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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 P (Children's Objections) [2017] EWHC 3577 (Fam) (21 December 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2017/3577.html Cite as: [2018] WLR(D) 69, [2018] 1 WLR 3657, [2017] EWHC 3577 (Fam), [2018] WLR 3657 |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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B |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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P |
Respondent |
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Mr Graham Crosthwaite (instructed by Sills & Betteridge) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 20 and 21 December 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was delivered in private. The Judge has given permission for this anonymised version of the judgment (and any of the facts and matters contained in it) to be published on condition always that the names and the addresses of the parties and the children must not be published. For the avoidance of doubt, the strict prohibition on publishing the names and addresses of the parties and the children will continue to apply where that information has been obtained by using the contents of this judgment to discover information already in the public domain. All persons, including representatives of the media, must ensure that these conditions are strictly complied with. Failure to do so will be a contempt of court.
Mr Justice MacDonald:
INTRODUCTION
i) At the time the mother retained the children outside the jurisdiction of Hungary they were each habitually resident in that jurisdiction for the purposes of Art 3 of the Convention;
ii) Both children were below the age of 16 at the time the mother retained them outside the jurisdiction of Hungary and remain so;
iii) The father did not consent to the retention of the children outside the jurisdiction of the Hungary;
iv) The retention of the children outside the jurisdiction of Hungary was wrongful for the purposes of Arts 3 and 12 of the 1980 Hague Convention;
v) At the date the father commenced proceedings both the children had been in the jurisdiction of England and Wales for less than 12 months.
BACKGROUND AND EVIDENCE
"Our marriage had broken down over several years and on 13 September 2015, my husband violently attacked me in my home. Both my autistic children tried to help me to escape from the house. From that date we lived with my mother in my grandmother's house (from 13 September 2015 to 4 November 2016)."
"Things finally came to a head on September 13 2015 when, after we had gone out as a family to eat, B made a rude comment to me and I raised an eyebrow in response. This was enough for B to begin grabbing me and pushing me around in the street. I told him to stop and looked around at other people in the street in the hope that someone would assist me. He shoved me hard again, swore at me and then stormed off.
I returned home with the children and B came back around forty minutes later, smelling strongly of alcohol. I was washing clothes in the bathroom and B began interrogating D in my bedroom, D evidently gave B an answer that made him angry. B came into the bathroom and smiled sadistically at me. I knew from experience he would become violent.
I ran from the bathroom but he followed me, grabbed me and shoved me around, throwing me across the room and against the furniture whilst shouting abuse at me. The children were screaming and crying, trying to make him stop and trying to get between us. He then pushed me back into the bathroom and told me 'Now I will teach you how a man should treat a woman'. I started to scream because I was sure he was trying to kill me. The kitchen taps had broken and so I was forced to use the sink in the bathroom to wash dishes and B attempted to lock me into the bathroom with him and the sharp kitchen knives. He pushed me into the bathroom whilst my children attempted to restrain him, he then shoved me across the room where I slashed my hand open on a carving knife that was on top of our washing machine. I managed once again to escape from the bathroom bleeding heavily from my slashed palm and my children hugged me to prevent further assaults by B. He attempted to rip them from my arms but they refused to let go of me and I of them. They were distraught and crying uncontrollably they thought they were going to see their mother murdered by their father."
"Before I was able to set out the purpose of our meeting, D raised his hand (something which I noted he was doing throughout the interview when he wanted to say something) and said "can I say how the whole thing happened?" He recounted "when we were living in [address given], my father asked something from me, I don't remember what he asked exactly, but I know one thing for sure he misunderstood my response to his question and he attacked my mother, he wanted to lock her in the bathroom and threatened to kill her, that's when knives were in the bathroom, my Mum slit her hand, I was very scared that he (the father) would indeed kill my Mum and I was crying. My sister hid in her room and I tried to pull my father back to stop him from killing my mum and then my sister joined in and tried to pull my father away so we both tried to save our Mum so we packed our things and then we went to my grandmother's in a taxi." D told me this incident happened "nearly two years ago about 10 September as this was when we have been living separately".
"I asked F what she understood as the reason for coming to see me. She said "when the plane took off, because my Dad wants to take us away from my Mum, I am very, very afraid of my father". At this point F became distressed and started to cry. I asked her why she was scared and she said "I am very, very scared that my father will kill my mum. I am scared because he will kill my Mum." I asked her why she thought her father likely to kill her mother and demonstrating this, F said "because he keeps pushing my Mum against the wall, he hit her many times in the bathroom we saved my Mum and very quickly left the place. I asked F if there was anything else that she would like to tell me. She said "no" before standing up and saying as she was walking towards the door "that's enough for me, I am very scared of my father, I love my Mum and my grandma very much." With that, she left the room."
"D has alleged that he observed his father attaching his mother, putting his hand around her neck. D thought his father was going to kill his mother. During the struggle, his mother cut her hand on a knife that was lying on a worktop in the bathroom, which caused a lot of bleeding (apparently the family did the washing up in the bathroom as the kitchen sink was out of order). D indicated that he was trying to pull his father off his mother and that he was crying. He also said F was hiding in her room, but came out crying and trying to help their mother as well. D added that his father was shouting and getting angry most days, which made him feel very afraid."
i) The mother continued to visit him and that the parties maintained a sexual relationship. The father exhibits explicit text messages between the parents that he contends corroborates this.
ii) The children agreed to see the father at Christmas 2015. The mother states that she had spent considerable time reassuring the children prior to this visit.
iii) Between December 2015 and March 2016, the father had contact with the children. The mother contends that the father would simply attend approximately every ten days and demand to see the children. She contends that the children refused to leave the house to talk to him so he made them stand in the window and say hello. The mother asserts that F sometimes refused to stand in the window. The maternal grandmother recalls that long discussions were had with the children and attempts made to calm them down in order to persuade them to sleep in the house with the father immediately prior to him departing for Canada.
iv) On 26 August 2016, the mother texted the father and informed him that the children were happy about his return to Hungary and considered that they were waiting for him.
i) Not to come within 100 metres of any property at which the mother and the children reside in Hungary.
ii) Not to remove the children from the care of the mother save for agreed contact with the children.
iii) Not to use or threaten violence or intimidate in any other way the children or the mother.
iv) To communicate with the mother through her solicitors, provided that provision is made for contact between the father and the children on their return to Hungary.
v) To pay for the return flights to Hungary for the mother and the children.
vi) Not to pursue criminal charges against the mother upon her return to Hungary in respect of her removal of the children from that jurisdiction.
i) The mother may seek the assistance of the Police to keep the father away from the mother and the children;
ii) The mother may seek child maintenance from the father;
iii) The mother may ask for a placement in a temporary family home or placement in a protected house.
"I reminded D that I would report what he told me to the Judge but could not guarentee that he and his sister could stay here. I therefore wondered how he would feel if the Judge ordered that he and his sister go back to Hungary and that a Judge in Hungary would decide where they should live and about the time they should spend with their father. D said "if we have to go back, I am very scared. One occasion when we were with my grandmother, my Dad came and my Mum gave him a list of food but he bought me milk chocolate which I can't have." I again explained that if they went back, they are likely to live with their mother and the Judge in Hungary would decide about contact with their father. D said "If I have to go back to my father, I know that he will not follow my diet so I would rather starve myself." I tried to explain in other ways that he will not be made to live with his father. D began to weep again and sounding quite distressed, he said "but I am scared that my father will kill my Mum if we return, when we spoke on Skype and I told him I don't want to go back, he (the father) told me that she (the mother) did a good job in turning us against him and my Dad told my Mum that she will regret it. I kept on repeating to my father that we don't want to go back and he said that no matter what we say, he still loves us and wants to be with us." Again unprompted, D said "and then another time when we would be in the street (this was him, the mother and his sister in Hungary), we would look over our shoulders fearing that my Dad would attack my Mum. I am very worried that Dad wants to take us away from my Mum, I am mostly scared that Dad will kill my Mum."…I wondered what [mum] had told them about coming to the UK and staying her and he replied "she didn't say anything, I felt that my father would not be able to hurt us whilst we were here, even at the airport in Hungary, we were very scared that my Dad would appear and hurt my Mum and take us away. The first time I felt safe and that my Dad would not be able to hurt my Mum was on the airplane. I don't want to go back to Hungary".
