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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> F (Child's Objections) (was Re N on appeal) [2015] EWCA Civ 1022 (14 October 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/1022.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 1022 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE FAMILY DIVISION
HIS HONOUR JUDGE BELLAMY
FD15P00183
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice President of the Court of Appeal Civil Division
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS
and
LADY JUSTICE BLACK
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RE F (CHILD'S OBJECTIONS) | ||
Note: was called Re N on appeal |
____________________
Mr David Williams QC & Miss Jacqueline Renton (instructed by Goodman Ray Solicitors) for the Respondent
Miss Mehvish Chaudhry (instructed by Dawson Cornwell) for the children's litigation friend
Hearing dates : 18th September 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
LADY JUSTICE BLACK:
The facts
"I am satisfied that by abusing the financial power imbalance in the way that he did the father effectively deprived the mother of the capacity to make a free and deliberate choice to return to England. On the contrary, his actions made such a return inevitable. The text message exchanges to which I referred earlier, when taken in the round, do not paint a picture of a mother who has acquiesced in the retention of her children in England or of a free and considered choice by her to return to live in England. They demonstrate that, in reality, she had little, if any, choice."
The text messages to which the judge refers must be those with which he deals at paragraph 16 et seq of the judgment (and see also paragraph 93). The judge said, at paragraph 17, that the totality of the text exchanges suggested that the father was putting the mother under intense pressure to bend to his will and described some of his texts as "highly abusive".
The position with regard to the children
The children's letters
"I am writing this letter because you won't listen to me. One of the reasons why I don't want to go back to Australia is because we have got Family and Friends here in England. I have made lots of new friends at my new school….My school has helped me a lot with my maths, reading, spelling and history. I really like history. Another of the reasons is that I have a cute baby sister that has just begun to crawl, named Molly. I would "LOVE" to see her grow up. Mum, on Thursday the judge will decide if I shall move back to Australia. This is the some [?] thing that I do not want to do. I want to live in England with my dad. My dad tells me the truth and tells me what is going on. That is why I love him and trust him. If you love us as much as you say you do, why are you trying to move us back to a country where we do not want to live. Please do not make us move back. By [Clare]"
"I am writing this letter because you won't listen when I try to talk. I don't want to go back to Australia because I have friends and family here. I have a baby sister called Molly and I want to grow up with her. In school I have learnt more than normal. My favourite subject is maths and English. I have some lovely friends at my new school…If we go back to Australia we will never see our family again. If we go back we will never see our daddy again. We love it here and we don't want to go back. You're saying that daddy's lied when actually you have!!! From [Harry]"
"I would like to stay in England because all our family is here and I love them very much. Also we have a 10 month baby sister that we also love to bits. So, people might say we are very young to make this big effort in staying in England but, I know what is right for me and I want to stay in England. Please!!! From [Clare] P.S And I would like to live with Dad."
The CAFCASS evidence
i) Harry, the youngest child, told her that they came here for the Christmas holiday and then decided that they did not want to go back because they have no family in Australia and wanted to be with their family here. He felt that his mother did not listen to them and that she just said that their father had told them what to say. There were things he missed about Australia and he wanted his dogs with him but he would be much happier if he lived with his father because then they could live in England, whereas his mother would make them return to Australia. He thought that living half with his mother and half with his father would make him happy.ii) Peter wanted to stay in England as he feels like part of a big family here, whereas in Australia it was just them and their mother, and he said that their baby half-sister was the main reason they wanted to come here. His ideal scenario was to live with his father here but to have his mother here too and to see her. He told the CAFCASS officer that he would be angry with his mother if they went back to Australia and would think it was her fault for going to court. He conveyed to the CAFCASS officer that going back to Australia was not commensurate with his idea of happiness. He said that he had been worried since the court proceedings began and it had been said that he may have to return to Australia.
iii) Clare told the CAFCASS officer that she wants to be in England living with her father and her siblings and amongst her extended family and also to see her mother. She said that she had been sad a lot of the time when living with her mother and only occasionally seeing her father, as she always really missed him. She said that if she returned to Australia, she would cry and cry like before when she missed her father. The CAFCASS officer thought that the most important relationship for her appeared to be with Molly, about whom she spoke a lot. The CAFCASS officer reported that Clare thinks that her mother had lied to them as she said that going to court was not about going back to Australia whereas it had turned out that it was. She said that Clare feels that she will be angry with her mother if they are returned to Australia. Clare was also worried about how life would be in that event, as she knew her mother had no money and her father paid for everything. Clare was clear that she identifies as English rather than Australian.
