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England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) >> A Local Authority v MM & Ors [2020] EWFC 65 (07 October 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/HCJ/2020/65.html Cite as: [2020] EWFC 65 |
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Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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A LOCAL AUTHORITY |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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MM |
1st Respondent |
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- and - |
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NM |
2nd Respondent |
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- and - |
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MC |
3rd Respondent |
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- and - |
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CM |
4th Respondent |
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W, X, Y and Z Children acting through their Guardian, |
5th to 8th Respondents |
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Stefano Nuvoloni QC and Nicola McIntosh (instructed by NFLG Sols for the 1st Respondent
Lorraine Cavanagh QC and William Baker
(instructed by Bhatia Best Ltd) for the 2nd Respondent
Vickie Hodges (instructed by Elliot Mather Sols) for the 3rd Respondent
Mark Twomey QC and Amanda Bewley
(instructed by Jackson Quinn Sols) for the 4th Respondent
Beryl Gilead (instructed by Hawley and Rogers Sols) for the 5th to 8th Respondents
Hearing date: 28 September 2020
The hearing was conducted remotely by CVP
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mostyn:
"In accordance with the provisions of the applicable legislation concerning the repatriation of minor children, we advise that Buzau General Directorate for Social Care and Child Protection, upon repatriation, will take over the minors and will put in place a special protection measure – respectively, emergency placement, in agreement with the provisions of Law 272/2004 with respect to the protection and promotion of children's rights, republished as subsequently amended and completed. Depending on the needs identified in the detailed assessment, specialist psychological and legal counselling services, as well as medical and educational integration services will be provided. Also, the psychological counselling of the minors and their family members can be provided, for the purpose of reintegration within the extended family, if this undertaking is in their interest."
i) Y and Z lived in Romania previously and have some memories of there;
ii) Until two years ago the children lived in a household where only Roma was spoken and work can be done to ensure that they retain a familiarity with the language;
iii) Equally, the children were raised until two years ago in a household that was culturally Romani;
iv) The children will be supported by being transferred together. Any suggestion that they would be separated is purely speculative;
v) Any short-term impact will be outweighed by long term benefits;
vi) The parents are intent on following the children to Romania in the event of a transfer; and
vii) The children will be caused emotional confusion and loss in the event that the parents are deported as they have never lived in a different country to one another before.
i) On 31 May 2018, at 41 days old, W was admitted following a routine midwife visit with extensive bruising and marks to her face and body and healing fractures to her right 6th rib posterolaterally and her left 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th and 7th ribs posterolaterally;
ii) The rib injuries were inflicted by being crushed across her chest by an adult hand. This occurred during the care of the first to fourth respondents on or around 21 to 26 May 2018. It would have caused her exquisite pain during the crushing injury and also afterwards upon movement or handling. This would have been obvious to any carer or anyone within earshot of her screaming;
iii) The bruises and marks to W were caused by inappropriate application of excessive force on more than one occasion;
iv) The first, second and third respondents failed to seek medical attention for W;
v) The first to fourth respondents are within the pool of potential perpetrators of the injuries to W;
vi) Extensive nappy rash was caused due to neglect of W's basic care by infrequent nappy changes;
vii) W, being a girl, was unwanted by all the adults save for her mother, the first respondent;
viii) The first respondent was controlled and experienced coercive behaviour from the second, third and fourth respondents but they all would have accepted this as culturally normative;
ix) The second, third and fourth respondents used inappropriate force on Y, Z and X and in particular:
a) The third respondent would frequently slap and pinch X;
b) The third and fourth respondents would on occasion use inappropriate force towards X;
c) The third and fourth respondents would strike Z and Y usually by slapping or smacking;
d) The fourth respondent kicked Y on one or more occasions;
e) The second respondent would strike Y and Z on occasions with a closed fist;
f) No effective role was taken to protect Z, Y and X;
x) The third and fourth respondents frequently drank excessively in the household to the point where their ability to meet the physical and emotional needs of the children was compromised;
xi) On occasion the third and fourth respondents gave alcoholic drinks to X;
xii) Frequent physical fights and altercations took place between the adults in the household which was chaotic and pervaded by intrafamilial conflict. In particular there were frequent occasions when the fourth respondent would assault the third respondent;
xiii) The food provided for the children in the household was frequently taken from bins and then washed before being given to them;
xiv) On occasions Z accompanied the third respondent when she stole alcohol from shops and was afterwards involved in the process of hiding what had been stolen;
xv) Z and Y were coerced by the third and fourth respondents into remaining silent about the matters in respect of which they made the above allegations;
xvi) On occasion, Z and Y were left with inadequate and inappropriate care when the third and fourth respondents went to Romania or were absent from the home;
xvii) On occasion, Z was used by the third and fourth respondents to assist in attempts to obtain money or pecuniary advantage; and
xviii) The sleeping arrangements for the children in the household were at times unhygienic and inadequate.
i) it would remove the need for interpretation of both lay and professional oral evidence, but also presumably written evidence as well, and therefore the risk of nuance and meaning being lost is removed;
ii) this point is repeated with respect to undertaking assessments of the parents and alternative careers, all of whom are in any event in Romania or intending to return to Romania;
iii) the current proposal for assessments is problematic in that there are no clear timescales or an identified assessor and the court has no power to make mandatory directions regarding these assessments being undertaken by Romanian professionals;
iv) the local authority's assessments of the parents and alternative careers have to date been flawed and it is unclear why positive local assessments have not been accepted by the local authority. It is argued that the local authority's flawed assessments are in part a product of it being an international exercise and also conducted via an interpreter;
v) Romania opposes the adoption of its nationals unless done in conformity with its laws;
vi) The Romanian court would be better placed to assess what local support services could be available to the family;
vii) Only the Romanian court has a realistic chance of ensuring the children continue to know and live within their Roma heritage and be brought up in their own nation. A Romanian court also has the benefit of being able to judge better the standard of care by the accepted standards in Romania as opposed to in England;
viii) In any event the advantage of judicial continuity in this jurisdiction will be lost if the fourth respondent's recently prefigured application for HHJ Lea to recuse himself is successful; and
ix) By the time of a final hearing many (indeed it is argued all) key witnesses will be in Romania and will be giving their evidence from there.
Transfer to a court better placed to hear the case
"1. By way of exception, the courts of a Member State having jurisdiction as to the substance of the matter may, if they consider that a court of another Member State, with which the child has a particular connection, would be better placed to hear the case, or a specific part thereof, and where this is in the best interests of the child:
…
(b) request a court of another Member State to assume jurisdiction in accordance with paragraph 5.
2. Paragraph 1 shall apply:
(a) upon application from a party;
…
3. The child shall be considered to have a particular connection to a Member State as mentioned in paragraph 1, if that Member State:
…
(c) is the place of the child's nationality; …"
"First, it must determine whether the child has, within the meaning of Article 15(3), 'a particular connection' with the relevant other Member State. . . . Given the various matters set out in Article 15(3) as bearing on this question, this is, in essence, a simple question of fact. For example, is the other Member State the former habitual residence of the child (see Article 15(3)(b)) or the place of the child's nationality (see Article 15(3)(c)).
Secondly, it must determine whether the court of that other Member State 'would be better placed to hear the case, or a specific part thereof'. This involves an exercise in evaluation, to be undertaken in the light of all the circumstances of the particular case.
Thirdly, it must determine if a transfer to the other court 'is in the best interests of the child.' This again involves an evaluation undertaken in the light of all the circumstances of the particular child."
"It is entirely proper to enquire into questions of fact that might inform the court's evaluation of whether a court is better placed to hear a case. Without wishing to prescribe an exhaustive list, those facts might include the availability of witnesses of fact, whether assessments can be conducted and if so by whom (i.e. not a comparative analysis of welfare perceptions and principles but, for example, whether an assessor will have to travel to another jurisdiction to undertake an assessment and whether that is a lawful and/or professionally appropriate course), and whether one court's knowledge of the case provides an advantage, for example by judicial continuity between fact finding and evaluation and so on."
"56. Consequently, it remains the task of the court having jurisdiction to determine, secondly, whether there is, in the Member State with which the child has a particular connection, a court that is better placed to hear the case.
57. To that end, the court having jurisdiction must determine whether the transfer of the case to that other court is such as to provide genuine and specific added value, with respect to the decision to be taken in relation to the child, as compared with the possibility of the case remaining before that court. In that context, the court having jurisdiction may take into account, among other factors, the rules of procedure in the other Member State, such as those applicable to the taking of evidence required for dealing with the case. However, the court having jurisdiction should not take into consideration, within such an assessment, the substantive law of that other Member State which might be applicable by the court of that other Member State, if the case were transferred to it. If the court were to take that into consideration, doing so would be in breach of the principles of mutual trust between Member States and mutual recognition of judgments that are the basis of Regulation No 2201/2003 (see, to that effect, judgments of 23 December 2009, Deticek, C-403/09 PPU, EU:C:2009:810, paragraph 45, and of 15 July 2010, Purrucker, C-256/09, EU:C:2010:437, paragraphs 70 and 71)."
"It is clear, therefore, that the power to transfer a case (or part of a case) to the courts of another Member State is an exception to the general principle, as the opening words of article 15 (1) themselves make clear. One of the fundamental principles of community law is that of legal certainty. It is for that reason that the ECJ (now the CJEU) has consistently held that exceptions to general principles should be narrowly interpreted: see Case 33/78 Etablissements Somafer SA v Saar-Ferngas AG [1979] 1 CMLR 490 at [7] (concerning jurisdiction in civil and commercial matters) and Case 348/87 Stichting Uitvoering Financiële Acties v Staatssecretaris van Financiën [1989] ECR 1737 (concerning exceptions to VAT liability)."
The exceptionality of the article 15 procedure is emphasised by para 3.3.1 of the Brussels IIa Practice Guide.
"It is also vital, as this case has demonstrated, that the Article 15 issue is considered at the earliest opportunity, that is, as Ryder LJ has pointed out, when the proceedings are issued and at the Case Management Hearing."
"43. It is the case … that the "better placed" and "best interests" questions are inter-related. Some of the same factors may be relevant to both. But it is clear that they are separate questions and must be addressed separately. The second one does not inexorably follow from the first.
44. …The question is whether the transfer is in the child's best interests. This is a different question from what eventual outcome to the case will be in the child's best interests. The focus of the inquiry is different, but it is wrong to call it "attenuated". The factors relevant to deciding the question will vary according to the circumstances. It is impossible to be definitive. But there is no reason at all to exclude the impact upon the child's welfare, in the short or the longer term, of the transfer itself. What will be its immediate consequences? What impact will it have on the choices available to the court deciding upon the eventual outcome? This is not the same as deciding what outcome will be in the child's best interests. It is deciding whether it is in the child's best interests for the court currently seised of the case to retain it or whether it is in the child's best interests for the case to be transferred to the requested court."
"Third and last, the requirement that the transfer must be in the best interests of the child implies that the court having jurisdiction must be satisfied, having regard to the specific circumstances of the case, that the envisaged transfer of the case to a court of another Member State is not liable to be detrimental to the situation of the child concerned."