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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> NY (A Child : 1980 Hague Abduction Convention : Inherent Jurisdiction) [2019] EWCA Civ 1065 (18 June 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/1065.html Cite as: [2019] 3 FCR 49, [2019] EWCA Civ 1065 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE FAMILY DIVISION OF THE
HIGH COURT OF LONDON
MR JUSTICE MacDONALD
FD19P00085
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MOYLAN
and
LORD JUSTICE HADDON-CAVE
____________________
Re NY (A Child) (1980 Hague Abduction Convention) (Inherent Jurisdiction) |
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Mr M Jarman and Mr M Gration (instructed by Ellis Jones Solicitors) for the Respondent
Mr T Gupta QC and Miss J Renton (instructed by Freemans Solicitors) for Reunite International (as intervenors)
Hearing date: 18th June 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE MOYLAN:
Introduction
Background
"[22] in my judgment the evidence does not tend to support the existence of an express agreement as contended for by the father. Whilst it is clear that both parties contemplated the possibility that the move to England would not be successful and that a further move or a return to Israel was a possibility, and whilst each party may well have further developed their intentions as to what would happen next as their marriage continued to deteriorate following their arrival in the United Kingdom, the evidence does not tend to support an express agreement to return to Israel in the event the move was not a success having been reached prior to their departure from Israel (in) November 2018."
The 1980 Convention Proceedings
"24. Given that NY is, on all counts, settled and happy in England, as is her primary carer, with accommodation, money, a nursery place and a solid support network, the court should exercise its discretion not to return NY to Israel."
Judgment
"I would nonetheless have concluded that it was in her best interests for an order to be made under the inherent jurisdiction of the High Court returning her to Israel for decisions concerning her welfare to be made in that jurisdiction."
"I am satisfied that by agreeing with the mother to move with NY to England, the father consented to the removal of NY from the jurisdiction of Israel for the purposes of Art 13."
"[67] subject to confirmation that the arrest warrant in respect of the mother has been discharged in the manner the father assured the court it can be, the protective measures offered by the father as set out above, and the matters set out in the letter to this court from the Israeli Ministry of (Justice), constitute sufficient protective measures in this case if the court orders the return of NY to the jurisdiction of the State of Israel, having regard to the level of risk assumed. I also bear in mind that the parents' relationship is now over and they will be living separately. In addition, the Rabbinical Court of Jerusalem is now seised of this matter and both parents have instructed lawyers within those proceedings. The matter will therefore quickly be the subject of judicial consideration in Israel."
"[68] In this case, and contrary to the submission of Mr Laing, I am satisfied that, notwithstanding that the mother has made out the exception under Art 13 of the 1980 Convention in this case, I should exercise my discretion to order the return of NY to the jurisdiction of the State of Israel.
[69] The discretion that arises upon an exception being made out permits the court to ensure that the exceptions under the 1980 Convention do not operate in a manner that is antithetical to the child's interests. Within this context, in respect of the consent exception, a distinction can be seen in the authorities between those cases, such as Re K (Abduction: Consent) [1997] 2 FLR 212, in which the consent of the left-behind parent will result in the child remaining in the home country of the abducting parent, in which country the child has extended family connections, a common language and sometimes a common nationality, and those cases, such as Re D (Abduction: Discretionary Return) [2000] 1 FLR 24, where the consent of the left-behind parent will result in the child remaining in a country in respect of which he or she (and often the abducting parent) has no prior knowledge, no links, no extended family and no common language, meaning that any welfare decision would fall to be taken in a vacuum, or least remote from the proper context for such decisions. In the former cases of consent, the exercise of the discretion in favour of return will be, understandably, rare. In the later cases of consent, the exercise of the discretion to return may be more readily granted.
