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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 >> I-L (Children) (1996 Hague Child Protection Convention : Inherent Jurisdiction) [2019] EWCA Civ 1956 (15 November 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/1956.html Cite as: [2019] EWCA Civ 1956 |
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ON APPEAL FROM
THE HIGH COURT FAMILY DIVISION
DEPUTY HIGH COURT JUDGE GEEKIE QC
FD19P00319
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PETER JACKSON
and
LORD JUSTICE ARNOLD
____________________
Re I-L (Children) (1996 Hague Child Protection Convention:Inherent Jurisdiction |
____________________
Miss S King QC and Miss J Renton (instructed by Payne Hicks Beach Solicitors) for the Respondent Mother
Hearing date: 15th October 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Moylan:
Introduction
Background
"The words (of an exchange between the parents on 19th May 2019) have a plain meaning. The mother is in transition. She is likely to be in the UK until October. She wishes to live in the USA. She does not wish to return to Russia. She uses the words "out of scope". When the father replies using slightly different words ("not an option") she does not challenge his understanding of her words. I will consider the mother's written and oral evidence about this below, but note at this stage, that, without more, the meaning of her words and the message they conveyed to F are plain."
Proceedings in Russia and England
The Judgment
"a) There was broad agreement that the children would be in England until October 2019;
b) M was actively interested in living in the USA in the future;
c) M was prepared to contemplate living in England beyond October;
d) F, with M's approval, was researching longer term plans for the children in England;
e) Nobody was talking about a return to Russia"
"[69] The children experienced a lengthy period of separation from both parents in January, February and March 2019. This will have affected their security and stability and rendered fragile their integration to what was their home state – tugging at their roots. After a month in the USA, they arrived in England on 13.5.19 with both parents having in mind that the stay would be for several months. The father's home in England is a very familiar environment to the children where they would quickly and easily achieve stability. They had started to attend football coaching and swimming classes. Both parents began to research options for a longer stay in England. The mother was considering a further move (to the USA). The mother had begun to sever her ties in Russia by letting out her house, albeit for a period which would have permitted re-admission in September 2019. As set out above, the mother was actively considering plans away from Russia and had ceased speaking about a return to Russia. I bear in mind that my focus must be on stability not permanence and that the assessment is qualitative not quantitative. I should look for some degree of integration, not full integration.
[70] Giving appropriate weight to all of these matters I have to look at the lives of the children between 13.5.19 and 31.5.19. Viewed from their perspective, there was little taking place in their lives that was any different from other holidays that they had spent with their father. I do not regard football coaching and swimming classes as being significant changes. The parental plans being made for schools and home were far from being agreed between the parents and had not begun to impact on the lives of the children. I do not consider that they had formed the roots necessary to establish habitual residence. The see-saw had not swung. I take the same view of the period between 13.5.19 and 12.6.19. The children remained habitually resident in Russia."
"I consider that the fact of his application to his local family court evinces a desire to prevent sudden change in the lives of the children, to achieve stability via a legal process. He was not "insisting on unilaterally deciding where the child will live". He was not demonstrating a wish not to honour "the temporary nature of the stay abroad". He was not setting "about making [the temporary stay] indefinite, often putting down the child's roots in the destination State with a view to making it impossible to move him home". He was not acting in order to prevent a return to Russia. He had just been informed, by inference, that M had no wish to return to Russia."
The judge expressly considered the point emphasised on behalf of the mother, that the father's application sought not only a prohibited steps order but also a "lives with order". He also paid "close attention" to the father's statement as he had been invited to do by counsel for the father.
"Not merely is the existence of a foreign order a "relevant factor" (Re L) but, in this case, the Russian courts are the courts of competent jurisdiction seised of welfare decisions in relation to these children. As I have found, the courts of England and Wales do not have jurisdiction."
Legal Framework.
"[45] I conclude that the modern concept of a child's habitual residence operates in such a way as to make it highly unlikely, albeit conceivable, that a child will be in the limbo in which the courts below have placed B. The concept operates in the expectation that, when a child gains a new habitual residence, he loses his old one. Simple analogies are best: consider a see-saw. As, probably quite quickly, he puts down those first roots which represent the requisite degree of integration in the environment of the new state, up will probably come the child's roots in that of the old state to the point at which he achieves the requisite de-integration (or, better, disengagement) from it.
[46] One of the well-judged submissions of Mr Tyler QC on behalf of the respondent is that, were it minded to remove any gloss from the domestic concept of habitual residence (such as, I interpolate, Lord Brandon's third preliminary point in the J case [1990] 2 AC 562), the court should strive not to introduce others. A gloss is a purported sub-rule which distorts application of the rule. The identification of a child's habitual residence is overarchingly a question of fact. In making the following three suggestions about the point at which habitual residence might be lost and gained, I offer not sub-rules but expectations which the fact-finder may well find to be unfulfilled in the case before him:
(a) the deeper the child's integration in the old state, probably the less fast his achievement of the requisite degree of integration in the new state;
(b) the greater the amount of adult pre-planning of the move, including pre-arrangements for the child's day-to-day life in the new state, probably the faster his achievement of that requisite degree; and
(c) were all the central members of the child's life in the old state to have moved with him, probably the faster his achievement of it and, conversely, were any of them to have remained behind and thus to represent for him a continuing link with the old state, probably the less fast his achievement of it."
"(a) "the attribution, exercise, termination or restriction of parental responsibility …
(b) rights of custody, including rights relating to the care of the person of the child and, in particular, the right to determine the child's place of residence …".
"(1) In all cases of urgency, the authorities of any Contracting State in whose territory the child or property belonging to the child is present have jurisdiction to take any necessary measures of protection.
(2) The measures taken under the preceding paragraph with regard to a child habitually resident in a Contracting State shall lapse as soon as the authorities which have jurisdiction under Articles 5 to 10 have taken the measures required by the situation.
(3) The measures taken under paragraph 1 with regard to a child who is habitually resident in a non-Contracting State shall lapse in each Contracting State as soon as measures required by the situation and taken by the authorities of another State are recognised in the Contracting State in question."
[33] Both BIIA and the 1996 Hague Convention are directly applicable in English law. One can approach the question of jurisdiction by going straight to them to see whether either applies in this case, and if so, which. If one were to begin instead with the Family Law Act 1986 (the 1986 Act), Ch II of which contains jurisdictional rules for the courts of England and Wales in family cases, it would soon be apparent that, insofar as the 1986 Act touches upon the sort of orders that are relevant in this case, it expressly defers to BIIA and the 1996 Hague Convention if they apply, see s 2(1) and (3) ibid. Insofar as the orders do not fall within the 1986 Act, it is not relevant but the road still leads inexorably to BIIA and the 1996 Hague Convention because, if they apply to a given set of circumstances, they govern jurisdiction.
[34] Insofar as the submissions to us suggested that the inherent jurisdiction of the English courts was unaffected by these instruments, and remained there in the background awaiting the call, it is not a suggestion I can accept. Where one or the other instrument applies, recourse can only be had to the inherent jurisdiction if that is permitted by the jurisdictional code that that instrument establishes. The decision of the Supreme Court in A v A and Another (Children: Habitual Residence) (Reunite International Child Abduction Centre and Others Intervening) [2013] UKSC 60, [2014] AC 1, [2013] 3 WLR 761, sub nom Re A (Jurisdiction: Return of Child) [2014] 1 FLR 111 (A v A) demonstrates this in relation to BIIA and I see no reason why matters should be different in relation to the 1996 Hague Convention.
[35] It is worth looking at A v A at this early stage because it is a useful example of the approach to be taken in applying BIIA and potentially also instructive, by analogy, in relation to the 1996 Hague Convention. Return orders had been made in the Family Division pursuant to the inherent jurisdiction of the High Court. Such orders are not s 1(1)(d) orders for the purposes of s 2(3) of the 1986 Act because they do not give care of a child to any person or provide for contact with or the education of a child, see para [27] of A v A. They were not, therefore, covered by the jurisdictional prohibitions in s 2 of the Act (para [28]), but nonetheless the English court did not have a free hand in relation to jurisdiction. The order requiring that the children be brought to this country from Pakistan related to the exercise of parental responsibility as defined for the purposes of BIIA and was therefore within the scope of that regulation (para [29]) which was directly applicable (para [20]). Having determined that the regulation applied notwithstanding that the rival jurisdiction was a non-Member State, the Supreme Court went on to apply its provisions in order to determine whether the English court had jurisdiction.
[36] This led the court ultimately to the domestic common law rules as to the inherent jurisdiction of the English High Court (para [59], et seq) but it is vital to recognise that the gateway to these rules and to the exercise of the inherent jurisdiction was Art 14 of BIIA. Article 14 is a residual jurisdiction provision to the effect that where no court of a Member State has jurisdiction, jurisdiction is to be determined in each Member State by the laws of that Member State. A v A is not authority, therefore, for the proposition that the courts of England and Wales can supplement their jurisdiction under BIIA by free exercise of the inherent jurisdiction. Where BIIA applies, if it does not entitle the English court to intervene, the English court cannot do so."
"[74] So far, I have established that BIIA did not apply to this case and that the 1996 Hague Convention did not confer jurisdiction to make the order that was made. It remains to consider whether there was any other basis on which Wood J had jurisdiction to make the order that he did. The instinctive reaction of the English lawyer in these circumstances is to reach for the inherent jurisdiction. However, in my view, it cannot assist here. Insofar as it concerns jurisdiction, the whole purpose of the 1996 Hague Convention, as with BIIA, is to determine, as between Contracting States, the state whose authorities have jurisdiction to take measures directed to the protection of the person or property of the child (see Art 1(1)(a)). That would be defeated if, notwithstanding an absence of jurisdiction under the Convention, a Contracting State were to be able to assume jurisdiction by virtue of a domestic rule. I referred earlier to A v A in order to explain how it was that the Supreme Court had recourse to the inherent jurisdiction there – it was through the BIIA jurisdiction provisions not in spite of them. There is no similar route available in this case. I conclude, therefore, that the inherent jurisdiction had no proper part to play in Wood J's decision."
I would just mention that, in the next paragraph, Black LJ went on to say that she was not suggesting that "the courts can never have recourse to the inherent jurisdiction in order to make an order for the return of a child to another country"; "it can be both a basis for exercising jurisdiction and the source of the power to make orders". This has very recently been confirmed by the Supreme Court in In re NY (A Child) [2019] UKSC 49.
"[39] While I would not, therefore, go so far as to say that such a case is invariably one of "urgency", I find it difficult to envisage a case in which the court should not consider it to be so, and then go on to consider whether it is appropriate to exercise the article 11 jurisdiction. It would obviously not be appropriate where the home country was already seized of the case and in a position to make effective orders to protect the child. However, as Lord Wilson pointed out in the course of argument, the courts of the country where the child is are often better placed to make orders about the child's return. Those courts can take steps to locate the child, as proved necessary in this case, and are likely to be better placed to discover the child's current circumstances. Those courts can exert their coercive powers directly upon the parent who is here and indeed if necessary upon the child. The machinery of going back to the home country to get orders and then enforcing them in the presence country may be cumbersome and slow. Getting information from the home country may also be difficult. The child's interests may indeed be compromised if the country where the child is present is not able to take effective action in support of the child's return to the country of his or her habitual residence."
Submissions
"Finally, it is relevant to note the limited function of an appellate court in relation to a lower court's finding as to habitual residence. Where the lower court has applied the correct legal principles to the relevant facts, its evaluation is not generally open to challenge unless the conclusion which it reached was not one which was reasonably open to it".
It is right to note, in passing, that in that case the Inner House of the Court of Session had overturned the Lord Ordinary, Lord Uist's, finding as to habitual residence on the basis that he had treated a shared parental intention to relocate to Scotland from France was "an essential element in any alteration of the children's habitual residence", at [9].
Determination
Lord Justice Arnold:
Lord Justice Peter Jackson: