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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> Button v Salama [2013] EWHC 4152 (Fam) (19 December 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2013/4152.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 4152 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
B e f o r e :
(Sitting in public)
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NAOMI ISIS BUTTON | Applicant | |
- and - | ||
TAMER AFIFI MOHAMED AFIFI SALAMA | Respondent |
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THE RESPONDENT appeared in person.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE HOLMAN:
"38. While such a course is legally permissible, the question of whether it is justified in a particular case will turn on the facts that are then in play. It will be for the court on each case to determine whether a further term of imprisonment is both necessary and proportionate.
39. Part of the court's proportionate evaluation will be to look back at past orders and at the cumulative total of any time already spent in prison and to bear those factors in mind when determining what order is to be made on each occasion. The court should also have some regard, if that is appropriate, to the likely sentence that might be imposed for similar conduct in the criminal court.
40. This is not however a licence for the courts to subvert the 1981 Act by blindly making successive committal orders for the remainder of a contemnor's natural life, as has been suggested on behalf of the father. It is a proportionate, stage-by-stage, hearing-by-hearing approach relying upon the discretion and judgment of the judge at each hearing."
"Second, there is no doubt that there may be successive or repeated contempts of court constituted by positive acts disobeying an order not to do them. For my part, I am quite satisfied that there may be also be consecutive or successive contempts of court constituted by repeated omissions to comply with a mandatory order positively to do something. However, where the latter is in question, it is plain that there may well come a time when further punishment will be excessive. When that will be is a matter of fact for each case."
"The abduction of children from a loving parent is an offence of unspeakable cruelty to the loving parent and to the child or children. ... It is a cruel offence even if the criminal responsible for it is the other parent."
Mr Jarman, understandably, emphasises that passage in that judgment. I wish to make absolutely clear that I do not in any way whatsoever condone the actions of the father in the present case, nor do I minimise in any way whatsoever the gravity of what has happened and is continuing to happen, and indeed the cruelty of it upon the mother. But it is extremely important not to forget that those words of Lord Judge related expressly to an "offence", and "the criminal" responsible for it.
"... in theory three possible ways in which the court could deal with the parent who abducted his child. First, by proceedings for contempt of court on the basis that an order of the court had been flouted; second, prosecution for an offence under the [Child Abduction Act] 1984; third, prosecution for kidnapping, either on the basis of force, or fraud in achieving the removal of the child from the other parent."
The reference there to" kidnapping" is a reference to a common law offence. There is no statutory offence of kidnapping as such.
"An offence of kidnapping by one parent of his or her children is much more problematic, and difficult of proof."
In any event, I am, to say the least, doubtful whether a common law offence such as kidnapping can possibly extend extra-territorially to a different sovereign state such as Egypt, where all the events in question took place.
"The court should also have some regard, if that is appropriate, to the likely sentence that might be imposed for similar conduct in the criminal court."
"(1) In any case where a court has power to commit a person to prison for contempt of court and (apart from this provision) no limitation applies to the period of committal, the committal shall (without prejudice to the power of the court to order his earlier discharge) be for a fixed term, and that term shall not on any occasion exceed two years in the case of committal by a superior court...."