[70] NY is an Israeli child of Israeli parents with no practical connection to this jurisdiction and whose extended family, identity, culture and history centre on the State of Israel. Whilst I accept that the father consented to NY being removed from the jurisdiction of Israel, in circumstances where the parents' marriage thereafter broke down the result of his consent is now to leave NY in a jurisdiction to which she has no connection, which is remote from the entirety of her close extended family and the country of her nationality and her first language. It is also remote from the jurisdiction in which the genesis of the dispute between the parents as to NY's welfare arose and the jurisdiction in which the vast majority of the evidence to determine that dispute is located. This in circumstances where there remain a number of judicial decisions to be made in respect of NY's welfare.
[71] The rules of jurisdiction in the 1980 Convention are, to adopt a characterisation from the jurisprudence in respect of BIIa, shaped in the light of the best interests of the child, in particular on the criterion of proximity. Proximity in this context being the practical connection between the child and the country concerned. In particular, at the heart of the policy considerations driving the 1980 Convention is the recognition that it is of manifest benefit to a child to have decisions regarding their welfare taken in the jurisdiction of their habitual residence.
[72] Within the foregoing context, whilst I accept that it is relatively unusual for court to exercise discretion in favour of return where the consent exception has been found to be established, in this case I am satisfied that the court should exercise its discretion to order the return of NY to country of her habitual residence. Having regard to the matters set out above, and in circumstances where I am satisfied that the protective measures I have summarised are sufficient to meet the assumed risk for the purposes of Art 13(b), it is in my judgment of manifest benefit to NY to have properly informed decisions taken regarding her welfare in the jurisdiction of her habitual residence rather than in a jurisdiction to which she has no prior connection and which is remote from nearly all of the things that bear on the decision save the company of her mother. In my judgment, that benefit greatly outweighs, in this case, the temporary disruption that will result from an order for return of NY after a short period spent in this jurisdiction. I am likewise satisfied that this benefit to NY outweighs the impact on the mother of an order for return, which impact I do not underestimate.
[73] As I have made clear above, I am satisfied that had I concluded that NY was habitually resident in this country, I would have reached the same decision under the inherent jurisdiction pursuant to the principles set out by the Supreme Court in Re KL (In re L) on the particular facts of this case."
Submissions
Legal framework
"(a) it is in breach of rights of custody attributed to a person, an institution or any other body, either jointly or alone, under the law of the State in which the child was habitually resident immediately before the removal or retention; and
(b) at the time of removal or retention those rights were actually exercised, either jointly or alone, or would have been so exercised but for the removal or retention."
As Lord Hughes JSC explained in In re C [2019], at [42]:
"If there is no breach of the rights of custody of the left-behind parent, then it is clear that the Convention cannot bite; such a breach is essential in activating it, via articles 3 and 12."
" it appears to me that a child can only come within it (a wrongful retention) if it has first been removed rightfully (e.g. under a court order or an agreement between its two parents) out of the state of its habitual residence and subsequently retained wrongfully (e.g. contrary to a court order or an agreement between its two parents) instead of being returned to the state of its habitual residence The typical (but not necessarily the only) case of a child within (this category) is that of a child who is rightfully taken out of the state of its habitual residence to another contracting state for a specified period of staying access with its non-custodial parent, and wrongfully not returned to the state of its habitual residence at the expiry of that period."
And, again, at p. 500B/C:
"For the purposes of the Convention, removal occurs when a child, which has previously been in the state of its habitual residence, is taken away across the frontier of that state; whereas retention occurs where a child, which has previously been for a limited period of time outside the state of its habitual residence, is not returned to that state on the expiry of such limited period."
"The mere fact that the relationship between the parents has come to an end cannot entitle one parent unilaterally to resile from that which has been agreed between them. The example which springs to mind is an agreement that children should visit a foreign country for a specific time, such as a school holiday. Clearly, a parent in such circumstances could not unilaterally change his mind and demand the return of the children before the term of the contract had expired."
