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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> C (Children) (Abduction: Article 13 (B)) [2018] EWCA Civ 2834 (20 December 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/2834.html Cite as: [2019] 1 FLR 1045, [2018] EWCA Civ 2834, [2019] 2 FCR 218 |
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ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
FAMILY DIVISION
HIS HONOUR JUDGE CLIFFORD BELLAMY
Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge
FD18PO0534
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DAVID RICHARDS
and
LORD JUSTICE MOYLAN
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C (Children) (Abduction: Article 13 (b)) |
____________________
Ms S Cooper (instructed by Access Law LLP Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date: Tuesday 11th December 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Moylan:
Introduction
Background
Proceedings
"[The mother] has been suffering with profoundly low mood and significant anxiety in relation to her current circumstances that she has found herself in with her husband.
[The mother] alleges that her husband has issues with alcohol. She goes on to accuse him of being physically violent to her on numerous occasions.
[Reference is then made to the mother's experiences in the past.]
As a direct response to the extreme stress she is now suffering with, she has developed Telogen Effluvium, a well-recognised illness that occurs after a major stress to the body, something more commonly seen after major surgery or pregnancy.
She has been started on Fluoxetine to improve her mood and this was increased to 40mg once a day. Unfortunately it doesn't seem to have helped her much, probably because her mood is likely situational.
She has been referred on to IAPT which is a psychological counselling service that provides low intensity cognitive behavioural therapy. I have referred her children to our health visitor service to assess the risk to the children due to the very concerning allegations above.
I have significant concerns about [the mother] being returned to South Africa, given the accusations of physical and sexual abuse. She tells me that her husband has access to her house, as well as to firearms and she feels her life would be directly under threat should she return. She also worries the policing and legal system would not protect her.
I have no concerns that [the mother's] mental state is unstable and her presentation is one of a woman struggling with enormously challenging circumstances in the best way she possibly can. There is no evidence to suggest psychosis or personality disorder from the 3 consultations we have had. I have absolutely no concerns from my interaction with [the mother] and her children that she has any impairment whatsoever in her ability to look after them and be a good mother."
Judgment
"[The mother] was very distressed whilst talking about [an incident] in South Africa and she was both physically shaking and emotionally very distressed in making this report."
The judge then commented that this "description mirrors the mother's presentation in court throughout this hearing."
"33. For the mother, Mr Jubb submits that there is clear evidence that the mother is psychologically fragile. Her condition has been exacerbated by the father's violent and sexually aggressive behaviour towards her. This has led to her seeking medical help from her GP who in turn has made a referral to Splitz Support Service. There is, he submits a real risk of a significant adverse effect upon the mother, psychologically, if the court were to order the summary return of the children to South Africa. It would be intolerable for these children to witness their mother having a significant psychological relapse."
"34. In his proposed protective measures the father says that he will 'arrange for the lodging of the Return Order and any undertaking with the Courts in South Africa upon the Respondent's return'. If the court is minded to order return, Mr Jubb submits that these documents should be lodged with the court in South Africa before the mother returns and not after she has returned. Given that there are currently no proceedings taking place in the South African court it is not clear to me what the effect would be of lodging the order and undertakings in the South African court and in particular whether that would enable the mother to take urgent steps to enforce the father's undertakings if he were to default."
I will return to this last comment below.
"47. Given the seriousness of the allegations made by the mother it is in my judgment undoubtedly the case that, if true, the court would find that those matters give rise to a grave risk that these children would be exposed to physical or psychological harm or otherwise placed in an intolerable situation if they were returned to South Africa without any steps being taken to put in place protective measures to safeguard their welfare.
48. As Baroness Hale observed in Re E , every child has to put up with a certain amount of rough and tumble, discomfort and distress. It is part of growing up. But there are some things which it is not reasonable to expect a child to tolerate. Among these are physical or psychological abuse or neglect of the child herself and exposure to the harmful effects of seeing and hearing the physical or psychological abuse of her own parent. If the mother's allegations against the father are true, the impact they have on her own physical or psychological well-being and, as a consequence, upon the well-being of the children goes well beyond the rough and tumble, discomfort and distress one might expect them to be able to take in their stride.
49. In this case there is clear evidence of the significant impact the abuse has had on the mother. It is apparent in the letter from her GP. It is apparent from the documents and logs disclosed by the police. It is apparent from the CAFCASS report. It was evident in her demeanour in court throughout this hearing. An order requiring the summary return of these children to South Africa would, I have no doubt, aggravate the distress and fear already being experienced by this mother. That is a risk. If her complaints about the father's behaviour are true then it is a grave risk. That is a risk which places these children in an intolerable position.
50. Is it possible to ameliorate that risk by putting in place protective measures? In Re D (Abduction: Rights of Custody) Baroness Hale made the point that if such measures are proposed it has to be shown that they will be effective to secure the protection of these children. With the best will in the world, this will not always be the case. No-one intended that an instrument designed to secure the protection of children from the harmful effects of international child abduction should itself be turned into an instrument of harm.
51. In this case the mother suffers from intense anxieties. Because it is not possible at this stage to undertake a finding of fact hearing, it cannot be said that there is an objectively proven foundation for those anxieties. However, that this mother's anxieties are real, intense and (if she were to return to South Africa with the children) potentially psychologically disabling, is in my judgment clear. If she returns to South Africa with the children and what is presently identified as a risk becomes a reality, it will not just be the mother who suffers as a result. It will also be the children."
Submissions
Legal Framework
" in evaluating the evidence the court will of course be mindful of the limitations involved in the summary nature of the Hague Convention process. It will rarely be appropriate to hear oral evidence of the allegations made under article 13(b) and so neither those allegations nor their rebuttal are usually tested in cross-examination."
At [35] the point was made that "art 13(b) is looking to the future: the situation as it would be if the child were to be returned forthwith to her home country". The judgment then returned to the approach the court should take to factual disputes.
"36. There is obviously a tension between the inability of the court to resolve factual disputes between the parties and the risks that the child will face if the allegations are in fact true. Mr Turner submits that there is a sensible and pragmatic solution. Where allegations of domestic abuse are made, the court should first ask whether, if they are true, there would be a grave risk that the child would be exposed to physical or psychological harm or otherwise placed in an intolerable situation. If so, the court must then ask how the child can be protected against the risk. The appropriate protective measures and their efficacy will obviously vary from case to case and from country to country. This is where arrangements for international co-operation between liaison judges are so helpful. Without such protective measures, the court may have no option but to do the best it can to resolve the disputed issues."
"52. The judge's rejection of the Article 13b argument was also criticised by the appellant. She was said wrongly to have rejected it without adequate explanation and to have failed to follow the test set out in §36 of Re E in her treatment of the mother's allegations. In summary, the argument was that she should have adopted the "sensible and pragmatic solution" referred to in §36 of Re E and asked herself whether, if the allegations were true, there would be a grave risk within Article 13b and then, whether appropriate protective measures could be put in place to obviate this risk. That would have required evidence as to what protective steps would be possible in Lithuania, the submission went.
53. I do not accept that a judge is bound to take this approach if the evidence before the court enables him or her confidently to discount the possibility that the allegations give rise to an Article 13b risk. That is what the judge did here. It was for the mother, who opposed the return, to substantiate the Article 13b exception (see Re E supra §32) and for the court to evaluate the evidence within the confines of the summary process. Hogg J found the mother's evidence about what had happened to be inconsistent with her actions in that she had continued her relationship with the father and allowed him to have the care of E, see for example what she said in §37 about the mother not having done anything to corroborate her evidence. She also put the allegations in context, bearing in mind what Mr Power had said about something good having happened in E's parenting, which she took as a demonstration that E would not be at risk if returned to Lithuania (§36). The Article 13b argument had therefore not got off the ground in the judge's view. The judgment about the level of risk was a judgment which fell to be made by Hogg J and we should not overturn her judgment on it unless it was not open to her (see the important observations of the Supreme Court on this subject at §35 of Re S , supra). Nothing has been said in argument to demonstrate that the view Hogg J took was not open to her; in the light of it, it was unnecessary for her to look further at the question of protective measures. She would have taken the same view even if the child had been going back to the father's care, but the Article 13b case was weakened further by the fact that the mother had ultimately agreed to return with E.
Determination
Lord Justice David Richards:
Lord Justice Lewison:
" the national court does not order return automatically and mechanically but examines the particular circumstances of this particular child in order to ascertain whether a return would be in accordance with the Convention; but that is not the same as a full blown examination of the child's future "
"There is nothing to indicate that the standard of proof is other than the ordinary balance of probabilities. But in evaluating the evidence the court will of course be mindful of the limitations involved in the summary nature of the Hague Convention process. It will rarely be appropriate to hear oral evidence of the allegations made under article 13(b) and so neither those allegations nor their rebuttal are usually tested in cross-examination." (Emphasis added)
"There is obviously a tension between the inability of the court to resolve factual disputes between the parties and the risks that the child will face if the allegations are in fact true. Mr Turner submits that there is a sensible and pragmatic solution. Where allegations of domestic abuse are made, the court should first ask whether, if they are true, there would be a grave risk that the child would be exposed to physical or psychological harm or otherwise placed in an intolerable situation. If so, the court must then ask how the child can be protected against the risk. The appropriate protective measures and their efficacy will obviously vary from case to case and from country to country. This is where arrangements for international co-operation between liaison judges are so helpful. Without such protective measures, the court may have no option but to do the best it can to resolve the disputed issues." (Emphasis added)
"(i) that the claimant must supply a plausible evidential basis for the application of a relevant jurisdictional gateway; (ii) that if there is an issue of fact about it, or some other reason for doubting whether it applies, the court must take a view on the material available if it can reliably do so; but (iii) the nature of the issue and the limitations of the material available at the interlocutory stage may be such that no reliable assessment can be made, in which case there is a good arguable case for the application of the gateway if there is a plausible (albeit contested) evidential basis for it."
"The rule is that the court must be satisfied, or as satisfied as it can be having regard to the limitations which an interlocutory process imposes, that factors exist which allow the court to take jurisdiction."
"Where, however, the grant or refusal of the interlocutory injunction will have the practical effect of putting an end to the action because the harm that will have been already caused to the losing party by its grant or its refusal is complete and of a kind for which money cannot constitute any worthwhile recompense, the degree of likelihood that the plaintiff would have succeeded in establishing his right to an injunction if the action had gone to trial, is a factor to be brought into the balance by the judge in weighing the risks that injustice may result from his deciding the application one way rather than the other."