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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 >> D (A Child) (International Recognition) [2016] EWCA Civ 12 (27 January 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/12.html Cite as: [2016] Fam Law 311, [2016] EWCA Civ 12, [2016] 2 FLR 347, [2016] 1 WLR 2469, [2016] WLR 2469, [2016] 2 FCR 1, [2016] 3 All ER 770, [2016] WLR(D) 44 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE FAMILY DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT
Mr. Justice Peter Jackson
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division)
LORD JUSTICE RYDER
and
LORD JUSTICE BRIGGS
____________________
In the Matter of D (A Child) (International Recognition) |
____________________
Mr. James Turner QC and Mr. Edward Devereux (instructed by Osbornes) for the Mother
Mr. Nicholas Anderson (instructed by Cafcass Legal) for the Child
Mr. Henry Setright QC and Mr. Michael Gration (instructed by Dawson Cornwell) for Reunite Child Abduction Centre
Hearing date: 20 May 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Ryder:
Introduction:
"[2] In summary:
(1) These issues concerning parental responsibility are governed by articles 21-39 of BIIR - the Council Regulation (EC) No. 2201/2003 (Brussels II Revised Regulation 2003).
(2) Article 21(1) provides that a judgment given in a Member State shall be recognised in another Member State without any special procedure being required.
(3) Article 21(2) allows any interested party to apply for a decision that the judgment be or not be recognised.
(4) Article 23(a)-(g) sets out seven grounds on which a judgment shall not be recognised.
(5) In this case, the mother relies on grounds (a) to (d), asserting that:
(a) Recognition would be contrary to public policy taking account of David's best interests.
(b) David was not given an opportunity to be heard, in violation of the fundamental principles of procedure in this jurisdiction.
(c) She herself was not served with the father's application that led to the November 2013 decision and was not enabled to defend those proceedings.
(d) She was not given the opportunity to be heard in those proceedings.
(6) The father contests each of these grounds. David's Children's Guardian submits that recognition should be refused on ground (b) and possibly also on ground (a). She makes no submissions on the other grounds.
[3] My conclusion is that the mother succeeds under article 23(b) because David was not given an opportunity to be heard in the Romanian proceedings, and also under article 23(c) and (d) in that she was not effectively served and was not given an opportunity to be heard. I dismiss her appeal under article 23(a), the public policy ground.
[4] I also uphold the mother's complaints in relation to certain aspects of the registration procedure in this jurisdiction, but her appeal does not ultimately succeed on those grounds.
[5] At the end of the hearing, I expressed concern at the damaging effect on David's welfare of the interminable litigation between his parents. The state of affairs described below is thoroughly contrary to the spirit of the BIIR regime, which aims to ensure that decisions are made in the country of a child's habitual residence and swiftly enforced elsewhere. I hope that even now the parents will take responsibility for David's future by reaching a mediated solution.
[6] In what follows, I set out the background, the history of the litigation, the legal framework, and my analysis and conclusions in relation to each ground of appeal.
Background
[7] David's parents are both Romanian. The father is aged 36 and the mother 31. They met in 2003 while they were both working in England, the father as a builder and the mother as a cleaner. They lived together in England from 2004 until November 2007, when they separated.
[8] In the meantime, David was born. In August 2006, during his mother's pregnancy, the parents had returned to Romania to get married. The mother remained there for David's birth on 8 November 2006, with the father travelling backwards and forwards to England. The mother and David remained in Romania for a short time because of visa problems that were solved by Romania's accession to the European Union on 1 January 2007. On 10 January 2007, the mother rejoined the father in England with baby David.
[9] In November 2007, the parents separated. In 2009, the father returned to Romania, though he has maintained a second home in England, to which he returns for about 10 days each month for work and to see David.
[10] The parties' marriage was dissolved by the Romanian court in April 2008. The mother and David live alone. In January 2013, the father remarried and now has a 1-year-old daughter.
[11] Until November 2012, the father had regular contact with David in England, including overnight contact at weekends. The mother then withheld contact for reasons that have not been adjudicated upon, and David then saw almost nothing of his father until March 2014. At that point, following the mother's arrest for an alleged failure to comply with an order of this court, David was placed in the care of his father in England. At present, following a succession of temporary orders, he divides his time equally between his parents.
[12] The overall picture is that:
• The father lived in England between 2003 and November 2009. Since then he has lived in Romania, visiting England for substantial periods. Despite the acute difficulties in the parents' relationship, he has a significant relationship with David.
• The mother has lived continuously in England since 2003. She has been David's main carer since his birth. She states that she has not been back to Romania since coming here with David in January 2007.
• David has lived in England since he was under two months old, a period of 7 years 7 months in the life of a child aged 7 years 9 months. He has attended school here since September 2010. Reports from school and other sources, referred to below, are positive. He has never been back to Romania and speaks only a few words of Romanian. "
a. David was not given an opportunity to be heard, in violation of the fundamental principles of procedure in this jurisdiction; and
b. mother was neither served with the father's application that led to the November 2013 decision and was not enabled to defend those proceedings, nor was she given the opportunity to be heard in those proceedings.
Ground 1: article 23(b) BIIR
"Peter Jackson J was wrong to find that article 23(b) of BIIR had been established for the following reasons-
a) Peter Jackson J was wrong in law in his approach to what in law could amount to a 'violation of fundamental principles of procedure of the Member State in which recognition is sought';
b) Peter Jackson J was wrong to conclude that the child not being heard in this case was a violation of fundamental principles of procedure in England and Wales;
c) Peter Jackson J placed insufficient weight on the overall picture in the Romanian proceedings as regards the child being heard;
d) Peter Jackson J was wrong to place no weight on the fact that F had raised the issue of the child being heard in February 2013 and M had refused."
Ground 2: article 23(c) BIIR
"Peter Jackson J was wrong to find that article 23(c) of BIIR had been established for the following reasons-
a) Peter Jackson J was wrong in concluding that the judgment had been given in default of appearance in light of the Annex II certificate issued by the Bucharest Court of Appeal;
[ ]
c) Peter Jackson J was wrong in his interpretation of the meaning of the words "in such a way as to enable that person to arrange for his or her defence" in article 23(c);
d) Peter Jackson J was wrong to place the burden of proof on [the father] in respect of any matter in relation to article 23(c) in particular in that he was "not satisfied" that the Romanian judicial summons were not documents which instituted the proceedings;
e) Peter Jackson J was wrong to make a finding in relation to M's knowledge of the proceedings without hearing oral evidence from M;
f) Jackson J was wrong to make a finding that the Romanian judicial summons were not documents which instituted the proceedings."
Ground 3: article 23(d) BIIR
"Peter Jackson J was wrong to find that article 23(d) had been established given that (the mother) had been validly served according to Romanian law. He ought to have concluded as a matter of law and fact that valid service according to Romanian national law was an 'opportunity to be heard'."
a. by placing reliance on article 23(a) BIIR; and
b. by identifying the defects in the registration procedure adopted by the district judge who made the second recognition and enforcement order at first instance.
"[100] David was never given the opportunity [to be heard]: how and why that happened is immaterial.
[101] The fact that the mother opposed David being heard is neither here nor there. The obligation to hear the child falls on the court and not the parties.
[ ]
[103] An English court, faced with a striking application of this kind (peremptory change of lifelong carer, country and language) would as a minimum seek a report from a court social worker that would, among other things, contain the child's perspective on such a momentous change of circumstances. Far from being unusual, such a report would be fundamental. Any decision reached without such information would immediately be vulnerable on procedural and substantive grounds."
General principles:
"The recognition and enforcement of judgments given in a Member State should be based on the principle of mutual trust and the grounds for non-recognition should be kept to the minimum required"
"(1) Children shall have the right to such protection and care as is necessary for their well-being. They may also express their views freely. Such views shall be taken into consideration on matters which concern them in accordance with their age and maturity.
(2) In all actions relating to children, whether taken by public authorities or private institutions, the child's best interests must be a primary consideration.
(3) Every child shall have the right to maintain on a regular basis a personal relationship and direct contact with both his or her parents, unless that is contrary to his or her interests."
83. "It should be added that that interpretation of the Regulation is consistent with its requirements and purpose and that it is the only interpretation which best ensures the effectiveness of Community law."
"[46] Article 23(a), in my judgment, contains a very narrow exception and, consistently with the entire scheme of BIIR and with the underlying philosophy is spelt out in Recital (21), sets the bar very high."
"[37] Recourse to the public policy clause in article 27(1) of the convention [then Brussels 1] can be envisaged only where recognition or enforcement of the judgment delivered in another contracting state would be at variance to an unacceptable degree with the legal order of the state in which enforcement is sought in as much as it infringes a fundamental principle."
The article 23 (b) question:
(1) "States Parties shall assure to the child who is capable of forming his or her own views the rights to express those views freely in all matters affecting the child, the views of he child being given due weight in accordance with the age and maturity of the child.
(2) For this purpose, the child shall in particular be provided the opportunity to be heard in any judicial and administrative proceedings affecting the child, either directly, or through a representative or appropriate body, in a manner consistent with the procedural rules of national law."
i. given that David was aged five when the first instance court made its determination that ultimately led to the final appeal, six during the first appeal and seven by the time of the judgment that was to be recognised and enforced, a court in England and Wales, in particular a final appeals court, would not necessarily have given him an opportunity to be heard ie there was neither a fundamental principle that was engaged nor was there a violation.
ii. in the context that there was some evidence at first instance at least sufficient for the Romanian court to dispense with any further opportunity being given for David to be heard, the overall position was that even if a fundamental principle was engaged it was not violated.
iii. An age appropriate enquiry into a child's wishes and feelings is not the same as giving the child an opportunity to be heard.
iv. The concept derived from section 1(3)(a) CA 1989 is the former not the latter.
v. Ascertaining a child's wishes and feelings in accordance with section 1(3)(a) CA 1989 is part of the court's welfare evaluation in coming to a conclusion about the child's best interests, it is neither a component nor reflective of any obligation in the court to give the child an opportunity to be heard.
vi. Likewise, a welfare report (whether general or issue specific including a report about a child's wishes and feelings) directed by a court under section 7 CA 1989 is intended provide evidence relevant to the welfare evaluation rather than being a vehicle that provides an opportunity for a child to be heard.
vii. It is unlikely that a five year old would be the subject of a Cafcass welfare report in contested section 8 CA 1989 proceedings which had as their object the determination of with whom the child should live even if that might involve (as the judge described it) a "peremptory change of lifelong carer, country and language" .
viii. Many courts in England and Wales would consider it inappropriate to canvass the views of a child so young let alone afford him an opportunity to be heard because of the adverse welfare implications of such a step.
ix. A court in England and Wales hearing private law family proceedings concerning a child aged between five and seven years, would hear about a child's wishes and feelings through his or her parents.
"look at the process as a whole, bearing in mind that this was an appeal decision, and not focus exclusively on the final leg of the legal journey."
"(3) in the circumstances mentioned in subsection (4), a court shall have regard in particular to
(a) the ascertainable wishes and feelings of the child concerned (considered in the light of his age and understanding)
(b) his physical, emotional and educational needs;
(c) the likely effect on him of any change in his circumstances;
(d) his age, sex, background and any characteristics of his which the court considers relevant;
(e) any harm which he has suffered or is at risk of suffering;
(f) how capable each of his parents, and any other person in relation to whom the court considers the question to be relevant, is of meeting his needs;
(g) the range of powers available to the court under this Act in the proceedings in question."
"[57] But there is now a growing understanding of the importance of listening to the children involved in children's cases. It is the child, more than anyone else, who will have to live with what the court decides. Those who do listen to children understand that they often have a point of view which is quite distinct from that of the person looking after them. They are quite capable of being moral actors in their own right. Just as the adults may have to do what the court decides whether they like it or not, so may the child. But that is no more a reason for failing to hear what the child has to say than it is for refusing to hear the parents' views.
[58] Brussels II Revised Regulation (EC) No 2201/2003 recognises this by reversing the burden in relation to hearing the child. Article 11(2) provides:
"When applying articles 12 and 13 of the 1980 Hague Convention, it shall be ensured that the child is given the opportunity to be heard during the proceedings unless this appears inappropriate having regard to his or her age or degree of maturity."
Although strictly this only applies to cases within the European Union (over half of the applications coming before the High Court), the principle is in my view of universal application and consistent with our international obligations under article 12 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. It applies, not only when a "defence" under article 13 has been raised, but also in any case in which the court is being asked to apply article 12 and direct the summary return of the child in effect in every Hague Convention case. It erects a presumption that the child will be heard unless this appears inappropriate. Hearing the child is, as already stated, not to be confused with giving effect to his views.
[59] It follows that children should be heard far more frequently in Hague Convention cases than has been the practice hitherto. The only question is how this should be done. It is plainly not good enough to say that the abducting parent, with whom the child is living, can present the child's views to the court. If those views coincide with the views of the abducting parent, the court will either assume that they are not authentically the child's own or give them very little independent weight. There has to be some means of conveying them to the court independently of the abducting parent.
[60] There are three possible ways of doing this. They range from full scale legal representation of the child, through the report of an independent CAFCASS officer or other professional, to a face to face interview with the judge. In some European countries, notably Germany, it is taken for granted that the judge will see the child. In this country, this used to be the practice under the old wardship system, but fell into disuse with the advent of professional court welfare officers who are more used to communicating with children than are many judges. The most common method is therefore an interview with a CAFCASS officer, who is not only skilled and experienced in talking with children but also, if practising in the High Court, aware of the limited compass within which the child's views are relevant in Hague Convention cases. In most cases, this should be enough. In others, and especially where the child has asked to see the judge, it may also be necessary for the judge to hear the child. Only in a few cases will full scale legal representation be necessary. But whenever it seems likely that the child's views and interests may not be properly presented to the court, and in particular where there are legal arguments which the adult parties are not putting forward, then the child should be separately represented.
[61] Hitherto, our courts have only allowed separate representation in exceptional circumstances. As recently as in In re H (Abduction) [2007] 1 FLR 242, the view was expressed in the Court of Appeal, that if the test for party status were to be revised in any direction, it should in future be more rather than less stringently applied. But Brussels II Revised Regulation requires us to look at the question of hearing children's views afresh. Rather than the issue coming up at a late stage in the proceedings, as has tended to take place up to now; European cases require the court to address at the outset whether and how the child is to be given the opportunity of being heard. If the options are canvassed then and there and appropriate directions given, this should not be an instrument of delay. CAFCASS officers and, in the few cases where this is appropriate, children's representatives are just as capable of moving quickly if they have to do so as anyone else. The vice has been when children's views have been raised very late in the day and seen as a "last ditch stand" on the part of the abducting parent. This is not the place they should take in the proceedings. There is no reason why the approach which should be adopted in European cases should not also be adopted in others. The more uniform the practice, the better.
[62] That is not, of course, this case. When the proceedings began, it might well have been considered inappropriate to hear A's views. When the proceedings should have been completed, in August 2005, this may still have been the case. But once the proceedings were prolonged beyond then, A had reached an age where it could no longer be taken for granted that it was inappropriate for him to be given the opportunity of being heard. Consideration should then have been given to whether and how this might be done. It could scarcely by then have been said that seeking his views, or allowing his legal participation, would add to the already inordinate delay. It goes without saying that if, having heard from the child, an issue arises under the Convention which has not been raised by either of the parties, the court will be bound to consider it irrespective of the pleadings."
"[24] [ ] The question of what if anything of that which a child wants to say is relevant to welfare and the weight to be given to it is an entirely separate question from the principle that a child is to be heard. The adverse welfare effect of delay may influence or even determine whether and how a child is to be heard on the facts of a particular case, but that again is a question relating to the welfare balance on a case management issue, not the question of principle.
[ ]
[28] On the question of principle, therefore, I agree with the appellant's submissions i.e. for the reasons set out above, there is an obligation in principle on the High Court sitting its inherent jurisdiction in relation to an abduction application to consider whether and how to hear the child concerned."
[ ] "Unless we in this jurisdiction are to fall out of step with similar societies as they safeguard Article 12 rights, we must, in the case of articulate teenagers, accept that the right to freedom of expression and participation outweighs the paternalistic judgment of welfare."
[ ] "If and to the extent that [the child's] Article 8 rights are engaged, then that will carry with it the important procedural right to be "involved in the decision-making process, seen as a whole, to a degree sufficient to provide [her] with the requisite protection of [her] interests" see W v United Kingdom (1988) 10 EHRR 29, para 64. However, although that may, it does not necessarily, carry with it the right to be represented or the right to party status: see ZH (Tanzania), paras 34-37. In CF v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2004] EWHC 111 (Fam), [2004] 2 FLR 517, proper representation was held to be necessary; because it was lacking, the decision was quashed. But there are many contexts where effective participation requires neither party status nor even representation."h
The article 23(a) question:
The question of service and the opportunity to be heard: the article 23(c) and (d) questions:
a. the court summonses were delivered to the mother's mother's address and that such service satisfied the requirements under Romanian law (judgment, at [113]-[114]);
b. on the balance of probabilities, it was more likely than not that the mother had had no knowledge of the proceedings until after they had been concluded (judgment, at [117]);
c. the Romanian Court of Appeal judgment was given in default of appearance (judgment, at [122]);
d. the proceedings in question are the father's appeal, launched in June 2013 and not the previous proceedings (judgment, at [122]);
e. the judicial summons to attend court that was served at the mother's mother's address was not a document which instituted proceedings or an equivalent document (judgment, at [122]); and
f. service did not take place in such a way as to enable the mother to arrange for her defence (judgment, at [122]).
a. concluding that the Romanian judgment had been given in default of appearance in light of the Annex II certificate issued by the Bucharest Court of Appeal;
b. interpreting article 23(c) so as to require the phrase "was not served with the document which instituted the proceedings" to be read together with "in sufficient time and in such a way as to enable that person to arrange for his or her defence" rather than on its own;
c. his interpretation of the meaning of the words "in such a way as to enable that person to arrange for his or her defence" in article 23(c);
d. placing the burden of proof on the appellant (father) in respect of any matter in relation to article 23(c), in particular in that he was "not satisfied" that the Romanian judicial summons were not documents which instituted proceedings;
e. making a finding in relation to the mother's knowledge of the proceedings without hearing oral evidence from her; and
f. finding that the Romanian judicial summons were not documents which instituted the proceedings.
"[...] is intended to ensure that a judgment is not recognized or enforced under the Convention if the defendant has not had an opportunity of defending himself before the court first seised."
"55 According to settled case-law, the purpose of Article 27(2) of the Convention is to ensure that a judgment will not be recognised or enforced under the Convention if the defendant has not had an opportunity to put his defence before the court which gave the judgment (Case 166/80 Klomps v Michel [1981] ECR 1593, paragraph 9; Case C-172/91 Sonntag v Waidmann [1993] ECR I-1963, paragraph 38; and Case C-474/93 Hengst Import BV v Anna Maria Campese [1995] ECR I-2123 paragraph 17)."
"Although the Convention is, as is clear from the preamble, intended to "secure the simplification of formalities governing the reciprocal recognition and enforcement of judgments of courts or tribunals," that aim cannot, according to a series of decisions of the Court, be attained by undermining in any way the right to a fair hearing."
"In that connection, it is apparent from recitals 16 to 18 in the preamble to Regulation No 44/2001 that the system of appeals for which it provides against the recognition or enforcement of a judgment aims to establish a fair balance between, on the one hand, mutual trust in the administration of justice in the Union, which justifies judgments given in a Member State being, as a rule, recognised and declared enforceable automatically in another Member State and, on the other hand, respect for the rights of the defence, which means that the defendant should, where necessary, be able to appeal in an adversarial procedure against the declaration of enforceability if he considers one of the grounds for non-enforcement to be present."
12. "Appearance" may have two separate meanings. Usually, once court proceedings have begun, a defendant will have to decide whether to ignore the proceedings or defend them or challenge the jurisdiction of the court. If he decides to defend he will at some stage have to lodge with the court a formal document of some kind; so will he if he challenges the jurisdiction of the court. Once that formal document has been lodged, he would in most legal systems, be said to have "appeared". If, however, he decides to ignore the proceedings he will not lodge any formal document with the court; in that sense he will not have "appeared" but, if he has been served with the proceedings, he will be at risk of having an enforceable judgment being entered against him.
13. Once proceedings come before a court for a hearing a defendant will again have to choose whether to be present in court or not. If he does choose to be present he will, on any view, have "appeared"; if he chooses not to be present he will not, in one sense, have "appeared". But if he has already chosen to take part in the proceedings by defending them or even by challenging the jurisdiction, he may (in some legal systems) be said to have already "appeared" and thus not be in default of appearance.
14. Mr Tavoulareas did not "appear" in either of the meanings of the word; he neither lodged any formal document with the court in Greece nor was he present when the proceedings came to trial. On any view, therefore, the judgment against him was given in default of appearance."
"15 For the purposes of the reply to the first part of the question it should first of all be pointed out that Article 27, point 2, lays down two conditions, the first of which, that service should be duly effected, entails a decision based on the legislation of the State in which judgment was given and on the conventions binding on that State in regard to service whilst the second, concerning the time necessary to enable the defendant to arrange for his defence, implies appraisals of a factual nature. A decision concerning the first of those conditions made in the State in which the judgment was given accordingly does not release the court in the State in which enforcement is sought from its duty to examine the second condition, even if that decision was made in the context of separate adversary proceedings.
16 The reply to this part of the question must accordingly be that, even if the court in which the judgment was given has held, in separate adversary proceedings, that service was duly effected, Article 27, point 2, still requires the court in which enforcement is sought to examine whether service was effected in sufficient time to enable the defendant to arrange for his defence."
"It must next be noted that, in its judgment in Case C-305/88 Lancray [1990] ECR I-2725, paragraph 18, the Court held that due service and service in sufficient time constituted two separate and concurrent safeguards for a defendant who fails to appear. The absence of one of those safeguards is therefore a sufficient ground for refusing to recognize a foreign judgment."
"The court in which enforcement of a default judgment is sought must consider the manner in which service was effected and whether, following service, the defendant had sufficient time to arrange for his defence. (Case 166/80 Klomps v Michel [1981] ECR 1593; Case 228/81 Pendy Plastic Products v Pluspunkt [1982] ECR 2723. Both conditions must be fulfilled: Case C-305/8 Isabelle Lancray SA v Peters und Sickert KG [1990] ECR I-2725; Case C-123/91 Minalmet GmbH v Brandeis Ltd [1992] ECR I-5661. See also Artic Fish Sales Co Ltd v Adam (No 2), 1996 SLT 970; Selco Ltd v Merier, 1996 SLT 1247.)"
"Article 27(2) must be interpreted as being intended to protect the right of a defendant to defend himself when recognition of judgment given in default in another Contracting State is sought, even if the rules on service laid down in that Contracting State were complied with."
19." In this connection it must be stated first of all that Article 27, point 2, does not require proof that the document which instituted the proceedings was actually brought to the knowledge of the defendant. Having regard to the exceptional nature of the grounds for refusing enforcement and to the fact that the laws of the Contracting states on the service of court documents, like the international conventions on this subject, have as their objective the safeguarding of the interests of defendants, the court in which enforcement is sought is ordinarily justified in considering that, following due service, the defendant is able to take steps to defend his interests as soon as the document has been served on him at his habitual residence or elsewhere. As a general rule the court in which enforcement is sought may accordingly confine its examination to ascertaining whether the period reckoned from the date on which service was duly effected allowed the defendant sufficient time to arrange for his defence. Nevertheless the court must consider whether, in a particular case, there are exceptional circumstances which warrant the conclusion that, although service was duly effected, it was, however, inadequate for the purposes of enabling the defendant to take steps to arrange for his defence, and accordingly, could not cause the time stipulated by Article 27, point 2, to begin to run.
20. In considering whether it is confronted with such a case the court in which enforcement is sought may take account of all the circumstances of the case in point, including the means employed for effecting service, the relations between the plaintiff and the defendant or the nature of the steps which had to be taken in order to prevent judgment being given in default. If, for example, the dispute concerns business relations and if the document which instituted the proceedings was served at an address at which the defendant carries on his business activities the mere fact that the defendant was absent at the time of service should not normally prevent him from arranging his defence, above all if the action necessary to avoid a judgment in default may be taken informally and even by a representative.
21 The reply to that part of the fourth question should therefore be that the court in which enforcement is sought may as a general rule confine itself to examining whether the period reckoned from the date on which service was duly effected allowed the defendant sufficient time for his defence. However the court is also required to consider whether, in a particular case, there are exceptional circumstances such as the fact that, although service was duly effected, it was nevertheless inadequate for the purpose of causing that time to begin to run." [Emphasis added]
"It follows from the wording of Article 27 that the courts of a contracting state may refuse to recognize a judgment only on one of the grounds expressly mentioned in that provision. One of those grounds is that laid down in paragraph (2), in order to ensure the adequate protection of the rights of a defendant against whom judgment is given in default of appearance abroad. Article 27(2) provides that a judgment shall not be recognized '... if the defendant was not duly served with the document which instituted the proceedings in sufficient time to enable him to arrange for his defence'. That provision takes account of the fact that certain Contracting States make provision for the fictitious service of process where the defendant has no known place of residence. The effects that are deemed to follow from such fictitious service vary and the probability of the defendant's actually being informed of service, so as to give him sufficient time to prepare his defence, may vary considerably, depending on the type of fictitious service provided for in each legal system."
"29. As I have indicated, that document enclosed a certificated English translation of the court order the payment order - that instituted these proceedings. BSL therefore knew, if they had read the documents that they were sent by the respondents, that they could challenge the payment order if they so chose, but only had limited time in which to do so."
"the court is entitled to examine whether on the ground and in the real world there was actual service or an acceptable substitute sufficiently ahead of the hearing to enable the defendant to arrange for his defence" [Emphasis added].
"31 In view of the fact that Article 27 (2), as has already been stated, seeks to enable a defendant to defend himself effectively, the defendant's behaviour may not be used as a basis for considering that service was effected in sufficient time even though the plaintiff subsequently became aware that the defendant could be reached at a new address. To admit such a proposition would be tantamount to acknowledging the existence of a presumption that service was effected in sufficient time. Although it may rightly be presumed that service was effected in sufficient time where the plaintiff did not know where to reach the defendant, such a presumption would clearly be contrary to the principle that the defendant's rights should be protected if, after service, the plaintiff learned where the defendant could be reached.
32 Thus the defendant's behaviour cannot automatically rule out the possibility of taking into account exceptional circumstances which warrant the conclusion that service was not effected in sufficient time. Instead, such behaviour may be assessed by the court in which enforcement is sought as one of the matters in the light of which it determines whether service was effected in sufficient time. It will therefore be for that court to assess, in a case such as the present, to what extent the defendant's behaviour is capable of outweighing the fact that the plaintiff was apprised after service of the defendant's new address."
11 [...] "the document which instituted the proceedings" cover any document, such as the order for payment [Zahlungsbefehl] in German law, service of which enables the plaintiff, under the law of the State of the court in which the judgment was given, to obtain, in default of appropriate action taken by the defendant, a decision capable of being recognized and enforced under the provisions of the Convention; [...][Emphasis added].
Lord Justice Briggs:
Lord Justice Moore-Bick: