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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> B (a minor), Re [2005] EWHC 1473 (Fam) (07 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2005/1473.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 1473 (Fam) |
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THE PRESIDENT
This judgment is being handed down in private on Thursday 7 July 2005 It consists of 8 pages and has been signed and dated by the judge. The judge hereby gives leave for it to be reported.
The judgment is being distributed on the strict understanding that in any report no person other than the advocates or the solicitors instructing them (and other persons identified by name in the judgment itself) may be identified by name or location and that in particular the anonymity of the children and the adult members of their family must be strictly preserved.
FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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B (A Minor) |
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Hearing date: 26 May 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Mark Potter, P :
"9. I do need to go back to Jamaica with [the child] as soon as possible. It is all right [for the father] to say that I should remain in this country, but I have no means of support here. He is not providing me with any money to financially support [the child] and I am not entitled to get any benefit whatsoever. I cannot continue living on people's charity and need to go home. It is not fair for [the child] and I to be forced to remain in this country with no means whatsoever of supporting ourselves. I am not able to work and not entitled to any benefits.
10. I understand [the child] does have dual nationality and may or may not be entitled to a British passport.
11. [The father] does not have any realistic proposals to care for [the child] in this country and I do not believe that it would be best for [the child] to remain here without me.
12. I therefore ask the court to determine this matter urgently as I am under a lot of stress at the moment; if I cannot return home to Jamaica soon [the child] and I could become homeless and destitute with no means of support."
"From these and other cases I think that the following propositions can be extracted.
1. The court may entertain an application to invoke its wardship jurisdiction or powers under the Children Act 1989 made by or in respect of a person liable to removal or deportation.
2. The jurisdiction will be exercised very sparingly because:
i. A wardship or Children Act order cannot deprive the Secretary of State of the power conferred by the Immigration Act 1971 to remove or deport the child or any other party to the proceedings, although it may be something to which the Secretary of State should have regard in deciding whether to exercise the power; andii. In cases in which there is, apart from immigration questions, no genuine dispute concerning the child, the court will not allow itself to be used as a means of influencing the decision of the Secretary of State.... Proposition (2) is stated in all the cases but the two reasons require further analysis. Reason (a) is contained in the judgment of Russell LJ in Re: Mohamed Arif [1968] Ch 643 at p662. In particular, after noting that a wardship order normally conferred upon the court the power to decide where the child should live and made its consent necessary to the removal of the child from the jurisdiction, so that unauthorised interference or removal constituted a contempt, Russell LJ pointed out that this could not apply in a case in which a statute expressly conferred the right to remove the child from the jurisdiction upon someone else. In relation to the powers of the Secretary of State under the immigration legislation, he said:Any lawful deportation order affecting a ward must be outside the normal position I have mentioned already, that a ward must not leave the jurisdiction without permission of the judge: indeed, it would override any existing express order of the judge in the wardship proceedings that the infant was not to depart from the jurisdiction."It followed, said Russell LJ, that:"The wardship of an infant, in my judgment, has not and could not in law have any effect on the powers and duties of the immigration authorities so as to hamper them in any way in removing the infant from the jurisdiction..."
"...there is no legal necessity for the Secretary of State to intervene and have the application dismissed before he is able to exercise his immigration powers. There may well be cases where intervention would serve no purpose. The court and the Secretary of State are performing different functions. It does not follow that because the court, applying its criteria of the welfare of the child, refuses to dismiss the application, the Secretary of State should not exercise its powers of deportation or removal. He may therefore take the view that whatever the court may decide about the welfare of the child, policy requires removal or deportation. Provided that such a decision is not irrational or procedurally irregular, the court cannot declare it unlawful."
"I have no objection to [the father] having contact in Jamaica whenever he comes there on holiday. He has family in the country and he wants to visit once, twice or three times a year, I would allow him contact, including overnight staying contact, whilst he is in Jamaica. Clearly, by the time [the father] visits Jamaica it may be that [the child] will not know [him] and be comfortable, so initially he will have to spend sometime getting to know her before she will be able to stay with him overnight. Contact will have to be taken at [her] pace and if she was comfortable with him, more or less straight away he could have extended contact."
1. The wardship be discharged upon the child's removal from the jurisdiction pursuant to the Notice of Removal dated 16 May 2005.
2. The tipstaff do release the passport of the defendant mother to her on presentation of this order after 9:30am on Friday 27 May 2005.
3. The plaintiff father do have contact with the minor as follows:
i. On 27 May 2005 from 9:30am to 2:30pm;
ii. Reasonable contact, including staying contact, whenever the plaintiff father visits Jamaica and whenever the defendant mother is in the United Kingdom with the minor. The times and places for such contact to be arranged between the parties.
4. The defendant mother do notify the plaintiff father of any address at which she and the minor reside from time to time.
5. There be permission to the parties to disclose to a Family Court in Jamaica the judgment herein for the purpose of applying for a contact order by consent in similar terms to paragraph 3(ii) herein. Such application to be made within 12 months of this order.
6. There be no order for costs save for detailed public funding assessment of both parties' costs.