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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 >> Egeneonu v Egeneonu [2018] EWCA Civ 1714 (18 July 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/1714.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Civ 1714 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE FAMILY DIVISION
Mr Justice Cohen
FD13P02234
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE HENDERSON
and
LORD JUSTICE PETER JACKSON
____________________
LEVI NKEM EGENEONU | ||
and | ||
IJEOMA EGENEONU |
____________________
Brian Jubb (instructed by Bindmans LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 18 July 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Peter Jackson:
The background
a) Obtaining travel documents to enable him to leave the UK.
b) Leaving the UK and travelling to Nigeria.
c) Breaching a non-molestation undertaking in March 2014 by phoning the mother and saying he would never return the children from Nigeria, and putting pressure on the mother to withdraw her wardship application by making threats to her and her family.
d) Failing to produce the children and to return them to the UK by 14 February 2014.
e) Failing to book tickets to effect the return of the children.
f) Failing to attend three hearings in March 2014.
a) Harassment of the mother.
b) Failure to attend four hearings.
c) Failing to provide information or providing false information about the children's whereabouts.
The present committal application
1. Failure to inform Victor Egeneonu of the matters required by the order of Roberts J.
2. Failure to secure the return of the children as required by Cohen J.
3. Failure to secure the return of the children as required by Williams J.
4. Causing the child C in August 2017 to write a letter to the court with the intention of misleading the court about the children's wishes and feelings.
5. Sending a false statement of a witness to the court in August 2017.
6. Making false written statements about the whereabouts of the children, his ability to secure their return and his relationship with Victor Egeneonu.
This appeal
1. The children had not been unlawfully retained in Nigeria in 2013.
2. All counts but one (no. 4) were repetitions of matters for which sentence had already been passed in September 2017, creating double jeopardy.
3. The recordings of the conversations were improperly obtained and had at one point been said to be inadmissible by Williams J.
4. The translation was incompetent and lacked independence.
5. Williams J and Cohen J, both generally and in ignoring a Nigerian court order, showed racist bias. Cohen J should have recused himself.
6. As to count 1, he had obeyed the order to tell Victor Egeneonu that he wanted the children returned.
7. As to counts 2 and 3, he had no power to bring the children to England, given the attitude of the Nigerian authorities and family members.
8. As to count 4, the recording regarding this was misunderstood.
9. As to count 5, the statement had been signed by the person concerned.
10. The order was wrong and unjust. The case is based on fraud, violation of international justice and slavery. Mrs Egeneonu fraudulently claimed the children had been abducted in order to get UK benefits. The English court has no jurisdiction over Nigerian children. His imprisonment amounts to slavery.
Decision
- It is not open to Mr Egeneonu to argue on this appeal that the children were not unlawfully retained in Nigeria in 2013, when the High Court has repeatedly ordered their return on that very basis.
- Contrary to Mr Egeneonu's submission, the recordings were admitted by the interlocutory decision of Williams J, a decision that was not subject to appeal, and from which no appeal would have been likely to succeed.
- Cohen J carefully considered the reliability of the recordings, to the perhaps unprecedented extent of hearing from the translator himself, and he was fully entitled to conclude that they were overall dependable.
- There is no basis upon which we could depart from the judge's assessment of the evidence, and in particular his conclusion about Mr Egeneonu's ability to perform the orders. The recordings provided clear proof of the matters arising in the individual counts, for the reasons expressed in detail by the judge. The judge was entitled to conclude that any doubt about Mr Egeneonu's capacity to act was removed by his deliberate efforts to ensure that the orders were not obeyed.
- The issue of a Nigerian court order is one that Mr Egeneonu has raised before. For example, in a letter from a Nigerian lawyer in January 2018, there is a reference to proceedings in Nigeria in 2016, and an order "in favour of Mr Egeneonu and the children". None of the many judges who have heard Mr Egeneonu has been persuaded that such an order could provide a genuine excuse for his disobedience of the orders of the High Court, and Cohen J was fully entitled to take the same approach.
- The allegations of bias made against Williams J and Cohen J are groundless. Such allegations are another example of the bluster habitually employed by Mr Egeneonu. There was no basis upon which Cohen J could properly have recused himself.
"37. … As in the case of prohibitive injunctions, it must in my view be permissible as a matter of law for the court to make successive mandatory injunctions requiring positive action, such as the disclosure of information, notwithstanding a past failure to comply with an identical request. A failure to comply with any fresh order would properly expose the defaulter to fresh contempt proceedings and the possibility of a further term of imprisonment.
38. While such a course is legally permissible, the question of whether it is justified in a particular case will turn on the facts that are then in play. It will be for the court on each occasion to determine whether a further term of imprisonment is both necessary and proportionate."
Lord Justice Henderson:
Lady Justice Sharp