He later observed that, if the mother was intending to abide by the terms of the agreement, she would have "a complete defence because the father had consented not merely to the removal of the children but, by necessary implication, had consented to their retention in England for a fixed term", at p. 79B/C. I recognise that, in saying the mother would have a complete defence, Wall J said that this would be either because the retention was not wrongful or under Article 13(a).
"36. This was the question of principle on which leave to appeal to this court was given. If the child has been removed from the home state by agreement with the left-behind parent for a limited period (and thus the removal is not wrongful), can there be a wrongful retention before the agreed period of absence expires? The classic example of the possibility is where the travelling parent announces, half way through the agreed period (say of a sabbatical year of study for the parent), that he will not under any circumstances return the child in accordance with the agreement he made. He might do more. He might effectively make it impracticable to return, by, for example, selling his house in the home state, abandoning his job there, and obtaining residency in the new state for himself and the child on the basis of an undertaking that they will both remain there indefinitely. No doubt other examples could be postulated. The question is whether, if such a thing occurs, there is then and there a wrongful retention, or whether his retention of the child cannot in law be wrongful until the date agreed for return arrives and, as it was graphically put in the American case Falk v Sinclair (2010) 692 F Supp 2d 147, the aeroplane lands and the child is not among those who disembark."
Lord Hughes went on to consider the concept of early wrongful retention or "repudiatory retention" in the course of which he said, immediately following the passage I have quoted in paragraph 37 above:
" It is clearly true that if the two parents agree that the child is to travel abroad for a period, or for that matter if the court of the home state permits such travel by order, the travelling parent first removes, and then retains the child abroad. It is equally true that both removal and retention are, at that stage, sanctioned and not wrongful. But to say that there is sanctioned retention is to ask, rather than to answer, the question when such retention may become unsanctioned and wrongful.
43. When the left-behind parent agrees to the child travelling abroad, he is exercising, not abandoning, his rights of custody. Those rights of custody include the right to be party to any arrangement as to which country the child is to live in. It is not accurate to say that he gives up a right to veto the child's movements abroad; he exercises that right by permitting such movement on terms. He has agreed to the travel only on terms that the stay is to be temporary and the child will be returned as agreed. So long as the travelling parent honours the temporary nature of the stay abroad, he is not infringing the left-behind parent's rights of custody. But once he repudiates the agreement, and keeps the child without the intention to return, and denying the temporary nature of the stay, his retention is no longer on the terms agreed. It amounts to a claim to unilateral decision where the child shall live. It repudiates the rights of custody of the left-behind parent and becomes wrongful.
44. The plain purpose of the Abduction Convention is to prevent the travelling parent from pre-empting the left-behind parent. The travelling parent who repudiates the temporary nature of the stay and sets about making it indefinite, often putting down the child's roots in the destination state with a view to making it impossible to move him home, is engaging in precisely such an act of pre-emption."
"28 Article 18 of the Convention provides that its provisions on return of children "do not limit the power of a judicial or administrative authority to order the return of the child at any time". The High Court has power to exercise its inherent jurisdiction in relation to children by virtue of the child's habitual residence or presence here: Family Law Act 1986, ss 2(3) and 3(1). The welfare of the child is the court's paramount consideration: Children Act 1989, s 1(1). But this does not mean that the court is obliged in every case to conduct a full-blown welfare-based inquiry into where the child should live. Long before the Hague Convention was adopted, the inherent jurisdiction was used to secure the prompt return of a child who had been wrongfully removed from his home country: see In re J (A Child) (Custody Rights: Jurisdiction) [2005] UKHL 40, [2006] 1 AC 80, paras 26, 27, and the cases cited therein."
Determination
(a) On the judge's findings, there was no retention in breach of rights of custody in this case such that the 1980 Convention does not apply;
(b) The judge properly took into account the identified protective measures and reached a determination that was open to him;
(c) The judge was entitled to make an order for NY's return under the court's inherent jurisdiction and his summary welfare decision to do so is fully supported by the reasons he gave.
Lord Justice Haddon-Cave:
Lord Justice Flaux: