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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) >> AA & BB (Rev 1) [2021] EWFC 17 (01 March 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/HCJ/2021/17.html Cite as: [2021] EWFC 17 |
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Sitting in the Royal Courts of Justice
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
SITTING AS A DEPUTY HIGH COURT JUDGE
____________________
In the matter of AA (d.o.b. [a date in] 2006) and BB (d.o.b. . [a date in] 2016) |
____________________
Teertha Gupta QC, Rebecca Carew Pole QC, Jennifer Perrins, Jacqueline Renton and Joshua Viney (instructed by Family Law in Partnership) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 17 February 2021
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR CUSWORTH QC:
Background
The Current Application
a. On 28 October 2020, the mother issued an application to determine the place of residence for the children, in the Russian court;
b. On 5 November 2020, the Russian court 'returned' or rejected the statement of claim in respect of her application without issuing it, on the basis of a determination that the court lacked jurisdiction in relation to the children. The ruling made clear that the mother had 15 days to contest the ruling through the Court;
c. On 6 November 2020, the father filed a C100 application in the Central Family Court in London for an urgent Prohibited Steps Order preventing the children's removal from the jurisdiction, and a Child Arrangements Order, seeking an order that the children live with him and spend time with the mother. He also filed a C1A. The application was issued on 9 November.
d. On 11 November 2020, M filed a 'private complaint' – effectively an appeal - against the determination that the Russian Court could not deal with her claims;
e. On 13 November 2020, M issued her second application for the court to determine that the place of residence of the children was with the mother at her address in Russia, and to recover maintenance payments for their support;
f. On 17 November 2020, the Russian court returned this second statement of claim, once more on the basis of a lack of jurisdiction;
g. On 24 November 2020, the mother issued her third application to determine the place of residence of the children, and to recover maintenance payments for their support; which application was accepted on 26 November, and pre-trial hearing set for 21 December;
h. On 18 December 2020 the mother filed a C1A in the English proceedings;
i. On 21 December 2020 the Russian Regional Court allowed the mother's private complaint against the original rejection (on 5 November 2020) of her first application, which had been filed on 28 October: the pre-trial hearing of her third claim, which had been listed for that day, had in fact separately been adjourned to 26 January 2021;
j. On the same day in England, the first hearing of the father's application took place before DJ Barrie; the mother would only just have learnt that her original claim could now proceed (Russia being several hours ahead of England): the recital to the order sets out that: "The mother disputes the jurisdiction of the courts of England and Wales to make substantive orders under the Children Act 1989…": amongst the directions given was the listing of a jurisdiction hearing to determine the habitual residence of the children, which both parties then acknowledged was required;
k. On 20 January 2021, the mother's first application was reconsidered and accepted by the court and set down for a pre-trial hearing on 2 March 2021; on the following day the mother applied for joinder of the two proceeding claims, although that had not yet been determined at the date of the hearing before me;
l. On 26 January 2021, the mother's third claim was adjourned on her application to 9 February 2021, and then to 18 and finally 24 February, on the basis of separate applications by both parties to enable this application to come before me;
m. There were at the date of the hearing before me two hearings listed in Russia, on 24 February and 2 March, in the 2 applications. Soon therefore, directions will be given for a hearing at which the Russian Court will determine the issue of the children's habitual residence, and so whether Russia considers itself to have jurisdiction to deal with welfare issues in relation to these girls.
(1) The authorities of a Contracting State which have jurisdiction under Articles 5 to 10 to take measures for the protection of the person or property of the child must abstain from exercising this jurisdiction if, at the time of the commencement of the proceedings, corresponding measures have been requested from the authorities of another Contracting State having jurisdiction under Articles 5 to 10 at the time of the request and are still under consideration.
(2) The provisions of the preceding paragraph shall not apply if the authorities before whom the request for measures was initially introduced have declined jurisdiction.
a. Relying on Article 61 of Council Regulation (EC) No 2201/2003 ('BIIR'), he says that the 1996 Hague Convention does not apply in this case. Although the United Kingdom ceased to be a Member State of the European Union on 31 January 2020, under the terms of the Withdrawal Agreement, European law applies as regards proceedings issued prior to the conclusion of the transition period on 31 December 2020. His application was issued on 9 November 2020 , , and is therefore governed by European law. Accordingly, he says that the court cannot impose a stay on the English proceedings pursuant to Article 13 of that convention;
b. He maintains that in any event, the mother had agreed to the English court being seised of the question of habitual residence and jurisdiction, and, on application of the court's general powers of case management and/or abuse of process principles, this court should proceed to determine that issue; and
c. Finally, he says that even if Article 13 does apply, he says that it does not operate to impose a mandatory stay on the English proceedings on the facts of this case.
Article 61, BIIR
Article 61
Relation with the Hague Convention of 19 October 1996 on Jurisdiction, Applicable law, Recognition, Enforcement and Cooperation in Respect of Parental Responsibility and
Measures for the Protection of Children
As concerns the relation with the Hague Convention of 19 October 1996 on Jurisdiction, Applicable law, Recognition, Enforcement and Cooperation in Respect of Parental Responsibility and Measures for the Protection of Children, this Regulation shall apply:
(a) where the child concerned has his or her habitual residence on the territory of a Member State;
(b) as concerns the recognition and enforcement of a judgment given in a court of a Member State on the territory of another Member State, even if the child concerned has his or her habitual residence on the territory of a third State which is a contracting Party to the said Convention.
Where proceedings relating to parental responsibility relating to the same child and involving the same cause of action are brought before courts of different Member States, the court second seised shall of its own motion stay its proceedings until such time as the jurisdiction of the court first seised is established.
[32] As regards Art 8(1) of Brussels IIA itself, that provision states that the courts of a Member State are to have jurisdiction in matters of parental responsibility with reference to a child who is habitually resident in that Member State at the time when the matter is brought before the court concerned. Thus, nothing in that provision indicates that the application of the general rule of jurisdiction in matters of parental responsibility, which it establishes, is conditional on there being a legal relationship involving a number of Member States.
[33] As the Advocate General observes in points 23 and 25 of his Opinion, it follows that, unlike certain provisions of Brussels IIA concerning jurisdiction such as Arts 9, 10 and 15, the terms of which necessarily imply that their application is dependent on a potential conflict of jurisdiction between courts in a number of Member States, it does not follow from the wording of Art 8(1) of that Regulation that that provision is limited to disputes relating to such conflicts.
149. I have come to the conclusion (not without some hesitation) that:
(i) It is neither necessary nor desirable to extend the Owusu principle in cases where there are parallel proceedings in a non-Member State. I have reached this conclusion for the following principal reasons:
(a) The risk of irreconcilable judgments which undermine two important objectives of the Brussels scheme namely: avoiding irreconcilable judgments between Member States and ensuring recognition of judgments between Member States.
(b) It would lead to an undesirable lacuna, as there will be no mechanism in place for resolving this situation with the consequence of both proceedings continuing with the consequent increased uncertainty and cost.
(c) The supporting rationale by Jacob LJ in Lucasfilm [Ltd and others v Ainsworth and another [2009] EWCA Civ 1328]
'..the EU could not legislate for third countries' [111];
'The Regulation is not setting up the courts of the Member States as some kind of non-exclusive world tribunals for wrongs done outside the EU by persons who happen to be domiciled within the EU.' [129]
'We do not have to decide whether [Catalyst Investment Group v Lewinsohn [2009] EWHC 1964] was correct, though we note that, if [Barling J] is right, there is this oddity: that there is a clear lis pendens rule, with associated court first seized rule, for parallel cases within the EU but none for parallel cases where one is running within the EU Member State and one without. …
(d) The reasoning that underpins Owusu is not incompatible with retaining the discretionary power where there are parallel proceedings in a non-Member State. It does not undermine certainty for the defendant (as he will be bringing the proceedings in the non-Member State); the claimant (although not mentioned in Article 2) will have knowledge of the proceedings in the non-Member State and it is likely to be in his interests to have one set of proceedings rather than two (the latter would happen if the Owusu doctrine was extended); there would be less risk of irreconcilable judgments given in Member States which are not recognised in another Member State; Coreck (which was decided 4 years before Owusu) permits judicial discretion in circumstances where there is no provision for it in Brussels I.
(ii) If I am wrong about what is set out in (i) above, I have come to the conclusion that it is neither necessary nor desirable for the Owusu doctrine to be extended to BIIR for the following principal reasons:
(a) There is no direct connection between Brussels I and BIIR save for the reference in recital 11 of BIIR to maintenance obligations being excluded from its scope as these are already covered by Brussels I.
(b) Whilst the court can look at one Regulation to interpret the other where their language is identical, the respective provisions in the Regulations are different in a number of material respects as set out in paragraph 147 (v) above with the consequences, if the Owusu doctrine is extended, outlined in that paragraph.
(c) Re I [(a child)(contact application: jurisdiction) [2009] UKSC 10] makes clear that forum non conveniens is not an anathema to BIIR.
(e) There is no good reason for the lacuna which would operate if Owusu applied. BIIR provides in Article 19 a mechanism if there are competing divorce proceedings in another Member State; if jurisdiction is based on Article 7 national law provides the solution. If the jurisdiction is based on Article 3 and the other competing forum is a non– Member State there is no mechanism to deal with this. This can result in two sets of proceedings with the resulting consequences and increased cost.
(f) Extending Owusu to BIIR is bound to have implications regarding Article 8 and jurisdiction in matters relating to parental responsibility. First, Article 15 provides a mechanism for a transfer of a case relating to parental responsibility between Member States where that is in the best interests of the child. There is no corresponding provision permitting a case to be stayed in favour of a non-Member State. There is no justification for depriving the courts of that power if it is in the best interests of the child to do so. Secondly, section 5(2) of the Family Law Act 1986 expressly empowers the court to grant a stay in favour of a non-Member State. Extending Owusu to BIIR would require the court to disapply the provisions of primary legislation which has been amended with the specific purpose of bringing the statute into conformity with BIIR.
(iii) In so far as it is necessary, bearing in mind my conclusions in (i) and (ii) above, I accept the arguments advanced on behalf of the husband that the narrow construction of the amendment to Sch 1 para 9 DMPA 1973 is to be preferred for the following reasons:
(a) The natural and preferable construction of 'proceedings governed by the Council Regulation' refers to the position where there are competing proceedings in another Member State.
(b) This construction is necessary to make clear that the discretionary powers conferred by paragraph 9 were ousted in cases where the mandatory provisions of Art 19 BIIR were engaged.
(c) The court's discretion to stay under paragraph 9 remains in place where the competing proceedings are in a non-Member State.
(d) This construction is not incompatible with EU law as it provides for the express provision in Article 19 and provides a mechanism in place to deal with competing non-Member State proceedings and reduces the risk of irreconcilable judgments.
37. In my judgment the Owusu case [2005] QB 801 has little to do with our case. First, it was concerned with a different Convention regulating jurisdiction in a very different field of activity…Second, the legislative language under consideration in Owusu was very different from the language of BIIR…Third, both Advocate General Leger and the court declined to answer the question that arises in our case, namely whether proceedings should be stayed in favour of competing prior proceedings in a non-member state. Part of the policy of both the Judgments Regulation and BIIR is to avoid competing and potentially conflicting judgments in different jurisdictions (lis alibi pendens). Since the Owusu case was concerned with different facts, different legislative language and a different piece of legislation, it could therefore only be applied to BIIR by way of analogy. The analogy would have to found itself on the policy underlying both the Judgments Regulation and BIIR. But fourth, the policy objectives of the Brussels Convention (and latterly the Judgments Regulation) were different from those of BIIR…
48. In JKN v JCN (Divorce: Forum) [2011] 1 FLR 826, para 149(iii) Ms Theis QC decided that proceedings were only 'governed' by BIIR if they fell within article 19 of BIIR. I agree with her. The whole context of paragraph 9 of Schedule 1 to the 1973 Act concerns stays of proceedings. In my judgment in the context of a legislative provision dealing with a stay of proceedings, the proceedings are only 'governed' by BIIR if BIIR tells the court how to deal with the application. Since, in my judgment, neither BIIR nor the decision of the Court of Justice in the Owusu case [2005] QB 801 does that (except in cases to which article 19 applies), the proceedings are not 'governed' by BIIR. I also agree with the husband that the wife's argument involves reading 'governed by' as meaning 'where jurisdiction is granted by'...
50 ... I do not consider that it is necessary to make a reference to the Court of Justice. I am comforted in that conclusion by the decision of the Cour de cassation in France of 17 June 2009 (Appeal No 08—12456). That court held that divorce proceedings in France should be stayed in favour of prior divorce proceedings in Iceland (which is not a member state) on the ground of lis alibi pendens; and that to order a stay on that ground was not an infringement of BIIR. The conclusion I have reached cannot, therefore, be regarded as the peculiarity of an island race of common lawyers. It is one that is shared by our civilian colleagues in mainland Europe.
1. The agreements and conventions referred to in Articles 59(1), 60 and 61 shall continue to have effect in relation to matters not governed by this Regulation.
So, in matters not 'governed by the Regulation', the 1996 Hague Convention continues to apply.
…the effect of Article 61 is that jurisdiction must be exercised under the Regulation rather than under the Hague Convention of 19 October 1996... In those circumstances, it is submitted, rightly, that the court cannot make use of the Article 15 procedure because that is to request a transfer to another Member State, and Albania is not a Member State. It is also submitted, in my judgment rightly, that the court could not use the transfer request under Article 8 of the Convention, since Article 61(a) of the Regulation acts to provide for jurisdiction only to be exercised under the Regulation and that this would be consistent with the practice guide's comment at page 16 that 'the scope for using Article 8 must be limited'.
(c) where proceedings relating to parental responsibility are pending before a court of a State Party to the 1996 Hague Convention in which this Regulation does not apply at the time when a court of a Member State is seised of proceedings relating to the same child and involving the same cause of action, Article 13 of that Convention shall apply.
That prospective provision serves in my view to confirm the above interpretation of the current situation, and that a purposive interpretation of the current unspecific provision is entirely justified. I also note that Article 97(2) (b) of the recast Regulation would adopt the same approach to applications for transfer under Article 8 of the 1996 Convention, as that to lis pendens under Article 13, which would avoid in future the lack of jurisdiction accepted in the West Sussex case.
Prorogation
Article 12
Prorogation of jurisdiction
…
3. The courts of a Member State shall …have jurisdiction in relation to parental responsibility in proceedings …where:
(a) the child has a substantial connection with that Member State, in particular by virtue of the fact that one of the holders of parental responsibility is habitually resident in that Member State or that the child is a national of that Member State; and
(b) the jurisdiction of the courts has been accepted expressly or otherwise in an unequivocal manner by all the parties to the proceedings at the time the court is seised and is in the best interests of the child.
Whilst our client does not accept that the children, or the family generally, are habitually resident in this jurisdiction, she has, since 16 November 2020, accepted that the English Court has jurisdiction to consider immediate and protective matters regarding the children. This includes matters relating to a return to Russia.
Accordingly, and entirely without prejudice to her position in this jurisdiction, her Russian lawyers will be applying for an adjournment of the hearing on 21 December 2020. She will also be seeking (following Monday's hearing) a general stay of the Russian children proceedings, pending consideration by the English court of the central issue regarding the children's future living arrangements, namely their return to their home in Russia.
(a) The mother's solicitors made it very plain in their letter that they did not accept the court's general jurisdiction, save in respect of provisional or protective matters, in circumstances where the children are physically present in this jurisdiction, but where the question of their habitual residence was in issue;
(b) When the letter is sent, the Russian Court had as indicated not yet handed down its determination of the mother's appeal by way of private complaint in relation to her first application made on 27 October 2020. If she had lost that appeal, she would have had a very much weaker argument in relation to any consideration of lis pendens under Article 13 of the 1996 Convention, and may well not have been able to advance such an argument at all;
(c) The only issue in relation to which they expressly accepted this court's jurisdiction was in relation to whether or not the children should return to Russia, which they categorised as a protective measure, and so open to this Court under Article 12 of the 1996 Convention, and not incompatible with its terms, in the event that Russia were to be found to have jurisdiction and that Convention applied.
(d) The determination in the Russian Court was made on 21 December, only a few hours before the directions hearing before DJ Barrie in this jurisdiction. A recital to the order of DJ Barrie anyway records that:
'The mother disputes the jurisdiction of the courts of England and Wales to make substantive orders under the Children Act 1989 in the present proceedings, but both parties agreed that the present court has jurisdiction to make interim orders amounting to provisional or protective measures and to give directions for a hearing to resolve the substantive jurisdictional issue'.
(e) Whilst Mr Gupta's position statement was drafted on the basis that the Russian Court had already accepted jurisdiction in this matter, it became clear during the course of the hearing that that was not so, and that the question of whether the girls can be said to be habitually resident in that jurisdiction has yet to be determined there. I will deal below with the impact of that circumstance on the application of Article 13 in this case; however, in circumstances where no court has yet accepted substantive jurisdiction, and Article 13 applies by its own terms only in situations where more than one court has already done so, I do not accept that the mother can be prevented by the operation of Article 12 (3) of BIIR from raising the point now.
Article 13
(a) That a request for corresponding measures has already been made in another state at the time of commencement of proceedings; and
(b) That the other state had jurisdiction at the time when those measures were requested of it; and
(c) That those measures are still under consideration.
'…for as long as the proceedings in respect of the "corresponding measures" in the other Contracting State are still under consideration.'
The authority having jurisdiction under Articles 5-10 should abstain from deciding on the request for measures with which it has been seised if corresponding measures have been requested from the authorities of another Contracting State which then had jurisdiction under the same Articles 5-10, such measures then being still under examination.
'[Email 17.2.21]: …the question of the children's habitual residence has not yet been finally determined by the court in [Russia], and … directions for the determination of that question are likely to be given by the judge at the preliminary hearing on 2 March 2021…. a pre-trial hearing - a stage where the judge gets prepared for hearing the case (clarifies claim, facts, evidence - if everything is ok and ready for consideration). Then, she will schedule a hearing where this is supposed to be decided.'
'[Email 16.2.21]: The stage of the initiation of a civil case consists of the following procedural steps: filing of a statement of claim; acceptance or rejection of a statement of claim, return of a statement of claim, leaving a statement of claim without movement; filing of a counterclaim, acceptance or rejection of a counterclaim. No other procedural actions are possible at this stage. The initiation of a civil case in court is carried out by filing a statement of claim…
… key point is that we need to differentiate between filing a statement of claim (petition) which is the beginning, the first step in initiation of a civil case, and commencement of civil proceedings, which occur when a judge rules on acceptance of a case and on initiation (commencement) of proceedings. The latter is NOT the beginning of "proceedings" but a response of a court to the petitioner's claim. The beginning is filing the claim.'
'[10.1] With regard to the measures sought by the Wife in her Claim of 27 October 2020, the Ruling of 21 December 2020 meant that they should become under consideration from date when the [Russian court] decided on taking over the Wife's Statement of Claim (accepted for proceedings)…in order to determine the priority of applying to the court for a determination of the children's place of residence, it is not the date of acceptance/initiation of the proceedings but the date when the claim was filed in the court that should be relevant'
'[6.6] The rulings can be appealed by a Private Complain. Therefore, the private complain does not operate as a new claim; it does not set new proceedings either under Russian law; it is an action that is taken in the course of ongoing civil proceedings on the case. It does not change the date when the Petitioner filled her claim, in this case when the Wife's Statement of Claim was filed in the court.'
'[6.4] As explained in the Decree of the Plenum of the Supreme Court N 52 of 27 December 2007 "…the term for consideration of the separated claim(s) should be calculated from the date of commencement of the period for the originally stated claim, and in case of merging of cases into one proceeding, the term for consideration of such case is calculated from the earliest date of commencement of the period for one of the merged cases".
[103] The effect of an appeal from a decision by the court first seised that it has no jurisdiction does not appear to be settled by authority... It is true that a judgment for the purposes of Brussels I is final even if an appeal is pending: e.g. Articles 37 and 46. But the object of Article 27 is to prevent irreconcilable judgments, and as a matter of policy it would be very odd if proceedings in the court second seised could continue even if on appeal the jurisdiction of the court first seised is established. Consequently, we consider (contrary to the view of the judge) that Article 27 applies until the proceedings in the court first seised are finally determined in relation to its jurisdiction. That would mean that the expression in Article 27.1 "until such time as the jurisdiction of the court first seised is established" should be interpreted to include the case where the court first seised has declared that it has no jurisdiction, but an appeal is pending against that decision, and that it would be unsatisfactory for the matter to be dealt with through a discretionary stay in the court seised second.
14. …In [C v S (Divorce: Jurisdiction) [2010] EWHC 2676 (Fam), [2011] 2 FLR 19,] the factual situation which faced the court was explained by [Hedley J] as follows:
16. 'There were a number of matters on which the experts were in agreement...; thirdly, that that was an order which was not capable of being appealed; and, fourthly, that there are no apparent outstanding proceedings in Italy at the present time. There was, however, a crucial matter on which they disagreed.
17. Miss Ceschini said that the effect of the order on 9th October was to finish the case and that… it was the fact that the order declaring the petition void and that the proceedings be shelved had the effect of absolutely bringing proceedings to an end.
18. Dr. Calá agreed thus far but he went on to say that …the Italian civil code would …have the effect of enabling an application to be made to revive the order, so long as some application was made within 12 months of its making…, and accordingly this case was capable of being revived. It was his opinion that, insofar as it was capable of being provided, first, that it amounted to a lis pendens under Article 19...
19. It follows, in those circumstances, that if Miss Ceschini is right, there were no proceedings in existence at the time when the English court exercised jurisdiction; whereas if Dr. Calá is right, there were archived but revivable proceedings which were capable of constituting a lis pendens and which, accordingly, were capable of allowing the Italian court to remain seised of the matter.
20. Those are matters to which I have given close and anxious attention. I have reminded myself that, in European jurisprudence, Regulations and Articles are often to be treated as living and purposive instruments and not always to be read as tightly as one might read an English statute. Certainly, I have come to the conclusion that Article 19 must be read purposively and, in my judgment, for a court to remain seised of a matter, there must in fact be existing proceedings before it. To construe the Article in any other way is potentially to make a nonsense of it by a court being seised of a matter about which it can do nothing unless a party revives it... For Article 19 to bear real meaning, in my judgment, it is essential that there be proceedings which can be properly described as "existing" before the court at the relevant date.'
15. [Counsel] thus contends that the situation here is truly analogous to that in C v S, and that in consequence, once the final separation order was made by the Italian Court…, those proceedings were over and the Italian court's seisin came to an end. His client was therefore free, he submits, to issue a fresh English divorce petition during the hiatus period in Italy, and thus become first in time for the purposes of Art 19. He relies heavily upon Ms Ceschini's expressed view that the Italian separation order was immediately enforceable…, notwithstanding her later expressed opinion that: 'The separation order... was not final…', because the term to appeal had not then expired. It is noticeable that, in the earlier case of C v S, her opinion that the order in that case was final was based, at least in part, upon the agreed fact that it was an order that was not capable of being appealed…
17. Whilst (a) the order remained potentially subject to appeal, and (b) as a result the husband (or the wife) was precluded from issuing divorce proceedings in Italy, it cannot be said that there were no proceedings which 'could properly be described as existing'. …there was a long stop time limit, at the end of which the order would have become final and the right of potential appeal been discharged. If, thereafter, the husband had taken no steps to issue divorce proceedings in Italy, then it might have become possible for the wife to have done so in England…. In those circumstances I am satisfied that the seisin of the Italian court… has not been lost along the way...
Outcome
'If there is one clear message emerging both from the European case law and from the Supreme Court, it is that the child is at the centre of the exercise when evaluating his or her habitual residence.'
Whilst he was speaking of the exercise which the judge determining jurisdiction has to undertake, there is a real danger that the persistent jurisdictional disputes in this case will impact negatively on the ability of either court to make decisions in these children's best interests.
28 February 2021