iv) Simon, the oldest child, also valued having family around him in England and said that being around his father had a sense of everything being "better" and somehow easier. He too has always identified with being English rather than Australian. He told the CAFCASS officer that if they returned to Australia he would feel "awful". He said that if they return to Australia, he would feel that his mother was responsible and that would not help their relationship; he felt that she had agreed to them staying, then she had come to England and "started all this court stuff". He would like to stay with his father but have his mother nearer to them.
Judge Bellamy's meeting with the children
The parents' perspective on the children's views
Judge Bellamy's decision: objections
"…the children's wishes, feelings and preferences are clear. With varying degrees of strength each of them has made it plain that they wish to remain in England and that they wish to remain in the care of their father. They are enjoying having contact with their wider family, most of whom they did not see during the years they were in Australia, and in particular they are enjoying living with Molly. Ms Adams' interpretation of what the children told her is that in this respect their circumstances in England cannot be replicated in Australia. She considered this to be more than a preference to remain in England."
"Harry
108. I referred earlier to a letter written by Harry to his mother. In it he sets out reasons for staying in England, not least because he wants 'to grow up with' Molly. He has nothing negative to say about Australia or about his mother's care of him whilst living in Australia. His primary concern appears to be that if he goes back to Australia 'we will never see our family again…we will never see our daddy again'. Against that, he told Ms Adams that he misses his old friends in Australia, 'as well as the spiders and the snakes'. He misses his swimming pool and the quad bikes. He misses, in particular, the family's two dogs and 'wants to be with them'. In her oral evidence Ms Adams said that Harry 'misses his dogs terribly'.
109. So far as this last point is concerned, I observe, in passing, that it would be surprising to the point of being highly improbable for the father to be unaware of the extent of Harry's distress. He clearly has the financial resources to arrange for the dogs to be brought to England. He has had more than sufficient time to do so. I find it distinctly odd that the father has not gone out of his way to resolve this issue.
110. Acknowledging, as I do, that in determining whether a child objects to being returned there is a 'fairly low threshold requirement', I am nonetheless not satisfied that it can properly be said that Harry objects to returning to Australia. He has a wish and a preference to remain in England but in my judgment he does not object to returning to Australia.
Peter
111. Peter clearly wishes to remain in England. He has made that clear to Ms Adams and to me. He told Ms Adams that his ideal scenario 'was to live in England with his dad, but have mum here and see her too'. He said that he 'was finding it a bit of a struggle at his new school'. He had had one good friend in Australia. Like Harry, Peter did not express any objections that related to Australia or to life in Australia. He has nothing negative to say about his mother's care of him whilst living in Australia.
112. As with Harry, notwithstanding the fairly low threshold requirement I am not satisfied that it can properly be said that Peter objects to returning to Australia,
Clare
113. In her letter to her mother and during her meeting with me, Clare emphasised the importance for her of living amongst her wider family and friends. It is clear that she has a particularly strong wish to live with Molly. She makes the same points in the letter she wrote to the Judge. In my judgment these are an expression of wishes, feelings and preferences and not of an objection to returning to her country of habitual residence. I accept that in her discussions with Ms Adams Clare's views were expressed with greater force than those of her brothers. I acknowledge that unlike her brothers Clare did make one negative comment about Australia saying that she 'was actually quite lonely in Australia cos it was just me and my mum – the only two girls in the house'. However, other concerns she expressed are to do with financial issues which are more to do with the relationship between her parents than with living in Australia. For example, Clare is the one who has the most vivid memories of telephone arguments between her parents concerning money; she is the one who expresses concern about how they would survive financially if they returned to Australia. Clare is also the one who harbours the greatest degree of anger towards her mother for not listening to her. After careful thought and reflection I have come to the conclusion that notwithstanding the fairly low threshold requirement to establish a child's objections, I am not satisfied that, in Convention terms, Clare does object to returning to Australia.
Simon
114. Simon, too, wishes to remain living in England with his father. He was only 5 years old when he moved to live in Australia. Until they came to England in 2014, 'Australia was home and they knew no different'. However, he says that he has always identified with being English. Like his younger siblings, Simon does not express objection to Australia, or to his life in Australia or to his mother's care of him whilst living in Australia.
115. I am in no doubt that this does not amount to an objection to being returned to Australia."
The appeal against the judge's finding that the children did not object
"69. In the light of all of this, the position should now be, in my view, that the gateway stage is confined to a straightforward and fairly robust examination of whether the simple terms of the Convention are satisfied in that the child objects to being returned and has attained an age and degree of maturity at which it is appropriate to take account of his or her views. Sub-tests and technicality of all sorts should be avoided. In particular, the Re T approach to the gateway stage should be abandoned."
"76. I now turn to how the law will work in practice. I do not intend to say a great deal on this score. The judges who try these cases do so regularly and build up huge experience in dealing with them, as do the CAFCASS officers who interview the children involved. I do not think that they need (or will be assisted by) an analysis of how to go about this part of their task. In making his or her findings and evaluation, the judge will be able to draw upon the entirety of the material that has been assembled in relation to the child's objections exception and to pick from it those features which are relevant to his or her determination. The starting point is the wording of Article 13 which requires, as the authorities which I would choose to follow confirm, a determination of whether the child objects, whether he or she has attained an age and degree of maturity at which it is appropriate to take account of his or her views, and what order should be made in all the circumstances. What is relevant to each of these decisions will vary from case to case.
77. I am hesitant about saying more lest what I say should be turned into a new test or taken as some sort of compulsory checklist. I hope that it is abundantly clear that I do not intend this and that I discourage an over-prescriptive or over-intellectualised approach to what, if it is to work with proper despatch, has got to be a straightforward and robust process. I risk the following few examples of how things may play out at the gateway stage, trusting that they will be taken as just that, examples offered to illustrate possible practical applications of the principles. So, one can envisage a situation, for example, where it is apparent that the child is merely parroting the views of a parent and does not personally object at all; in such a case, a relevant objection will not be established. Sometimes, for instance because of age or stage of development, the child will have nowhere near the sort of understanding that would be looked for before reaching a conclusion that the child has a degree of maturity at which it is appropriate to take account of his or her views. Sometimes, the objection may not be an objection to the right thing. Sometimes, it may not be an objection at all, but rather a wish or a preference."
"In this [Hague] context an 'objection' means a wholesale objection to returning to the country of habitual residence. Invariably such a child cannot think of anything positive to say about that other country. That is not the case here. When speaking to the children [the CAFCASS officer] approached her task using the wrong test."
"One of the difficulties in this case relates to the approach Ms Adams took in her discussions with the children. Although at the beginning of her report she notes that she had been tasked by the court to report as to 'the children's objections, if any, to a return to Australia', thereafter the word 'objection' does not appear either directly or by inference. There is no doubt that Ms Adams ascertained the children's wishes and feelings. There is equally no doubt that she ascertained their preference. She did not directly consider with the children whether they objected to returning to their place of habitual residence, Australia."
Judge Bellamy's decision: discretion
"120. ….. In her letter to her mother, Clare says that 'My dad tells me the truth and tells me what is going on'. In discussion with Ms Adams she said that she was worried about how life would be if they returned to Australia 'as she knew her mum had no money and her dad had paid for everything since they split up'. In his letter to his mother, Harry expressed the belief that 'if we go back to Australia we will never see our family again, if we go back we will never see our daddy.' Simon told Ms Adams that being around his dad 'had a sense of everything being "better" and somehow easier', an observation which could be an indication that he, too, is aware of the greater financial security when living with his father compared to the financial uncertainty and unpredictability of life with his mother."
"I felt very strongly that these children,….all four of them, really knew what they were talking about. They expressed themselves so well and so beautifully about everything, they are ….very mature, very articulate and I did explore things carefully, I did ask them challenging questions, to look at different perspective and there is just a clear sense there that being in England was – they appeared to feel more at home being clear and they gave very clear and cogent reasons as to why that was. I didn't sense that it was about being manipulated or coerced, but I do accept that there's a context always to children's experiences and there are loyalties to different parents and so on, but in many ways they really were quite remarkable how they expressed themselves and ….they had a great deal to say about their particular experience. "
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS:
LORD JUSTICE MOORE-BICK: