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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> K, Re [2014] EWCA Civ 905 (15 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/905.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 905 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
FAMILY DIVISION
The Hon Ms Justice Russell
FD14P00124
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MCFARLANE
and
LORD JUSTICE KITCHIN
____________________
In the matter of K (A Child) |
____________________
Mr M Jarman (instructed by Landmark Legal) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 4 June 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Kitchin:
Introduction
"E. AND UPON the court repeating to [the father] that if the paternal grandparents refuse to return the child to this jurisdiction then the court expects the Respondent Father to make applications to the Singaporean court to ensure [M] is returned to this jurisdiction pursuant to this Court's Order."
The background
"I want both of you to bring [M] back to the UK as soon as possible. This is very urgent because the judge will THROW ME IN JAIL if [M] is not back in the UK by that time [Tuesday 18 March 2014]. Please I need your support in order to do this."
The following day, he wrote again:
"I have booked tickets for both of you and [M] to travel to the UK on next Mon evening, 17 Mar at 11:10 pm. Please make sure that you and [M] are on that plane for London. I really need your help to comply with the UK court orders."
In a further email on 16 March 2014, he emphasised:
"I hope you respect my decision to do this as after all I am [M's] father, and I have no choice in this matter since I have been compelled with the threat of imprisonment by this judge."
Then, after they had failed to catch the first flight, he wrote on 17 March 2014:
"I cannot believe you missed your flight and put me in this predicament!!! Please don't let me down especially at this crucial time. I really need your support. You know that given the judge's temperament, I will be thrown in jail. …
Please be on that plane. Please DO NOT forsake me. I am calling out to you as your only child who is in dire need of your help."
To that last email, the grandparents replied on the same day that they had spent the whole weekend thinking about the matter but would not return M to the United Kingdom because they feared he would suffer in the mother's care.
"Well, if [M] is not back here immediately, [the father] is quite right to suppose that he will be going to prison for a considerable length of time. How do you want to deal with it?
The father was thereupon directed to enter the witness box where he made an affirmation and was cross-examined. After explaining that the grandparents were refusing to return M to his mother because they believed it was not in his best interests, the following interchange took place:
"MS JUSTICE RUSSELL: No, I understand that, and nor are you going to be allowed to travel to Singapore, so I fully understand that. Nonetheless, you must have some sway with them, and if he is not here, you know what the consequences will be. There will be – it will be done properly – there will be an opportunity for you to be properly legally represented, but the courts have in the past and will again in the future if necessary imprison people that do not obey their orders.
A. I have fully complied with the order to arrange for [M] to come back. My parents – I don't think it's fair that I should be jailed because of my parents' default.
Q. Well, that is another issue.
MR JARMAN: You have parental responsibility. You will impress on your parents –
A. I have.
Q. – that they must return [M] to this jurisdiction by Friday?
A. Yes, I have.
Q. If they do not, an application will be made for you to be sent to prison.
MS JUSTICE RUSSELL: This is the last chance.
A. I fully understand that and will try my best again.
…
MS JUSTICE RUSSELL: How long do you think you would go to prison for?
A. I don't even want to guess. I don't even want to guess. I do not want to go to prison.
MR JARMAN: There have been cases in this jurisdiction, in this court, where a father has spent two continuous years in prison for failing to return his child to this jurisdiction.
MS JUSTICE RUSSELL: Well, there has been more than one case, in fact.
A. I do not want to go to prison. I can say that."
"MS JUSTICE RUSSELL: That means that you must do everything, which means that it is no good just arguing with your parents; you need to put it into effect, and however you do that – the court will not consider it to be sufficient that you say, "I asked my parents but they're reluctant, so they refused." You need to do more than that. Do you understand?
A. Yes, I – my Lady, I have spent money that I don't have. I don't even have money for lawyers to represent me. I've spent money that I don't have to buy them tickets, and I've changed them, and they've cost a lot. I don't see how much longer I can go on like this."
"MS JUSTICE RUSSELL: Mr [the father], I urge you to go and get legal representation. Because you are entitled to be represented because there is a real prospect of you losing your liberty – do you understand that? The matter is going to be listed for a committal hearing on Friday, unless [M] is here on Friday.
A. I don't understand why … I don't think it's fair that I should be liable for my parents' default.
Q. Well, I am afraid that you are. They are not the child's parents. You are. Take action. If necessary, take action against them.
A. I have no more money, my Lady. And they are not my agents. They are not … they're not my alter ego.
Q. That is a matter that I will ultimately have to decide. I am telling you what is happening now. The court is giving you one last opportunity to get [M] here and for you to remain at liberty. The case will be listed on Friday in open court for committal proceedings. You will be served with proper documents. Please make sure that the documents are properly drawn."
"MS JUSTICE RUSSELL: Yes. Well, it is the liberty of the subject, because you are likely to be imprisoned if [M] is not here. You understand that, do you not?
A. I do, and I … "
"MS JUSTICE RUSSELL: Can you sit back down. Mr Jarman, I am concerned about sentencing someone to what will be, if I find him to have been in breach of the order (because I have not heard all the evidence yet) – but on the face of it, there is no evidence before me, and I am sure that [the father] would have put it there, to indicate that he has taken any action in Singapore to make sure that his parents enforce the order of this court, as he was advised to do and told to do – it is likely that the period of imprisonment will be lengthy."
"Now, I will have that in mind when I sentence you for breach of the order that I made on the 14th of March. The breach is plain. [M] is not here. I have told you in uncertain term that you must make your parents return him, and if that means taking action in the Singapore court, that is something you have to do without any delay. You are responsible for his return. He is being denied being with his mother, who loves him, and I have no doubt that if he could tell me, he would tell me he loved his mother. It is an offence of unspeakable cruelty."
"[The father]: Yes, my Lady. I wish to point out that I am not depriving my wife of contact with my child. She is free to travel to Singapore and I have offered to pay for her flight tickets.
MS JUSTICE RUSSELL: … – this court has ordered you to bring the child here. Not to allow his mother to go to Singapore. That does not begin to meet the breach of the order, as must be self-evident to you. You have done nothing in Singapore to ensure that he is returned. Nothing. Nothing.
[The father]: My Lady, respectfully, I have no more monies left.
MS JUSTICE RUSSELL: I am tired of hearing you say that. Take action in Singapore.
[The father]: It is not sufficient that I do not consent to my parents' application in Singapore?
MS JUSTICE RUSSELL: No. You have shown me nothing. Nothing to show that you have taken action in the Singapore court. Nothing at all. Nothing from you to the Singapore court saying you want your child – not your parents' child – your child returned to this jurisdiction. You have lodged no documents with the Singapore court, have you? Have you?
[The father]: No.
MS JUSTICE RUSSELL: So you have done nothing.
[The father]: Given the short time …
MS JUSTICE RUSSELL: Well, do it. You have some time now to get represented and to take action."
The order of 14 March 2014
"59. The first principle is that habitual residence is a question of fact: has the residence of a particular person in a particular place acquired the necessary degree of stability (permanent is the word used in the English versions of the two CJEU judgments) to become habitual? It is not a matter of intention: one does not acquire a habitual residence merely by intending to do so; nor does one fail to acquire one merely by not intending to do so. An illegal immigrant may desperately want to become habitually resident in this country, but that does not mean that he does so. A tax exile may desperately want to lose his habitual residence here, but that does not mean that he does so. Hence, although much was made of it in argument, the question of whether or not a child is "Gillick-competent" is not the point: Gillick v West Norfolk and Wisbech Area Health Authority [1986] AC 112.
60. In the case of these three children, as of others, the question is the quality of their residence, in which all sorts of factors may be relevant. Some of these are objective: how long were they there, what were their living conditions while there, were they at school or at work, and so on? But subjective factors are also relevant: what was the reason for their being there, and what were their perceptions about being there? I agree with Lord Wilson (para 37) that "wishes", "views", "intentions" and "decisions" are not the right words, whether we are considering the habitual residence of a child or indeed an adult. It is better to think in terms of the reasons why a person is in a particular place and his or her perception of the situation while there – their state of mind. All of these factors feed into the essential question, which is whether the child has achieved a sufficient degree of integration into a social and family environment in the country in question for his or her residence there to be termed "habitual".
"63. The quality of a child's stay in a new environment, in which he has only recently arrived, cannot be assessed without reference to the past. Some habitual residences may be harder to lose than others and others may be harder to gain. If a person leaves his home country with the intention of emigrating and having made all the necessary plans to do so, he may lose one habitual residence immediately and acquire a new one very quickly. If a person leaves his home country for a temporary purpose or in ambiguous circumstances, he may not lose his habitual residence there for some time, if at all, and correspondingly he will not acquire a new habitual residence until then or even later. Of course there are many permutations in between, where a person may lose one habitual residence without gaining another."
The order of 21 March 2014
The order of 3 April 2014
"1. I will not recuse myself. I do not consider that this matter is before me for any other reason than that Mr K has failed to comply with court orders. It is clear that he disagrees with my judgment and makes some specific complaints about it. The correct route in that case is that of appeal.
2. Much of what Mr K said before me today amounted to arguments that he was trying to put against the judgment which I have made. Any fair and impartial observer would find no bias in these proceedings other than that the court found against Mr K and thinks that that necessitates a different court considering matters of contempt. The hearing will go ahead."
"8. On 27th March, the day that M should have been travelling if he was to return to England by the 28th March, a solicitor privately instructed by [the father] attended before Mrs Justice Theis ex parte. He was represented by a Mr Brookes of Messrs Carters solicitors. The application was to discharge the burden of the order dated 21st March in returning M to England and further to adjourn this court hearing date. The application was made without notice to the mother or her solicitors. It was I find a deliberate attempt to undermine and subvert due process. Moreover that fact that [the father] paid lawyers to make this wholly misconceived application gives lie to his claim that he is without funds."
"11. Again M has not been returned to the jurisdiction. [The father] has taken no active steps to get his parents to return M to this jurisdiction. I have seen nothing from his parents which would indicate anything other than an active desire to keep M from his mother and on the face of the evidence before this court that it is more likely than not that they have colluded with him in M's retention."
"17. It was a blatant attempt to overturn an order of the court and to subvert the court's jurisdiction, specifically the enforcement of court orders. Not only did [the father] seek to have these committal proceedings adjourned he failed to disclose he was doing so by not identifying this hearing as a committal on the face of the draft order he sought to put before Theis J (paragraph 1 c) and d) of that draft order).
18. Paragraph 3 of the order dated 21st March specifically sets out that this court shall consider the father's compliance with the order dated 21st March 2014 as well as the previous two orders of the 14th and 19th of March 2014.
19. The court has determined today that [the father] is in contempt of court for the breaches of all three of the court's orders as M has not been returned to the jurisdiction of this court. There is no doubt about this, the contempt alleged is therefore proved to the necessary standard of proof that is to say beyond all reasonable doubt. Before I turn to sentence I shall add that the steps taken by [the father] to have the orders effectively set aside amount to a determined and organised course of conduct which is contemptuous of the jurisdiction of this court. Moreover he has continued to lie to the court particularly regarding his financial situation."
Conclusion
Lord Justice McFarlane:
Lord Justice Maurice Kay: