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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 >> B (A Child) (Abduction: Habitual Residence) [2020] EWCA Civ 1187 (10 September 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/1187.html Cite as: [2021] 2 FLR 1, [2020] WLR(D) 498, [2021] 2 All ER 1246, [2020] 4 WLR 149, [2021] 1 FCR 105, [2020] EWCA Civ 1187 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE FAMILY DIVISION
Mrs Justice Judd
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BAKER
and
LORD JUSTICE PHILLIPS
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B (A Child) (Abduction: Habitual Residence) |
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Ms Jacqueline Renton and Ms Charlotte Baker (instructed by Access Law) for the Respondent Mother
Mr Christopher Hames QC and Mr Harry Langford (instructed by Freemans Solicitors) for The International Centre for Family Law, Policy and Practice
Hearing date: 16 July 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Moylan:
(1)(a) Did the judge's finding that B was habitually resident in Australia mean that the 1980 Convention does not apply;
(1)(b) If the 1980 Convention does apply, did the judge have power to make an order that B should be returned to France or is there no such power, as argued by the mother; if there is such a power, should an order have been made, as sought by the father;
(2) Was the judge wrong to find that B was habitually resident in Australia and should she have decided that B was habitually resident in France.
As referred to above, the basis on which it was accepted that the father's application depended on B being habitually resident in France is not clear. However, as this is an issue which goes to the court's jurisdiction, it is one which we need to determine.
Background
"In France, the family moved straight into a rented property that they had viewed and secured online, which was furnished, and the family dog arrived a day or two after they did. The father's job was due to start on 27 December. Meanwhile, the family had decided to spend Christmas with the maternal family in the UK from 20 December until 5 January in the case of the mother and from 20 to 26 or 27 December in the case of the father".
The family duly came to England and Wales on 20 December 2019 with the father returning on 27 December because of his work commitments. On 3 January 2020, the mother informed the father that "she believed the relationship between them was at an end and that she did not intend to return to France with [B]".
The Judgment
"[4] The father had spoken of the family going back to live in France after [B] was born but in August 2019, he applied for and secured a job there. The mother and father considered this offer carefully comparing the cost of living in each country and they decided to go. The mother says in her statement that she felt pressurised by the father to go and live in France, although at times he was indecisive. In any event, they gave up their rented property in Australia, packed up their possessions and left on 1 December. This was a decision by them both. The mother had left her job open in Australia until January 2021 and the father's contract in France allowed for a six months probationary period."
"[16] I entirely accept that it is possible for a child, or indeed any person, to lose a previous habitual residence and to gain a new one in a very short space of time. Indeed, as little as a day, a week, or in a case such as this, in less than three weeks. Having considered all the evidence carefully, however, I accept Ms Baker's submissions that [B] was not habitually resident in France as at the relevant date, 3 January. In particular, I accept that the situation of the family unit in France was not simply a replica of the situation in Australia. In so doing, I make it clear that I am not saying that there needs to be any sort of equivalence between the two. The fact she was more integrated in her Australian life would not mean that she could not achieve some degree of integration in France, a lesser degree of integration but still sufficient. However, it is my finding in this case that she simply had not achieved a degree of integration in a social and family life as required by the authorities in France as at 3 January.
[17] I bear in mind that [B] is very much dependent at her very young age on the position of her parents. One of those parents, her mother, did not become at all integrated into France during the time that she spent there. She had her doubts right from the very beginning, she felt excluded because of the language barrier, she was not able to drive, she did not have use of her mobile phone, or easy use of a bank account. Regardless of whose, indeed if it was anyone's fault at all, the mother was unsettled and unhappy both in the relationship and otherwise during the period when she was in France. That must be clear from what happened afterwards.
[18] The father's family was there but the mother had not really begun to develop any friendships or support networks either for herself or [B] in the time that they spent in France. The mother had joined a group of English-speaking people on Facebook but none of them lived nearby and she did not see any of them. Although I accept that the father was in a different situation from the mother, in that he spoke the language and was returning to the country of his birth and upbringing, with the mother feeling as she did, the family unit was simply not at all the same as it had been in Australia. Apart from possibly one or two visits to the library, [B] had not really begun the process of getting into the sort of life a toddler of her age does, for example, by going to any toddler groups, or parent and toddler groups, or attending any social get togethers at all, although I accept of course she spent time with paternal relatives. She had not visited the nurseries that she was to attend and the process of integration into that was only due to start in early January.
[19] In my judgment, the process of integration into a social and family life in France had barely started at the time the family left to go to the UK for Christmas and I do not think anything material happened over the course of the Christmas period to move it on. As I say, it follows from that as at 3 January, I find that [B] was not integrated and had not begun to be integrated into a social and family environment in France and therefore that she cannot have been habitually resident at that time.
[20] It is not necessary for me to make any more findings beyond that as to [B's] habitual residence. I have been conscious at all times while considering the evidence and law in this case that it is highly unusual for a court to find that a child has no habitual residence. No doubt it is very unusual as well as undesirable for an individual, a child or an adult, to have no habitual residence at a particular point in time but it does occasionally happen and particularly at a junction like this when a family has just moved from across the world to a new place and then they organise a holiday very soon afterwards. Having said that, the roots in Australia were strong ones for the mother and B at least and I have concluded they had not loosened to the extent they had lost habitual residence there. Even if I am wrong about that I am clear that neither of them had gained habitual residence in France."
Submissions
Law
"[52] In my view, the only basic requirements for the application of the Convention are:
(a) the child must have been habitually resident in a Contracting State at the date of the alleged removal or retention;
(b) the removal or retention must be wrongful;
(c) the application must be determined in the Contracting State where the child is; and
(d) the Convention must be in force between both States."
The 1980 Convention applies whenever the child is habitually resident at the relevant date in a Contracting State, subject only to it being other than the requested state. It does not apply if the child is habitually resident in the requested state at the date of the retention or removal because, as explained by Lord Hughes in In re C, at [34]:
"The Convention cannot be invoked if by the time of the alleged wrongful act, whether removal or retention, the child is habitually resident in the state where the request for return is lodged. In such a case, that state has primary jurisdiction to make a decision on the merits, based on the habitual residence of the child and there is no room for a mandatory summary return elsewhere without such a decision."
"Desiring to protect children internationally from the harmful effects of their wrongful removal or retention and to establish procedures to ensure their prompt return to the State of their habitual residence, as well as to secure protection for rights of access,"
As explained by Lady Hale in In re E (Children) (Abduction: Custody Appeal) [2012] 1 AC 144:
"[14] … This objective is, of course, also for the benefit of children generally: the aim of the Convention is as much to deter people from wrongfully abducting children as it is to serve the best interests of the children who have been abducted. But it also aims to serve the best interests of the individual child. It does so by making certain rebuttable assumptions about what will best achieve this: see the Explanatory Report of Professor Pérez-Vera, at para 25."
"[8] … The first object of the Hague Convention is to deter either parent (or indeed anyone else) from taking the law into their own hands and pre-empting the result of any dispute between them about the future upbringing of their children. If an abduction does take place, the next object is to restore the children as soon as possible to their home country, so that any dispute can be determined there. The left-behind parent should not be put to the trouble and expense of coming to the Requested State in order for factual disputes to be resolved there. The abducting parent should not gain an unfair advantage by having that dispute determined in the place to which she has come."
This is in part because the courts in the family's "home country" will be better placed to make any welfare decisions and determine any factual disputes. In addition, as Lady Hale said, at [15]: "Restoring a child to her familiar surroundings is seen as likely to be a good thing in its own right".
"Where a child has been wrongfully removed or retained in terms of Article 3 and, at the date of the commencement of the proceedings before the judicial or administrative authority of the Contracting State where the child is, a period of less than one year has elapsed from the date of the wrongful removal or retention, the authority concerned shall order the return of the child forthwith.
The judicial or administrative authority, even where the proceedings have been commenced after the expiration of the period of one year referred to in the preceding paragraph, shall also order the return of the child, unless it is demonstrated that the child is now settled in its new environment.
Where the judicial or administrative authority in the requested State has reason to believe that the child has been taken to another State, it may stay the proceedings or dismiss the application for the return of the child."
"109 The second paragraph answered to the need, felt strongly throughout the preliminary proceedings, to lessen the consequences which would flow from the adoption of an inflexible time-limit beyond which the provisions of the Convention could not be invoked. The solution finally adopted plainly extends the Convention's scope by maintaining indefinitely a real obligation to return the child. In any event, it cannot be denied that such an obligation disappears whenever it can be shown that 'the child is now settled in its new environment'. The provision does not state how this fact is to be proved, but it would seem logical to regard such a task as falling upon the abductor or upon the person who opposes the return of the child, whilst at the same time preserving the contingent discretionary power of internal authorities in this regard. In any case, the proof or verification of a child's establishment in a new environment opens up the possibility of longer proceedings than those envisaged in the first paragraph. Finally, and as much for these reasons as for the fact that the return will, in the very nature of things, always occur much later than one year after the abduction, the Convention does not speak in this context of return 'forthwith' but merely of return.
110. The problem common to both of these situations was determining the place to which the child had to be returned. The Convention did not accept a proposal to the effect that the return of the child should always be to the State of its habitual residence before its removal. Admittedly, one of the underlying reasons for requiring the return of the child was the desire to prevent the 'natural' jurisdiction of the courts of the State of the child's residence being evaded with impunity, by force. However, including such a provision in the Convention would have made its application so inflexible as to be useless. In fact, we must not forget that it is the right of children not to be removed from a particular environment which sometimes is a basically family one, which the fight against international child abductions seeks to protect. Now, when the applicant no longer lives in what was the State of the child's habitual residence prior to its removal, the return of the child to that State might cause practical problems which would be difficult to resolve. The Convention's silence on this matter must therefore be understood as allowing the authorities of the State of refuge to return the child directly to the applicant, regardless of the latter's present place of residence."
"35 The submissions made to this court addressed also the separate question of whether a return under the Abduction Convention, if made, must always and only be made to the state of habitual residence immediately before the wrongful act. It is to be noted that article 12 does not contain any such restriction, and that Professor Pérez-Vera's Report at para 110 makes clear that the decision not to do so was deliberate. The reason given is that whilst ordinarily that state will be the obvious state to which return should be made, there may be circumstances in which it would be against the interests of the child for that to be the destination of return. The example given is of the applicant custodial parent who has, in the meantime, moved to a different state. The propriety, in such circumstances, of an order returning the child to the new home state of the custodial parent is not in issue in this case. For the reasons given above, the silence of article 12 on the destination of a return order is of no help on the issue which does arise, namely whether an order for return can be made if at the time of the wrongful act the child was habitually resident in the requested state. It is however to be observed in passing that the unusual circumstances envisaged in para 110 of the Pérez-Vera Report were held at first instance to have arisen in O v O (Child Abduction: Return to Third Country) [2014] Fam 87 and there did result in an order for return to the new home state."
"In RB v VG for two years prior to the removal to Israel, the child had been living with the mother in France after the Belgian Court had awarded custody to the mother and given permission for relocation. The father appealed against this decision and eventually the Belgian Appellate Court allowed his appeal and ordered that the child be transferred to the custody of the father in Belgium. Before the date set for the transfer the mother removed the child to Israel. The mother's argument that the Court could not order return of the child to Belgium because his habitual residence was in France was rejected. Justice Arbel stated that in most cases returning the child to a third country would not give effect to the objectives of the Convention of returning the child to a familiar everyday life. However, in cases where it is not practicable to return the child to the place of habitual residence, then it may be preferable to return the child to a third country than to leave him in the State of refuge, especially where the third country was a place with which he was familiar, for example, where he had lived there previously or had visited the left-behind parent there. Furthermore, in this particular case, if the child had not been abducted, he would have in any event moved to live in Belgium in accordance with the Belgian Court's decision, which was enforceable in France. Thus, returning the child to France, from where he would be sent to Belgium in any event, would only lead to unnecessary prolongation of the process of returning the child to his father, in contravention of the purpose of the Convention"
"[33] The return of children under the Hague Convention is to the jurisdiction of their habitual residence and it is not generally necessary or likely that the return would be to the same situation nor should it be in the present case."
"[18] 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."
"[17] As Baroness Hale DPSC observed at para 54 of A v A, habitual residence is therefore a question of fact. It requires an evaluation of all relevant circumstances. It focuses on the situation of the child, with the purposes and intentions of the parents being merely among the relevant factors. It is necessary to assess the degree of integration of the child into a social and family environment in the country in question. The social and family environment of an infant or young child is shared with those (whether parents or others) on whom she is dependent. Hence it is necessary, in such a case, to assess the integration of that person or persons in the social and family environment of the country concerned. The essentially factual and individual nature of the inquiry should not be glossed with legal concepts which would produce a different result from that which the factual inquiry would produce."
"[41] According to case law, the child's place of habitual residence must be established on the basis of all the circumstances specific to each individual case. In addition to the physical presence of the child in the territory of a member state, other factors must be chosen which are capable of showing that that presence is not in any way temporary or intermittent and that it reflects some degree of integration of the child into a social and family environment: see A's case [2010] Fam 42, paras 37 and 38; Mercredi v Chaffe [2012] Fam 22, paras 44 and 47-49 and OL v PQ (Case C-111/17PPU), paras 42 and 43.
[42] It is apparent from that case law that the child's place of habitual residence for the purpose of Regulation No 2201/2003 is the place which, in practice, is the centre of that child's life. Pursuant to article 8(1) of that Regulation, it is for the court seised to determine where that centre was located at the time the application concerning parental responsibility over the child was submitted.
[43] In that context, it is necessary, in general, to take into consideration factors such as the duration, regularity, conditions and reasons for the child's stay in the territory of the different member states concerned, the place and conditions of the child's attendance at school, and the family and social relationships of the child in those member states: see A's case [2010] Fam 42, para 39.
[44] Furthermore, where the child is not of school age, a fortiori where the child is an infant, the circumstances of the reference person(s) with whom that child lives, by whom the child is in fact looked after and taken care of on a daily basis - as a general rule, its parents - are particularly important for determining the place which is the centre of that child's life. The court has observed that the environment of such a child is essentially a family environment, determined by that person or those persons, and that that child necessarily shares the social and family environment of the circle of people on whom he or she is dependent: see Mercredi v Chaffe [2012] Fam 22, paras 53-55.
[45] Accordingly, in a situation where such an infant lives with its parents on a daily basis, it is necessary, in particular, to determine the place where the parents are permanently present and are integrated into a social and family environment. In that regard, it is necessary to take into consideration factors such as the duration, regularity, conditions and reasons for their stay in the territory of the different member states concerned, and the family and social relationships maintained by them and by the child in those member states: see Mercredi v Chaffe, paras 55 and 56.
[46] Lastly, the intention of the parents to settle with the child in a given member state, where that intention is manifested by tangible steps, may also be taken into account in order to determine the child's place of habitual residence: see A's case [2010] Fam 42, para 40; C v M [2015] Fam 116, para 52 and OL v PQ, para 46."
"(ii) One of the great values of habitual residence as a base for jurisdiction is proximity: Proceedings brought by A, para 35; by this the court clearly meant the practical connection between the child and the country concerned."
This reference to the word "proximity" as meaning "practical connection" was quoted by Lord Wilson in In re B, at [42], providing further context for his subsequent comparative evaluation in that case.
"[62] In endorsing certain of Mr Turner's criticisms of Judge Cushing's judgment, I do not wish to be taken as suggesting that there is only one way in which to approach the making of a finding of fact about habitual residence. Habitual residence is a question of fact and the scope of the enquiry depends entirely on the particular facts of the case. What is important is that the judge demonstrates sufficiently that he or she has had in mind the factors in the old and new lives of the child, and the family, which might have a bearing on this particular child's habitual residence. The court's review of all of the relevant evidence about habitual residence cannot be allowed to become an unworkable obstacle course, through which the judge must pick his or her way by a prescribed route or risk being said to have made an unsustainable finding. In some cases it will be necessary to carry out quite a detailed analysis of the situation that the child has left; in other cases, less detail of that will be required and the judge will be able to explain shortly why that is and focus more on the circumstances in the new country.
[63] It has now been said countless times that there is no room for glosses and sub-rules in the field of habitual residence. A recent reiteration of this can be found at [46] of Re B … Lord Wilson was careful to call the three propositions, which he there set out about the point at which habitual residence might be lost and gained, "suggestions", stressing that they were "not sub-rules but expectations" and underlining the lack of rigidity in what he was saying by observing that they were expectations "which the fact-finder may well find to be unfulfilled in the case before him". When he turned to the particular facts concerning B, in a section headed "Application" commencing at [48], he was even further from stating principles than he had been at [46], having turned his attention to what, as a matter of fact, should be the finding as to habitual residence in that case. He would not expect, I imagine, to find a judge's finding as to habitual residence being impugned because the judge had failed to work, step by step, through each of the elements he examined in [49] and [50] of his judgment as if through a welfare checklist. Mr Turner's submissions did not go quite so far as to suggest that, but they did have a flavour of it." (my emphasis)
"[61] In conclusion on this issue, while Lord Wilson's see-saw analogy can assist the court when deciding the question of habitual residence, it does not replace the core guidance given in A v A and other cases to the approach which should be taken to the determination of the habitual residence. This requires an analysis of the child's situation in and connections with the state or states in which he or she is said to be habitually resident for the purpose of determining in which state he or she has the requisite degree of integration to mean that their residence there is habitual.
[62] Further, the analogy needs to be used with caution because if it is applied as though it is the test for habitual residence it can, as in my view is demonstrated by the present case, result in the court's focus being disproportionately on the extent of a child's continuing roots or connections with and/or on an historical analysis of their previous roots or connections rather than focusing, as is required, on the child's current situation (at the relevant date). This is not to say continuing or historical connections are not relevant but they are part of, not the primary focus of, the court's analysis when deciding the critical question which is where is the child habitually resident and not, simply, when was a previous habitual residence lost."
"(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."
It sometimes appears that these two elements have been overshadowed by the third, namely "(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".
"[63] The quality of a child's stay in a new environment, in which he has only recently arrived, cannot be assessed without reference to the past. Some habitual residences may be harder to lose than others and others may be harder to gain. If a person leaves his home country with the intention of emigrating and having made all the necessary plans to do so, he may lose one habitual residence immediately and acquire a new one very quickly. If a person leaves his home country for a temporary purpose or in ambiguous circumstances, he may not lose his habitual residence there for some time, if at all, and correspondingly he will not acquire a new habitual residence until then or even later. Of course, there are many permutations in between, where a person may lose one habitual residence without gaining another."
Determination
"It is the duty of the court to construe the Convention in a purposive way and to make the Convention work."
Likewise, in In re K (A Child) (Reunite International Child Abduction Centre intervening) [2014] AC 1401, Lady Hale posed the following question when considering whether "rights of custody" should be interpreted as including, what have been called, "inchoate rights":
"[3] The issue … is between two different approaches to the interpretation of the concept. Is it to be interpreted strictly and literally as a reference to rights which are already legally recognised and enforceable? Or is it to be interpreted purposively as a reference to a wider category of what have been termed "inchoate rights", the existence of which would have been legally recognised had the question arisen before the removal or retention in question? The issue is well illustrated by the facts of the present case."
She decided that the term should be interpreted purposively. The purposes of the 1980 Convention which she considered relevant in that case were, at [60], to "protect the child from the harmful effects of international child abduction" and to "enable the courts of the child's habitual residence to determine where his long-term future should lie".
Conclusion
Lord Justice Baker:
Lord Justice Phillips: