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England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) >> A (Jurisdiction: Family Law Act 1986) (Application for Amplification), Re [2021] EWFC 105 (15 December 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/HCJ/2021/105.html Cite as: [2021] EWFC 105 |
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West Bar, Sheffield, S3 8PH |
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B e f o r e :
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Re: A (Jurisdiction: Family Law Act 1986) (Application for Amplification) |
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Dr Charlotte Proudman (instructed by Nelsons Law) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 30th November 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was delivered in private. The anonymity of the children and members of their family must be strictly preserved. All persons, including representatives of the media, must ensure that this condition is strictly complied with. Failure to do so will be a contempt of court.
Mr Justice Poole:
Introduction
i) The matrimonial proceedings between the parties ended with the decree absolute in 2017.ii) The father's application is for an order under s.8 of the Children Act 1989 which falls within the category of orders within s.1(1)(a) of the Family Law Act 1986 (FLA 1986).
iii) Neither child is habitually resident or present in the jurisdiction of England and Wales.
iv) The father's application was made after Britain left the European Union and Council Regulation No. 2201/200 ("Brussels II") has no application to the present case.
i) Does the question of making the order arise "in connection with" matrimonial proceedings (s.2(1)(b)(i) of the FLA 1986)?ii) If so, are the proceedings "continuing" (ss.2A(1)(a)(ii) and 42(2) of the FLA 1986) notwithstanding the decree absolute?
iii) If the court does have jurisdiction under the FLA 1986, would it nevertheless be more appropriate for the application to be determined outside the jurisdiction of England and Wales such that the court should direct that no order should be made (s.2A(4) of the FLA 1986)?
Background
i) Both parties were born in England. They began co-habiting in 2006. They married in Nottingham in 2013. In 2014 they moved, with both children, to Country D where both taught at an international school. They separated in 2016. The father commenced divorce proceedings in the Newport Family Court, Gwent, which proceeded by consent and ended with the making of the decree absolute in August 2017.ii) Following the parties' separation, both children initially lived with the mother but in early 2018 J moved to live with the father. Later that year both parties and the children returned to live in England after the teaching contracts ended, but the mother applied to the Family Court at Chesterfield for permission to remove A from the jurisdiction to live with her in Country C. As recorded in the order of HHJ Bellamy on 13 August 2018, the father believed that it was in A's best interests to move to Country C to live with the mother. The court recorded that it had jurisdiction on the basis of habitual residence. In effect, the court allowed the mother to take A with her to live in Country C where they both remain. The mother is employed as a teacher in that country. It is not disputed that A is habitually resident there.
iii) From August 2018 to August 2019 J lived with grandparents in Scotland before moving to live with the father in Sheffield. The father maintains that on a visit to him during the Christmas holiday in 2019, A disclosed to him that the mother had physically abused her. This is denied by the mother and I have received no evidence on the matter beyond the father's assertion. The father and J decided to move to the Middle East, specifically to Country B where the father had an offer of a job. He says that the intention was to be closer to A. He applied to the Family Court at Sheffield for permission to remove J from the jurisdiction to live with him in Country B. By consent of the parties, HHJ Lynch made orders on 22 July 2020 permitting the father to relocate with J to Country B, and providing for J to live with the father, A to live with the mother, and for each child to spend time with the parent with whom they were not living. Although the child arrangements orders were in respect of both children, the court recorded that it had jurisdiction in relation to J on the basis of habitual residence but did not make any recording of its jurisdiction in relation to the orders concerning A. The mother was represented by solicitors for the purpose of the proceedings and the consent order.
iv) In July 2021 the father and J visited Country C. The father alleges that A disclosed abuse of her by the mother. Again, this is denied and I have received no evidence on the allegation beyond the father's assertion. He alerted the Country C's police and child protection services but this resulted in no action being taken against the mother. Indeed, the mother made a complaint of harassment against the father and he signed a document which he now understands was an agreement not to make allegations against the mother, in order to allow him to leave Country C. The father's contact with A has been very restricted, he says, and concerned for her welfare, he has made his application to this court for an order that she should live with him.
The Statutory Provisions
1 Orders to which Part I applies.
(1) Subject to the following provisions of this section, in this Part "Part I order" means—
(a) a section 8 order made by a court in England and Wales under the Children Act 1989, other than an order varying or discharging such an order…
There is no dispute that the father's application is for such an order.
2 Jurisdiction: general.
(1) A court in England and Wales shall not make a section 1(1)(a) order with respect to a child unless—
(a) it has jurisdiction under the Hague Convention, or
(b) the Hague Convention does not apply but—
(i) the question of making the order arises in or in connection with matrimonial proceedings or civil partnership proceedings and the condition in section 2A of this Act is satisfied, or
(ii) the condition in section 3 of this Act is satisfied.
As noted, the 1996 Hague Convention does not apply and therefore does not confer jurisdiction in this case. Given the agreement that A is neither habitually resident nor present in this jurisdiction, the condition under section 3 of the Act does not apply. Hence, the relevant provision is at s.2(1)(b)(i).
2A Jurisdiction in or in connection with matrimonial proceedings or civil partnership proceedings.
(1) The condition referred to in section 2(1) of this Act is that the proceedings are proceedings in respect of the marriage or civil partnership of the parents of the child concerned and—
(a) the proceedings—
(i) are proceedings for divorce or nullity of marriage, or dissolution or annulment of a civil partnership, and
(ii) are continuing;
The parties agree that the matrimonial proceedings were in respect of their marriage, they are the parents of the child concerned, A, and the proceedings were for divorce. There remains an issue of whether the proceedings are "continuing".
42 General interpretation of Part I.
(2) For the purposes of this Part proceedings in England and Wales or in Northern Ireland for divorce, nullity or judicial separation in respect of the marriage of the parents of a child shall, unless they have been dismissed, be treated as continuing until the child concerned attains the age of eighteen (whether or not a decree has been granted and whether or not, in the case of a decree of divorce or nullity of marriage, that decree has been made absolute).
Submissions and Caselaw
"were included in the 1986 Act specifically to replace the jurisdiction which previously been provided by s 42 of the 1973 Act. They were not made redundant by the repeal of ss 41 and 42, as Mostyn J determined, but were introduced to replace the latter. This was expressly considered by the Law Commissions and, for the reasons given, it was recommended that this jurisdiction should continue. In my view, the reasons they gave, and which were clearly accepted, remain equally valid today. It would be difficult to justify the court having financial remedy jurisdiction but not, even potentially, having parental responsibility jurisdiction".
And at [187]
"The courts should take a broad view as to whether the question arises in or in connection with the other proceedings. In broad terms all that is required is that the parties to those proceedings are 'the parents of the child concerned', that the proceedings are taking place or did take place in England and Wales, and that one or other or both of the parents seek a s 1(1)(a) order because their marriage or civil partnership is being or has been dissolved. The reason the court can take a broad view is because this provision only applies if neither BIIA nor the 1996 Hague Convention apply and because s 2A(4) balances the broad scope of s 2(1)(b)(i) by giving the court the power not to exercise this jurisdiction."
"4.8 The practical application of this general principle raises a problem as to when, for the purpose of custody jurisdiction, proceedings for divorce, nullity or judicial separation should be regarded as coming to an end. The effect of existing law in all three United Kingdom countries is that once the court is duly seised of the matrimonial dispute, it retains jurisdiction to deal with questions relating to custody of and access to the children. This jurisdiction is retained however long ago the divorce was granted, however distant the connection of the child with the country in which the divorce took place, and however close and long-standing the child's connection with some other part of the United Kingdom. The question we have to answer is whether, for the purposes of our scheme, the jurisdiction of the divorce court to make custody orders should continue so long as the child is within the appropriate age limit, i.e. 18 in England and Wales and Northern Ireland and 16 in Scotland.
"4.9 We have reached the conclusion that a court dealing with divorce, nullity or judicial separation proceedings should remain entitled to exercise custody jurisdiction until the child attains the appropriate age, even where the child or his parents are or have become habitually resident elsewhere in the United Kingdom. Our main reason for reaching this conclusion is the impossibility of devising any general rule to the contrary effect which would not sometimes operate against the interests of the child's welfare or against those of the parents.
"4.10 Nevertheless, we recognise that in some cases it will be advantageous for issues as to custody and access to be determined by a court in a United Kingdom country other than that in which the proceedings for dissolution of the marriage are brought …
"4.11 We therefore recommend as follows-
Where a court in the United Kingdom has jurisdiction in proceedings for divorce, nullity of marriage or judicial separation, that court should continue to have jurisdiction to make custody orders in the course of those proceedings."
"[16] Since the words in question ("in or in connection with") remain in the section, I must clearly apply them and Mr Scott is not suggesting otherwise. That said, his submissions are persuasive as to the fact that, if the mere existence of divorce proceedings here can clothe the court with jurisdiction to make child welfare orders in respect of children habitually resident elsewhere, then it would drive a coach and horses, or at least a coach, through the now generally accepted approach to the issue of jurisdiction. Clearly, if Parliament had wanted to say that, whenever there are pending matrimonial proceedings here, this court should without more have jurisdiction in respect of issues regarding the parties' children, then it could have done so. But it did not; and yet the criterion for jurisdiction remains "in or in connection with" matrimonial proceedings.
"[17] It is self-evident on the face of the petition that the application which the mother now wishes to make is not "in" her matrimonial proceedings, because no application is nor could have been made there. But what does "in connection with" actually mean? Mr Hale submits it merely means that if there are pending divorce proceedings, then any application regarding the children is automatically connected with them; but I cannot accept that. I consider, as did Judith Parker J obiter in AP v TD [2011] 1 FLR 1851, paras 122–123 that there must be some nexus more than just the mere existence of the two sets of proceedings and the fact that the parties to them are the same. It is not entirely easy to see what nexus there can or could be between proceedings seeking quite different reliefs; but it may be that the question is simply one of fact and degree. As a proposition which I put to Mr Scott and he accepted (and from which Mr Hale did not dissent), one can envisage a petition which raises the same issues as a Children Act application made at about the same time (for example "unreasonable behaviour" allegations against the respondent involving his behaviour towards the children). Such issues would be "connected" both as to content and in point of time. But that is not the case here. The mother's application regarding the children arises out of events in June 2016 and raises issues wholly unrelated to the issues in the divorce proceeding issued nine months previously in September 2015. As Mr Scott submits, her application relating to the children could have been made if the parties had not been married or, indeed, if they were not getting divorced; it is freestanding."
"41. On this analysis the residual jurisdiction can, at any rate in theory, be invoked years after the divorce provided that the applicant parent can earnestly claim that the child arrangements application is being made "because" the marriage has been dissolved.
"42. I agree that there must be a clear causal link demonstrated between the child arrangements application and the divorce. A causal link requires the facts giving rise to the present application to be fairly traceable to the now concluded divorce. This must be so because any other interpretation would make a mockery of the statutory requirement that the question of making the child arrangements order arises "in connection with" divorce proceedings. I would suggest that taking "a broad view" of the words of the statute does nonetheless require fidelity to their plain intention.
"43. In this regard I completely agree with Parker J in AP v TD [2010] EWHC 2040 (Fam) at [122] where she stated:
"Therefore I conclude that section 2(1)(b)(i) does qualify section 42(2) and does require a connection, probably a temporal connection, to be established between "the question of making the order" and the matrimonial proceedings, but how that connection is to be defined is more difficult. In the light of the Explanatory Note to the Rules introducing the amendments consequent on Brussels II Revised, a purposive construction of Section 2(1)(b)(i) would support an interpretation of the provisions bringing it into line with the provisions of Brussels II Revised, and away from the UK based "continuing proceedings" jurisdiction. The time frame of the revoked FPR 2.40 is similar to the time frame for continuing jurisdiction based on divorce in Brussels II and Article 12 of Brussels II Revised. In my judgment to fall within the residual jurisdiction there must be proximity between the divorce proceedings and the court being asked to determine a question of making an order in relation to children.
In any case it may be that essentially the same application or issue has been before the court, unresolved, for some time, but once an order has been made, then in my view the connection with the matrimonial proceedings would terminate." I see the criterion of temporal proximity as being the prime (but not only) metric for establishing whether there is a causal link between the child arrangements application and the earlier, now concluded, divorce.
Relying on these cases, Dr Proudman says that there is no temporal or causal link between the divorce and the question that arises in the father's application.
Conclusions on Jurisdiction
"34. It seems to me that it must be right that the phrase 'in or in connection with' must mean something more than the mere existence for a child arrangements order being made whilst a divorce petition is continuing. The Court of Appeal in Lachaux refers to the application being made because the marriage is being dissolved. Thus one is looking for something which creates some nexus or connection even perhaps a tenuous connection in order for the wording of the statutory provision to be fulfilled. Ms Halsall emphasised that the Court of Appeal had supported a broad construction of the phrase not a narrow one. Ultimately it is probably a question of fact."
And when applying that approach at [47] he held:
"Although I accept that the Court of Appeal decision in Lachaux supports the court taking a broad approach [to] this issue I do not read the decision as amounting to a boundless discretion where the mere existence of a divorce petition at the same time as applications in respect of children satisfy the condition."
i) There must be a clear causal link between the issues raised and the divorce proceedings.ii) There needs to be some connection between the issues raised in the application and the divorce proceedings that goes beyond the mere fact that the divorce proceeded in this jurisdiction. The connection may exist due to one or more factors such as proximity in time, an overlap in the relevant facts or subject-matter, a causal link, or some other matter. However, there is no necessary condition and the sufficiency of any factors to establish a connection will be a question of fact and degree.
iii) All that is required is that there are issues of child arrangements raised by the application and the courts of England and Wales have previously assumed jurisdiction in divorce proceedings between the parties who are parents of the child or children concerned.
For the reasons that follow I adopt the second of these three approaches.
"Our main reason for reaching this conclusion is the impossibility of devising any general rule to the contrary effect which would not sometimes operate against the interests of the child's welfare or against those of the parents."
If, notwithstanding the fact that there are or were divorce proceedings, those divorce proceedings have no connection at all with the question raised by the s.8 application, then s.2(1)(b)(i) is not satisfied. The mere fact that jurisdiction as to welfare issues is preserved in proceedings for divorce, and that welfare issues concerning a child are the basis for the s.8 application, does not mean that the reason for the s.8 application can be found in the divorce. In particular, if, during a period of years since a decree absolute, child arrangements have been settled by consent or court order, then the connection between the divorce proceedings and the s.8 application is likely to have been broken. In such circumstances, the reason for any welfare application is not connected to the matrimonial proceedings: the s.8 application has not been made "because of" those proceedings.
Appropriate Forum
"Application for Amplification"
i) Requested the court to "review the decision that the question of making the order sought by the father in his s.8 application does not arise in or in connection with the matrimonial proceedings."The applicant further submitted that:ii) Given that the divorce petition issued by the Applicant on 21 February 2017 – attached to the application for amplification – included a request for a financial order to be made in respect of both himself and the children, and Form A has not yet been issued, the financial remedy proceedings are "latent" and "ancillary to the divorce proceedings and therefore are either the same as those for divorce or fall under the generic umbrella of "matrimonial proceedings"."
iii) Financial remedies, including child maintenance and support, would be directly affected were the Applicant's s.8 application to be successful.
iv) "The Father fully intends on issuing Form A as soon as the Children Act jurisdiction issue has been resolved."
v) The matrimonial proceedings are "pending".
vi) The Court "has failed to give sufficient consideration to the fact that the financial remedy claims have been applied for albeit not yet commenced."
vii) There is a clear connection between the unresolved financial remedy questions and those being brought by the Applicant under the Children Act 1989: "These financial qua divorce qua matrimonial proceedings and consequent ancillary, extant unresolved claims are therefore pending and propel the children matters into the realm of being in connection with them. The court did not investigate this matter and indeed asked no questions during the hearing at all. Had it done so on this issue, junior counsel for the applicant would have explained this connection fully."
viii) The court should consider how paragraphs 21 to 25 of the draft judgment sit with the submission made by junior counsel during the hearing that the underlying welfare issues that prompt the Father's s.8 CA 1989 application derive from the divorce in that " (a) the mother's behaviour towards A mirrors her behaviour towards the Father during he relationship which prompted the Father to petition for divorce, and (b) the fact that the divorce and separation means that A is no longer protected from that behaviour by the Father."
ix) The Court did not consider whether there was further jurisdictional basis to proceed namely the parens patriae jurisdiction.
i) The application for amplification does not in fact state that the reasons given in the draft judgment were inadequate and require amplification. An advocate has a duty to give the court the opportunity of considering whether there is a material omission (FPR PD30A) but it is another matter to seek to create an omission by making new submissions that the court had not previously received and therefore had not considered. The father's new application invites the court to reconsider its decision on the basis of new arguments not made at the hearing. It is not therefore an application made in accordance with the principles in English v Emery Reimbold and Strick (above) – see [24] and [25] of the speech of Lord Phillips MR.ii) The application was signed by both Leading Counsel and Junior Counsel even though Leading Counsel was not involved in the hearing before me.
iii) Submissions before me did not touch on the question of an application for a financial order; indeed, the petition itself was not within the bundle of documents relied upon by either party. The Applicant's counsel did not inform the court that there had been no financial settlement or order before the decree absolute. The Applicant father's statement, which was the only witness evidence before the court, did not mention any financial matters, let alone his intention to issue Form A upon resolution of his s.8 application. Hence the matters set out at 29 (ii) to (vii) above were entirely new submissions based on assertion or evidence which whilst available was not previously put before the court.
iv) The court was sitting as the Family Court hearing a s.8 Children Act application. There was no application under the inherent jurisdiction for the court to exercise its parens patriae jurisdiction. There was no evidence directed to that issue and no submissions as to whether the jurisdiction should be exercised.
i) An application for a financial order would not fall within the meaning of "proceedings for divorce" under s.2A of the FLA 1986.ii) Even if a financial order application were to be regarded as "proceedings for divorce" it is not pending. The divorce proceedings ended with the decree absolute and no Form A has been issued.
iii) The parties' financial positions have changed significantly since the divorce was concluded. Whilst Dr Proudman addresses communications between the parties and between their lawyers as to financial matters I do not regard it as appropriate for me to take those matters into account. There has been no evidence adduced in relation to those matters. However, it is clear that the parties have adopted separate lives, each financially independent, in different countries.
iv) There is no connection between any financial order application and the grounds for the father seeking a child arrangements order, which are the conduct of the mother and the best interests of the parties' daughter.
v) The divorce petition (which both parties now invite me to consider) relied upon the moodiness and lack of communication of the mother. Those allegations have no connection whatsoever with the allegations now raised by the father in relation to the mother's treatment of their daughter.
vi) There is no application for the court to exercise its parens patriae jurisdiction and in any event this is not a case in which the court should exercise that jurisdiction. The circumstances are not exceptional – there is no evidence before the court that the child concerned requires the court's protection. There is a significant difference between accepting that it might be in a child's best interests to live with the other parent and accepting that the circumstances justify the exercise of the parens patriae jurisdiction.