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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> TG (A Child : location order and disclosure orders) [2017] EWHC 514 (Fam) (15 February 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2017/514.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 514 (Fam), [2017] 4 WLR 142, [2017] WLR(D) 558 |
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FAMILY DIVISION
B e f o r e :
(In Private)
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J Z | Applicant | |
- and - | ||
T G | Respondent |
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MR. E. REID (instructed by Bloomfield Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE FRANCIS:
"Notwithstanding the provisions of the preceding Article, the judicial or administrative authority of the requested State is not bound to order the return of the child if the person, institution or other body which opposes its return establishes that-
(b) there is a grave risk that his or her return would expose the child to physical or psychological harm or otherwise place the child in an intolerable situation."
"I kept telling the applicant to leave because I could not deal with the alcoholic behaviour any more. But he said to me that, if he had to leave, he would kill me and kill the baby and would then commit suicide."
"I swear on baby life T go face you go shit.
I need to see my daughter.
I swear I will spend my life to destroy her.
Tell her I will find her, I will kill her and I will sit and laugh.
I will facking. You are shit.
You facking all shit. All shit like shit people. You shit. I thought you can understand."
"I sure the day my baby daughter born she'll be witness.
If I didn't see my baby daughter on regular basis I will pray to my God take away every happiness from T [the mother], give her pain, make her cry."
Ms. Papazian did a very good job at trying to finesse the effect of these messages and I recognise that the father did later say:
"God please forgive me for asking this. I will not ask you or do not want to do nothing with T unless she just letting me see S on regular basis."
Then he said:
"God knows I want to have simple deal with T."
"In the light of these passages we must make clear the effect of what this court said in In Re E. The critical question is what will happen if, with the mother, the child is returned. If the court concludes that, on return, the mother will suffer such anxieties that their effect on her mental health will create a situation that is intolerable for the child, then the child should not be returned. It matters not whether the mother's anxieties will be reasonable or unreasonable. The extent to which there will, objectively, be good cause for the mother to be anxious on return will nevertheless be relevant to the court's assessment of the mother's mental state if the child is returned."
"It is also common for such abducting parents to claim that the parental relationship has broken down because of domestic abuse and ill-treatment by the other parent. That is why - she says - she had to get away and that is why - she says - she had to do so secretly. She was too afraid to do otherwise and she is too afraid to go back. Critics of the Convention have claimed that the courts are too ready to ignore these claims, too reluctant to acknowledge the harm done to children by witnessing violence between their parents, and too willing to accept that the victim, if she is a victim, will be adequately protected in the courts of the requesting country…In particular, it is said, the courts in common law countries are too ready to accept undertakings given to them by the left-behind parent; yet these undertakings are not enforceable in the courts of the requesting country and indeed the whole concept of undertakings is not generally understood outside the common law world. At all events, the change in the likely identity of the abductor places a premium on the efficacy of protective measures which was not so apparent when the Convention was signed.
Yet the parties also understand that there is no easy solution to such problems. The first object of the Convention is to deter either parent (or indeed anyone else) from taking the law into their own hands and pre-empting the result of any dispute between them about the future upbringing of their children. If an abduction does take place, the next object is to restore the children as soon as possible to their home country, so that any dispute can be determined there. The left-behind parent should not be put to the trouble and expense of coming to the requested state in order for factual disputes to be resolved there. The abducting parent should not gain an unfair advantage by having that dispute determined in the place to which she has come. And there almost always is a factual dispute, if not about the primary care of the children, then certainly about where they should live, and in cases where domestic abuse is alleged, about whether those allegations are well-founded. Factual disputes of this nature are likely to be better able to be resolved in the country where the family had its home. Hence it is one thing to say that the factual context has changed and another thing entirely to say that the change should result in any change to the interpretation and application of the Hague Convention."
"Thus a relatively low risk of death or really serious injury might properly be qualified as 'grave' while a higher level of risk might be required for other less serious forms of harm."
"'Intolerable' is a strong word, but when applied to a child must mean 'a situation which this particular child in these particular circumstances should not be expected to tolerate'. It is, as article 13(b) makes clear, the return to the requesting state, rather than the enforced removal from the requested state, which must have this effect. Thus the English courts have sought to avoid placing the child in an intolerable situation by extracting undertakings from the applicant as to the conditions in which the child will live when he returns and by relying on the courts of the requesting State to protect him once he is there."