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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 >> ZM v AM [2014] EWHC 2110 (Fam) (26 June 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2014/2110.html Cite as: [2014] Fam Law 1402, [2014] EWHC 2110 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
B e f o r e :
Sitting at the Royal Courts of Justice
____________________
ZM |
Applicant |
|
-and- AM |
Respondent |
____________________
Richard Harris (instructed by Petherbridge Bassra Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 23-25 June
Judgment date: 26 June
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Peter Jackson:
(1) That during the course of the marriage she was subject to excessive control and occasional violence by the father and by his mother.(2) That the father was engaged in drug-dealing and other criminal activity.
(3) That she had no knowledge of the 2011 proceedings and that the residence order was procured by fraud.
(4) Centrally, that she was tricked into going to Pakistan.
Assessment of the parents as witnesses
Control
Violence
(1) Violent disorder, committed in 2001 for which he received a sentence of 15 months in a young offenders institution;(2) Assault occasioning actual bodily harm, committed in 2004 for which he received a community punishment order;
(3) Possessing an offensive weapon in a public place, committed in 2005, for which he received a community punishment order;
(4) Assault occasioning actual bodily harm, committed in July 2012, for which he received a sentence of 11 months imprisonment suspended for two years.
Criminal activity
The 2011 proceedings
(1) Having heard the mother's evidence on this issue, I believe her.(2) The father's evidence was by contrast unconvincing. He could not explain why the mother should want to put herself at such a disadvantage. His account of attempting to persuade her to attend court on each occasion was patently untrue. The distance between the family home and the courthouse is approximately 3 miles. Her genuine support would have strengthened his case and he would have had no trouble in prevailing upon her to attend if that was her true position.
(3) The father's decision to seek a residence order within days of the mother calling the police shows that he had decided that the marriage was over and that he would now assume control of S's future. He did everything necessary to feather his own nest by getting legal representation, but nothing to protect the far weaker position of his wife, who received no legal advice at all. It is noteworthy that the father's statement does not suggest that he had told the mother about these proceedings, still less that she agreed with them.
(4) I am not satisfied that the process server gave the papers to the mother. It is more likely that the father arranged for someone else to receive them.
(5) Likewise, I find that the person with whom Mrs P communicated on 1 July was not the mother. The answers that were given were (a) factually untrue and (b) wholly in the father's interests. Having seen the mother give evidence, I found her someone who is almost incapable of giving short answers of the kind described by Mrs P. I do not know who was impersonating the mother or how the father arranged it, but it would not have been difficult. For completeness, I find that the discrepancy in the telephone numbers is more likely to be a clerical error than something more sinister.
(6) I also refer to my findings in regard to earlier and later events, which are seriously damaging to the father's credibility.
The mother's immigration status
The mother's departure for Pakistan
(1) It is overwhelmingly unlikely that the mother would have voluntarily walked out of S's life in this way. She was up to that point, I find, his main carer – or at least an equal carer with the father. When she went to the refuge five months earlier, she took him with her. Even the father conceded in evidence that she was a main carer for her son.(2) I believe her evidence about the events at the airport. The father had arranged for her to be chaperoned by other passengers during her 2010 trip and her account of being reassured by another passenger on this occasion had the ring of truth – it was a spontaneous detail not contained in her statement.
(3) The reason why four people travelled to the airport that evening was to maintain the pretence that three of them were going to be travelling to Pakistan. There was no other reason for S or his grandfather to undergo a 110 mile round trip.
(4) The father's evidence showed that he has very little concern about the effect on S of losing his mother. He would not have hesitated to cut her off in this way. In the three years since the mother left England, he has made no direct contact with her whatsoever.
(5) Although it was unrealistic for the mother to expect S to have travelled to Pakistan, I accept her account that she thought it was just about manageable.
(6) I do not attach much weight to the evidence of the father's witness Mr A. He described an argument between the parents after the mother's return from Pakistan in 2010. Left alone for a few moments, he says that he told her that she could go to Pakistan if that is what she wanted, and that she said that she thought that she would. Such a conversation may have taken place, but it does not significantly support the father's case or undermine the mother's.
(7) My findings in relation to the father's deception in the legal proceedings are relevant to this issue as well.
Conclusion and consequential orders
(1) S will remain a ward of court until his future is clarified. At this stage, I say nothing about what may be in his longer term best interests. Mr Power's report contains concerning information about the extent of S's self-harming and his struggling with his environment.(2) In the meantime, it is clearly in S's interests for his mother to be reintroduced to him. While she remains in Pakistan, voluntary arrangements can be made between the school and herself for contact in the form of Skype and exchange of information by way of reports and photographs: the father is to be kept informed of this, but his approval is not to be required.
(3) Once the mother is in England, the matter shall be restored for directions, before me if available. At that point, consideration will be given to the gathering of evidence about S's welfare, to the mother's claim to have direct contact and to have S to live with her, to S's status within the proceedings, to the possible role of CAFCASS, to the question of a possible transfer of the proceedings to the local court and to the issue of the father's passport.
(4) In the meantime, I shall follow the advice of Mr Power and make a Family Assistance Order to the local authority where S lives. At this stage, this is for the purpose of monitoring and supporting the reintroduction of the mother to S in such a way that he is not avoidably unsettled. Mr Power aptly describes this as a Herculean task: I hope that even now the father will amend his opposition to the mother's involvement for the sake of his son, who depends so much upon him.
(5) I shall discharge the residence order maded in the County Court on 11 July 2011.
(6) I direct that S is not to live away from his current address or be removed from England and Wales until the further hearing and that the father's passport shall remain with the Tipstaff for the time being.