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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 >> DH v CL & Ors [2014] EWHC 1836 (Fam) (06 June 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2014/1836.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 1836 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
B e f o r e :
____________________
DH |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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CL A Local Authority ML and ET LL (by his Children's Guardian) |
Respondents |
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Ms Rebecca Stokes-Herbst (instructed by Watson Woodhouse) for the mother, CL
Mrs Elaine Averis (instructed by Tilly Baily & Irvine) for the maternal grandparents, ML & ET
Ms Lesley McKenzie (instructed by Local Authority Solicitor) for the Local Authority
Mr Phil Mitchell (instructed by Donnelly McArdle Adamson) for the Children's Guardian
Hearing dates: 14-16 May 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Cobb:
Introduction & summary
i) The proposed future home for L is in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq (the semi-autonomous state in the north-east corner of Iraq) ('Kurdistan'); the father fled from this region some 12 years ago as an asylum seeker; he now wishes to return;ii) There is (or, more accurately, was see [7] below) a real prospect that were I to refuse the application, the father would return to Kurdistan without L. For reasons summarised below, L's mother is not able (and does not put herself forward) to care for L. L's grandparents offer to care for him in England, but their proposal is not without difficulties, and does not attract the support of the local authority or L's guardian. There is a local authority application for a public law order which would become active if L were left here by his father; L faces a real prospect of a childhood in long-term foster care if he remains in England.
Relevant legal principles
i) As I am required by statute, I determine L's future by giving primacy to L's best interests (section 1(1) CA 1989).ii) In applying the test in (i) above, I have had specific regard to the factors relevant to his welfare adumbrated in section 1(3) ibid.
iii) The welfare principles summarised above in (i) and (ii) govern applications for international relocation just as they govern other welfare-based determinations concerning children. This is the essence of the Court of Appeal's judgments in K v K (Relocation: Shared Care Arrangement) [2011] EWCA Civ 793 [2012] 2 FLR 880, which laid to rest any notion that there should be a determinative presumption in favour of such an application. As Black LJ said at §141:
"the principle the only authentic principle that runs through the entire line of relocation authorities is that the welfare of the child is the court's paramount consideration. Everything that is considered by the court in reaching its determination is put into the balance with a view to measuring its impact on the child."Adding (§143)"I detect in [Dame Elizabeth Butler Sloss P's] discussion of the factors and in her summary at para [85] [in Payne v Payne [2001] 1 FLR 1052] no weighting in favour of any particular factor. She said that the reasonable proposals of the parent with a residence order wishing to live abroad carry 'great weight' whereas the effect on the child of denying contact with the other parent is 'very important' but I do not infer from that phraseology any loading in favour of the reasonable proposals as opposed to the effect of the loss of contact."And (§145)"When a relocation application falls to be determined, all of the facts need to be considered."iv) I have considered the positives and negatives, the benefits and detriments, of the relevant placement options for L by reference to the evidence and the welfare checklist factors (following and adapting the approach in see Re W [2013] EWCA Civ 1227 §78). I have guarded against adopting a linear approach to this exercise (as discussed by McFarlane LJ in Re G [2013] EWCA Civ 965), which
" is not apt where the judicial task is to undertake a global, holistic evaluation of each of the options available for the child's future upbringing before deciding which of those options best meets the duty to afford paramount consideration to the child's welfare" (§50).v) That said, in the overall evaluation of the competing outcomes for L, I have attached significance and importance to the particular and special relationship which L enjoys with each of his parents. This point has particular relevance to these facts given the stark alternative either of L having his home with his father abroad, or living with a grandparent or foster carers in this country. I approach this particular issue by following the guidance offered by the House of Lords in Re G [2006] UKHL 43, [2006] 2 FLR 629, and the Supreme Court in Re B [2009] UKSC 5, [2010] 1 FLR 551. In Re G Baroness Hale observed:
"that the fact of parenthood is to be regarded as an important and significant factor in considering which proposals better advance the welfare of the child. Such fact does not, however, establish a presumption in favour of the natural parent, nor generate a preferential position in favour of the natural parent from which the Court commences its decision making process Each case should be determined upon an examination of its own merits and of the individuals there involved.' (Emphasis, by underlining, in the original).The point was further and specifically explored in Re B [2009] in which Lord Kerr (at §37, giving the judgment of the court) said:"All consideration of the importance of parenthood in private law disputes about residence must be firmly rooted in an examination of what is in the child's best interests. This is the paramount consideration. It is only as a contributor to the child's welfare that parenthood assumes any significance. In common with all other factors bearing on what is in the best interests of the child, it must be examined for its potential to fulfil that aim. There are various ways in which it may do so, some of which were explored by Baroness Hale in Re G, but the essential task for the court is always the same."vi) I bear very much in mind that the facts of this case engage L's rights to respect for a private and family life under Article 8 of the ECHR. This is reflected by his right to a family life with his father, whether here or abroad; but he also has a right to family life with his maternal family, and indeed with his half-siblings (with whom he has had only reasonably limited contact in recent times). L's Article 8 rights are not merely theoretical, but real and dynamic rights, deserving of the closest attention.
i) Article 16 of the Iraqi Civil Code makes plain that "foreign judgments issued by foreign courts are not subject to enforcement in Iraq unless it was deemed otherwise by a specific law";ii) The authorities of Iraq or the Iraqi Kurdistan Region will not recognise the order made here "unless an application for the foreign order to be enforced is made with (sic.) the presence of both parties"; I interpolate here that this is unlikely to be realistically achieved on the facts of this case;
iii) There is no assurance that if the parties sought to engage the family court in Iraq (the Court of Personal Status, applying the Islamic Shari'a Shafite or Hanafi schools) and sought a custody declaration in line with the order of this court that it would necessarily mirror an order made in this court.
i) the risk that the father may breach the child arrangements order providing for L to spend time or otherwise have contact with his mother and grandparents,but also
ii) the magnitude of the consequence of breach of such an order.
In this regard, I have considered the judgment in Re K (Removal from the Jurisdiction Practice) [1999] 2 FLR 1084 (following Re T (Staying Contact in Non-Convention Country) [1999] 1 FLR 262, and Re A (Security for Return to the Jurisdiction: Note) [1999] 2 FLR 1); I accept the key principle distilled from these authorities namely that it is for the court to achieve what security it can for the child by building in all practical safeguards to its order. In this case, the financial circumstances of the parties put beyond reality the adoption of a monetary bond. No party proposed any specific alternative. In the event, I considered that it was reasonable and proportionate to require the father, at the conclusion of the hearing and once the path to relocation was cleared, to return to the witness box to swear on the Koran before the family members that he would bring L back for contact with the maternal family each year. He gave me that assurance on oath.
L and his childhood history
The application: proposals for L's future
i) He plans to move back to Kurdistan at the end of the current school year, in mid/late July 2014.ii) He has obtained a place for L in a school in Erbil where his brother is the Deputy Headmaster. That school has a number of foreign students, including three English children. The school can make special needs provisions for L; English is one of the mainstream core subjects.
iii) L speaks fluent Kurdish, and has no difficulty in conversing with his cousins and paternal family; he should therefore be able to integrate satisfactorily into his school and local community; the paternal family also have some familiarity with English certainly written English even if not conversational which will also assist L.
iv) The father will live in his own home with L and his wife; this property was bequeathed to him by his late father, but is currently tenanted. I have seen photographs of the property and descriptions of it. It appears more than adequate for their needs.
v) The father has been offered a job in a kitchen fitting company for which a brother is a manager. I have seen an e-mail confirming the job offer, with a starting salary of $1,000 per month;
vi) The father's home is a 5-minute drive from the local General Hospital; L will be entitled to state funded health services;
vii) The father has made a commitment to return to England each year with L for one month (at his own expense), so that L may have contact with his maternal family (the academic year in Kurdistan provides for a long summer holiday from late May to early September). When L is spending time with his mother the father proposes that this continues to be supervised at all times by the maternal grandparents; these return visits to England will give L the opportunity also to see his half-siblings, W and T;
viii) The father wishes to make one trip to Kurdistan in the near future to sort out the formalities relating to his move (including the arrangements for obtaining vacant possession of his home); he has offered that L should stay with the maternal grandparents in that period. It is further proposed that the current weekly contact should continue until L leaves this jurisdiction.
ix) Once L has moved, indirect contact will take place at least weekly by Skype; Skype contact will also take place on relevant maternal family birthdays, mother's day, Christmas and Easter, and other important events. The father has offered to purchase the maternal family a laptop and has agreed to fund the provision of internet. I support these initiatives.
x) The father has further agreed to provide translated school reports and photographs to the mother on an annual basis, together with details of the school term dates, and current telephone numbers
Discussion
i) Physical and emotional needs / capability of the parents: It is apparent from the history rehearsed above that the mother's care of L in the first two years of his life were neglectful, and in DJ Arkless' judgment, significantly harmful. By contrast, the local authority has made clear its view (and the guardian confirms) that in the last four years L has thrived in his father's care; the father has offered L stability and consistent care. Concerns about the father's practice of taking L to work with him at the fast-food outlet on some evenings of school days were readily acknowledged by the father and swiftly corrected; the father referred to the fact that he had a limited support network in this country to assist him with appropriate babysitting; the arrangement by which the father left L with the mother and grandparents on some evenings came to an end. The father will have working commitments with more sociable hours in Kurdistan, and a wider support network;ii) I have obviously considered carefully the 'capability' of the grandparents to care for L. The evidence, including the independent evidence of Mr. Greenhalgh the independent social worker, is that they would struggle to offer L the quality of care which he needs, particularly for the balance of L's childhood;
iii) In fact, it seemed to me that if the father were to have left L in this country, and relocated himself, L would be devastated. This would, in my judgment, be likely to manifest itself in distressed and challenging behaviour. As a consequence L would not be likely to settle easily in any placement; he would need an unusually competent standard of parenting. In my judgment, the grandparents would have struggled to manage a young boy, playing out destructive or other similar behaviours, while he grieved for his father. If they found it difficult to care for L, and failed, L would be exposed to further disruption and loss which would aggravate his already strong sense of disruption and abandonment.
iv) Educational needs: Although L would benefit from special needs provision in the school in England, I do not believe that the special educational provision in Erbil will be materially different. He would be likely to be offered the chance to work in small groups in class.
v) Cultural issues: L is a boy with a rich mixed heritage. Whether here or in Kurdistan, it is important that respect is paid to both sides of his cultural inheritance. The father complains that the maternal family have been dismissive of L's cultural mix, and indeed have been racist and shown animosity towards him. The maternal family's hostile and denigrating attitude to the father's Iraqi heritage have been referred to above (see [53]). It is a matter of some anxiety that these views may re-surface.
vi) Background circumstances: While the father has received valuable practical support from the maternal grandparents at times in the past, the father does not have a good network of emotional support. In Kurdistan, by contrast, the father has considerable emotional and practical support available to him. While L will benefit from the support of the paternal family, he will sadly lose the immediacy of a relationship with, and regularity of care by, his maternal grandparents
vii) Likely effect on change in circumstances: As L has enjoyed regular contact with the maternal side of his family throughout his life, in the short-term the loss of that contact will be detrimental to L. That said, I feel confident that with the benefit of loving care from his father, and the commitment to promote the relationship the effects of losing that regular relationship will be significantly mitigated.
viii) L's ascertainable wishes and feelings: Following L's trip to Kurdistan in summer 2013, it appears that L became increasingly embroiled in discussions between the adults about future options for him; he was described to be "torn" between them, and feeling "responsible" for their actions. L often asked professionals what he should do to "sort things out". When given the chance to express his view in a neutral setting to a social worker on more than one occasion, (on each occasion without prior notice having been given to the parents, thereby reducing the risk of pressure being placed on him) L reported that he would like to live in Kurdistan; he referred more than once to not loving his mother because she would not let him go.
Conclusion.