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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> S (A Child), Re [2018] EWCA Civ 1453 (21 June 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/1453.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Civ 1453, [2018] 3 FCR 394, [2019] 1 FLR 354 |
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Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE PETER JACKSON
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IN THE MATTER OF S (A CHILD) |
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Transcript of Epiq Europe Ltd 165 Street
London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400
Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
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Mr Nicolas Anderson (instructed by Major Family Law Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE MOYLAN:
Introduction
(1) The summary dismissal of the 1980 Convention application at a directions hearing was wrong and was not in accordance with the Guidance given by Sir James Munby P in Re D (Children)(Child Abduction: Practice) [2016] 4 WLR 62;
(2) The judge was wrong to conclude on the basis only of the statement from the mother's solicitor that the 1980 Convention was not engaged;
(3) The judge was wrong, at the very least, not to have adjourned the application to enable further evidence to be filed.
Background
Proceedings
Hearing on 8 February 2018
"It is clear from the statement filed on behalf of the mother that the child had been living with the father with the agreement of the mother and on 27 December the child was going for a visit to the mother but not to permanently return to her long-term care. I am not satisfied that the father abducted or wrongfully removed the child from Ireland on 5 January 2018."
The judge also dealt with the submission made on behalf of the mother that the case should, prior to being substantively considered, be adjourned to enable her to file a statement. The judge said:
"I am asked to adjourn this hearing until the mother files a statement. I take the view that the solicitor representing the mother had, I assume, taken full instructions in so serious an application. In my judgment that statement does not disclose that the father wrongfully removed the child on 5 January. Accordingly, I am in no doubt that this application must be dismissed. There is going to be a hearing in the Family Court to determine whether the child should remain living with the father or whether he should return to Ireland to live with the mother. This is the appropriate forum to resolve this dispute, not this child abduction application."
Submissions
Discussion
"The circumstances in which the court can properly adopt an "ultra-summary" approach in Hague cases are very limited and the cases in which it can ever be appropriate to do so are likely to be very few and far between."
Prior to expressing his conclusion in these terms, the President had referred to the fact that proceedings under the 1980 Convention are by their very nature summary. He also described them as being sui generis and advised caution "before applying too uncritically purely domestic approaches to what are, after all, international cases governed by an International Convention", paragraph 21.
"22 … I have no doubt Baker J was entirely right to decide the case as he did and for the reasons he gave. Where, as there, the basis for the attempt to abbreviate an already summary process was an argument going to the merits (or more precisely the asserted demerits of the other party's case) the short point, as Baker J explained, is that, save perhaps in an exceptional case, such arguments are properly to be dealt with as part of the substantive hearing and not by way of preliminary point. Preliminary points here, as in other jurisdictions, have an unfortunate tendency, unless kept under strict control, to cause the very delay which it is their object to avoid. I would expect cases in which it can be appropriate to follow the course adopted by Connell J in Re G to be most unusual and very rare. As Baker J commented, 20 years had elapsed before the point next arose in Re W.
23 I equally have no doubt that Holman J was entirely right to decide AF v HS as he did and for the reasons he gave. That was not a case where the basis of the application was a challenge going to the intrinsic merits of the Hague proceedings. It was, like the one before me, a case where the Hague proceedings had been overtaken by subsequent events - a change in the family's circumstances or developments in the foreign court - the effect of which was to deprive the Hague proceedings of any continuing utility and to make it unnecessary and inappropriate to allow the proceedings to continue in circumstances where there was no obvious benefit either to the parents or to the children in carrying on. In such a case, in my judgment, the court undoubtedly has power, applying the principles in Re C, to bring the proceedings to a premature conclusion. In the nature of things, I would expect such cases to arise only infrequently. The vast bulk of Hague cases will – must - continue to a substantive hearing in the usual way."
I agree with everything said by the President in Re D.
"I recognise, of course, that when applying these principles and assessing the evidence the court will always need to take into account, in addition to the circumstances of the particular case, the forensic context. In Hague cases this will include the manner by which applications are typically made. The information will have been supplied to our domestic Central Authority ("ICACU") by another Central Authority using standardised forms which have been developed over the years. This information will then be supplied by ICACU to the solicitors instructed on behalf of the applicant and will form the basis of the evidence put before the court. The context in Hague cases also includes the need for expedition."
Determination
LORD JUSTICE PETER JACKSON: