the name L is only to aggravate the task. Against that, it can obviously be said that the removal of G from the community in which his father lives requires every sensible counter-balancing in order to ensure that, throughout the years of development in Spain, G maintains the consciousness that he has an English father who is attached to him in every way.
The judge had no evidence as to Spanish custom and made the assumption that it must accord with English custom. But in Spain there is, of course, a very different custom in relation to the naming of a child, and that custom gives the child the advantage of one of the maternal surnames and one of the paternal surnames. So combining his parents' surnames might have seemed a very sensible solution in this case, bearing in mind that G was going to be living in Spain and going to a Spanish school. That is a solution which the parties should hereafter consider as a means of bridging the divide which presumably still subsists between them following the judge's ruling.
But I think it is important to recognise in this and in all cases that there must be some burden on the parent who seeks to obtain the judge's approval of change. The child here was very young and there was certainly nothing set in stone by the date of the hearing.
With some hesitation, and with every respect to the judgment of Judge Kemp, I think on this occasion that he probably reached the wrong conclusion. I think that the order should not have gone as it went. In the order as drawn, in paragraph 3, he simply says:
"There be permission to change the name of the child to [GAR]."
"Reasons given for changing or seeking to change a child's name based on the fact that the child's name is or is not the same as the parent making the application do not generally carry much weight",