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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> W v W [2009] EWHC 3288 (Fam) (10 December 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2009/3288.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 3288 (Fam), [2010] 1 FLR 1342, [2010] Fam Law 228 |
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This judgment is being handed down in private on 10 December 2009. It consists of 12 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.
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE BAKER
FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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W |
Plaintiff |
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- and - |
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W |
Defendant |
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Miss Jacqueline Renton (instructed by Bindmans LLP) for the Respondent
Mr Edward Devereux (instructed by Freemans LLP) for the Applicant Child C
Hearing date: 8 December 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE BAKER:
Introduction
Summary of background
C's reasons for being joined as a party
(1) C is a bright, articulate young woman who is without doubt competent and able to give instructions.
(2) C informed Miss Hansen that if the Court ordered L's return to Australia, her mother would follow and then so would she, otherwise no one will be there to protect her brother or mother. She was extremely concerned as to their welfare and her own.
(3) C told Miss Hansen that she could not remember when her parents did not argue and fight, and that her father was an extremely domineering man and when annoyed he would take it out on either her (in the last few years) or her mother or both of them.
(4) Given the level of violence in the home, C always tried to keep L by her side to protect him and keep him away from it all. He is six years younger and she has always protected him as much as she was able. They are very close.
(5) When asked by Miss Hansen whether her father had been physically violent to her, C said "yes". The first time was when she was eleven years old. She had come home from school to find her parents arguing and had shouted at them to stop. Her father had told her it was none of her business, C had replied "yes it is, I live here" and her father smacked her across the face. She described to Miss Hansen how her father had seemed to lose control and was beating and punching her all over her arms and legs and then threw her across the room onto a sofa and continued hitting her. After this incident, C said that she was bruised all over her arms and legs.
(6) C described to Miss Hansen how the fights and beatings continued for a number of years until eventually her mother got the courage to separate from her husband and the three of them left the family home in 2006 when C was about fourteen. However, she said that this did not last for long as her father visited them regularly. During the visits he would be rude and offensive to her mother and would be horrid and denigrating to L calling him "fat" and telling him that he was no good for anything. C stated that her father would never take L out but seemed to use contact as a way of controlling her mother and her.
(7) C stated that her mother had subsequently moved house again, but, to her disappointment, had then told her father where they were now living. C stated that her father constantly demanded that they move back to live with him. She said to Miss Hansen that "they sort of reconciled" and that it was "like she [i.e. her mother] had given up".
(8) C said that things had come to a head last year when she was sitting her exams in June. One evening her father came round and her parents started arguing again. C could not concentrate and asked him to be quiet, whereupon her father became furious and started hitting her all over her arms and legs. The next morning she went to her exam covered in bruises and with her arms aching. She broke down during the exam and could not complete the paper. The school's counsellor had taken her aside and found her a hostel where she could stay because she was too scared to go home.
(9) C told Miss Hansen that she was worried for L and knew that she had to move back into the house because of her concern and did so in about January or February of this year. She said: "the last five months before we left were awful. My Mum had tried to protect L a bit but it did not really work. I would therefore argue with Dad to try to ensure that L was protected from his Dad's usual bullying. I also felt I had to protect my mother".
(10) C further said to Miss Hansen: "I am terrified that if L goes back, Mum would go back as well, and there will be no protection for either of them. I will have to go back too… I do not how [L] would handle my father now. I do know that my father started hitting me quite regularly from the age of eleven onwards and this is L's age now. I believe L would suffer the same fate". She stated that unfortunately her mother is so scared of her father that she could not say no to him. She could not shut the door on him and could not report him to the police. In essence, C said that the mother could not protect her children from the father. Their only protection was that of distance.
The parties' positions
The Family Proceedings Rules: Decision in S v B
"(a) the person alleged to have been brought into the UK the child in respect of whom an application under the Hague Convention is made;
(b) the person with whom the child is alleged to be;
(c) any parent or guardian of the child who is within the UK and is not otherwise a party;
(d) the person in whose favour a decision relating to custody has been made if he is not otherwise a party; and
(e) any other person who appears to the court to have a sufficient interest in the welfare of the child" (emphasis added).
"(1) Without prejudice to rules 2.57 and 9.2(A) and to para. 2 of appendix 4, if in any family proceedings it appears to the Court that it is in the best interests of any child to be made a party to the proceedings, the Court may appoint
(a) an officer of the service or a Welsh family proceedings officer;
(b) if he consents, the Official Solicitor; or
(c) if he consents, some other proper person
to be the guardian ad litem of the child with the authority to take part in the proceedings on the child's behalf.
(2) An order under paragraph (1) may be made by the court of its own motion or on the application of a party to the proceedings or of the proposed guardian ad litem…"
The parties' submissions
(1) "… [T]here is now a growing understanding of the importance of listening to the children involved in children's cases" (per Baroness Hale of Richmond in Re D at para 57).
(2) Baroness Hale concluded in Re D (at para 58) that the obligation of Article 11 (2) of Council Regulation (EC) No 2201/2003 of 27 November 2003 Concerning Jurisdiction and the Recognition and Enforcement of Judgments in Matrimonial Matters and the Matters of Parental Responsibility, repealing Regulation (EC) No 1347/2000, ("Brussels II Revised"), which required European Hague Convention cases (subject to the Regulation) to hear the child, unless it appeared inappropriate having regard to his or her age or degree of maturity, should be of universal application to all Convention cases.
(3) Save in "settlement" cases under the second paragraph of article 12 of the Hague Convention (where joinder of children should be "routine"), separate representation of children will generally not add enough to the court's understanding to justify the likely intrusion, expense and delay (per Baroness Hale in Re M at para 57). Baroness Hale added, however, that she would hesitate to use the word 'exceptional', as proposed by the Court of Appeal in Re F (Abduction: Joinder of Child as Party) [2007] EWCA Civ 393, [2007] 2 FLR 313. She added: "the substance is what counts, not the label."
(4) "If the 'gateway' of the children's objections exception is passed, the court must consider the discretion stage. It is argued that Re M marks a change so that the return 'policy' of the Convention is a much less potent factor to be considered at this stage …. Welfare considerations, including having regard to the children's views, will now loom larger" (per Ryder J. in Re C at para 45).
(1) She is a full sibling to L and very close to him.
(2) She is significantly older and more mature than the non-subject child Y in S v B, and in the opinion of Miss Hansen she is bright and articulate.
(3) She plays a very different role in the household from that played by Y in S v B. She is, it is submitted, a "critical protective element" for L against the father's allegedly violent behaviour. Her role and presence in the mother's household directly impacts upon L's welfare.
(4) The allegations of domestic violence are, it is said, of a more serious degree than in S v B.
(5) C will be devastated if this Court orders L to be returned to Australia and will face a difficult decision whether to stay here or accompany him.
(6) C has a position close to, but independent of, that of the mother, about whom she makes some criticisms in her capacity to protect L.
(7) A person's right to respect for private and family life under Article 8 of ECHR incorporates inter alia a right to procedural fairness, as recognised in numerous cases from W v UK (1987) 10 EHRR 29 to CF v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2004] EWHC 111 (Fam), [2004] 2 FLR 517. Procedural fairness requires that C be allowed to participate in this process that will lead to crucial decisions about her future and that of her family.
Decision