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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> B v B [2012] EWHC 1924 (Fam) (13 July 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2012/1924.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 1924 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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B |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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B |
Respondent |
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Mr Marc Roberts (instructed by Mubasheri & Co Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 2nd July 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Theis DBE :
Introduction
1. That this court retain exclusive jurisdiction in relation to all matters concerning the children and any variations to Orders previously made, herein.
2. That any proceedings issued in the Dubai Courts by the Applicant mother be dismissed or in the alternative that the orders that the Orders previously made by this court be registered and recognised in Dubai and that the proceedings issued by the Applicant mother in the Dubai Courts be stayed pending the order being registered and recognised.
3. The passports of the children be retained by the lawyer for the Respondent father or any other person that the Court consider this to do so.
4. An order for the Respondent father's costs in this Application and matters ancillary thereto including his wasted costs of the current proceedings in the Dubai Courts.
5. An Order that the Applicant pays a Security Deposit into Court in the sum of GDP 50,000 to cover any future costs incurred by me in the event that further breaches occur and it be necessary for me to remedy same in any court.
Relevant background
Upon the Respondent father being believed to have obtained a Travel Ban in the Dubai Court preventing the children from travelling outside the United Arab Emirates
Upon the Applicant mother intending to apply to the Court in Dubai to lift the Travel Ban imposed on the children at the earliest opportunity
Upon the mother intending, in the absence of the father's cooperation, to apply to the Court in Dubai for recognition and enforcement of the order made on 5th November 2010 and of this order.
Upon the parties and the court agreeing that the parties and the children are, at present, habitually resident in Dubai, United Arab Emirates
Upon the order of 5th November 2010 remaining in force
Upon the parties agreeing for the said Order to be filed and/or registered with the Dubai Court so as to be recognised by said Court
Order
1. There is no Order on the Applicant Mother's application for costs arising from and ancillary to the hearing on 21st January 2011
2. Leave is given to the Father to withdraw his application under the Children Act 1989 dated 21st January 2011
3. The parties, through their respective solicitors, shall within 14 days of the date of this order agree the translations of this order and those made on the 5th November 2010 and 21st January 2011.
4. The Applicant Mother shall file and/or register (as may be appropriate) copies of said three Orders and their translations with the principle court in Dubai as soon as is practically possible and shall, thereafter, notify the Respondent Father of the same.
5. The costs of preparing the translations, of attesting the said Orders and of filing and/or registering the same in the Dubai courts and any ancillary costs that may be incurred shall be shared equally between the parties. The Applicant's solicitor shall take the lead and arrange for the translations and for the attesting of the
Orders.
6. Leave is given to the parties to disclose to the Dubai Courts the documents filed within the Children Act proceedings in the UK in the event any application is made in Dubai by either party further to the Order of the 5th November 2010.
At the outset [of this hearing] I indicated to the parties that it seemed to me that these issues concerning the children should no longer be litigated in this court. All parties are habitually resident in Dubai and intend to stay there for the foreseeable future; the children are there; plainly therefore issues about what contact there should be or rather how the parenting time should be divided between the parties is a matter which is best determined by the court where the children are living, namely, the court of Dubai. In the event, however, I am not formally making any order staying the proceedings or the applications because the father has through his solicitor indicated that he is willing to withdraw his application.
A little later, in the context of refusing the mother's application for costs he said
Having travelled to Dubai and chosen to live in Dubai, the parties are subject to the laws of Dubai….
The Law
Submissions of the parties
Decision
(1) The provisions made in that order to provide for the order to be filed and/or registered with the Dubai Courts so as to be recognised.
(2) The terms of the order providing for the documents filed in these proceedings to be disclosed to the Dubai Courts 'in the event of any application is made in Dubai by either party further to the order of 5th November 2010'. This clearly anticipated applications being made in Dubai.
(3) The clear observations made by Baker J in his judgment (para 6) on 14 March 2011 together with the father withdrawing his application under the CA 1989 as a consequence.
(4) The translation of the orders, paid for jointly as required by the order dated 14 March 2011, and lodging them with the UAE Embassy on 24 March 2011.
(5) This case can be distinguished from Re W (ibid). In that case there was no doubt that the primary jurisdiction remained in Malaysia, where the child concerned still lived with her father. In this case it would be difficult to maintain that the order dated 14 March 2011 intended this court to retain the primary jurisdiction, particularly in the light of Baker J's comments in his judgment.
Failure to comply with the bundle Practice Direction
(1) Mr Roberts said he thought the court may have kept the position statements from the last hearing. He advanced no basis for that belief and why it absolved him from the obligations under the Practice Direction
(2) Mr Roberts said the updated statements were not in the bundle because the preceding Friday and Saturday were not working days in Dubai. The statements were dated 19 June 2012 and 27 June 2012 respectively, so well before the previous Friday.
(3) Mr Howling Q.C. thought leaving a copy of his position statement (and 46 page attachment) on my clerk's desk at 9.30am on the morning of the hearing (even though she wasn't there) was sufficient. When I asked why it had not been lodged by 11am the previous Friday he replied he was in court. That is a wholly inadequate explanation, particularly as it transpired the position statements I did get from both counsel on the morning of the hearing on 2 July 2012 were merely copies of those used at the hearing on 21 June 2012; they had not been updated or revised.