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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> A & B v P Council [2014] EWHC 1128 (Fam) (21 March 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2014/1128.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 1128 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
A & B |
Applicants |
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- and - |
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P Council |
1st Respondent |
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- and - |
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M (A Child by his Children's Guardian) |
2nd Respondent |
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Mr T Solicitor-Advocate (P Council) for the 1st Respondent
Mr Lee Arnot (instructed by W solicitors) for the Guardian
Ms Ruth Cabeza (instructed by Cafcass Legal)
Hearing date: 6th March 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Theis DBE:
Introduction
Background
The Issue
AND UPON it being recorded that the Court will proceed on the basis that the birth father, X, holds parental responsibility for the child under the law of the Kingdom of Thailand which subsists in accordance with Article 16 of the 1996 Hague Convention following the child becoming habitually resident in England and Wales.
The Relevant Legal Framework
Notice of proceedings to person with foreign parental responsibility
14.4
(1) This rule applies where a child is subject to proceedings to which this Part applies
and –
(a) a parent of the child holds or is believed to hold parental responsibility for the child under the law of another State which subsists in accordance with Article 16 of the 1996 Hague Convention following the child becoming habitually resident in a territorial unit of the United Kingdom; and
(b) that parent is not otherwise required to be joined as a respondent under rule 14.3.
(2) The applicant shall give notice of the proceedings to any parent to whom the applicant believes paragraph (1) applies in any case in which a person who was a parent with parental responsibility under the 1989 Act would be a respondent to the proceedings in accordance with rule 14.3.
(3) The applicant and every respondent to the proceedings shall provide such details as they possess as to the identity and whereabouts of any parent they believe to hold parental responsibility for the child in accordance with paragraph (1) to the court officer, upon making, or responding to the application as appropriate.
(4) Where the existence of such a parent only becomes apparent to a party at a later date during the proceedings, that party must notify the court officer of those details at the earliest opportunity.
(5) Where a parent to whom paragraph (1) applies receives notice of proceedings, that parent may apply to the court to be joined as a party using the Part 18 procedure.
Discussion
(1) Whilst they accept the father's name is on M's birth certificate they do not understand that to confer parental responsibility. The mother describes in her statement the social stigma in Thailand of not being able to name the father on the birth certificate. The mother said the father did not go with her to register the birth, but he allowed her to take his passport to enable her to do so.
(2) When M was born his birth was recorded in the name M Y. At the bottom of M's birth certificate there is a note that reads as follows 'at the mother's request M's' family name was changed from Y to Z (request number nnn) entered into the register on 15 February 2008'. The mother states when she made this change via the Amphur (the equivalent of the local authority in Thailand) and the relevant official made enquiries and was satisfied that she and the father had not married, M's birth had not been legitimised and she was entitled to change M's name without consulting the father.
(3) They have made enquiries about the legal position and refer in their position statement to the provisions of section 1546 of the Thai Civil and Commercial Code which provides when a child is born and the mother is not married to the father, the mother is the sole person who exercises parental powers over the child to the exclusion of the father.
(4) Section 1547 of the Code provides the following exceptions – if there is a subsequent marriage between the parents, if there is registration made at the Amphur or there is a judgment of the court. As already mentioned above, the Amphur is described by the mother as the equivalent of a local authority here. The registration requires both parents to agree in writing that the father is the legitimate father and the child needs to have reached the age of 7 or 8 years to understand and accept what is happening. In this case none of these exceptions apply.
(5) On 27 August 2008 the mother obtained a certificate from her Amphur confirming that the father had had no involvement in M's life, the mother had raised M on her own and the father had not legitimised M's birth. This certificate is supported by a contemporaneous record of the meeting of the local community where the mother lived, held on 5 February 2008 and presented to the Amphur that underpins the certificate.
(6) The mother states the Thai authorities will not grant a passport to a minor unless it can be shown that all those with parental responsibility have agreed the passport should be issued. The record of the meeting of the local community was accepted as sufficient evidence by the Thai Ministry of Foreign Affairs when M was granted his first passport on 19 February 2008. The Amphur certificate dated 27 August 2008 was relied upon by the Royal Thai Embassy, London, when M renewed his passport on 10 January 2013. Each agency accepted that only the mother was required to consent to the issue of these passports.
(7) This certificate was relied upon by the British Embassy in Bangkok when M was granted a settlement visa in September 2008, by the UKBA in December 2008 when M was granted indefinite leave to remain and by the French Embassy in London when he was given a visa to visit France in July 2009. All these agencies accepted this certificate as evidence that the father had no parental rights and no agency required any further enquiries to be made as to the father's position.
(8) The mother and step-father entered into a parental responsibility agreement which was registered with the Principal Registry of the Family Division on 13 March 2013. In registering that agreement the explanations and documents set out above were relied upon and were accepted.