Showing posts with label Payne v Payne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Payne v Payne. Show all posts

Tuesday, 19 July 2011

Another first... Case Law for Kindle...FREE

Now you can read judgments on your kindle, ipad, iphone or tablet reader, using free kindle software.

We've especially formatted the leading case law on international child relocation (leave to remove) for viewing on Kindle readers and on other hardware using Amazon's free kindle reading software.

You'll need to download Amazon's free kindle software here to be able to open and read our Kindle format reference guides.

Click on the image above to download the case law, then copy it over to your preferred reading hardware and carry it with you to court, read it on the bus, in bed, or even on the loo!

Includes the new Re K (Children) judgment, Payne v Payne, Re Y and AR (Children).

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.

If you have a Kindle Reader, or have Kindle software on your IPAD, IPhone Android or Tablet, you can download this article, especially formatted for Kindle.

Click the article title below:

Payne Reviewed? A Very British Coup

More Kindle content will be coming soon from The Custody Minefield. Follow the blog, to find out when this content is being released.

To download Kindle software for your phone, PC or tablet, visit the following:

Kindle Software Applications

Wednesday, 16 June 2010

Mr Justice Mostyn - A new judge in old shoes?

In an already noteworthy career and at only 50 years old, Mr Justice Mostyn QC had carved a reputation as the top divorce lawyer in the country, one half of the dream team who represented Paul McCartney; intelligent, widely respected, and a barrister who made his opponents tremble.

Only appointed to the High Court on 20th April, in less than 2 months, the Honourable Mr Justice Mostyn has given a landmark judgment which makes extraordinary reading.

On June 10th 2010, Mostyn gave his judgment in a leave to remove case. I have read many judgments, but none like this. This was remarkable.

Those who have followed my work will know I have been campaigning against the current application of legal precedent in leave to remove cases. The architect of that current 'binding' precedent is Lord Justice Thorpe. I believe Thorpe's reasoning in Payne to be ill-considered, unscientific, lacking in substance, and counter to the principles of the Children Act. I believe it has caused harm to thousands of British children. Sir Bob Geldof, who wrote the foreword in my Parliamentary Briefing Report on Relocation had the same opinion, and went further:

“The court is entirely informed by outdated social engineering models and contemporary attitudes rather than fact, precedent rather than common sense and modish unproven nostrums rather than present day realities. It is a disgraceful mess. A farrago of cod professionalism and faux concern largely predicated on nonsensical social guff, mumbo-jumbo and psycho-babble. Dangling at the other end of this are the lives of thousands of British children.”

You might expect the newly appointed Mr Justice Mostyn to be conservative in his opinions. You might expect him to be a traditionalist, reserved, not wishing to rock the boat. You would be wrong. His judgment, his opinion on Thorpe's guiding precedent in relocation cases was nothing short of ruthless. His reasoning cuts through the social guff and mumbo-jumbo that has beset leave to remove judgments under Thorpe’s guidance.

In 2008 as a QC, Mostyn came before Lord Justice Thorpe in a relocation case arguing against Thorpe’s own precedent with, in his own words ‘no little personal conviction’. The arguments were firmly repelled by Thorpe, and the orthodoxy of Payne v Payne reaffirmed. As any who have come up against Thorpe in a leave to remove case will know, Thatcher-like, the man ‘is not for turning’.

Two years on, with an international convention of judges having met in Washington in March and confirmed a child centred approach to deciding relocation cases, Mr Justice Mostyn went for the jugular. He clearly reasons out why the ideology in Payne v Payne is wrong. He cites the urgent need for the ideology in Payne v Payne to be reviewed in the Supreme Court. He turns the tables on 40 years of precedent, bringing child welfare back to the fore. In a single judgment, a herd of misguided sacred cows are slain. He reaffirms the desirability of shared parenting, questions the need for supervised contact where there is no evidence of risk, he reminds us of the child's Convention Right to Family Life, he reaffirms the paramountcy principle.

With such public criticism by the High Court of the Court of Appeal’s guidance, and that criticism having been so intelligently reasoned through, an urgent review by the Supreme Court has become a necessity.

Popular and controversial, Lord Denning was perhaps the last great judge, prepared to overturn what he considered to be ‘bad law’ in the pursuit of justice. It may be that Denning’s long vacant shoes have a new owner.

Download the full judgment here


Sunday, 13 June 2010

A Generic Submission challenging Payne v Payne

Now published as a downloadable pdf on the home page of www.thecustodyminefield.com, the legal arguments for a challenge to Payne v Payne at appeal in the Royal Courts of Justice - the format provided is a submission for a permission to appeal hearing before Lord Justices of Appeal.

You will notice that the main thrust of this generic submission is in circumstances where the trial judge relied on the guidance of Payne v Payne (which they are ‘bound’ to do), and that that guidance affords too little weight to contemporary scientific child welfare research which highlights potential emotional, psychological and developmental harm which a child is likely to suffer when denied substantial involvement from both parents in their day-to-day care. Further, that Payne v Payne affords great weight to the distress argument, despite there being no scientific evidence to support the assumption that refusal of a leave to remove application will so adversely impact the primary carer that it will cause harm to the children. Further, that LJ Thorpe, in Payne v Payne, did not accept that the comparative importance of fathers had changed in 30 years as no authorities were presented by counsel to support such a finding. In this submission, we highlight a number of research authorities which have been published in the years following the judgment in Payne v Payne.

Wednesday, 26 May 2010

What's going on

It's been a while since I've updated my blog, but I've been busy.

We've had a campaign to change the law on leave to remove. An early day motion (EDM373) with 58 Members of Parliament supporting us, our Parliamentary Briefing Report with Bob Geldof's foreword, and our arguments to change the law accepted as being 'compelling in the right case' by Lord Justice Wall.

The main Custody Minefield website has been fully upgraded, with new sections including:

  • Electronic Guides on Leave to Remove and Applying for an Emergency Protection Order;
  • Templates for Court Forms;
  • MSWord Templates for documents for court including a position statement, statement, documents for a court bundle, a skeleton argument and a scott schedule;
  • A recommended books page;
  • Research supporting the benefits of shared care.

Currently being worked on are e-Guides on applying for a Shared Residence Order and Applying to Enforce Contact.

Have a look...

www.thecustodyminefield.com

We're currently averaging between 4,000 and 5,000 visits each month, and many of our factsheets are now ranked no.1 on Google.