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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> B v B [2014] EWHC 1804 (Fam) (21 May 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2014/1804.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 1804 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Royal Courts of Justice |
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B e f o r e :
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B | Applicant | |
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B | Respondent |
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MR. C. HAMES appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE MOSTYN:
"If it is intended to take a child abroad for permanent residence, the other parent's permission is necessary."
"Under the law of Lithuania, Mr. B has the right to participate in the upbringing of the minor daughter as determined in the Ukmerge District Court decision of 22 December 2010."
I should state that the reason the mother came here was because she was out of work in Lithuania and, as she said to me, she came here to seek work to support herself and her daughter in circumstances where the father had fallen into arrears with child maintenance. She found work on arrival in this country in Ipswich within two days, working in a factory, packing baby bottles and other such materials.
"I informed my ex-husband that I am willing to go to England to work and
I will take my child with me and he did not say anything. He was happy for this and he accepted. Also, if you see his statements which he did, no, I am in England with my sister."
"The respondent alleges I consented to the removal of A from Lithuania so the respondent could work in the United Kingdom. This is an inaccurate reflection of discussions which took place between myself and the respondent. I can confirm we did speak about the respondent working in England and it was agreed that A stay with me until the respondent secured employment in the UK, in England. I did not agree to A moving to England with the respondent and at no point did I state that she could go where she wanted, nor that A could reside in England with the respondent. I do accept I was aware of the respondent did want to go to England to work and we discussed that A would live with me during that time. I was shocked however when the respondent left without informing me and took A to the United Kingdom. The respondent also lied to A and told her that they were going away only for a weekend and did not inform her they would be moving to England permanently."
I turn to Article 13 of the Convention which says merely in sub-paragraph (a) that this court is not bound to order the return of a child if the person who opposes her return establishes that the other person has consented to the removal. The authorities on the question of consent have made clear, unsurprisingly, that the evidence has to be clear and unequivocal before the court will find that such consent exists. Therefore, if there has been consent given in writing, that would obviously satisfy the test. If there has been an admission of consent, that would ex hypothesi satisfy the test. If there has been an oral agreement between the parties which is corroborated either by third-party evidence or by the conduct of the parties in the light thereof, that would satisfy the test. Here, we have simply a conflict of evidence so I have to ask myself whose account is more likely.
Mr. McGavin from the CAFCASS High Court Team and he has given me oral evidence. He says in para.27:
"I asked A how she would feel if the judge said she had to go back to Lithuania and she responded, 'Not good because I want to stay here. I don't want to go back to Lithuania. I like it here.'"
"I told A in case she was in any doubt that, in the event that she has to go back, her mother would accompany her. She responded that her mother had come here because there was no money in Lithuania and they did not have money to buy food. I asked what Bubba thought about them being here and she responded she did not know."
"A's express wishes are to remain in this country with her mother. On the scaling exercise, she said she would hate to go back."
"It was evident that A feels she has to take sides, this reinforced by her mother's adverse comments about her father in my presence. She has clearly sided with her mother and with remaining in this country. She was guarded in what she had to say. Her responses lacked depth, detail and balance. I found it difficult to get a picture particularly of her life in Lithuania. Questions about Lithuania were frequently diverted back to favourable comments about this country."
Mr. McGavin do not come close to meeting the threshold for a sufficiently mature objection to a return for the specific limited purpose and period which I have mentioned, so that defence does not arise either.
1. A will, after the return to Lithuania, remain in the custody of her mother.
2. There will be no order for contact in favour of the father pending an order made by the Lithuanian court to that effect.
The reason I make that order is in the light of the admissions of violence made by the father in his statement.
3. There will be an order prohibiting the father from molesting the mother in any way.
4. There will be an order prohibiting the father from approaching within 100 metres of the mother's flat which I have mentioned.