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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) >> M v F (Travel to Non-Convention Country) [2017] EWFC 7 (17 January 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/HCJ/2017/7.html Cite as: [2017] EWFC 7 |
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B e f o r e :
(In Private)
B E T W E E N :
M Applicant
- and -
F Respondent
M v F (Travel to Non-Convention Country)
____________________
MRS. D. TODMAN (instructed by Mr A. Spearman of A City Law Firm) appeared on behalf of the Respondent (Father).
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE PETER JACKSON:
(i) Despite her established situation in England, the mother naturally retains significant ties in Iran, where she lived for 20 years, and where her family of birth remains. It is important to remember that one is not looking just at the current position, but also at future possibilities if circumstances should change, namely, if the mother's ties in England, for some reason, should weaken, or if her ties or attraction to her home country of origin should, for some reason, strengthen, e.g. because of some family crisis in Iran.
(ii) While there is no expert evidence, the parties are specifically agreed on the following propositions. Under the Iranian system there are very limited processes for reliably securing the return of the children if they were kept. Such systems as might exist could in all likelihood be frustrated by determined opposition from the abducting parent. In that regard, it is worthy of note that the mother's family is comfortably off and established in Teheran. It is not, I think, necessary to reach any conclusion on the father's more extensive anxieties about behind-the-scenes influence, necessary or possible. It is further common ground between the parties that the father would be at a severe disadvantage in seeking remedies in Iran because of his sexual orientation and his known campaigning stance in the human rights field. It is common ground that if the father was himself to go to Iran he would be at personal risk because of the attitude of the regime in Iran to homosexuality and matters of that kind. So, there could be no confidence that a retention could reliably be undone.
(iii) In considering the children's welfare, note must be taken of the father's anxieties and the state of the relationship between him and the mother because that rubs off on the children. So, an otherwise suitable trip might cause such tension as to be inadvisable in terms of the overall effect on the children's welfare.
(iv) The mother and children are solidly established in the United Kingdom. They were all born here and are citizens. The children's schooling is exceptionally important to them and to each of their parents. The mother has a home of her own here of significant value, together with a share in an even more valuable home with her husband. The mother has married someone who is a European citizen. The children have a stepbrother here of whom they are naturally extremely fond. The mother, having studied here, works here in a rewarding occupation.
(v) Having considered my conclusion about any statements made by the mother that she would remove the children to Iran during the marriage I find that they are of no real significance in calculating risk. I attach more importance to the features that are clearly established in regard to the ties both here and also in Iran than on statements that are probably made in heat. I also note that the mother has neither said anything of this kind, nor done anything in the past five years to seek to take the children to Iran, indeed, the relationship with her family has been sustained by them doing the travelling throughout that period.
(vi) There was nothing in the mother's evidence to suggest that in respects other than her account of any previous statements about removing the children, she was not being sincere. My assessment of her is that she gave evidence in a broadly truthful manner, but I remind myself that I am not only concerned with her current intentions but with her future intentions.
(vii) There are a number of protective factors tying the mother and children to this jurisdiction. I have already mentioned a number of them – Mr P, and A, and the schools. I further attach significance to the level of contact that the mother has supported with the father ever since the separation that must have been a particularly difficult one. The levels of contact that have taken place have been child-centred. I am more than aware of conflicts between parents, the behaviour on the part of Mr P that led to a caution, angry, abusive voicemail on one or more occasions from the father to the mother, but these are, in my view, peripheral when compared to the commitment of both parents to the children's relationships with each other. These incidents are unfortunate, they should not happen, and for the children, particularly as they get older it must be incredibly embarrassing to see your parents behaving in this way. But the core of this is the dependable level of contact that there has been.
(viii) What I would most like to emphasise as a protective factor, as the children get older, is the standpoint of the children themselves. They have a point of view in this, and their very clear point of view is that they want to continue living in England, leading a life that they know and enjoy. If it was suggested to them that they should go and live in Iran full-time they would be appalled, however fond they are of their grandparents, cousins, uncle and aunt. These being the parents that, they are I find that they both, and in particular the mother, would give very considerable weight to the children's perspective.
(ix) I take into account the benefit of travel generally. The children will enjoy school trips, indeed they have had one. They enjoyed a holiday with their father overseas, which the mother agreed to – she did not have to – but that was something that they really look back on with pleasure. Both parents agree that that sort of travel should continue.
(x) The benefits of travel to Iran are more particular. These children are British/Iranian in their backgrounds, so it must be considered that a visit to the parents' homeland, the home of their relatives on both sides would be a matter of real enlightenment for them.
(xi) A very distinctive feature of this case is that the father accepts, having listened to the children in particular, that there should be some travel abroad despite the risks. He accepted that during 2016, subject to some conditions, and he now accepts that the mother and children should be able to travel, subject to conditions, to Hague Convention countries. It is, in my view, of some significance that the father himself, although being very anxious about this issue, finds that the balance falls in favour of this form of overseas travel.
(xii) Some safeguards are available in the form of arrangements which would require travel abroad to be in the presence of Mr P, or in the absence of A. The significance of Mr P, which is why the father puts him forward, is that a family holiday with him would be an outward sign that the mother's current life in London was continuing, whereas a trip without Mr P might arise in circumstances where difficulties had arisen in that marriage. The significance of travel in A's absence is obvious. I discount the possibility that the mother would take two children to Iran and leave one behind on anything other than a very short term basis. There is, on the mother's side, the availability of sufficient funds to finance a bond to give the father a fighting fund if things went wrong. There is the possibility of a document being created that would strengthen the father's legal position in Iran by granting him and his family custody of the children while they were there, and there is the possibility which would arise whatever my decision of the mother giving a solemn undertaking on her holy book that she would return the children at the end of any holiday.
(xiii) I mentioned the children's wishes and feelings, those are to travel and also to travel to Iran at some point. In circumstances of this sort I cannot attach very much weight to the views of the children, even of this age, but nevertheless I bear in mind that my decision will either be with, or against, the grain of the children's wishes.
(xiv) The father's suggestion that one solution might be for the mother to take the children to Iran one at a time does not seem to me to be an answer because such a trip would be very peculiar in the overall family context.
(a) that each parent is to give the other not less than a month's notice of any proposed travel, with details and proof of who will be travelling and to where; what the contact details are; and copies of the travel documents.
(b) so far as the mother is concerned, travel will be either in the presence of Mr P, as proved by the travel documents, or in the absence of A, as proved by the lodging of his passport (so one will have to be obtained), or by demonstrating that his passport is being used for another purpose such as, for example, a holiday with his father.
(c) I will receive the mother's sworn undertaking today which will be recorded.
(d) In addition to the above conditions, in the case of travel to Iran or another non-Hague Convention country:
(i) The travel will not be before 2018.(ii) Before each trip the mother is to provide a bond in the sum of £25,000 to cover the father's legal costs in Iran and/or the United Kingdom, but that is to be provided a month in advance along with the other proofs. I will not engage in the business of charges on the mother's property. The mother and her family are capable of raising this money in the form of a bond which is, of course, to be held in some agreed manner, possibly by the father's solicitor and, naturally, returned at the end of each visit. I consider that the sum is proportionate, although it falls some way from the competing contentions.(iii) In respect of this form of travel, before each occasion of travel the mother is to provide the father, at her expense, with a declaration notarised in Iran, agreeing that while the children are in Iran they are to be considered to be in the custody of the father and his parents, and the father is to co-operate with that process. I prefer that to a suggestion made on the mother's behalf, which is that custody would only pass if the children were kept after the due date, first, because it requires the dates to be known when getting the document and, secondly, because I do not attach any weight to the possibility that the document might be used against the mother during any permitted time. It may be that the situation can be dealt by the declaration being held alongside the bond by a trusted third party so that it would only fall to be used if there was a default.(iv) As far as I am concerned, the order will need to say that passports are to be given to the travelling parent not less than two weeks ahead of the date of travel.
I know that there will be other matters that the parties will have discussed for inclusion in the order and I will hear them about those in a minute, together with any requests for further clarification of my decision.