Showing posts with label Moore-Bicke. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Moore-Bicke. Show all posts

Saturday, 27 August 2011

Demographics, Leave to Remove and the Courts: The Ticking Time Bomb

A few years ago, leave to remove applications were comparitively rare when compared to other types of family law case (anecdotally, circa 1000 cases a year).

As reported in a number of broadsheet papers this week, the number of births in Britain to immigrant mothers is fast approaching 25% of all births. In London, it is already over 50%. In some boroughs, 75%.

You do not need to be a seer to realise that cases involving international relocation and abduction abroad are certain to increase and could overwhelm the courts and Foreign Office.

At the Custody Minefield, we're receiving more and more enquiries from parents seeking to prevent a leave to remove application. Already in 2011, we've experienced a 50% increase in our guides being viewed, compared to page views in all of 2010. A couple of years ago, emails about relocation cases mainly involved ones where emigration was a lifestyle choice. From what we're seeing in 2010, they more commonly involve a parent seeking to return to their country of birth, with cases involving returns to Europe, Eastern Europe, the USA, Canada, New Zealand, Australia and South America, but most commonly Poland and Pakistan. In all of these cases, the children had been born in the UK and had lived all their lives here.

About these latest birth statistics, shadow home secretary Dominic Grieve said: 'With births to foreign mothers becoming such a large driver of population growth, it is vital that immigration levels are set taking into account the ability of our schools, hospitals and other local services to cope.'

Have the Government or courts considered the impact on leave to remove applications and unlawful abductions abroad in the years which will follow?

The Family Justice Review Panel have specifically said that it is not within their remit to consider this area of law despite even senior members of the judiciary accepting the controversy that exists over the handling of these cases.

The Family Courts did review Payne v Payne earlier this year, which until that point was held to be both leading and binding case law in international child relocation cases. The review happened in the case K (Children) [2011] EWCA Civ 793, but was contradictory and inconclusive. The review followed much criticism that the courts paid too much attention to adult, rather than child welfare.

The review saw the courts slightly pull back somewhat from the adult centric guidance which had been followed since the Payne case. The Lord Justices of Appeal did not agree on which guidance should apply (depending on the particulars of the case), with Thorpe (Head of International Family Law) and Moore-Bick (Deputy Head of Civil Justice) holding that the guidance in Payne v Payne should not be a consideration where parents share care, while Lady Justice Black felt it should. All agreed that despite the controversy and criticism that the judge made guidance conflicts with Parliamentary statute, the guidance would still apply to cases where there was a primary carer.

Moore-Bick led us to believe that the only point of law ever to come from Payne v Payne was that child welfare must be the court's paramount consideration. Every family law case includes this point of law... so why was Payne considered binding precedent (as said to us by all preceeding Presidents of the Family Courts)? Why was it necessary to have this raised as a point in law, when that principle was laid out in statute? As a vanishing act, it wasn't particularly convincing, and rather than a white rabbit, the furry creature which Moore-Bick sought to make disappear was the judiciary having held adult welfare above child welfare in relocation cases which contravened the existing statute. The basis upon which relocation cases had been judged in the preceeding decade had 'contaminated the purity of the paramountcy principle' and due to the confused and contradictory ruling in K (Children), will continue to do so.

The main review point from the K (Children) judgment was that the wide ambit of judicial discretion should be unfettered, although this was muddied by the Lord Justices also saying that the guidance from Payne should be considered where there is a primary carer, and Lady Justice Black going further when she said it was useful in all external relocation cases. As a magic act, we were assured the rabbit had disappeared, but the head was clearly poking out of the magician's coat.

We are now seeing firms of solicitors asking for a £30,000 deposit from a parent needing representation in a case involving an international element, and their advising the parent that total costs could top £100,000. Why so much? The lack of detailed, child centric guidance and the inconsistency caused by the wide ambit of judicial discretion in considering these cases leads to lengthier and thus more expensive litigation.

This is compounded by the adversarial rather than inquisitorial nature of our family law system which leads to success being as much dependent on the skills of advocates and legal advisors as the facts of the case.

We believe the welfare checklist within the Children Act 1989 is too open to interpretation, and due to this, all family law cases concerning children become more uncertain, causing more lengthy litigation. Outcomes are inconsistent from court to court due to individual judicial discretion. We can only hope that at some point, the Government wakes up and considers the proposals that we and Families Need Fathers put forward to the Family Justice Review.

We are also seeing an increase in enquiries for information concerning unlawful child removals. Pakistan presents a particular problem in these circumstances. While an agreement exists between the UK and Pakistan courts setting out a protocol as to how these cases should be covered, the protocol was not ratified under Islamic law. One senior member of the legal profession in Pakistan commented that the UK/Pakistan Protocol was not worth the paper it was written on. Pakistan is not a signatory county to the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction, and consequently, there is little practical help available to parents in the UK whose children are unlawfully removed to Pakistan.

Statistics from the Foreign and Commonwealth Office confirm that in the last year, the instances of one parent abducting their children abroad have increased by 10% and believe more cases go unreported.

Their response? A campaign to warn parents of the risks and prevention steps, and an admission that the assistance they can give is limited once the children have left the country. The reason being they cannot interfere with the law in foreign countries (not even when the unlawfully abducted child is a British national?).

The clock is ticking, and harm being done while the Ministry of Justice sleeps. Sadly, it is probably only the explosion in cases that will wake them, and by then, it will be too late.

Saturday, 9 July 2011

A very British Coup - Payne Reviewed?

The following is of course a fictitious interpretation of what has recently happened in the Royal Courts of Justice, concerning the quite astonishing, and long overdue review (civil court rescue of its family court cousin?) concerning the binding precedent of Payne v Payne. We are of course not reviewing or interpreting or amending what was said in court. Our sincere respects to Lord Justice Moore-Bicke (would he mind staying a while!) and Lady Justice Black, and of course, to Lord Justice Matthew Thorpe, our Head of International Family Law.

MB
"Now look into my eyes...

Let me introduce myself. I'm a new boy to family law, s
o bear with me if I appear a little callow. Well yes, I may be Deputy Head of Civil Justice, but I'm only here by chance, just filling in for the day!

Let us remind ourselves that our President of the Family Courts said a review of Payne wasn't possible in the Court of Appeal, so of course, this isn’t what we’ll be doing in court today. Sir Nicholas was of course quite right that only the Supreme Court or Parliament could review binding precedent *mumble*... yes I'm aware that if Payne had been applied 'per incuriam' - without care - then of course the Court of Appeal could make corrections, but that's not why I've been parachuted in *cough*, I mean why I am here by chance today
[and if it is held that I have reviewed Payne, I've covered myself quite nicely at paragraph 79... note well Lord Falconer, this is why judges should have an advocacy background and not come from the lesser ranks!].

So let me be quite clear, this judgment I am handing down today, in this case K (Children) does not include a review of Payne, oh no, not in the slightest. I've simply passed some comments on Payne, I'm not reviewing it at all, and I am not contradicting our President of the Family Courts.

Payne of course remains as precedent, but only in so far as it raised a single point of law (
look into my eyes)..."that child welfare must be the court's paramount consideration" [which of course needed to be emphasised in 2001 as a point of law, given that some of my colleagues appear not to have understood what paramountcy means - looking at no-one in particular].

I am aware that some will say that I am rewriting the guidance in Payne (the Solicitors Journal), but they're quite mistaken... not at all what I'm doing, I'd just like you to consider that the entire family justice profession and judiciary, with the notable exceptions of Hedley J and Elias LJ, have misunderstood and misapplied Payne v Payne for the last 11 years [so glad I come from the civil courts!]

We'll avoid mentioning the thousands of British families affected. The children who
have subsequently lost contact with the parents left behind due the court's additional
naivety at blindly believing so many 'primary carers' that they will of course support
contact once beyond the UK court's grasp. No point mentioning the emotional, psychological and developmental harm which relocation risks inflicting on our children. We can't turn the clock back, and they're no longer within our jurisdiction, so they're not British children now, strictly speaking, or our responsibility.

Clearly, there is little point in apportioning blame, when the only way to sack those responsible would be to have both Houses of Parliament vote to remove them from office, and that has only happened once in 250 years. Parliament's attention is understandably focused elsewhere.
[Could the timing of this judgment have been any better... thank heavens for the News of the World!]

Let us also avoid Matthew's quoting of statistics, and the fact that the Equalities Commission found in 2008 that fathers and mothers share care almost equally in today's society, and it is only once the courts become involved that this falls from almost 50% to the 3% that Matthew just quoted to you.

Let us also avoid mentioning the likelihood of harm caused to children by the court's position for the last 40 years, and that Briefing Report and evidence submitted at Westminster last November by The Custody Minefield and Families Need Fathers which highlighted that these risks of harm have been known since 2002, yet it has taken concerted campaigning to get the family courts to remember that their raison d'etre is safeguarding child welfare and not dogmatic wrangling over protocol.


*Cough* Moving swiftly on, I believe it is a more sensible resolution to say
that, what you believed Payne v Payne to have meant, and how it bound you all
wasn't in the slightest what the Lord Justices intended... was it Matthew... just nod old chap!

...and of course the guidance must be 'followed', as the President of the Family Courts said recently), what he actually meant was 'considered', since aside from the sole point of law concerning the paramountcy principle, it just provides some jolly useful tips, which of course should be considered, but that guidance is merely guidance, it isn't actually binding you see, and never was!


There has however been a jolly unfortunate misunderstanding, and had it not been for Matthew's slight slip in 2007 which caused this fuss, of using super-glue to apply guidance as precedent, we could all be doing something else this afternoon.

...and of course Re Y should be heeded by the judiciary where care is shared as Matthew so rightly just reminded you [after our little chat].


With reference to his comment that Re Y will only affect a handful of cases, I refer you to Lady Justice Black.


Lady Justice Black peers over the top of her glasses and says [and I quote] ... 'I would not expect to find cases bogged down with arguments as to whether the time spent with each of the parents or other aspects of the care arrangements are such as to make the case "a Payne case" or "a Re Y case"'

(Is that clear Matthew)

So you've all been dreaming... you're in a better place... I'm going to count back now, 3.... 2..... 1.....
"

[Editor – ‘Does anyone remember that moment when Bobby Ewing stepped out of the shower and he hadn’t been murdered at all, 18 months before?']

A dream?
Peut-etre c'etait un cauchemar pour les enfants.

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