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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 >> R v P [2017] EWHC 1804 (Fam) (03 March 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2017/1804.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 1804 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Royal Courts of Justice |
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B e f o r e :
(In Private)
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R | Applicant | |
- and - | ||
P | Respondent |
____________________
(Incorporating Beverley F. Nunnery & Co.)
Official Court Reporters and Audio Transcribers
5 New Street Square, London, EC4A 3BF
Tel: 020 7831 5627 Fax: 020 7831 7737
[email protected]
____________________
THE RESPONDENT appeared in Person.
MR. M. GRATION (instructed by CAFCASS Legal) appeared on behalf of the Guardian.
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Crown Copyright ©
MRS. JUSTICE THEIS:
Introduction
The Background
- On 5th June 2012, it is reported that the father said in a text:
"I spoke just ugly bad words. Everybody understands they are ugly. I do not go deep into their significance. I do not make excuses. They cannot exist. Nevertheless, I do not do it deliberately and I did not apply them in their direct sense. I just said ugly words. I was panic, pain and hysteria stricken."
- In November 2012, he says as follows:
"Forgive me. I promised you that. I do not know how to compensate the trauma suffered by the mother because of my hysterias. I was unable to appreciate and respect her."
Those indicate the ranges of emotions that were being expressed by the father. Albeit at a time close to the breakdown of the parents' relationship, but are perhaps indicative of the way the father has behaved.
"There is a strong mutual conflict between the parents of the minor child, there are systemic conflicts in the presence of the child and it violates the child's interests".
The same judgment also refers to a "behavioural and emotional disorder and tic" which had been diagnosed in X (who at that stage was about two and a half) and suggested that stressful situations should be avoided.
- From 12th May 2014 for a period of twelve weeks, contact was to be between X and the father for two hours twice a week in the presence of a psychologist. It was anticipated on that first stage that twenty-four meetings must take place.
- After those meetings, contact for eight weeks between X and the father for two hours twice a week, once in the presence of a psychologist and once unsupervised. Eight meetings to take place with the psychologist and eight without.
- After thirty-two meetings with the psychologist and eight meetings unsupervised, contact between X and the father unsupervised every Tuesday and Thursday from 5pm to 7:30pm and on alternate Saturdays from 10am to 7:30pm.
- The parents were required to meet the cost of the psychologist jointly and equally.
- There were five meetings between the father and X and four meetings between the parents in Spring 2014.
- The father did not apply to enforce the May 2014 order until September 2014.
- From September 2014 until September 2015, there had been thirty-eight further meetings of one hour that had taken place between the father and X, as I understand it, in the presence of the psychologist.
The last time X saw her father was on 21st September 2015.
"The father's behaviour during a family conflict does not prove the father's efforts to solve the conflicts in a constructive way, but, on the contrary, it proves his intention to go deep into absolutely insignificant details and not to solve the problem. The court concluded the father's behaviour with the mother (continuous prying out of the same things, harassment, humiliation, etc.) can be assessed as psychological violence and is improper in respect of the mother and the father did not prove any concrete circumstances demonstrating improper execution of marital duties by the mother…the actual reason for the breakdown of the marriage between the parties was an improper attitude of the father towards the family, his disrespect to the mother and systematic application of psychological violence in respect of the mother."
"avoided giving back the daughter to the mother and pressed her strongly, the child was returned to the mother only after applying physical force to the father…there is some date in the case that the mother sought medical advice because of abdominal pains of her daughter on the next day after the conflict."
"caused fear and psychological discomfort to the daughter and had a negative impact on healthy development of the child. The father recognises that he came to the daughter when he saw her, spoke to her, kept her and went to play to another trampoline. He also recognises that the mother asked the daughter to go with her. The father may communicate with the daughter with participation of the psychologist only according to temporary safeguards; moreover…it was forbidden to the father to enter the educational establishment of his daughter…the minor daughter feels huge emotional tension between the parents and it causes big stress and negative emotions to her. As the father knew all the circumstances related with the determined order of communication…he should have avoided the conflict on 7th September 2014 and behaved properly in the presence of the child."
"X was physically settled and to an extent has achieved a sense of psychological settlement in the UK."
Her reservations were in relation to the lack of a relationship between X and the father and the negative views she had about him.
The Legal Framework
"The removal or the retention of a child is to be considered wrongful where -
(a) it is in breach of rights of custody attributed to a person, an institution or any other body, either jointly or alone, under the law of the State in which the child was habitually resident immediately before the removal or retention; and
(b) at the time of removal or retention those rights were actually exercised, either jointly or alone, or would have been so exercised but for the removal or retention.
The rights of custody mentioned in sub-paragraph (a) above, may arise in particular by operation of law or by reason of a judicial or administrative decision, or by reason of an agreement having legal effect under the law of that State."
"Where a child has been wrongfully removed or retained in terms of Article 3 and, at the date of the commencement of the proceedings before the judicial or administrative authority of the Contracting State where the child is, a period of less than one year has elapsed from the date of the wrongful removal or retention, the authority concerned shall order the return of the child forthwith.
The judicial or administrative authority, even where the proceedings have been commenced after the expiration of the period of one year referred to in the preceding paragraph, shall also order the return of the child, unless it is demonstrated that the child is now settled in its new environment.
Where the judicial or administrative authority in the requested State has reason to believe that the child has been taken to another State, it may stay the proceedings or dismiss the application for the return of the child."
"What is the degree of settlement which has to be demonstrated? There is some force, I find, in the argument that legal presumptions reflect the norm, and the presumption under the Convention is that children should be returned unless the mother can establish the degree of settlement which is more than mere adjustment to surroundings. I find that word should be given its ordinary, natural meaning and that word 'settled' in this context has two constituents. First, it involves a physical element of relating to being established in a community and an environment. Secondly, I find that it has an emotional constituent relating to security and stability."
"A broad and purposive construction of what amounts to 'settled in its new environment' will properly reflect the facts of each case, including the very important factor of concealment or subterfuge that has caused or contributed to the asserted delay."
"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.
The judicial or administrative authority may also refuse to order the return of the child if it finds 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 its views."
I pause to say that the latter part of that is not being pursued in this case.
"In considering the circumstances referred to in this Article, the judicial and administrative authorities shall take into account the information relating to the social background of the child provided by the Central Authority or other competent authority of the child's habitual residence."
"A court cannot refuse to return a child on the basis of Article 13b of the 1980 Hague Convention if it is established that adequate arrangements have been made to secure the protection of the child after his or her return."
"Notwithstanding a judgment of non-return pursuant to Article 13 of the 1980 Hague Convention, any subsequent judgment which requires the return of the child issued by a court having jurisdiction under this Regulation shall be enforceable in accordance with Section 4 of Chapter III below in order to secure the return of the child."
Mr. Perkins, in his submissions, makes it clear that is an option, if this court does not order the return of the child, and that may be an application the father will make in Lithuania if the Lithuanian Court retains jurisdiction, so the proceedings in relation to this child are likely to continue.
"(1) The standard of proof is the ordinary balance of probabilities. The burden of proof rests upon the person opposing the child's return. It is for that person to produce evidence to substantiate the defence raised.
(2) There must be a grave risk of the harm alleged to the child. 'Grave' qualifies the 'risk' of harm rather than the 'harm' itself but there is a link between the two concepts. The risk to the child must have reached a such level of seriousness as to be characterised as 'grave.' A relatively low risk of death or serious injury might properly be qualified as 'grave' whereas a higher level of risk might be required for other less serious forms of harm.
(3) The situation faced by the child on return depends crucially upon the protective measures which could be implemented so as to avoid the risk that the child will be harmed or otherwise face an intolerable situation.
(4) Inherent in the Convention is the assumption that the best interests of children as a primary consideration are met by a return to the country of their habitual residence following a wrongful removal. That assumption is capable of being rebutted only in circumstances where an exception is made out;
(5) 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'. Those words can be applied just as sensibly to physical or psychological harm as to any other situation. Every child has to put up with a certain amount of rough and tumble, discomfort and distress. It is part of growing up. But there are some things which it is not reasonable to expect a child to tolerate, including exposure to the physical and psychological harm done to a parent;
(6) The source of the risk of harm is irrelevant such that it may stem from the subjective perception of a parent which could have intolerable consequences for the child;
(7) If the risk is serious enough the court is not only concerned with the child's immediate future as the need for protection may persist."
(1) to identify the risks;
(2) consider the protective measures; and
(3) in the absence of protective measures, the court should do the best it can to resolve the disputed issues.
"In this case, it is argued that the delay has been such that the return of this child to Romania would place him in an intolerable situation. '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. In many cases this will be sufficient. But once again, the fact that this will usually be sufficient to avoid the risk does not mean that it will invariably be so. In Hague Convention cases within the European Union, article 11.4 of the Brussels II Revised Regulation (Council Regulation (EC) No 2201/2003) expressly provides that a court cannot refuse to return a child on the basis of Article 13(b) 'if it is established that adequate arrangements have been made to secure the protection of the child after his or her return'. Thus it has to be shown that those arrangements will be effective to secure the protection of the child. With the best will in the world, this will not always be the case.
No one intended that an instrument designed to secure the protection of children from the harmful effects of international child abduction should itself be turned into an instrument of harm."
"The grave risk of harm arises not from the return of the child, but the refusal of the mother to accompany him. The Convention does not require the court in this country to consider the welfare of the child as paramount, but only to be satisfied as to the grave risk of harm. I am not satisfied that the child would be placed in an intolerable situation, if the mother refused to go back. In weighing up the various factors, I must place in the balance and as of the greatest importance the effect of the court refusing the application under the Convention because of the refusal of the mother to return for her own reasons, not for the sake of the child. Is a parent to create the psychological situation, and then rely upon it? If the grave risk of psychological harm to a child is to be inflicted by the conduct of the parent who abducted him, then it would be relied upon by every mother of a young child who removed him out of the jurisdiction and refused to return. It would drive a coach and four through the Convention..."
"The principle that it would be wrong to allow the abducting parent to rely upon adverse conditions brought about by a situation which she has herself created by her own conduct is born of the proposition that it would drive a coach and horses through the 1985 Act if that were not accepted as the broad and instinctive approach to a defence raised under Article 13(b) of the Convention. However, it is not a principle articulated in the Convention or the Act and should not be applied to the effective exclusion of the very defence itself, which is in terms directed to the question of risk of harm to the child and not the wrongful conduct of the abducting parent. By reason of the provisions of Articles 3 and 12, such wrongful conduct is a 'given' in the context of which the defence is nonetheless made available if its constituents can be established."
"(42) The Supreme Court has endorsed clearly the principle that where it is established that the situation on return would expose the child to a grave risk of harm or otherwise place him or her in an intolerable situation then the source of the grave risk of harm or intolerable situation is irrelevant. This must be consistent with the status of Art 13(b) as a narrow welfare exception to the general obligation under Art 12, which narrow exception is designed to legislate for those very limited number of cases where an order for return would result in a grave risk of physical or psychological harm or would otherwise place the child in a situation that is intolerable to that child. To take the present case as an example, were the court to conclude that a return to Holland would expose S to a grave risk of physical or psychological harm or would otherwise place S in an intolerable situation by reason of his being separated from his mother and placed in care in Holland, from S's perspective whether that separation, and all that flows from it, is due to the mother's contumelious attempt to frustrate the Convention process or an involuntary inability to travel or something between those two extremes is neither here nor there for S. The risk of harm is grave or the situation intolerable for S either way.
(47) Thus, accepting the imperative need to maintain fidelity to the aims of the Convention, it is important in cases where a parent refuses to return that, in determining whether a defence under Art 13(b) is made out, the primary focus of the court remains on the question of the risk of harm or intolerability to the child rather than the conduct of the abducting parent. Within this context, it is important again to bear in mind that Art 13(b) looks to the situation as it would be if the child were returned forthwith to his or her home country and that the situation which the child will face on return depends crucially on the protective measures which can be put in place to ensure that the child will not be called upon to face an intolerable situation when he or she gets home. The significance for the situation the child will face upon return of a parent's refusal to return must in each case be evaluated in the context of the protective measures that can be put in place to mitigate the impact of the same."
"In case of wrongful removal or retention of the child, the courts of the Member State where the child was habitually resident immediately before the wrongful removal or retention shall retain their jurisdiction until the child has acquired a habitual residence in another Member State and…
(b) the child has resided in that other Member State for a period of at least one year after the person, institution or other body having rights of custody has had or should have had knowledge of the whereabouts of the child and the child is settled in his or her new environment and at least one of the following conditions is met:
(i) within one year after the holder of rights of custody has had or should have had knowledge of the whereabouts of the child, no request for return has been lodged before the competent authorities of the Member State where the child has been removed or is being retained.
(ii) a request for return lodged by the holder of rights of custody has been withdrawn and no new request has been lodged within the time limit set in paragraph (i);
(iii) a case before the court in the Member State where the child was habitually resident immediately before the wrongful removal or retention has been closed pursuant to Article 11(7);
(iv) a judgment on custody that does not entail the return of the child has been issued by the courts of the Member State where the child was habitually resident immediately before the wrongful removal or retention."
"…article 12 does envisage that a settled child might nevertheless be returned within the Convention procedures… It would be consistent with all the other exceptions to the rule of return. It would avoid the separate and perhaps unfunded need for proceedings in the unusual event that summary return would be appropriate in a settlement case. It recognises the flexibility in the concept of settlement, which may arise in a wide variety of circumstances and to very different degrees. It acknowledges that late application may be the result of active concealment of where the child has gone. It leaves the court with all options open. Furthermore, the difference between the two solutions is by no means as great as is sometimes assumed. This depends upon the scope of the discretion to be exercised both within and without the Convention procedures."
"In cases where a discretion arises from the terms of the Convention itself, it seems to me that the discretion is at large. The court is entitled to take into account the various aspects of the Convention policy, alongside the circumstances which gave the court a discretion in the first place and the wider considerations of the child's rights and welfare. I would, therefore, respectfully agree with Thorpe LJ in the passage quoted in para 32 above, save for the word 'overriding' if it suggests that the Convention objectives should always be given more weight than the other considerations. Sometimes they should and sometimes they should not.
The Convention itself has defined when a child must be returned and when she need not be. Thereafter the weight to be given to Convention considerations and to the interests of the child will vary enormously. The extent to which it will be appropriate to investigate those welfare considerations will also vary. But the further away one gets from the speedy return envisaged by the Convention, the less weighty those general Convention considerations must be."
"In settlement cases, it must be borne in mind that the major objective of the Convention cannot be achieved. These are no longer 'hot pursuit' cases. By definition, for whatever reason, the pursuit did not begin until long after the trail had gone cold. The object of securing a swift return to the country of origin cannot be met. It cannot any longer be assumed that that country is the better forum for the resolution of the parental dispute. So the policy of the Convention would not necessarily point towards a return in such cases, quite apart from the comparative strength of the countervailing factors, which may well, as here, include the child's objections as well as her integration in her new community."
The Submissions of the Parties
"I did not inform the father of X's removal from Lithuania because I was scared that he would do everything to destroy our lives. I fear that he will look for us in the UK and start persecuting me and my daughter as he did in Lithuania."
"There are elements of emotional settlement that are met. She likes her school, likes her friends, has a park nearby that she likes to play in, visits her Godmother. These are huge elements of emotional settlement."
Then a little later, she said:
"There is a small part of emotional settlement that is not met. It is an important part, but one piece of the puzzle. I am not diminishing its importance. It is part of the emotional life of this child. There are lots of things about her emotional settlement that are met, but it is regrettable that following the long history she does not have a relationship with her father."
Discretion