"It is my professional opinion that D has disengaged from his life in Hungary. He told me that he had no family there and no friends in school and yet attached to the mother's statement is a latter from her cousin in which he mentions a daughter. Most importantly, using the "three islands tool", D described Hungary as "the island of fear" where he said only his father, B, lived. This was the island in the far corner of the page. In the middle, he put himself, his sister, his mother and the maternal grandmother in what he called "the island of peace". He said that this was here in the UK. Similarly, F, who too placed herself in the middle island with her brother, her mother and the maternal grandmother, called one other island at the top corner "dry land" but nowhere on that image did B figure."
"His Lordship introduced himself to the children and they did the same each separately. He then invited them to sit where they wanted.
The Judge told them that he wanted for them to see him so that they can see who will be making the decisions.
He also said that he knew that they had met with [Ms Odze] and had talked to [her] and had told [Ms Odze] how they feel about things and what they want.
[He said that the Ms Odze had] also prepared a report for the Judge setting out all these things and that "I read that very carefully so I know what you say about things and I am going to think very carefully about that".
Mr Justice MacDonald noted that the children were looking at photos and he told them that sometimes Judges have to wear silly costumes and F laughed loudly.
Then he asked them if they had any questions and D said "yes".
D: "You know that I would like to be here".
Judge: "I do".
D: "Because I don't want to go back to Hungary".
Judge: "I know you said that and I will be thinking very carefully about that"
F: "I also want to ask a question".
Judge: "Yes"
F: "I am very scared to go back to Hungary because I am very worried"
Judge: "I know that, Lillian said in her report and I will think very carefully about what I need to do"
D: "Can I tell you how everything happened?"
Judge: "I don't want you to do that because it can be very upsetting for you."
D: "But I would like to tell you."
Judge: "Not here, but what I have is a big pile of papers and that tells me everything that happened. So, before I make my decision I will know everything that happened and I will think very carefully about that. Ok?"
Both children replied OK
D: "Can I ask something?"
Judge: "Yes"
D: "I would like to ask you not to send us back to Hungary because of all the secrets that we said and we can be in big trouble about that"
F started crying and she too said that she wants to say something.
F: "I am very scared about going to Hungary so please do not send us back"
Judge: "I am going to listen to everything and to what you say. I am going to let you go now so that I can listen to the case"
D: "Just one more thing, I am very, very afraid of my father."
F said the same thing as her brother
Judge: "I understand that."
F: "I love my Mum very much and my grandma very much."
Judge: "Thank you for coming to see me. I know you are anxious and I am pleased to have met you, it has helped me a lot, I am going to let you go now."
As the children were leaving, standing facing His Lordship, they both pleaded, begging His Lordship in unison "please, please, please Judge do not send us back to Hungary, we are very afraid of my father".
At that point, [Ms Odze] intervened as [she] did not think they would leave."
"Therefore, even an assurance that a return to Hungary does not mean that they have to have contact with their father, will not ameliorate the severe adverse impact on their overall psychological well-being, if they have to return to Hungary against their will."
THE LAW
Objections
i) The gateway stage should be 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.
ii) Whether a child objects is a question of fact. The child's views have to amount to an objection before Art 13 will be satisfied. An objection in this context is to be contrasted with a preference or wish.
iii) The objections of the child are not determinative of the outcome but rather give rise to a discretion. Once that discretion arises, the discretion is at large. The child's views are one factor to take into account at the discretion stage.
iv) There is a relatively low threshold requirement in relation to the objections defence, the obligation on the court is to 'take account' of the child's views, nothing more.
v) At the discretion stage there is no exhaustive list of factors to be considered. The court should have regard to welfare considerations, in so far as it is possible to take a view about them on the limited evidence available. The court must give weight to Convention considerations and at all times bear in mind that the Convention only works if, in general, children who have been wrongfully retained or removed from their country of habitual residence are returned, and returned promptly.
Harm
i) There is no need for Art 13(b) to be narrowly construed. By its very terms it is of restricted application. The words of Art 13 are quite plain and need no further elaboration or gloss.
ii) The burden lies on the person (or institution or other body) opposing return. It is for them to produce evidence to substantiate one of the exceptions. The standard of proof is the ordinary balance of probabilities but in evaluating the evidence the court will be mindful of the limitations involved in the summary nature of the Convention process.
iii) The risk to the child must be 'grave'. It is not enough for the risk to be 'real'. It must have reached such a level of seriousness that it can be characterised as 'grave'. Although 'grave' characterises the risk rather than the harm, there is in ordinary language a link between the two.
iv) The words 'physical or psychological harm' are not qualified but do gain colour from the alternative 'or otherwise' placed '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'.
v) Art 13(b) looks to the future: the situation as it would be if the child were returned forthwith to his or her home country. 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. Where the risk is serious enough the court will be concerned not only with the child's immediate future because the need for protection may persist.
vi) Where the defence under Art 13(b) is said to be based on the anxieties of a respondent mother about a return with the child which are not based upon objective risk to her but are nevertheless of such intensity as to be likely, in the event of a return, to destabilise her parenting of the child to a point where the child's situation would become intolerable the court will look very critically at such an assertion and will, among other things, ask if it can be dispelled. However, in principle, such anxieties can found the defence under Art 13(b).
"[27] In In re E this court considered the situation in which the anxieties of a respondent mother about a return with the child to the state of habitual residence were not based upon objective risk to her but nevertheless were of such intensity as to be likely, in the event of a return, to destabilise her parenting of the child to the point at which the child's situation would become intolerable. No doubt a court will look very critically at an assertion of intense anxieties not based upon objective risk; and will, among other things, ask itself whether they can be dispelled. But in In re E it was this court's clear view that such anxieties could in principle found the defence. Thus, at para 34, it recorded, with approval, a concession by Mr Turner QC, who was counsel for the father in that case, that, if there was a grave risk that the child would be placed in an intolerable situation, "the source of it is irrelevant: eg, where a mother's subjective perception of events lead to a mental illness which could have intolerable consequences for the child". Furthermore, when, at para 49, the court turned its attention to the facts of that case, it said that it found "no reason to doubt that the risk to the mother's mental health, whether it be the result of objective reality or of the mother's subjective perception of reality, or a combination of the two, is very real".
And
"[34] 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."
"In the light of his conclusion at (d), which on any view was open to him, it seems to us that it was unnecessary for Charles J to have continued to address the mother's subjective perceptions. For the effect of his conclusion was that the mother's anxieties were based on objective reality. So it added nothing for him to refer, as in effect he did in three separate paragraphs of his substantive judgment, to the mother's 'genuine conviction that she has been the victim of domestic abuse', by which he implied that she was convinced about something that might or might not be true."
DISCUSSION
Allegations of Domestic Abuse
i) Both parents accept that there were incidents of dispute during the course of their relationship, some of which disputes the children witnessed.
ii) The Hungarian social services have confirmed that there were aware of issues of domestic abuse in the family home and were involved with the family on a daily basis due to family conflict.
iii) The accounts provided by the children and their mother of life in the family home are internally consistent in many respects, including the father repeatedly and extensively questioning D as to the mother's whereabouts and activities and the father teaching D to fight.
iv) The father concedes that there was an incident between himself and the mother on 13 September 2015 and corroborates some of the mother's account in that regard. In particular, he corroborates her account that the incident started when the family were out, that the parents continued to argue in the bathroom at the family home and that the mother suffered a cut to her hand during the incident.
v) The accounts provided by the children and their mother about the incident on 13 September 2015 are internally consistent in many respects. In particular, the are consistent with regard to the fact that the father was questioning D prior to the incident and that such questioning appeared to be the trigger for the incident in the family home, that the incident occurred in the bathroom in the presence of knives, that the mother cut her hand on a knife during the incident and that both children tried to protect their mother during the incident.
vi) D gave a consistent account of the incident of 13 September 2015 to both Ms Odze and Mrs Jenkins. F also gave an account of the event, in which she too mentioned attempts by the children to protect their mother. D also gave an account of other incidents which, as I have mentioned, corroborate to a certain extent the account provided by the mother.
vii) The evidence of Mrs Jenkins makes it clear that, given their respective diagnoses of autism, there is a reduced likelihood of the children being able to pretend events occurred when they did not or to 'fake' feelings, and a greater likelihood of the children revealing any efforts by others to compel them to fabricate events.
viii) The children's level of distress, anxiety and upset when recalling their family life at home to Mrs Jenkins tends to support the credibility of their accounts of what they witnessed, as does the conclusion of both Ms Odze and Mrs Jenkins that the children's anxiety and distress was real and tangible. Both Ms Odze and Mrs Jenkins considered that the children's demeanour made it likely that they were each recalling events that they had witnessed directly.
Children's Objections
i) The children's objections have been and remain persistently and very strongly expressed. Both D and F never miss an opportunity to express in clear terms, and seek to explain why they do not wish to return to Hungary. It is plain that those objections centre on a fear of returning to Hungary as being the place where bad things happen, independent of whether or not they see their father. The fact that each child has a diagnosis of autism does not detract from the strength of their objections.
ii) The court has before it cogent evidence that to return the children to the jurisdiction of Hungary would cause them not only extremely high levels of fear, distress and anxiety, but would also have a severe adverse impact on their overall psychological well-being and result in a significant deterioration in their mental health. In my judgment, the evidence demonstrates that the fact that D and F have autism does markedly increase these risks. I note again that D is already contemplating the dysfunctional coping strategies he would seek to deploy were he to be returned. I further recall Mrs Jenkins evidence that, in circumstances where it is the location of Hungary itself that drives the children's fear and anxiety, this is not a case where protective measures would adequately ameliorate this situation.
iii) The court has before it cogent evidence that D (and possibly F) suffer from chronic PTSD. The court also has clear evidence from Mrs Jenkins that to return D to the location in which the trauma that grounds his PTSD would militate against the successful resolution of that condition.
iv) The children plainly regard living in England as a form of safe harbour from the matters they have previously witnessed. The children have managed to establish a degree of stability in terms of their home life and education. Within this context, the court has evidence before it that to remove the children from that safe harbour at this time would be entirely antithetic to their welfare in circumstances where, as they would see it, they would be returning to fear for their mother's life and uncertainty. I also bear in mind Mrs Jenkins evidence that there are, at present, significant advantages for the children's recovery from the emotional harm they have suffered in maintaining distance from the location in which they experienced trauma.
v) Whilst the subject of an appeal by the father, and whilst there are separate proceedings ongoing before the District Court in Pécs, it is the case that the mother has, at least at present, permission to remove the children from Hungary and reside in the jurisdiction of England and Wales. Having regard to the factors set out in this paragraph, and in any event, it would not be in the children's best interests to return them to the jurisdiction in Hungary in circumstances where the mother is, at present, entitled to return to England immediately upon arrival.
Harm
CONCLUSION