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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> D (A Child), Re [2015] EWHC 3434 (Fam) (09 November 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2015/3434.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 3434 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
B e f o r e :
(Sitting As A Deputy High Court Judge)
(In Private)
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and |
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MS. L. STONE QC and MR. A. CAMPBELL (instructed by Williams & Co. Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
JUDGE FINNERTY:
"... it is my view that no action is required at present in relation to your immigration status and that in the light of the circumstances, if an application were to be made at this time it might well be refused."
Therefore it is not correct that the mother did nothing to regularise her immigration position.
"You state that your sponsor is a British Citizen but have provided no evidence in support of this. When we contacted your sponsor he stated that he lives in Israel with you. Your sponsor is not in the UK and there is no evidence that he is able to reside in the UK with you as your partner. There is no evidence that your sponsor is not (sic) present or settled in the UK or can be admitted for settlement on the same occasion as you. I therefore refuse your application under paragraph EC-P.1.1(d) of Appendix FM of the Immigration Rules, (E-ECP.2.1).
You state that you married your sponsor in 2011. Whilst you have submitted what you state is a marriage certificate, this has not been officially translated. Therefore, you have not provided evidence that you are married to your sponsor as stated or that your marriage is valid. I therefore refuse your application under paragraph EC-P.1.1(d) of Appendix FM of the Immigration Rules, (E-ECP.2.7).
You state that you wish to settle with your sponsor. You state that you meet in May 2011, your relationship began in August 2011and that you married in December 2011 but have provided no evidence in support of this. You state that you live as husband and wife in Israel since your marriage but have provided no evidence in support of this. You have submitted some photos but these are of your wedding only. You state that you and your sponsor have a child but have provided no evidence in support of this. There is no evidence that you are in a relationship with your sponsor as stated. I therefore am not satisfied that your relationship with your sponsor is genuine and subsisting or that you intend to live together permanently in the UK. I therefore refuse your application under paragraph EC-P.1.1(d) of Appendix FM of the Immigration Rules, (E-ECP.2.6 & 2.10).
Your sponsor is exempt from meeting the requirements of paragraph E-ECP.3.1 as they are in receipt of carer's allowance. You state that you have lived together since your marriage in Israel. It is therefore unclear how or why your sponsor is entitled to this allowance. In order to meet the requirements of these Rules you and your sponsor must be able to maintain and accommodate yourselves and any dependents adequately in the UK without recourse to public funds. You have submitted a letter from his employers stating that your sponsor has been employed as an admin assistance on a permanent basis since May 2013 with a weekly salary of £100 in cash. You have submitted no evidence to support this. Furthermore, when we contacted your sponsor on 05.11.14, he stated that you live together in Israel and that you will move to the UK together once you have a visa. It is therefore, unclear how your sponsor has been in permanent employment in the UK when he lives in Israel. You have submitted a letter of employment from the M Nursery stating they will employ you as a nursery worker but there is no evidence that you are qualified for such a position. Furthermore, there is no evidence that you were interviewed for this position and therefore, how you have chosen for this role or why a company would hold open a position for you until you receive entry clearance to ultimate UK. On the evidence provided, I am not satisfied that you and your sponsor are able to maintain and accommodate yourselves and any dependents adequately in the US without recourse to public funds. I therefore refuse your application under paragraph EC-P.1.1(d) of Appendix FM of the Immigration Rules, ... E-ECP.3.3(b).
I have also considered whether the particular circumstances set out in your application constitute exceptional circumstances which, consistent with the right to respect for family life contained in Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights, warrant consideration by the Secretary of State of a grant of entry clearance to come to the United Kingdom outside the requirements of the Immigration Rules. I have decided that they do not.
I have therefore refused your application because I am not satisfied, on the balance of probabilities, that you meet all of the requirements of the relevant Paragraph of the United Kingdom Immigration Rules."
"[1] On TUESDAY 26th May 2015 V1W1 attended the POLICE STATION front office with her daughter to report physical abuse and sexual abuse. When asked to provide more detail, V1W1 and calmly responded saying she had been beaten and raped over a period of time by her ex-husband when they were together and the daughter had been beaten by the ex-husband.
CID were spoken to about the allegation and informed that Sapphire should be contact in regard to the allegation, Sapphire were then contacted prior to conducting a report and DS Smith was advised over the matter and explained an SOIT officer has been assigned to deal with V1W1 and conduct further investigation into the matter and would just require a CRIS report and MERLIN to be completed and further investigation would be conducted by themselves.
The allegation of abuse begins when V1W1 and SUS1 were married in DECEMBER 2011 in Israel through an arranged marriage organized by both parties parents who's details were not provided. They have one daughter which is currently in custody of V1W1 and appeared safe and well when seen. Approximately a month after the marriage SUS1 started physically assaulting V1W1 by beating her with anything he could reach [2] such as mobiles which were said to leave bruises on her body in places which could be covered up and sexually assaulting by raping her during numerous occasions however V1W1 did not explain how many time this would occur in a week.
V1W1 stated that believed that this was being done due to something being wrong with SUS1 due to the fact they were living in Israel and his upbringing was in the UK. Approximately 16 months after, around APRIL of 2013, V1W1, SUS1 and daughter decided to move to the UK into a flat in E5, which V1W1 states was in close proximity to where SUS1's parents lived and believed that this would resolve the issue.
V1W1 said the sexual and physical abuse continued soon after moving with regular incidences during a week, during this time in the UK V1W1 spoke to three friends about the abuse. The three friends live in the UK and had experienced similar incidences and they remained silent over the matter and spoke to no other persons about the incidents. However all three friends want to remain unanimous [sic] due to community retaliations.
The abuse continued over the following 2 years with continual physical assaults by beating, sexual assaults by rape and threats to harm and kill both V1W1 and the daughter. V1W1 then left the UK after having been assaulted in front of her daughter which occurred when she got up at night to feed the daughter and SUS1 started punching her in the stomach. V1W1 made her way back to Israel with the daughter to stay with friends around March 2015.
VIW1 has returned to the UK on 26/05/2015 as she needed to attend court on the 29 of MAY 2015.
[3] She said on one such occasion he had been running a bath. She said she was checking the water temperature and realised he had only put the hot tap on, so she added some cold water to it. She said he came to her and he tried to slap her face, she said she put her arm up to protect herself at which point he punched her in the face causing her to bleed from the nose. She said she fell back and worried that she may fall in the hot bath but didn't. She said she didn't tell anyone about what happened. She said when she went to the GP he would go with her. She said she told the doctor sex was hurting her and the doctor told her she did not relax enough and she should try to use KY jelly.
She also mentioned another occasion just after their daughter started crèche in 2014 when she said the suspect slapped their daughter around the face 4 or 5 times after she had eaten chocolate and got messy. She said their daughter ran to her crying, she calmed her down. She said their daughter had a black bruise mark to her face. She said their daughter was almost 2 years old at the time. They went to their fathers place (whose father is unknown but this will be checked) and apparently he had asked how their daughter had got the mark to her face. Apparently the suspect said the daughter was just clumsy."
"79. The father seeks a child arrangements order which provides for D to reside with him and to spend time with the mother. Her contact with D if she is in this country could be generous and frequent. If she were to return to Israel he proposes she could have staying contact 3 times per annum in England and 3 times per annum in Israel. It is the father's case that he can best meet D's needs for a stable and secure home environment. He has an established home and support network with which D is very familiar. He also states that he is the parent who can best meet D's emotional needs by supporting and promoting D's relationship with both parents. Significantly the father remains a member of the orthodox community, which the mother left following her return to England, and accordingly D will have her primary home within the community into which she was born.
80. Since he vacated the matrimonial home the father has resided in the home of the paternal family. He has continued to work for the same company. He has since the end of June begun a new relationship with EF. The father and EF became engaged in September 2015. EF has been introduced to D. It is the father's case that D is developing a warm relationship with EF...
81. If D lives with the father, she will also have the advantage of support from the paternal grandmother. It was she who cared for D for several months when the mother went to work in the nursery and before D was old enough to attend nursery herself. The mother accepted that when grandmother was ill, she had not wanted anyone else to care for D because she didn't trust anyone else with D."
"71. The mother's plans are inchoate and unsupported, and would expose D to unstable and inappropriate living conditions. The father is also concerned about the safety of D should the mother in fact reside in, an Israeli settlement on the West Bank, as proposed by her in her statement of 7 September 2015. It is an area which remains highly volatile. The father is further opposed to the relocation as he believes that the mother is hostile towards him, his family, and his orthodox faith and is unsupportive of his role in D's life. Accordingly she is highly unlikely to support contact arrangements or his relationship with D. In fact the father states that it is far more likely that the mother will seek to undermine that relationship, D's perception of the father, and her perception of the faith and community into which she was born, and frustrate any contact arrangements directed. The mother has not offered or disclosed any measures which could be taken here or in Israel which could sufficiently reassure the court in this respect.
72. The mother's credibility is so unreliable that the Court cannot place confidence in what she says are her plans for her future.
73. The mother told the court in her statement of 7 July that she planned to live with her grandmother. She has never lived with her grandmother. It seems from her own mother's evidence that she did not even stay with her grandmother when she went to Israel in March; she went to her mother for a short while but then went to friends (and she told the police that she stayed with friends in March 2015). Although there was a period when she spent one night a week staying with her grandmother, this was before D was born, and is entirely different from the stresses of full time living in close proximity with the additional demands of a young child. It is untried and untested.
74. In her statement of 7 September 2015, the mother's plans had changed. She now planned to live in an Israeli town on the West Bank in a three bedroomed house owned by her proposed employer. The town is situated on the West Bank in an area of Arab settlement. It is a troubled and dangerous area. She says she has been offered work there by a Mr. T. The only evidence provided in support of this offer is a letter from Aharon Hameiri, who described himself as Mr. T's attorney. There is no evidence from Mr. T, and no evidence that Mr. Hameiri is authorised to act on his behalf. No information is provided as to the duties the mother would be expected to undertake. Significantly also the letter does not refer to the provision of housing for the mother, which the mother describes as 'part of the package'. Nor is there any reference to the promise referred to by the mother that Mr. T will pay for her to take driving lessons.
75. In her oral evidence, her plans had changed again. She reverted to the proposal that she would live with her grandmother because of the concerns that the West Bank town is an unsafe area. However she still proposes to work there on a daily basis (weekdays). The town is some 98 kilometres away from the area of Jerusalem in which the grandmother lives. This would involve the mother in substantial - and tiring - travel - two hours by public transport each way each day.
76. It is difficult to know what real support she would have from her family in Israel. Although she went initially to stay with her mother in March 2015, she did not stay there. She did not go on to stay then with her grandmother, or any other family member. Instead she says she took D to friends in the West Bank town. This would suggest her real inclination is not to live with her grandmother, as she now claims, but in fact to take D to that town again.
77. The mother states that if the job in the West Bank town did not work out, '.. there are plenty of back up options for me. I would easily be able to find employment in childcare in the local area as I already have experience and such jobs are easy to find'. We observe that no evidence whatsoever has been provided in support of this assertion or that she would expect to receive £800 per month in such occupation.
78. What role would the mother allow the father to have in D's life if she were living in Israel? In her first statement the mother states that should relocation be permitted, '… it would be a priority of mine to facilitate the continued relationship between D and [the father]'. In the light of the evidence we have set out above, we submit that the Court must have grave doubts about this. On her own case, she wants any contact by the father in Israel to be supervised and to be visiting contact for a few hours in a day only. Moreover she has already made serious allegations of physical abuse by the father to the Israeli police and it is not known what if any intervention they may make should the father travel to Israel. There is nothing to prevent her making serious allegations against him again. A mirror order will do little to protect him in those circumstances."
"However, as my Lord, Hedley J, has pointed out, the bar as to practicalities that must be jumped by the relocation applicant is set at a wide variety of heights depending on the facts and circumstances of the case. In this commonplace category of cross-border family creation, where the primary carer is returning to a completely familiar environment, the bar is obviously set considerably lower than in the case of an applicant who, in pursuit of some dream or ambition, is proposing to take the children to an unknown and untried environment. The bar is set particularly low where the primary carer is returning to the completely familiar home life after such a brief absence. In this instance the mother had only been in this country for six years in total."