BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) >> N (a child) [2020] EWFC 35 (01 May 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/HCJ/2020/35.html Cite as: [2020] EWFC 35 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
IN |
Applicant |
|
- and - |
||
DK |
Respondent |
____________________
The respondent mother appeared in person from Greece
Hearing date: 28 April 2020
The hearing was conducted by Zoom
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mostyn:
i) The application for the return order may be framed either as a claim for a specific issue order under section 8 of the Children Act 1989 or for an order pursuant to the inherent power of the High Court. However, the latter course should only be invoked exceptionally. Exceptionality may be demonstrated by reasons of urgency, complexity or the need for particular judicial expertise: [44].
ii) Notwithstanding that the application is for a summary return order, the court must nonetheless conduct a proper welfare enquiry pursuant to section 1 of the Children Act 1989. The evidence must be sufficiently complete and up-to-date to justify the making of a return order. In the welfare enquiry the child's interests will be the paramount consideration. The court must specifically consider all the matters mentioned in section 1(3), the first of which, of course, is the ascertainable wishes and feelings of the child concerned: [51 -53], [56], [57], [58].
iii) The respondent must be given sufficient notice of the application to seek a return order: [54].
iv) Where there are contested allegations of domestic abuse the court must specifically consider whether any enquiries should be conducted into them and, if so, how extensive that enquiry should be: [59].
v) The court must be satisfied by evidence as to the living arrangements for the child if a return order were to be made: [60].
vi) The court must specifically consider whether the parties should give oral evidence at the hearing and if so on what aspects and to what extent: [61].
vii) The court must consider whether a Cafcass officer should be directed to prepare a report, and if so, what aspects and what extent. It will be important in this way to establish the child's wishes and feelings: [62].
viii) The court will need to consider the ability of the court in the other place to reach a swift resolution of the issues between the parents in relation to the child: [63].
"47. The situation in this case is not the same as that in In re A. I do not, therefore, consider that a "particularly compelling reason" would be required before it would be appropriate for a court to make a return order summarily at the outset of proceedings. However, having regard to the matters set out above, I consider that, absent a good reason to the contrary, the better course is for the court to defer making a return order until an application under the 1980 Convention has been determined in the other Member State. As Black LJ said this is how the return of a child is "expected to be dealt with". Once such a determination has been made the court can then decide what order to make pursuant to Article 11(8) of BIIa.
48. Apart from this being the "expected" route, it has certain real advantages. First, a higher degree of direct assistance is likely to be provided by the authorities in the requested state to a party bringing an application under the 1980 Convention than in respect of an application for the enforcement of an order. Secondly, there is a specific obligation on states to determine applications under the 1980 Convention within 6 weeks. There is no such specific requirement in respect of the enforcement of parental responsibility orders. Thirdly, Article 11 provides what is to happen if a non-return order is made. There is, therefore, a tailor-made procedure through which the courts of the respective Member States engage with the case and engage with each other. Additionally, any subsequent return order has an expedited enforcement procedure under Chapter III, Section 4 and, to repeat, "without any possibility of opposing its recognition if the judgment has been certified in the Member State of origin in accordance with" Article 42(2). The making of a summary return order does not necessarily lead to the expeditious return of a child.
49. The advantages of an application being made under the 1980 Convention as against making a summary return order are evident from the circumstances of this case. Having obtained a summary return order, the mother found herself unable effectively to apply for its enforcement. It is not, therefore, known whether she might have encountered other difficulties under Article 23, for example on the issue of whether the voice of the child had been heard. Although there were some delays in the mother's application under the 1980 Convention being progressed, once she engaged with the process required in the Netherlands to progress an application under the 1980 Convention, the court there dealt with the application with expedition. That such applications are dealt with expeditiously can be seen from the information provided in its Annual Report for 2017 by the Dutch Office of the Liaison Judge for International Child Protection (BLIK). This is not to say that a return order would be made but that the process was more likely to be expedited by making an application under the 1980 Convention than seeking to enforce a summary return order by means of BIIa."
i) a declaration that the child, N, is habitually resident in England and Wales and was on the 21 March 2020;
ii) a specific issue order for the mother to return the child to England forthwith;
iii) a prohibited steps order preventing the mother from removing the child from England once he returned to England and Wales, until the conclusion of these proceedings;
iv) a specific issue order requiring the mother to lodge the child's passport and travel documents with the father's solicitors, until the conclusion of these proceedings;
v) a prohibited steps order preventing the mother from applying for a travel document or passport with the Greek embassy in England and Wales; and
vi) a Child Arrangements Order for the child to live with the father till the conclusion of these proceedings.
"On the basis of temporary protection, we are going to pursue gaining an order before the 20th of April preventing the opponent from fling away from the place where the child is being kept (except for England). Given the present conditions, we may not be able to gain the judge's permission regarding the urgent nature of the matter and thus, not be able to secure a hearing, rather than one confirming that there is no urgent need for temporary protection."
"I made it clear to [the father] right at the beginning that I do not intend to stay in Greece permanently – the main reason that I have come to Greece is that I am very afraid of the coronavirus and I want to do whatever I can to keep N (and me) safe from it. The small Greek island where my mother lives, where N and I are now staying with her, is naturally isolated from the mainland and has its own medical facilities. It is absolutely safe for until now there were zero (0) incidents of corona virus contamination. I believe that it is a much safer place to be for us than the much more densely populated area of Barking / outskirts of London, given the numbers of people affected and die in London on a daily basis.
…
I do not know exactly when we will return, but that is because the whole situation is moving so quickly and no-one knows what things will be like in two weeks let alone a month. When I arrived in Greece it was not in complete lockdown, since we got here they have closed the borders and traveling is banned completely and I don't think that I could even return now to England if I wanted to – which I do not at this time as I believe staying in Greece gives N a much better chance in this pandemic."
Obviously, the mother had no opportunity to respond to the witness statement from the father's Greek lawyer.