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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 >> AB v AN & Anor [2020] EWHC 2048 (Fam) (28 July 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2020/2048.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 2048 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
AB | Applicant | |
and | ||
AN | First Respondent | |
and | ||
BN | Second Respondent | |
and | ||
THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | Intervenor |
____________________
The First Respondent did not attend and was unrepresented
The Second Respondent did not attend and was unrepresented
Mr Rob Harland (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the Intervenor
Hearing dates: 10 July 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Lieven DBE :
Factual Background
"Dear [AN],
I am directed by the head of the family to formally write to you to present your daughter [EO] for circumcision in line with the culture and tradition of the family of [X] land. Despite series of calls and efforts by your Mother to [unclear] her for this crucial genital mutilation of which you know the importance and the consequence of not performing it to our family, you turned a deaf ear.
This letter serves as a formal reminder to present [EO] on/before July 21 2019. Otherwise the family is left with no option than to come and take her
Yours sincerely
for the family"
"At this point, against our family tradition and wish, [EO] had been taken away from our reach and she is now in the UK. We cannot oppose or consent to the British court to act in accordance with their laws. Unfortunately, we will not be able to attend the court proceeds even via video-link due to lack of infrastructure. So we hereby leave all the decisions to the court."
The case law
40. The challenge of the Secretary of State on this question, with respect, misses the point. Even if the evidence presented to the court and the tribunal is the same (at least on the FGM issue) and even if on that issue their different methods of risk evaluation might benefit the appellant (about which we express no concluded opinion), the context and nature of the decision-making process is materially different. A child or young person in proceedings in the family court for a FGM protection order will be separately represented. She will have her own voice. That is not the case in the tribunal in a case like this where a young person is not making her own asylum application but, like A, is the dependent of an adult who is. As we have remarked, whether a person's interests are a primary or paramount consideration can and sometimes does lead to a different decision on the same facts. Furthermore, the assessments of risk being conducted are different. That is not a question of proportionality, but rather is a reflection of the different focus and function of the statutory schemes.
41. Furthermore, in so far as it was suggested that the President failed to have regard to the argument we summarise above, that is difficult to accept given the reliance the President placed on the decision of Black LJ in Re H at the core of his reasoning. To recollect, Black LJ identified the establishment of risk in a family case as a two stage process, the first of which involves the court finding facts on the balance of probabilities before it evaluates risk, whereas an immigration and asylum tribunal considers humanitarian protection claims, inter alia, on the basis of a reasonable degree of likelihood of serious harm. We do not consider that the Secretary of State has established that the differences between these two methods of evaluation supports her appeal
42. As we indicated at the beginning of this judgment, Mr McKendrick appropriately limited in his oral submissions the challenge that the Secretary of State makes to the President's decision. In the discussion with counsel of the mischief that the Secretary of State sought to provide for, the relevance of part 25 of the Family Procedure Rules in the context of the family court's statutory function described in paragraph 2 of schedule 2 of the FGMA 2003, was explored. This provides a sufficient answer to the problem that it is said may arise.
43. When a family court comes to consider an issue upon which it is said a tribunal has already opined, including, for example, a tribunal's specialist view about third country risk, the relevance of the tribunal's conclusion, any intermediate findings of fact, and the nature and extent of the evidence upon which these are based will be examined as part of all the circumstances in accordance with paragraph 2 of schedule 2 of the FGMA 2003. Whether further evidence is required by the family court to undertake its separate function in respect of a FGM protection order will depend on the application of the test in rule 25.4(3) FPR which is whether the expert evidence is necessary to assist the court to resolve the proceedings. There is no need to add any gloss to that test. The application of the Rules in the context of the legislation already provides a solution to any asserted tendency not to have regard to what other courts or tribunals may have said on what may be a related issue.
55. Turning to the second issue, namely the role of the family court in assessing risk in FGMA proceedings where the risk has previously been assessed by the FTT, I am unable to accept the Secretary of State's submission that an FTT assessment must be the 'starting point' or default position for the court and that the court should only deviate from the FTT assessment if there is good reason to do so.
56.The Secretary of State's submission is not supported by any authority. In fact, as the helpful observations from Black LJ (as she then was) in Re H (see paragraph 32 above) demonstrate, the approach to risk assessment in a family case is a different exercise from that undertaken in the context of immigration and asylum. The family court has a duty by FGMA 2003, Schedule 2, paragraph 1(2) to 'have regard to all the circumstances' and, to discharge that duty, the court must consider all the relevant available evidence before deciding any facts on the balance of probability and then moving on to assess the risk and the need for an FGM protection order. Although the family court will necessarily take note of any FTT risk assessment, the exercise undertaken by a FTT is not a compatible process with that required in the family court. It is not therefore possible for an FTT assessment to be taken as the starting point or default position in the family court. The family court has a duty to form its own assessment, unencumbered by having to afford priority or precedence to the outcome of a similarly labelled, but materially different, process in the immigration jurisdiction.
"Making the child a party to proceedings is a step that will be taken only in cases which involve an issue of significant difficulty and consequently will occur only in a minority of cases."
"Dr Sumi Ratnam is an expert Psychiatrist. She can complete psychiatric assessment of the Mother, stating the effects that FGM has had on her, and the likely effects it will have on [EO]."