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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> P (Abduction: Child's Objections), R v [2020] EWCA Civ 260 (28 February 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/260.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Civ 260 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE FAMILY DIVISION OF THE
HIGH COURT OF LONDON
DEPUTY HIGH COURT JUDGE MR R PEEL QC
FD19P00110
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE KING
and
LORD JUSTICE MOYLAN
____________________
Re P (Abduction: Child's Objections) |
____________________
Ms M Jones (instructed by Ben Hoare Bell LLP) for the Respondent Father
The Mother in Person
Hearing date: 28th January 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Moylan:
Introduction
Background
"(i) M resolutely opposes contact;
(ii) Engagement with F induces stress in M who would benefit from therapeutic input;
(iii) M believes F is planning the targeted abuse of the children;
(iv) The children say that they do not want to see F although this is likely to be on M's "instructions";
(v) F is able to parent the children;
(vi) There is no evidence to justify the fears expressed by M about F posing a risk to the children;
(vii) The children have a very close, "intense" relationship with F's mother, their paternal grandmother;
(viii) The separation of the oldest child from F and the paternal grandmother is a considerable burden on [him];
(ix) The eldest child has exhibited challenging behaviour;
(x) Unaccompanied contact, including overnight contact, should resume and be backed up by appropriate and robust measures."
Proceedings and Judgment
"Whilst accepting the children have been in their mother's sole care and their position is likely to be aligned with and supportive of their mother, [P] expressed his views with considerable force and his expressed memories of his life in Germany were wholly negative. He is approaching 13 years and I consider of an age and understanding for his wishes to be taken into account and he voiced his objection to returning to Germany. Regarding (the two younger children), whilst expressing they did not wish to return to Germany, I assessed their priority was to remain with their mother in her care, wherever she may be living".
"(iv) For some years after 2012 the children were able to maintain a relationship with F and regular levels of contact. The report of the psychologist referring to the intense bond developed between the children, in particular the eldest child, with F and the paternal grandmother is telling. It is objectively improbable that such a bond would have developed if the children felt in danger from him. The separation of the eldest child from F is described by the German psychologist as an extreme burden on the child.
[…]
(xiii) Her concern that the children do not want to have contact with F, and should not be placed in his care is, in my view one for the German courts to decide. Further, their resistance may be less entrenched than M submits; certainly, the contact between F and the younger 2 children during this hearing appears to have been successful."
"79. I have concluded that even though the children's views should be taken into account, they are outweighed by all the matters to which I have referred in the previous paragraphs of this judgment (particularly paragraphs 69-75) and which I do not propose to repeat. They are not of an age where their views are determinative. And their views are, so it seems to me, in part a product of their mother's antipathy towards F and resistance to any idea of contact. These are issues best dealt with in Germany for all the reasons previously given."
"74. The children, like the parents, are German. They lived all their lives in Germany until March 2018. Their extended families are in Germany. Their first language is German. They had no connection with the United Kingdom before their arrival here. Their lives here have been unsettled with a number of moves and no consistency of accommodation or schooling. The courts in Germany were seised of the case for well over a year before M and the family came to the United Kingdom. They are far better placed to deal with the welfare issues than the courts of this jurisdiction; those welfare issues may include where the children live, contact and perhaps also whether M should be permitted to relocate with the children from Germany to the United Kingdom. The German social services were engaged with the family for a period measured in years and a family psychologist report was prepared in Germany. The authorities (legal and non-legal) in Germany are likely to have a much better understanding of this case than their counterparts in this jurisdiction, and undoubtedly are better positioned to resolve factual and welfare issues.
75. I also consider it possible that were I not to order a return, the relationship between the children and F, as well as the relationship between the children and their paternal grandmother, may be difficult to re-establish. It is hard to see how F, and the paternal grandmother, could achieve a successful reintroduction of contact from the distance of Germany in circumstances where M is resolutely opposed to contact. Difficulty in pursuing legal proceedings from afar, together with difficulty in implementing and enforcing welfare decisions, may prove too much for F."
Legal Framework
"(1) The court may make a child a party to proceedings if it considers it is in the best interests of the child to do so."
Practice Direction 16A provides under paragraph 7:
"7.1 Making the child a party to the proceedings is a step that will be taken only in cases which involve an issue of significant difficulty and consequently will occur in only a minority of cases. Before taking the decision to make the child a party, consideration should be given to whether an alternative route might be preferable, such as asking an officer of the Service or a Welsh family proceedings officer to carry out further work or by making a referral to social services or, possibly, by obtaining expert evidence.
7.2 The decision to make the child a party will always be exclusively that of the court, made in the light of the facts and circumstances of the particular case. The following are offered, solely by way of guidance, as circumstances which may justify the making of such an order –
(a) where an officer of the Service or Welsh family proceedings officer has notified the court that in the opinion of that officer the child should be made a party;
(b) where the child has a standpoint or interest which is inconsistent with or incapable of being represented by any of the adult parties;
(c) where there is an intractable dispute over residence or contact, including where all contact has ceased, or where there is irrational but implacable hostility to contact or where the child may be suffering harm associated with the contact dispute;
(d) where the views and wishes of the child cannot be adequately met by a report to the court;
(e) where an older child is opposing a proposed course of action;
(f) where there are complex medical or mental health issues to be determined or there are other unusually complex issues that necessitate separate representation of the child;
(g) where there are international complications outside child abduction, in particular where it may be necessary for there to be discussions with overseas authorities or a foreign court;
(h) where there are serious allegations of physical, sexual or other abuse in relation to the child or there are allegations of domestic violence not capable of being resolved with the help of an officer of the Service or Welsh family proceedings officer;
(i) where the proceedings concern more than one child and the welfare of the children is in conflict or one child is in a particularly disadvantaged position;
(j) where there is a contested issue about scientific testing.
7.3 It must be recognised that separate representation of the child may result in a delay in the resolution of the proceedings. When deciding whether to direct that a child be made a party, the court will take into account the risk of delay or other facts adverse to the welfare of the child. The court's primary consideration will be the best interests of the child."
"[51] Thus paragraph 7.1 of the Practice Direction makes clear that a grant to a child of party status will be made only in cases which involve an issue of significant difficulty and thus only in a minority of cases. Consideration, so it suggests, should first be given to whether an alternative course might be preferable; and the suggestion is well reflected by the court's current practice of inviting an officer in the CAFCASS High Court team to see the child before it decides whether to make her a party to Convention proceedings.
[52] Paragraph 7.3 of the Practice Direction stresses that a grant to a child of party status may result in delay adverse to her welfare and of which account should therefore be taken. This factor has a particular relevance to Convention proceedings. The need for expedition is written into article 11.3 the Convention; and the aspiration, articulated in the same paragraph, for determination within six weeks of issue is, in the case of EU states, stiffened by article 11.3 of B2R, which positively requires determination within that period save in exceptional circumstances.
[53] But it is paragraph 7.2 of the Practice Direction which is of particular significance. It offers non-prescriptive guidance about the circumstances which may justify a grant to a child of party status. The examples include, at (a) the case where a CAFCASS officer favours the grant; at (d) the case where the child's views cannot adequately be communicated by a report; and at (e) the case where an older child is opposing a proposed course of action. The last example should not in my view be taken to endorse any routine grant of party status to older children objecting to their return to the requesting state in Convention proceedings. But the example most apt to the present case is at (b), namely where the child has a standpoint incapable of being represented by any of the adult parties."
"156 I end this section of my judgment with a cautionary note. It should not be expected that an application for children to be involved in proceedings, either as appellants or as respondents, for the first time in the Court of Appeal will be received sympathetically. By the time the matter reaches the Court of Appeal, it is usually far too late in the day to address this sort of issue. I have said several times already, and make no apology for saying again, that this needs to be thought of at the very outset of the proceedings. As to how an application made at that stage may fare, nothing that I have said in this judgment is intended to affect the existing jurisprudence on the subject."
This observation applies with even more force now that the President's Guidance on Case Management and Mediation of International Child Abduction Proceedings 13th March 2018, expressly requires the question of whether and how a child is to be heard, including whether a child should be joined as a party, to be addressed at the first on notice hearing: paragraph 2.11(h).
"46 … Once the discretion comes into play, the court may have to consider the nature and strength of the child's objections, the extent to which they are "authentically her own" or the product of the influence of the abducting parent, the extent to which they coincide or are at odds with other considerations which are relevant to her welfare, as well as the general Convention considerations referred to earlier. The older the child, the greater the weight that her objections are likely to carry. But that is far from saying that the child's objections should only prevail in the most exceptional circumstances."
Submissions
Determination
Lady Justice King:
Lord Justice Patten: