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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> P v A (Summary Return) [2015] EWHC 3818 (Fam) (04 December 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2015/3818.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 3818 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London. |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
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P | Applicant | |
v | ||
A | Respondent |
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HIS HONOUR JUDGE BOOTH:
"By the Divorce Order of 16th May 2011 the Regional Court of Legnica dissolved the marriage between Iwona Armatys Pietka and Aleksander Pietka. Upon mutual motion of the spouses the Court did not decide which of the spouses was guilty of the breakdown of the marriage. The Court entrusted execution of parental responsibility over the children, including A, to mother, limited execution of the parental authority of the father to general insight in upbringing and education of the children, notably to co-signing about the choice of the education, and professional occupation, and medical treatment of the child in case of his serious illness. The Court decided not to decide on contacts of the father with the children after divorce and the accommodation of the parties."
"In light of the Supreme Court's guidance presented above, in my opinion the crucial importance to decide is whether or not the father has the right of veto to the child's relocation is establishing if permanent change of the child's place of residence will make it impossible for the father to contact the child in the way resulting from the wording of the Order of 16th May 2011. If the answer to this is positive the father would have the right to prevent the child's removal from Poland. Therefore, it will be possible to confirm that mother has not the right to remove the child from Poland without the father's consent."
She goes on:
"In my opinion the facts of the case concerning the contacts' issue may be crucial in determining whether the father had a right of veto. Assuming that father's contacts with the child were regular and in principle included spending time with the minor child every or almost every weekend the father had the right of veto against the child's relocation abroad. If, on the other hand, those contacts were irregular and rare, as it has been described in the mother's statement, on this ground one may assume that relocation would not affect father's contacts' execution, the father would not be entitled to such a right of veto."
So what the expert is describing are two extremes of a continuum. On the one side, regular and frequent contact being exercised where relocation would prevent that happening and secondly, irregular and rare contact, where relocation would not necessarily prevent that happening.
"I can wait in Poland until it all finishes. If I need to go then we will go to Poland and wait until it finishes."
She records him as saying that he would not mind being in Poland for a little while so he can see his friends and his grandma. But then the expectation was when the whole case finishes he could come back to England.
Accepting all of those points I can see no basis on which I could exercise that discretion to allow A to stay.
AVTS REF: 6221/H5021