BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> AC v NC [2021] EWHC 946 (Fam) (21 April 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2021/946.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 946 (Fam) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
AC |
Applicant |
|
- and - |
||
NC |
Respondent |
____________________
Paul Edwards (instructed by Major Family Law) for the Respondent.
Hearing date: 14 April 2021
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was delivered in private. This anonymised version of the judgment has been prepared for publication on the BAILII website.
Mr Justice Mostyn:
"Upon finalization of Divorce, [NC] (Mother) and [K] (Child) will be relocating to the United Kingdom (UK), with agreement from [AC] (Father). We agree to Joint (50/50) Custody of Child, whereby Child will attend school in the United Kingdom, and have his school breaks in the USA with his Father."
"…ORDERED, that the parties be awarded joint legal custody of the minor child of the parties, namely [K], born on [a date in January] 2017; and it is further,
ORDERED, that the Plaintiff [the mother] shall be the primary residential custodian, with reasonable rights of parenting time granted to the Defendant [the father]; and it is further
ORDERED, that the Defendant shall have parenting time in accordance with the terms of the Written Settlement Agreement dated October 22, 2019; and it is further,
ORDERED, that the Written settlement [sic] agreement dated October 22, 2019 be incorporated, but not merged, into this Judgment…"
"The father was married to the mother of the child and the divorce was finalised on the 4/1/2020 which activated the custody and contact agreement made as part of the divorce proceedings within the court in [State A]. The mother has failed to keep her side of this agreement and the father filed an application for full custody in respect of the child in the court in [State A] and dated 29/10/2020 before he was aware of the ability to issue Hague proceedings which are now issued for the return of the child to the USA. It is disputed that the child is now habitually resident in England as the mother's solicitors have asserted in a letter to the father because permission to relocate to England was only made on the basis on the agreement which has not been adhered to by the mother."
The elementary rule
"It is not at all uncommon for there to be competing custody orders made in different jurisdictions, as there are here. Under the Convention, the tie-breaker is the habitual residence of the child. As the preamble to the Convention states, it was the desire of the States parties "to protect children internationally from the harmful effects of their wrongful removal or retention and to establish procedures to ensure their prompt return to the State of their habitual residence". Article 3 provides that:
'The removal or the retention of a child is to be considered wrongful where - (a) it is in breach of rights of custody attributed to a person, an institution or any other body, either jointly or alone, under the law of the State in which the child was habitually resident immediately before the removal or retention. . . .'
Hence it is common ground that the father can only succeed in his application under the Convention if K was habitually resident in the United States on either 31 July or 29 August 2012 when the mother's disobedience of the Texan order became wrongful."
"After the consent order of the Canadian judge [G] was permitted to live in England and left the jurisdiction of the Ontario court [with the mother]. Mr Turner accepted and there can be no doubt that she acquired an habitual residence in England during 1992 and well before the hearing in July 1992. Habitual residence of a child is not fixed but may change according to the circumstances of the parent or other principal carer with whom the child lives and who is lawfully exercising rights of custody. It may change within months or even weeks: see In re F. (A Minor) (Child Abduction) [1992] 1 FLR 548. When her mother came to England and was allowed to bring G with her, G's habitual residence changed to that of her mother and consequently she became habitually resident in this jurisdiction before the potential breach of access rights was known. If G were in the future to be wrongfully removed from England an application to the contracting state to which she was taken would be to return her to England as the state in which she was habitually resident before the wrongful removal. Canada would not be the country to which she would be returned. Equally on an application in respect of rights of access the relevant jurisdiction under Article 4 is the English court and not the Canadian court. The effect of the order of Judge Nevins is to transfer the primary control by a court over the child from Ontario to England and to put the English court in the driving seat."
The test for habitual residence
"Therefore, the answer to the second question is that the concept of "habitual residence" under Article 8(1) of the Regulation must be interpreted as meaning that it corresponds to the place which reflects some degree of integration by the child in a social and family environment. To that end, in particular the duration, regularity, conditions and reasons for the stay on the territory of a member state and the family's move to that state, the child's nationality, the place and conditions of attendance at school, linguistic knowledge and the family and social relationships of the child in that state must be taken into consideration. It is for the national court to establish the habitual residence of the child, taking account of all the circumstances specific to each individual case."
"I conclude that the modern concept of a child's habitual residence operates in such a way as to make it highly unlikely, albeit conceivable, that a child will be in the limbo in which the courts below have placed B. The concept operates in the expectation that, when a child gains a new habitual residence, he loses his old one. Simple analogies are best: consider a see-saw. As, probably quite quickly, he puts down those first roots which represent the requisite degree of integration in the environment of the new state, up will probably come the child's roots in that of the old state to the point at which he achieves the requisite de-integration (or, better, disengagement) from it."
And at [46]:
"The identification of a child's habitual residence is overarchingly a question of fact. In making the following three suggestions about the point at which habitual residence might be lost and gained, I offer not sub-rules but expectations which the fact-finder may well find to be unfulfilled in the case before him: (a) the deeper the child's integration in the old state, probably the less fast his achievement of the requisite degree of integration in the new state; (b) the greater the amount of adult pre-planning of the move, including pre-arrangements for the child's day-to-day life in the new state, probably the faster his achievement of that requisite degree; and (c) were all the central members of the child's life in the old state to have moved with him, probably the faster his achievement of it and, conversely, were any of them to have remained behind and thus to represent for him a continuing link with the old state, probably the less fast his achievement of it."
"The process of a change of habitual residence can happen quickly or slowly. The key, indeed only, question is whether by the relevant date that change has happened. This is a pure matter of fact. In answering the key question, the court examines the links to the previous state of habitual residence, the extent to which those links have ended, and the extent of the establishment of new links in the second state."
The father's case
Conclusions
Note 1 But not everyone agrees that a state of mind is a fact. See for example Leland v. Oregon, 343 US 790 (1952) where Frankfurter J wrote of “how vast a darkness still envelops man's understanding of man's mind” citing the famous dictum of the fifteenth century jurist Brian CJ that “the thought of man is not triable, for the devil himself knows not the thought of man” (YB 17 Ed IV 1). See however Greene v The King (1949) 79 CLR 353 where Latham CJ disputes this belief, holding that “it did not need recent developments in psychology to establish that states of mind are not only facts, but the most important facts in human life” and that “a doctrine which declines to regard a state of mind as a fact is to me completely incomprehensible.” [Back]