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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 >> AS v CPW (Rev 1) [2020] EWHC 1238 (Fam) (18 May 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2020/1238.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 1238 (Fam), [2020] 2 FLR 1000, [2020] WLR(D) 525, [2020] 4 WLR 127 |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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AS |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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CPW |
Respondent |
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Kate Claxton (instructed by Morrison Spowart) for the Respondent (mother)
Hearing dates: 11 & 12 May 2020
The hearing was entirely conducted remotely by Zoom
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mostyn:
i) B, a boy born on 14 January 2006, now aged 14½;
ii) AR, a boy born on 8 June 2010, now aged nearly 10; and
iii) AS, a girl born on 27 September 2011, now aged 8¾.
i) On 11 February 2019 B ran away from home. The mother texted the father: "B has expressed his desire to want to live with you and that he no longer wants to live here. I would like to drop him off at yours, now." Given that the father had not seen B for two years this reaction by the mother does signify a certain level of desperation.
ii) A few days later on 14 January 2019 the mother met the Head of Inclusion at B's school in an attempt to reduce the risk of permanent exclusion. At that meeting it was acknowledged that B had said he wished to move to another school. In the bundle there is a record of numerous instances of unpleasant disruptive conduct by B covering 6½ pages from September 2017 to February 2019. These had led to a three-day exclusion in May 2018 and a five-day exclusion from 1 February 2019.
iii) Notwithstanding these admonitions B's behaviour did not improve and on 10 June 2019 he was permanently excluded from his school. The consequence was that he would have to complete his education at what is known as a PRU school ("pupil referral unit") where children are placed who have been expelled from their schools or who have otherwise not been placed for mainstream education. Unsurprisingly the mother viewed this prospect with dismay and feared that B's education would be irretrievably impaired.
iv) In parallel with these events the mother gave evidence that B was getting involved in gang culture in his part of South London. In her first witness statement she stated:
"As I explained to the Cafcass Officer, I was extremely worried about B's welfare as he had been permanently excluded from [redacted] School in July shortly before I went on holiday and this was the culmination of extremely disruptive behaviour and this is set out in the exclusion letter and refusal of appeal and behaviour report. I also know that B was a member of a gang and I had become extremely concerned for his life had he remained in London due to the high level of knife crime in South London which is gang related."
v) In her oral evidence she elaborated on this and explained how she had discovered that B had been on social media used by gang members and even been given a telephone by a local gang for the purposes of becoming a drug courier across county lines. It is true, as Ms Chaudhry submitted, that it was surprising that this was not mentioned in her written evidence. However, although I am satisfied that the mother is generally an unreliable narrator in writing I am satisfied, in this respect, that she held authentic and well-based fears for her son's welfare.
i) a recital recording the mother's agreement to return B to this country as soon as possible;
ii) a prohibited steps order forbidding the mother from removing the two younger children from the jurisdiction without the consent of the father or the court; and
iii) a fixture of the final hearing for 13 May 2020.
"Mother agreed she would return son. If she has not done so father will need to take action to get his son returned but as he is out of the country any such application will need to be made to the High Court."
I will explain later in this judgment why the opinion of the District Judge that only the High Court could make an inward return order is not correct.
"… the legal right of a parent to the custody of a child … is a dwindling right which the courts will hesitate to enforce against the wishes of the child, and the more so the older he is. It starts with a right of control and ends with little more than advice."
"…that parental right yields to the child's right to make his own decisions when he reaches a sufficient understanding and intelligence to be capable of making up his own mind on the matter requiring decision."
"And nothing that I have said is intended to cast any doubt on the powers of the courts, recognised in the early cases to which I have referred, and still available today in both the parens patriae jurisdiction and under statute, notably the Children Act 1989, to make orders in the best interests of children up to the age of majority, with due regard to their wishes and those of their parents, but not dictated by them."
"I have thought very long and hard about whether an order for return is in Q's best interests. I have concluded that it is in his best interest's overall to return but that still begs the question of whether an order is appropriate or not given his age. I have thought more than twice about what the right outcome and order should be in respect of Q. I have considered whether given his age I should decline the application for the order for return but rather to operate on the belief that he will return with V in any event as I believe that he wishes to remain with her and a large part of him wishes to return to Poland anyway. If I leave the choice to him I feel reasonably sure that he will come under significant pressure from his mother and her partner to remain and I do not consider that to be in his best interest. I conclude that there may be some merit in Miss Papazian's point that although he describes his contact with his father as being undertaken in order to comply with the court order that may in fact be a mask for an underlying and genuine desire to have a relationship with his father. I have also obviously considered whether in making an order for return it will set up struggle between the court system seeking to enforce the return and Q resisting. From all I have read and heard about Q I do not conclude that this is a likely outcome. I conclude that it is more likely that Q will cooperate in the process of return. In respect of Q I'm also satisfied that an order for his return should be made pursuant to the inherent jurisdiction. Notwithstanding he is 17 and has expressed a desire to remain in the UK and not to return to Poland, I'm satisfied on a summary assessment of his welfare that a return is in his best interests notwithstanding his age and his expressed views. The summary welfare assessment comprises many elements and save in respect of his expressed views they point to his welfare being promoted by a return to Poland and the resumption of a full life there. I am fully alive to the unusual nature of making a return order in respect of a 17-year-old who says he does not wish to return. However I am particularly alive to the issue of the impact that the chronic parental conflict is having on the ability of Q and V to truly understand their own positions and to be able to express views which are not tainted by the backdrop to their lives that the conflict has given. I consider that making an order in respect of Q may in fact free him from responsibility which would otherwise be placed on him to seek to remain in England in support of the mother's ongoing campaign to remedy what occurred in Poland in 2014."
I have to say that I am surprised by this decision, but it may be rationalised as being reflective of perceived equivocation on the part of Q as well as a concern that his expressed wish may well have been the product of coercion. Further, given that the 12-year-old was going anyway the decision of Q can easily be categorised as objectively unreasonable. I very much doubt that Williams J would have reached the same decision had he been concerned with the 17-year-old alone.
i) it would reward a particularly blatant act of unilateral self-help by the mother;
ii) it would perpetuate the separation of B from his parents, his brother and his sister;
iii) it would leave him in a country riven by civil strife which is unstable and volatile;
iv) his accommodation does not appear to be fixed and the members of the maternal family who care for him are not constant;
v) his education would be within a school which is not in the top rank in that country; and
vi) there is no national health system in Sierra Leone to care for him should he fall sick.
"The court's wardship jurisdiction is part of and not separate from the court's inherent jurisdiction. The distinguishing characteristics of wardship are that (a) custody of a child who is a ward is vested in the court; and (b) although day to day care and control of the ward is given to an individual or to a local authority, no important step can be taken in the child's life without the court's consent."
"Should B does return (sic), I would like the father to state out exactly what he can do to support B. For fear of his safety in our neighbourhood, I would like B to live with his father provided of course he follows Cafcass recommendations as well as provide suitable accommodation."
The mother told me that this was no longer her position, but it does demonstrate, first, her great concern of the perils which B faces were he to live with her in her neighbourhood; and, second, her acceptance that the relationship between father and B requires no form of supervision.
"…the mother agrees to supervised direct contact commencing once the father has started attending the domestic abuse perpetrator programme. The mother proposes that this contact should take place fortnightly at [redacted] Contact Centre".
The order went on to provide that the father must attend a domestic abuse perpetrator programme.
"Cafcass do not support interim arrangements pending completion of the DAPP as the risks have not been addressed and a safe exit strategy considered from the supervised arrangements."
"In the light of any findings of fact or admissions or where domestic abuse is otherwise established, the court should apply the individual matters in the welfare checklist with reference to the domestic abuse which has occurred, and any expert risk assessment obtained. In particular, the court should in every case consider any harm which the child and the parent with whom the child is living has suffered as a consequence of that domestic abuse, and any harm which the child and the parent with whom the child is living is at risk of suffering, if a child arrangements order is made. The court should make an order for contact only if it is satisfied that the physical and emotional safety of the child and the parent with whom the child is living can, as far as possible, be secured before during and after contact, and that the parent with whom the child is living will not be subjected to further domestic abuse by the other parent."
Plainly, given the findings of fact that have been made, an order for contact can only be made which secures the physical and emotional safety of the children and the mother. An order for supervised contact provides such safety. Contact between the father and his children gives effect to the right to family life to all participants and facilitates one of the two most vital relationships in a child's life. However, unrestricted normal contact has to yield to safety measures where there have been findings of domestic abuse. That said, I just do not understand the logic underpinning the Cafcass officer's recommendation. Findings of domestic abuse would only in the rarest of cases mean no contact all; what they mean is that careful safety measures need to be implemented, perhaps for a prolonged period, while analysis is undertaken of the feasibility of moving to unrestricted contact. The mother plainly recognised this when, on legal advice, she made her agreement as recorded in the order of 28 February 2020.
i) no such holiday may exceed 28 days in duration;
ii) at the conclusion of the holiday and the return to the United Kingdom the passports are to be returned to their present place of safety;
iii) the father must be given at least three weeks' notice of such each holiday with full details of the travel arrangements to, and accommodation in, Sierra Leone; and
iv) no such holiday can take place until this judgment, and the order giving effect to it, have been registered at the mother's expense in Sierra Leone pursuant to the Foreign Judgments (Reciprocal Enforcement) Act 1960 (Chapter 21 of the Laws of Sierra Leone).
I am satisfied, following the guidance in Re R (A Child) [2013] EWCA Civ 1115, [2014] 1 FLR 643 at [23], that this final condition, explained so clearly by the expert, is sufficient to neutralise the risk of any retention by the mother of the two younger children in Sierra Leone. I acknowledge the existence of such a risk. After all, in a report made in the private law proceedings on 23 January 2020 the Cafcass officer recorded that the mother had told her that she planned to relocate to Sierra Leone in April 2020 with the two younger children. However, the mother told me that this was not, and never had been, her true intention. I accept that, but am nonetheless satisfied that the mirroring in Sierra Leone of this judgment, and my order giving effect to it, is necessary in order to neutralise the risk.
"The Cafcass High Court Team shall by 4pm on 27 March 2020 provide a report setting out B's wishes and feelings together with any views that Cafcass may have to whether B should be made a party and separately represented in these proceedings."
However, Ms Magson's first report dated 26 March 2020 did not address the question of separate representation.
"The Cafcass Officer, Lynn Magson, shall by 4pm on 1 May 2020 ?le and serve a short report in order to update the court and parties in relation to the call between the father and B directed above and also the Cafcass Officer's recommendation in relation to whether B should be separately represented in these proceedings."
In her addendum report of 1 May 2020 Ms Magson stated:
"Whilst being of the view B is of an age to have his views taken into account, I consider these are expressed within the previous report and re-enforced in his conversation with his father and available to the court and do not propose B should be separately represented."
"Rule 37.9 exist for a purpose. The purpose clearly is so that somebody in the position of Mr Chaudhry can see prominently and at once, the moment a lengthy order of this kind is given to him, what the gravity of the situation is and that he is at risk not merely being arrested at the time, but of being committed to prison as a punishment for contempt of court."
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