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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> B & Anor (children), Re [2003] EWCA Civ 1149 (30 July 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/1149.html Cite as: [2003] Fam Law 820, [2003] 2 FCR 673, [2003] 2 FLR 1043, [2003] EWCA Civ 1149 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CAMBRIDGE COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE O'BRIEN) – (B & Anor (children), Re)
ON APPEAL FROM LUTON COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE HAMILTON) – (S (Child))
Strand, London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JUDGE
and
LORD JUSTICE SEDLEY
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B & Anor (children), Re |
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and S (Child) |
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In S (Child): JOHN SABIDO (instructed by Messrs Knowles Benning of Dunstable LU6 1SN) appeared for the appellant mother. DUNCAN BROOKS (instructed by Messrs Berg & Co of Manchester M2 5BG) appeared for the respondent father.
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Crown Copyright ©
THORPE LJ:
B & Anor (children), Re – The Facts
S (Child) – The Facts
"Not without extreme anxiety and in a very finely balanced case, as I have said on a number of occasions, I do not feel that this is a matter in which I should grant the mother leave to take the child out of the jurisdiction and her application therefore to do so is rejected."
The Principles
"(The affidavit) emphasises the urgency of the step-father's appointment to the New York office. It is obviously a matter of great importance. I do not think that it is for the court to try to assess just how important it is. Interference with reasonable decisions, particularly of step-parents, is something the court should undertake with considerable hesitation if the children are to continue to live with that step-parent. That seems simple commonsense."
"The welfare of young children is best served by bringing them up in a happy, secure family atmosphere. When, after divorce, the parent who has custody of the children remarries, those children then join and become members of a new family and it is the happiness and security of that family on which their welfare will depend. However painful it may be for the other parent that parent has got to grasp and appreciate that fact. If a step-father, for the purposes of his career, is required to live elsewhere the natural thing would be that he will wish to take his family, which now includes his step-children, with him, and if the court refuses to allow him to take the step-children with him he is faced with the alternative of going and leaving the family behind which is a very disruptive state of affairs and likely to be very damaging to those step-children, or alternatively he may have to throw up his career prospects and remain in this country. If he has to do that he would be less than human if he did not feel a sense of frustration and, do what he may, that may well spill over into a sense of resentment against the step-children who have so interfered with his future career prospects. If that happens it must reflect upon the happiness and possibly even the stability of this second marriage. It is to that effect that the court was pointing in the decisions of Poel v Poel [1970] 1 WLR 1469 and Nash v Nash [1973] 2 All ER 704 and it was stressing that it was a factor that had to be given great weight when weighing up the various factors that arise when a judge has to decide whether or not to give leave to take children out of the jurisdiction."
The Principles Applied – B & Anor (children), Re
"70. There remains a serious query, to my way of thinking. It is undoubtedly the case that mother in character is mercurial. The way she has described her relationship with Mr K, although she is a lady approaching the age of 40, has struck me as being that of the first fine careless rapture of a teenager. That is how it feels. But this it seems to me, despite the passage of a year, is largely an untried, untested relationship. The pattern is that the parties have been together for short periods and then apart. It is right that there was a period of four months or so from September to Christmas last year, but probably they have been together I suppose for about six months out of the last 13, and I ask myself, from the point of view of the children, what would happen if it breaks down? Neither party is yet divorced, although there are divorce proceedings in hand in each case. Both parties spoke of having a child or children, but neither of them has said anything about marriage. What is the security of mother and the children if they go to South Africa and things do not work out? As I say, the longest period they have all been together as a family in South Africa was for a fortnight, when it was all I suppose a very big adventure.
71. Mother has no friends and no family of her own in the Republic of South Africa. I know it is a Roman-Dutch system, but I have to assume that the law is the same there. If they separate before or without being married, she would be in a precarious position. The only answer provided to that, of course, is that when her own ancillary relief proceedings are settled she should have about half of the family assets, possibly about £70,000 – I have taken a slightly gloomier view than her counsel – and it may be that some legal fees will have to come out of that. It is said that that would be her security, but I have no evidence as to what her proposals are for dealing with that, and it may be that she has not thought it through herself.
72. So at this stage, with neither party divorced, no proposals to remarry, very unclear as to what might happen, and an untried and untested relationship, in my judgment, despite the enthusiasm of both the parties for it, I am concerned that from the point of view of the children these proposals are not realistic at present. I am concerned about that to the extent that I conclude that although the practical matters have been sorted out, the application as a whole is not realistic for that reason."
"74. Turning to C,
"What would be the impact on the mother, either as a single parent or as a new wife, of a refusal of her realistic proposal?"
plainly it would be disappointment, as with Mr K. But the evidence is that she would cope, put it this way, that it would place a strain on the relationship but it will continue. Her evidence has been that if disappointed on this occasion, she will make another application, that maybe a time will come when the criticisms of the application's practicality which I have found compelling will no longer exist. It is of the nature of things that the mother and Mr K will be together some of the time, as much as half of the time or more, for example. This is not seeking to pre-guess contact arrangements, but it could be that the children would be in the course of one year with mother in the Republic of South Africa for, say, nine weeks, school holidays in this year being about 12 weeks, that mother might be there without them for another 10 weeks, say, while the children are with father, and that in another seven weeks Mr K may be in the United Kingdom, where he has business interests and no doubt he could also spend some of his holiday. That would be a total of 26 weeks. It is not perhaps ideal in a marriage, but it is the sort of period that for example an offshore oil-rig worker would be spending at home with his wife and family. A disappointment, certainly, but it seems to me eminently manageable and far from an overwhelming disappointment. The question of disappointment to the boys, it seems to me, would be more than offset by a combination of longish visits to the Republic of South Africa, for which any contact schedule should make provision, and the more frequent contact with their father."
The Principles Applied – S (Child)
"36. Every decision I have made is with J's best interests at heart. If J were not permitted to leave the UK, E would join us here although this may severely hamper E's career prospects. E's job is highly specialised and it is unlikely that he would be able to secure a similar post in the UK. Even if E were successful in securing a post in the UK, it would be at a considerably reduced salary and there is a strong likelihood we would have to relocate outside of the Luton area. The decrease in E's earning ability would also severely affect the financial support he would be able to offer our family."
That paragraph has all the hallmarks of the lawyer's craft in playing a card which he or she conceives to strengthen the client's prospects of winning the game.
"Can I just ask you this straight question: what effect would it have on you if you were not able to go to Australia with J?"
This was the significant answer:
"Regardless of the support that I would have from my family, who, yes, I am close to, I personally feel that it would have a devastating impact on my well-being and my happiness, and therefore I feel, as J and I are so close, I feel that he will be – that will have an impact on J."
"Q - So while everything here is quite settled at the moment, it is fair to say that to a large extent Australia is an unknown quantity isn't it?
A - I would say that, yes, but I'm not settled and I'm not happy, therefore I feel that has an impact on J at the moment."
The second exchange is as follows:
"Q - Anyway you also have your family round here, he has the friends he has met in school and also the beavers. It would be a chance for E to come over here and J to remain in a stable position wouldn't it?
A - J will have more stability, security with a family that, if we are in Australia, because that's where I will be happy, that's where my future well-being will be. I feel I will be happy there. He will have JA around him, who he misses immensely and talks about all the time. That's where I feel that his happiness will be."
"The mother has not said in her statement or in her evidence to me that she would be greatly distressed rather than obviously disappointed if leave were refused. To her great credit she has thought out a fall-back position, which is something to which she seems to be able to confront with some equanimity."
"As to the likely effect on the mother, as I said earlier in this judgment, whilst she will no doubt be keenly disappointed if leave were refused, I do not get the impression at all that she would be in anyway extremely distressed in a sense that would impinge on J's welfare for the future, she having, as I have already said, to her immense credit made significant and well thought out back-up plans."
JUDGE LJ:
SEDLEY LJ: