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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> E, Re (Special Guardianship Order: Ukraine) [2024] EWHC 263 (Fam) (12 February 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2024/263.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 263 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
SITTING AS A DEPUTY HIGH COURT JUDGE
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Mrs R |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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The Mother |
1st Respondent |
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- and - |
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E By Her Children's Guardian |
2nd Respondent |
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Ms Lubeya Ramadhan (instructed by A&N Care solicitors) for the 1st Respondent
Ms Georgia Mitropoulos (instructed by National Legal Service Solicitors)
for the 2nd Respondent
Hearing dates: 8, 9 and 10 November 2023
Judgment Handdown 12 February 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Miss Katie Gollop K.C :
The Parties
Representation
Evidence
The Mother's Application to Adjourn
Elena's Arrival In England and Her Disclosures
The Litigation Background
Fact-finding: the allegations of alienation
1. Mrs R provided Elena with false narratives about Elena's life:
a) After Elena's arrival in England, she falsely claimed the agreed plan was that Elena would live in the UK for 3 years;
b) Mrs R's own trauma was overlaid into Elena's experiences;
c) Mrs R caused professionals to receive false information that did not reflect Elena's true experiences.
Response: Denied generally. As to a), it was the mother who led Elena to believe she would remain in the UK for 3 years, not Mrs R.
2. After Elena's arrival in England, Mrs R immediately reduced contact and removed Elena's Ukrainian phone so that all contact between mother and daughter had to go through Mrs R.
Response: Agreed that contact reduced. That was because of increasing tension then breakdown in the mother-daughter relationship, not as a result of reduction imposed by Mrs R. Mrs R did not remove the phone: Elena handed it over after an argument with her mother. Mrs R had done all she could to support communication.
3. On being informed of the mother's intention to come to England, Mrs R applied for an ex parte order to prevent her arrival.
Response: Mrs R agreed she made the ex parte application but denied that she did so to prevent the mother's arrival in England. The purpose was to stop the mother from taking Elena to Ukraine for a short holiday, as she had said she wished to, as Ukraine was not a safe country.
In oral evidence, the mother accepted that she had said sent a text message about taking Elena to Ukraine for a holiday. She said this was an attempt to lull Mrs R into believing that she agreed to Elena living in England for three years; her real intention was to take Elena to Poland, not Ukraine which accepted was unsafe.
4. Mrs R has not promoted or encouraged mother-daughter contact. Four complaints were itemised.
Response: Denied. Mrs R had promoted and encouraged contact. She had complied with all relevant court orders and professional advice. Court orders for interim contact directed that contact occur in accordance with Elena's wishes and feelings. Elena did not wish to have contact with her mother, respond to communication from her, or have photos sent. Mrs R had to respect that.
Progress with contact had been made but the Hague application undid that.
When Elena attended virtual contact with a list of questions, the questions were entirely her own and not influenced by Mrs R.
5. On a specified date Mrs R attempted to prevent the mother from coming to the UK by falsely stating that the mother's visa had been cancelled.
Response: Admitted. Mrs R considered it necessary to lie to protect Elena in circumstances where the mother, the maternal grandparents, and the mother's partner had sent threatening, aggressive communications to Mrs R, and Elena had been exposed to the situation when abuse was shouted at Mrs R down the phone after she advised the adults of the Prohibited Steps Order application.
6. Mrs R blocked the mother on a messaging platform.
Response: Admitted. Mrs R did so on the advice of the police after receiving numerous abusive and threatening messages from the mother.
7. Mrs R blocked the mother on all internet accounts and platforms.
Response : Denied. Mrs R blocked the mother on one platform and did not return messages sent via another. She did not have access to other platforms. At all times, the mother was able to e mail her.
In oral evidence, the mother accepted that e mail communication between them was always possible.
8. In England, Elena, who was baptised into the Orthodox faith, had been encouraged to join a Catholic church and was thus being deprived of her Orthodox and Ukrainian heritage.
Response : Denied. Elena had not known she had been baptised and had not been to church with her family when in Ukraine or taught about any faith.
In England, she had expressed a wish to join a church choir and Mrs R had supported that. The mother had been sent pictures and messages about her participation in the choir and expressed no disapproval until months later, around the time of her Hague application. Elena was free to explore Orthodox Christianity if she chose to.
In oral evidence, Mrs R said that they always celebrated European Christmas on 25 December as well as the Orthodox festival on 7 January and at Easter, they baked special Ukrainian breads. There was a Greek Orthodox church nearby and she would encourage Elena to visit it. Elena attended Ukrainian club at school and loved it. Mrs R told me that she herself has Ukrainian national dress and when I asked whether she might obtain national dress for Elena, she immediately embraced that suggestion. (In my letter to her, I told Elena that Mrs R had promised to buy her a national costume.)
9. Mrs R prepared/coached Elena for meetings with professionals. There were three itemised complaints about a meeting with a psychiatrist and a social worker.
Response : Denied. No influence was exerted. Mrs R supported Elena with such meetings but did not coach her. Elena did her own preparation. At Elena's request, she sent one written note so that Elena did not have to repeat her story to a further professional.
10. Mrs R isolated Elena from her Ukrainian family. Two complaints were made concerning grandparents on each side.
Response : Denied. Despite encouragement from Mrs R, Elena did not wish to have contact with her maternal grandparents. Mrs R had facilitated contact with her paternal grandparents and not restricted that or blocked them for any reason.
In evidence, Mrs R said that Elena had a photo of her parents and the frame broke during the journey from Poland to England. Therefore, she bought a silver frame for the picture.
11. Mrs R had inappropriately spoken to Elena about adoption. Mrs R had not discouraged her from calling them "mum" and "dad".
Response : Adoption allegation denied. Elena had raised adoption and Mrs R had said that was not appropriate as she had a mother. Elena had spoken about adoption in response to comments from her mother along the lines that Elena would not be her daughter if she wanted to remain in England.
"Mum" and "dad" allegation partially accepted. There was no discouragement initially (Mrs and Mr R simply did not respond if Elena called them mum and dad). When the behaviour persisted, Mrs R obtained professional advice from a social worker and on advice, immediately put appropriate boundaries in place. Since that conversation, Elena understood and had since called Mrs and Mr R aunt and uncle.
(i) A financial interest. She said that in 2021, Mrs R had told their mother that their house in England was mortgaged and re-mortgaged with a condition that if the debt was not paid off in full after eight years, they would be evicted. However, in English law they could not be evicted if they had a minor in the house. Mrs and Mr R also got all sorts of benefits as a result of Elena living with them and these benefits took the financial burden off them.
(Pausing there, Mrs R told me that the mortgage is easily affordable for them (she and Mr R work full time), the value of the house exceeds the mortgage by some distance, and they receive £90 each month in child benefit. I am entirely satisfied that their actions in respect of Elena are not motivated by money).
(ii) Mrs R simply hated her. That could be because she had always lived in Ukraine near to their parents and had the chance to be close to them. Mrs R had never had that as she lived far away and she was jealous.
(iii) Revenge. Their mother had seen pictures of Mr R on the internet and told her that Mr R looked like Elena's father. This reminded the mother that when she and her late husband started dating, at around age 17, Mrs R liked him and maybe taking Elena was a form of revenge.
(iv) Child envy. The mother told me: "Mrs R wanted to have children but couldn't have any and maybe this is why she wanted to take my daughter away from me. I have a wonderful daughter who is intelligent, beautiful, smart and of course Mrs R was very happy when she got this child and doesn't need to change nappies and of course just wanted to keep her for herself."
(Mrs R told me, and I accept, that neither she nor her husband had ever had any desire to have children. They were childless by choice. The SGO application was prompted by Elena's needs, not a newfound wish on their part to acquire a child).
The Position of Ukraine
The Special Guardianship Order Application and Contact
Decision
Contact
"Let me meet my daughter and if I cannot change her mind then I will leave her alone and leave her with Mrs R. Until I see her whilst she keeps passing all this information to social workers, my mother's heart will never believe this. Mrs R doesn't let her see me because she knows my daughter will want to be with me."
"24/7 Mrs R puts this into my daughter's mind, she alters her reality. I wonder how she'll live with this. This is why I'm insisting on a return to me."
"I can give her an apology a thousand times, even for that which isn't true, and kneel in front of her – as a mother I know how to solve it – but I need to be able to see my daughter – she needs to be rebalanced to go into a zero state."
Conclusion