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McDonald v Sanchez [2024] NZHC 2110 (31 July 2024)

Last Updated: 24 October 2024

NOTE: PURSUANT TO S 139 OF THE CARE OF CHILDREN ACT 2004, ANY REPORT OF THIS PROCEEDING MUST COMPLY WITH SS 11B, 11C AND 11D OF THE FAMILY COURT ACT 1980. THIS IS AN ANONYMISED VERSION OF THE JUDGMENT. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE
IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND INVERCARGILL REGISTRY
I TE KŌTI MATUA O AOTEAROA WAIHŌPAI ROHE
CIV-2023-425-115
[2024] NZHC 2110
UNDER
the Care of Children Act 2003
IN THE MATTER
of an appeal against a decision of the Family Court at Queenstown
BETWEEN
McDONALD
Appellant
AND
SANCHEZ
Respondent
Hearing:
23 April 2024
Counsel:
J G D Guest and K P Lane for Appellant
I M Blackford and J M Gandy for Respondent S N van Bohemen Lawyer for Children
Judgment:
31 July 2024

JUDGMENT OF OSBORNE J

Introduction

  1. Sanchez v McDonald [2023] NZFC 12247 [Judgment]. The names of the parties have been anonymised in this judgment, as have the names of associated entities.

McDONALD v SANCHEZ [2024] NZHC 2110 [31 July 2024]

(a) the children’s habitual residence at the date of their allegedly unlawful retention in New Zealand (found to be 16 December 2022) was Spain;

(b) the appellant had established (pursuant to s 106(1)(d) of the Act) the children objected to being returned and that it was appropriate to give serious consideration to their views;

(c) the appellant had not established (pursuant to s 106(1)(b)(ii) of the Act) that the respondent had “consented to or later acquiesced in the removal” of the children;

(d) the appellant had not established (pursuant to s 106(c)) there was a grave risk the children’s return to Spain would expose them to psychological harm or otherwise place them in an intolerable situation; and

(e) the appropriate course in the exercise of the Family Court’s discretion was to make an order for the return of the children to Spain.

2 Hague XXVIII (opened for signature 25 October 1980, entered into force, 1 December 1).

The parties

Chronology

(a) The relevant Spanish provincial law would govern their divorce in relation to parental responsibilities and child maintenance matters and they would submit to the jurisdiction of the Spanish Courts;

(b) The children’s care would be shared on a week-about basis for most of the year with longer periods in the summer and Christmas and Easter holidays; and

(c) From January 2020, the parties would move to New Zealand with the children for one year. In January 2021, the children would move to Spain to permanently establish their residence there.

(a) the children were to travel to New Zealand with Mr McDonald for the period of one year, approximately, from 1 November 2021 to completion of the New Zealand 2022 school year;

(b) if Ms Sanchez travelled to New Zealand, Mr McDonald was to pay her financial support;

(c) if Ms Sanchez did not travel to New Zealand, a visiting regime was to be established for Ms Sanchez and the children and she was to pay Mr McDonald financial support;

(d) the children were to be returned to Spain in late 2022; and

(e) after the return of the children to Spain, the provisions of the 22 February 2017 order were to apply.

Neither parent has been living and working in Spain this year and I can advise that we will not be departing on the 18th to Spain.

including an email from Ms Sanchez on 24 January 2023. (These exchanges led to Mr McDonald’s unsuccessful assertion in the Family Court that Ms Sanchez had acquiesced in the children not returning to Spain, a ground no longer pursued by Mr McDonald).

The legislation and the statutory provisions

Purpose of the Convention

Firmly convinced that the interests of children are of paramount importance in matters relating to their custody.

Desiring 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, as well as to secure protection for rights of access.

(a) to secure the prompt return of children, wrongfully removed to or retained in any Contracting State; and

3 Punter v Secretary for Justice [2006] NZCA 533; [2007] 1 NZLR 40, (2006) 25 FRNZ 327 [Punter 2].

(b) to ensure that rights of custody and of access under the law of one Contracting State are effectively respected in the other Contracting States.

4 Andersen v Lewis [2023] NZHC 390 at [12].

thorough investigation of those interests.5 Professor Mark Henaghan and Christian Poland have observed:6

The primary purpose of the ... Convention ... is to stop parties from forum shopping, when decisions go against them in foreign jurisdictions. The flipside is that courts should respect the foreign courts to make decisions about children in their own jurisdictions, that are in the children’s best interests.

  1. The Court of Appeal in LRR v COL has explained the operation of s 4(4) in these terms:7

Section 4(4) does not disapply s 4(1). Rather, s 4(4) makes it clear that the requirement to determine such proceedings speedily, and to return a child promptly if no exception is made out, is not limited by s 4(1). The inquiry into the best interests of the child must be approached in the manner contemplated by ss 105 to 107. But it remains the case that the welfare and best interests of the child are, as the United Kingdom Supreme Court put it in Re E, at the forefront of the whole exercise. The outcome does not turn on the interests of the parents or guardians of the child, or for that matter of the relevant Central Authorities or States.

  1. Secretary for Justice v HJ (2006) 27 FRNZ 212 (SC) per McGrath J at [131]. See also Re E (Children) Abduction: Custody Appeal [2011] UKSC 27 [2012] IAC 144 [Re E] at [13]: “There is no provision expressly requiring the court hearing a Hague Convention case to make the best interests of the child its primary consideration ... These are not proceedings in which the upbringing of the child is in issue. They are proceedings about where the child should be when that issue is decided, whether by agreement or in legal proceedings between the parents or in any other way”.
  2. Mark Henaghan and Christian Poland “How New Zealand Courts Approach Difficult Hague Convention Cases” in Margaret Brinig (ed) International Survey of Family Law (Intersentia, 2021) 357 at 370.

7 LRR v COL [2020] NZCA 209, [2020] 2 NZLR 610 at [83].

Article 3

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; and

b) at the time of removal or retention those rights were actually exercised, either jointly or alone, or would have been so exercised but for the removal or retention.

The rights of custody mentioned in sub-paragraph a) above, may arise in particular by operation of law or by reason of a judicial or administrative decision, or by reason of an agreement having legal effect under the law of that State.

Article 4

The Convention shall apply to any child who was habitually resident in a Contracting State immediately before any breach of custody or access rights. The Convention shall cease to apply when the child attains the age of 16 years.

Section 105 of the Act

  1. Application to court for return of child abducted to New Zealand

(1) An application for an order for the return of a child may be made to a court having jurisdiction under this subpart by, or on behalf of, a person who claims—

(a) that the child is present in New Zealand; and

(b) that the child was removed from another Contracting State in breach of that person’s rights of custody in respect of the child; and

(c) that at the time of that removal those rights of custody were actually being exercised by that person, or would have been so exercised but for the removal; and

(d) that the child was habitually resident in that other Contracting State immediately before the removal.

8 P R Beaumont and P E McEleavy (ed) The Hague Convention on International Child Abduction

(Oxford University Press, 1999) at Appendix 1.

(2) Subject to section 106, a court must make an order that the child in respect of whom the application is made be returned promptly to the person or country specified in the order if—

(a) an application under subsection (1) is made to the court; and

(b) the court is satisfied that the grounds of the application are made out.

...

Section 4 of the Act

Section 106 of the Act

  1. Grounds for refusal of order for return of child

(1) If an application under section 105(1) is made to a court in relation to the removal of a child from a Contracting State to New Zealand, the court may refuse to make an order under section 105(2) for the return of the child if any person who opposes the making of the order establishes to the satisfaction of the court—

(a) that the application was made more than 1 year after the removal of the child, and the child is now settled in his or her new environment; or

(b) that the person by whom or on whose behalf the application is made—

(i) was not actually exercising custody rights in respect of the child at the time of the removal, unless that person establishes to the satisfaction of the court that those custody rights would have been exercised if the child had not been removed; or

(ii) consented to, or later acquiesced in, the removal; or

(c) that there is a grave risk that the child’s return—

(i) would expose the child to physical or psychological harm; or

(ii) would otherwise place the child in an intolerable situation; or

(d) that the child objects to being returned and has attained an age and degree of maturity at which it is appropriate, in addition to taking them into account in accordance with section 6(2)(b), also to give weight to the child’s views; or

(e) that the return of the child is not permitted by the fundamental principles of New Zealand law relating to the protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms.

Section 105(1)(a) — children present in New Zealand

Section 105(1)(b) — breach of rights of custody

Section 105(1)(c) — exercise of custodial rights

Date of retention of the children

(Punter 1),9 that it was not possible for retention to occur until the lawful period for the children to be in New Zealand had expired.

Habitual residence

The law

9 Punter v Secretary for Justice [2003] NZCA 306; [2004] 2 NZLR 28 (CA) [Punter 1].

10 See Secretary for Justice v SB (Retention: Habitual Residence) [2006] NZFLR 1027 (HC) at 41; AHC v CAC FC Auckland FAM-2010-004-2326, 7 January 2011 at [36]; RCL v APBL [2012] NZHC 1292 at 25. See also Punter 1, above n 9, at per Blanchard P at [38]–[39].

11 Save that under the interpretation provision, s 95 of the Act, there is a definition dealing peculiarly with a Contracting State that has two or more systems of law applicable in different units (not relevant here).

Child Abduction Convention: A Critical Analysis.12 Dr Schuz identified two main models used by various courts, being the parental intention (parental rights model) and the independent (child-centred model). Dr Schuz identified that by 2014 there had been attempts by Judges in some jurisdictions, including New Zealand and Israel, to combine the two models in a way similar to that recommended by Dr Schuz in a 2001 article.13

In SK v KP, the inquiry into habitual residence was held, at [80], to be a broad factual inquiry. Such an inquiry should take into account all relevant factors, including settled purpose, the actual and intended length of stay in a State, the purpose of the stay, the strength of ties to the State and to any other State (both in the past and currently), the degree of assimilation into the State, including living and schooling arrangements, and cultural, social and economic integration. In this catalogue, SK v KP held that settled purpose (and with young children the settled purpose of the parents) is important but not necessarily decisive. It should not in itself override what McGrath J called, at [22], the underlying reality of the connection between the child and the particular State:

[22] There is also support for the proposition that the Court should be slow to infer a change in habitual residence in the absence of shared parental attempt to bring it about, this reflecting the weight attached to parental intention under the Convention: Zenel v Haddow 1993 SLT

  1. R Schuz (ed) The Hague Child Abduction Convention: A Critical Analysis (Hart Publishing, Oregon 2013) at Chapter 8.
  2. At 186, citing R Schuz, Habitual Residence of Children under the Hague Child Abduction Convention — Theory and Practice (2001) 13 Child and Family Law Quarterly 1.

14 SK v KP [2005] NZCA 443; [2005] 3 NZLR 590, (2005) 24 FRNZ 518 (CA).

  1. SK v KP, above n 14, citing re M (Minors) (Residence Order: Jurisdiction) 1993 1 FLR 495 (CA) at 499.
  2. A v A (Children: Habitual Residence) (Re A (Jurisdiction: Return of Child)) [2013] UKSC 60, [2014] AC 1, per Lady Hale at [54(vii)].

17 Punter 2, above n 3, at [88].

975 at p 979. The decision of the Court on habitual residence must, however, in the end always reflect the underlying reality of the connection between the child and the particular state. Obviously there will be circumstances in which having been considered the facts indicate to the Court that all the circumstances of the case rather indicate this underlying reality.

[95] Schuz acknowledges the possibility of combining the parental rights and independent or child-centred models in a hybrid model. Under this model, habitual residence may be acquired either by residence for an appreciable period (ie objective factors) or by residence for a shorter period of time accompanied by a settled purpose. The phrase “residence for an appreciable period” should, in her view, be interpreted in accordance with the objectives of the Convention. What is required is sufficient time for, in the light of the respective connections with the relevant countries, the new country to have become the forum conveniens and/or to have created a situation where removal from that country is likely to cause the child the sort of harm usually associated with intentional child abductions.

[106] In our view, the SK v KP formulation of the test accords appropriate significance to parental purpose in line with Lord Brandon's statement of principle. At the same time, by requiring all of the relevant factual circumstances to be weighed alongside the consideration of settled purpose, the test in SK v KP accords with the need to ensure that the concept of habitual residence remains a factual one not limited by presumptions or presuppositions – see Dicey and Morris (at 152). As pointed out by Schuz, the pure parental rights model (as postulated by Mr Pidgeon) does not meet this aim. We also endorse Schuz’s other comments on that model – see at [94] above. We also prefer the SK v KP formulation to that in Mozes, where, in our view, the Court put too much emphasis on parental purpose, thus obscuring the factual nature of the inquiry. The SK v KP formulation also accords with what is said in Dicey and Morris. The authors (at 150) say that the element of settled purpose is not necessarily determinative, and that the better view is that

18 SK v KP, above n 14, at [73]–[75].

  1. At [75]; Punter 2, above n 4, at [88] and [188]; Basingstoke v Groot [2007] NZFLR 363 (CA) at [28].

20 Punter 2, above n 3, at [95].

21 At [106].

evidence of intention may be important in particular cases, for example in establishing habituation when the actual period or periods of residence have been short.

(citations omitted)

In summary the assessment of whether a particular country is a child’s habitual residence is a factual inquiry, necessarily tailored to the particular circumstances of the individual case. Parental purpose may be a factor, but it is not determinative. The focus is on the actual situation of the child, and his or her connection with and integration in the relevant country.

22 LRR v COL, above n 8, at [88].

23 Langdon v Wyler [2017] NZHC 2535 at [14].

24 Basingstoke v Groot, above n 20.

The judgment — habitual residence

25 Kerslake v Wilson [2022] NZFC 8611 at [21]–[33].

(a) the children had strong ties to Spain, having lived there for five years on a shared-care (week-about) basis from respectively, age 6–11 and 4– 9;

(b) only Andrew would have had any lingering memories of having previously lived in New Zealand;

(c) the children were clearly habitually resident in Spain when they left for New Zealand in November 2021;

(d) habitual residence in Spain was not immediately lost on departure to New Zealand as New Zealand was never intended to be a place of permanent residence;

(e) a number of factors could have led to Andrew and Sophia obtaining habitual residence in New Zealand without difficulty, including some conscious memory of New Zealand on the part of Andrew; the presence of paternal family members in New Zealand; previous lengthy holiday periods in New Zealand and a familiarity with the environment; the children’s New Zealand citizenship and their fluency in English; and the fact their father is a native New Zealander;

(f) there remain indications the children see themselves as closely connected to both Spain and New Zealand, including their reference to themselves as “Spiwis” (that is, Spanish Kiwis);

(g) their fluency in Spanish and some competency in Catalan;

(h) their support of sporting teams in both countries;

(i) the circumstances and terms on which the children came to New Zealand were relevant, namely that Spanish Court orders were very specific, over Ms Sanchez’s opposition, requiring the period of stay to be from November 2021 until the end of the 2022 New Zealand school year, following which the children were to be returned to Spain;

(j) the Spanish order is relevant not because it impacts on the New Zealand Court but as a part of the wider factual matrix and circumstances under which the children came to New Zealand, namely a “strictly temporary time-limited impermanent move”, authorised over their mother’s opposition and a concern that, if their father came to New Zealand, he would not return the children;

(k) taking Mr McDonald at his word (as given in the Spanish appeal hearing), Mr McDonald also viewed the arrangement as a temporary, time-limited move;

(l) the children must also have known the move was temporary, time- limited and they likely knew their parents were arguing in Court about whether they would be allowed to leave for New Zealand and that their departure to New Zealand was subsequently authorised on a finite basis;

(m) the children, at their ages, would have understood concepts of time and that their return to Spain was not at some undefined time;

(n) the stay in New Zealand was intended as something more than a “holiday” but was never intended to be permanent or even undefined;

(o) the fact that the children’s stay was temporary and would end on a clearly defined date, and this was known to the children, makes it harder to establish the children’s habitual residence had become New Zealand;

(p) the children are settled and enjoyed their New Zealand residence — but (to their knowledge) the stay was temporary and would end on a set date, as opposed to their having become established in this place and “putting down roots”;

(q) there is some similarity between the children’s situation with that of a child who spends a year overseas on an educational exchange programme, during which they experience a range of schooling, developing friendships, engagement with the cultural and sporting activities and developing personal relationships; and

(r) the children had in New Zealand involvement with their extended paternal family, but it was always on a temporary basis.

closer to the children. The Judge did not view her temporary arrangements in Sydney as significantly altering the children’s connection with Spain.

Children’s objections to return

The law

(a) the reasons for the objection;

(b) whether the reasons are valid and well-founded;

(c) the strength of the view;

(d) the age and maturity of the child;

(e) relevant surrounding circumstances; and

  1. Re J (Abduction: Child’s Objection to Return) [2004] EWCA Civ 428, [2004] 2 FLR 64, CA at [61], quoting Re T (Abduction: Child’s Objection to Return) [2000] 2 FLR 204.
(f) to what extent the child’s views are shaped or coloured by undue influence or pressure, directly or indirectly exerted by the abducting parent.

The children’s views in this case

  1. ... school in Spain during and post-Covid required long periods of distance learning and then, when they returned to school, they had to have social distancing in the class room and wear masks and they had not liked that;

d) That school in New Zealand on arrival was very different (ie no social distancing, no masks) and that they liked that ...

  1. It appeared to me from my 1:1 meeting with her that Sophia was very keen not to be disloyal to either of her parents. When I asked her what she would do if she was the boss, she said that she did not want to “be the boss” or to decide where she and [Andrew] should live.
  1. My notes of her views were:

a) She “loves” living where she is. Her reasons included:

  1. She, [Andrew] and Mr [McDonald] live in a neighbourhood where there are lots of neighbours, dogs, horses and animals.
  1. She knows all the people in the neighbourhood;
  1. She can bike to visit the neighbours and also into their [NZ residence];
  1. their [NZ residence] school is big, friendly, there is lots of grass and it is not “locked up” (in contrast to her school in [a large city in Spain]);
  1. She has lots of activities (she told me about soccer and cross country in particular);

b) For the most part she has enjoyed her mother’s 3 visits to see them in [town] but they can be “stressful” because she (Ms [Sanchez]) talks to her about going to live with her in Spain;

c) Sometimes [Sophia] does not like her calls with her mother. Her reasons were that sometimes Ms [Sanchez] cries and gets “hyped-up” and that makes [Sophia] feel unhappy.

d) Her views about her family/friends/neighbourhood /school in Spain included:

  1. That she occasionally messages and talks to her aunt and grandmother in Spain;
  1. That she hadn’t talked to her friends in Spain for “months”
  1. That there were “high gates” around the school;
  1. The neighbourhood did not feel safe (in contrast to how she felt about the neighbourhood in [their NZ residence]);

e) That she could not understand why Mum does not want to come to New Zealand (to live)

f) That if the Court decided she and [Andrew] were to stay in New Zealand she would be happy because she likes it here; there is “more nature”; she has friends; she lives with grandma and there are animals. But she said she would also be sad if that meant that her mother went back to Spain. [Sophia] said she would “feel both emotions”.

g) That if the Court decided she and [Andrew] were to return to Spain she would feel happy to be with her Mum, but sad if Dad didn’t come back and upset if she had to live in apartment, without animals.

  1. Before I conducted my meeting with [Sophia] we reviewed my notes and she agreed to me passing her views to the parties/the Court.
  1. [Andrew] was more forthcoming with his preference to live in [their NZ residence], not [a large city in Spain]. My notes of his reasons for that are:

a) It is “freer” here. If he wants to visit friends he can go and do that on his bike – something he said he could not do in the middle of [a large city in Spain]

b) He has friends here: he talked about Jack, Flynn and Josh;

  1. School in New Zealand is more relaxed than in Spain;

d) He is excited about the prospect of attending ... High School next year. He has visited the school and likes it, he is interested in learning Tech, drawing and Japanese there;

  1. I asked [Andrew] if felt like the “new kid” or if he had “fitted in” to life in New Zealand. He assured me he did not feel like the new kid and that he fitted in.
  1. My notes of when [Andrew] talked about his parents included:

a) That Mum’s visits to New Zealand had been too short;

b) He did not know what his mother would do if he and [Sophia] lived in New Zealand;

  1. He knows that his father does not want to go back to Spain where he does not have a house or family.
  1. My notes of when I asked [Andrew] what he would do if he were “the boss” were

a) He would decide that he and [Sophia] would live in New Zealand;

b) It would be “perfect” if Mum came to live in New Zealand;

  1. It would be “nice” if Mum stayed in Australia and continued to visit and he and [Sophia] were able to visit her there.
  1. At the end of the meeting I reviewed my notes with [Andrew] and he agreed to me reporting his views to his parents and the Court.

The judgment — the children’s objections

[122] They are able to clearly articulate what they like better about New Zealand than Spain. The children are happy and settled in New Zealand. They are in the care of their father. They are supported by paternal family, particularly their grandmother. They are doing well at school. They report having positive peer relationships. They live in what many would consider an idyllic rural/urban lifestyle in a genuinely beautiful place.

[208] I am satisfied their objections are rational and reasonable and readily understandable. The children’s views are the result of their positive experiences in New Zealand probably combined with the unusual COVID- affected environment in Spain immediately prior to their departure.

The discretion under s 106 of the Act

The law

It is not the function of the requested State to conduct a wide-ranging inquiry into the best interests of the child. But the prompt and focused inquiry required by the provisions of the Convention is designed to ensure that the outcome does serve the interests of the particular child. As Baroness Hale said in Re D:33

27 Secretary for Justice v HJ [2006] NZSC 97, [2007] 2 NZLR 289 [HJ].

28 At [53].

29 At [50].

30 At [50].

31 LRR v COL, above n 7, at [99], [148].

32 At [79].

  1. Re D (Abduction: Rights of Custody) [2006] UKHL 51, [2007] 1 AC 619 at [52]. See also the discussion of the relevance of the interests of the child in the Explanatory Report that accompanies

... No one intended that an instrument designed to secure the protection of children from the harmful effects of international child abduction should itself be turned into an instrument of harm.

[144] While the provisions of the Act which give effect to the obligations of the Hague Convention are expressly not limited by the fundamental statutory principle set out in s 4(1) — that the welfare and best interests of a child in his or her particular circumstances must be the first and paramount consideration in proceedings under the Act — and the best interests of the child are not expressly made a primary consideration in Hague Convention proceedings, that does not mean they are not “at the forefront of the whole exercise”.35 If the assumption that the best interests of the child will ordinarily be served by returning a child to the country where they are habitually resident can be displaced by one of the statutory exceptions, that must only be because the particular circumstances of that child are such, that considerations relating to their welfare and best interests will best be served by them remaining where they are until the dispute between their parents is resolved.

The judgment — exercise of the discretion

the Convention: Elisa Pérez-Vera Explanatory Report on the 1980 Hague Child Abduction Convention (Hague Conference Permanent Bureau, Madrid, April 1981) at [23]–[25], [29], and [116].

34 Andersen v Lewis, above n 4.

35 Care of Children Act 2004, [COCA] s 4(4); Re E, above n 5, at [14]. (The “forefront of the whole exercise” reference in Re E was adopted by the Court of Appeal in LRR v COL, above n 7, at [83].)

he noted, if other exceptions are established, the discretion may require careful consideration.

[212] Section 4 of the Act makes the welfare and best interests of children in their particular circumstances the first and paramount consideration in proceedings under the Act. Section 4(4)(a) also says the section “does not limit” that part of the Act which deals with Hague Convention applications. However, that does not mean that welfare and best interest considerations are irrelevant to Hague Convention proceedings. LRR v COL said they should be at the “forefront” of the Court’s considerations.36

36 LRR v COL, above n 7, at [83]. This is a reference to the passage in the judgment in LRR v COL

which is set out above at [30].

(a) he accepted the children’s return to Spain would be a major change and challenging for them whereas remaining in New Zealand would be less disruptive to their current lives;

(b) he found no evidence that return would be deeply traumatising for them or give rise to a grave risk of psychological harm;

(c) it is a matter of concern that Ms Sanchez, during the period the children have been in New Zealand, has had no meaningful role in their day-to- day care and only limited physical contact (on four occasions with them);

(d) Mr McDonald, for unclear reasons, has refused to let the children leave New Zealand to visit Ms Sanchez in Australia;

(e) even the limited contact Ms Sanchez has had with the children in New Zealand has at times been unsatisfactory;

(f) there has been frequent remote contact by AVL but, even then, Ms Sanchez has had difficulties in speaking to the children when she expected to;

(g) the children have had a glaring absence of their mother in their lives, at least physically, while living in New Zealand, at a time when Mr McDonald has had primary care and control over the children’s movements and contact;

(h) the negotiations for both physical and remote contact have been characterised by high conflict between the adults, making satisfactory arrangements difficult;

(i) the situation that has existed in New Zealand can be contrasted with the children’s lives in Spain, where their care was shared, with both parents having significant and substantial care and contact through a five-year period, with no evidence of major difficulties over shared care;

(j) the Judge was not in a position to know whether, if the children were primarily in Ms Sanchez’s care in Spain and Mr McDonald at a distance, the same difficulties over contact would occur.

fundamental objectives being to establish an international order under which there would be certainty about return.

(a) if he did not make an order for return in the present case, it was difficult to see how any court in any jurisdiction could have confidence that children would be returned at the end of a permitted period overseas (particularly a longer period) if the travelling parent were to change their mind and refuse to return the children;

(b) Mr McDonald’s argument boiled down to the proposition that the Court should exercise its discretion to refuse return because the children have enjoyed their time in New Zealand, are settled in New Zealand, and do not wish to return to Spain;

(c) that proposition could not be correct because, otherwise, courts (including the New Zealand courts), when making decisions to approve travel, could not have confidence the children would be returned. It

could be predicted courts would become reluctant to agree to children spending extended periods abroad; and

(d) the likely destination to which the children would travel overseas with one parent is the country of that parent’s origin where his or her extended family will be, as in this case. If courts become reluctant to sanction longer periods overseas, children could be denied opportunities in relation to that parent’s culture and background and the forging of deeper relationships that are involved in such travel. The Judge considered that not a desirable outcome.

[122] ...Frankly, their objection to return to Spain and their corresponding desire to remain in New Zealand is entirely understandable and rational. They are able to clearly articulate what they like better about New Zealand than Spain. The children are happy and settled in New Zealand. They are in the care of their father. They are supported by paternal family, particularly their grandmother. They are doing well at school. They report having positive peer relationships. They live in what many would consider an idyllic rural/urban lifestyle in a genuinely beautiful place.

...

caregiver since November 2021. Ms Sanchez has had very limited face-to- face contact with the children since then. Just after this hearing, she was to undertake her fourth visit to New Zealand to spend time with the children during the school holidays. Her face-to-face contact has been limited to four such holiday periods over a timespan now of almost two years. The most frequent contact she has with the children is remote contact by AVL and social media (although she alleges difficulties with that also).

...

[193] Given the above catalogue of very significant changes for the children, I am readily prepared to accept there may be some risk to their “happiness”, level of settlement and their general wellbeing on their return to Spain, especially initially. They will be without their father who has been their primary caregiver. They will move into the care of their mother. They do not wish to return and their opposition might be stronger than it appears on its face. They are settled and happy in New Zealand and have some memories of life in Spain they are not enthusiastic about.

[195] Mr Guest invites me to accept, as a matter of common sense, there are potential psychological implications for the children if ordered to return. I do accept that. I agree it is a matter of common sense that with such major changes in the children’s lives, return will be a challenging and unsettling time for them.

Approach on appeal

  1. This discussion in the context of the impact, should the children return to Spain, on contact with their father.

38 Austin, Nichols & Co Inc v Stichting Lodestar [Austin, Nichols] [2007] NZSC 103, [2008] 2 NZLR

141. See also Coates v Bowden (2007) 26 FRNZ 200 (HC) at [36]; Huntly v Hamilton [2014] NZHC (686 at [27]–[31]; BK v CJ & KJ [2015] NZHC 2169 at [56]–[58].

submitted it was arguable the appeal against the s 106 decision was against the exercise of a discretion, and that the principles in May v May would therefore apply to that aspect.39

(footnotes omitted)

39 May v May (1982) 1 NZFLR 165 (CA).

40 AHC v CAC [2011] NZHC 2118; [2011] 2 NZLR 694 (HC).

Issue 1 — habitual residence

Grounds of appeal

(a) Misdirected himself by addressing the children’s understanding at the time of their arrival in New Zealand in November 2021 rather than the assessment of habitual residence in December 2022;

(b) Misdirected himself by placing too much weight on whether the children had acquired habitual residence in New Zealand by such date rather than whether they retained habitual residence in Spain at that date;

(c) Misdirected himself on the issue of parental understanding about the return of the children to Spain, and the related “settled purpose” approach to habitual residence;

(d) Failed to place weight on the Respondent’s residence in Australia, her suggestion that the family move to Australia, and her initiation of mediation in Australia, in determining whether the children’s habitual residence remained in Spain;

(e) The Judge’s determination at paragraph [98] that “the children retained substantive links to Spain and continued to see Spain as at least an equal “home” to New Zealand” was unsustainable on the evidence, particularly:

(i) There was accepted evidence that neither parent had lived in Spain for approximately a year at the date of the Hague Convention retention (and 22 months by the time of the hearing);

(ii) There was accepted evidence that contact between the children and the Respondent took place electronically from Australia and physically in New Zealand;

(iii) There was scant evidence of the children maintaining contact or relationships with anyone in Spain.

Submissions: appellant

although coloured by the decision in LRR v COL in relation to the children’s best interests. Mr Guest referred to a number of cases of either “time-limited visits” or “shuttle arrangements”. He cited examples of habitual residence being established in relatively short periods.41 Mr Guest identified decisions in which parental purpose relating to time-limited visits was recognised as a factor but not determinative.42

(a) parental intention is only a factor, far from determinative, and less important with older children;

(b) habitual residence is an assessment to be made at the relevant time of determination and not decided by earlier agreement of the parties or even a court order; and

(c) a practical and sensible assessment must be made for the children, centred on their view of their lives at the relevant time.

(a) neither parent had lived in Spain for over a year at the date of retention (and nearly two years at the date of the Family Court hearing);

  1. Olliver v Richardson [2018] NZHC 2696 (12) months; Gibbs v Gibbs [2021] NZFC 8790 (less than two years), [2021] NZFC 3318; (appeal dismissed), [2022] NZCA 67.

42 Referring to Punter 2, above n 3; Langdon v Wyler, above n 23.

(b) both parents and both children are New Zealand citizens. The children were born in New Zealand;

(c) the children had previously experienced living in New Zealand as their home and holidaying here;

(d) the former residence in Spain cannot be assessed as “strong”, Andrew having spent only five of his 12 years and Sophia having spent five of her 10 years, at no time with both parents together;

(e) there has been a full integration of the children into New Zealand schooling and New Zealand activities focused on a single area with extended family;

(f) the children’s contact with their mother has been with her living in Australia, not in Spain — Ms Sanchez has “not kept the home fires burning”;

(g) there has been some physical contact through Ms Sanchez’s visit, but with upset to the children;

(h) there has been extensive electronic contact;

(i) there was evidence (contentious) that Ms Sanchez had suggested in the presence of the children that the family should live in Australia;

(j) from the children’s viewpoint, shared care arrangements in Spain must seem a distant and quite different prospect from the arrangements they had in their NZ residence.

(a) the Judge had misdirected himself by addressing the children’s understanding at the time they arrived in New Zealand (November

2021) rather than at their date of retention (December 2022) — the Judge thereby became overly concerned as to the understanding the children would have had as to the time-limited nature of their stay in New Zealand, failing to focus on what had evolved in their lives subsequently;

(b) the Judge misdirected himself by placing too much weight on whether the children had acquired habitual residence in New Zealand rather than whether they had retained habitual residence in Spain. In Mr Guest’s submission, the former would almost certainly grow out of the latter, but the focus had to be on an assessment of the former, namely what continuing links the children retained with Spain. The Judge’s emphasis on the children’s knowledge that they had to return to Spain is an untenable basis for determining habitual residence;

(c) the Judge misdirected himself on the issue of parental understanding about the return of the children to Spain and any “settled purpose”. Mr Guest accepted there was “for a time” a settled purpose about Spain being the habitual residence but “towards the end of the 12-month period” Mr McDonald did not accept such a “settled purpose”. Even Ms Sanchez by suggesting the family might settle in Australia, exhibited some “equivocality” on the issue. The Judge also erred in appearing to treat the Spanish order as the continuing joint settled purpose;

(d) the Judge failed to place weight on Ms Sanchez’s residence in Australia, her suggestion the family move to Australia, and her initiation of mediation in Australia, when determining the place of the children’s habitual residence. In Mr Guest’s submission, the Judge had to place greater weight on Ms Sanchez’s move to Australia, given Mr McDonald’s evidence that Ms Sanchez had for a long time wanted to make such a move and the identification of Australia in her later discussions; and

(e) there was no evidence to support the Judge’s conclusion that “the children retained substantive links to Spain and continued to see Spain as at least an ‘equal home’ to New Zealand” because:

(i) neither parent had lived in Spain for approximately a year at the date of retention;

(ii) contact between the children and Ms Sanchez had been taking place electronically from Australia and physically in New Zealand; and

(iii) the children had maintained little contact or relationships with anyone in Spain.

Submissions: lawyer for the children

(a) had the necessary degree of integration in a social and family environment, and stability;

(b) had such a degree of integration into their social and family environment that their residence here was “habitual”; and

(c) were settled.

... 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.

  1. Re R (Children) (Reunite International Child Abduction Centre and others intervening) [2015] UKSC 35, [2016] AC 76 [Re R].
  2. Re M (Children) (Habitual Residence: 1980 Hague Child Abduction Convention) [2020] EWCA CIV 1105 [Re M].

45 F v M [2021] CSOH 90.

46 Re R, above n 43, at [13].

47 At [21].

... the important question is whether the residence has the necessary quality of stability, not whether it is necessarily intended to be permanent. The Lord Ordinary’s exclusive focus on the latter question led to his failing to consider in his judgment the abundant evidence relating to the stability of the mother’s and the children’s lives in Scotland, and their integration into their social and family environment there.

... These are important factors but, in my view, they do not counterbalance the degree of integration that the children had established in England. I would want to emphasise that this is not to diminish the importance for the children of their continuing connections with Germany. Rather, it is that they are not sufficient to mean that the children were not habitually resident in England because of the powerful factors demonstrating the extent of their integration and the stability of their life with their mother in England.

48 Re M, above n 44, at [74].

(a) went to England for an intended stay of 12 months or so;

(b) attended school in England;

(c) settled quickly because in part they were familiar with the place;

(d) loved the local environment; and

(e) had become integrated to a very substantial degree in a social and family environment.50

49 At [73].

50 At [73].

51 At [74].

[23] I conclude that, while the intentions of the parties in June 2020 were to come to Scotland only for a trial period without altering the children’s habitual residence, as a matter of fact that habitual residence had changed by

3 June 2021. The outcome may seem counterintuitive at first. Formal agreements entered into in good faith by two adults of sound mind should not be readily ignored or set aside. However, while the unusual feature of this case is the detail of the agreement and its formality, the principle remains the same. It accords with the policy of the Convention that children are not parcels of property whose future can be determined solely by the contracts or actions of adults. An agreement that a child’s habitual residence will not change cannot be enforced if, as a matter of fact, that child’s residence is found to have changed. I acknowledge that the development of the law on habitual residence as it applies to Hague Convention cases appears to have resulted in parents now being effectively unable to enter into a directly enforceable agreement on the temporary relocation of their children. Such agreements remain relevant as a factor, but will not be adhered to where, as here, the necessary social and family integration of the children in the “new” country is shown to be of a well settled character. It may be that different views exist in other Hague Convention jurisdictions about the relative significance of a formal agreement entered into with the benefit of legal advice such as that entered into by these parties. In this jurisdiction, however, it is clear that, no matter how formal the agreement, the analysis of the circumstances of the children at the material time must be the primary focus of the discussion. Of course each case is sufficiently fact sensitive that no absolute rules have been laid down. Had the children’s settlement in Scotland been shallower, it may be that the nature and terms of the agreement would have had greater weight. On the current understanding of habitual residence as it applies to the Hague Convention, however, the agreement could never have been determinative.

52 F v M, above n 45, at [23].

53 LRR v COL, above n 7, at [83].

The requirement to treat the welfare and best interests of the child as paramount applies to proceedings under sub-pt 4 of pt 2 seeking the return of a child under the Convention. Section 4(4) does not disapply s 4(1). Rather, s 4(4) makes it clear that the requirement to determine such proceedings speedily, and to return a child promptly if no exception is made out, is not limited by s 4(1). The inquiry into the best interests of the child must be approached in the manner contemplated by ss 105 to 107. But it remains the case that the welfare and best interests of the child are, as the United Kingdom Supreme Court put it in Re E, at the forefront of the whole exercise. The outcome does not turn on the interests of the parents or guardians of the child, or for that matter of the relevant Central Authorities or States.

(Emphasis added)

Submissions: respondent

to the requirements of the Spanish order, is the course which most closely adheres to the scope and purpose of the Convention — the purpose of return is to recognise the Court of the country of the child’s habitual residence as the forum for decisions on matters of custody and access rather than having such matters determined by a country to which the child has been removed or in which the child is being retained.

(a) school in Spain during post-COVID-19 required long periods of distance learning and then, when they returned to school, they had to

have social distancing in the classroom and wear masks and they had not liked that; and

(b) school in New Zealand on arrival was very different (i.e. no social distancing, no mask) and they had liked that.

Analysis

54 Punter 2, above n 3, at [95].

the judgment dealing with the children’s objections to returning to Spain) both the children’s comments in relation to Spain and their respective explanations as to how they are settled and enjoying living in the New Zealand residence.

children) Ms Sanchez would be in this part of the world on a temporary basis and would then return to live in Spain with the children.

Spanish courts considered, approved and ultimately reimposed the arrangements agreed on by the parents.

Issue 2 — the discretion to refuse return

Introduction

returned promptly to Spain unless a ground for refusal of return was established and the Court determined in its discretion to refuse to make an order under s 105(2) of the Act. It has been established (and is not challenged) that one ground for refusal of return exists, namely (under s 106(1)(d)) the children object to their return and have attained an age and a degree of maturity at which it is appropriate to give weight to their views.

Grounds of appeal

(a) Failing in respect of such discretion to exercise it in the best interests of the children, or even adequately assessing the best interests of the children;

(b) Elevating the importance of the Spanish Court order and the goals of the Hague Convention beyond the best interests of the children;

(c) Failing to give adequate weight to the views of the children as expressed through their lawyer, as required under the Care of Children Act 2023 and the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child;

(d) Disregarding the evidence that the Appellant would be unable to return to live in Spain;

(e) Failing to give proper weight to the potential psychological implications for the children if ordered to return;

(f) Failing to take into account whether any assessment of the best interests of the children would be better carried out in New Zealand or in Spain.

(g) Taking into account recent physical contact between the children and the Respondent (paragraphs [217] to [219]) when:

(i) Such contact was irrelevant, even on the exercise of a discretion, to the return of the children to Spain;

(ii) The parties had contemplated the Respondent living in New Zealand, and it was the Respondent’s choice to live in Australia;

(iii) A return of the children to Spain would bring about an even more pronounced dislocation between the Appellant and the children than any dislocation between the Respondent and the children.

(h) Placing weight on the shared care arrangement in Spain up until the last travel to New Zealand in November 2021 in the actual circumstances in which there was no possible return to such arrangement.

Submissions: appellant

(a) it is difficult to imagine the Spanish court allowing the children to come to New Zealand over Ms [Sanchez’s] opposition unless it was confident the children would be returned at the end of the time-limited period;

(b) it is difficult to identify a clearer case than this one where a foreign court makes an order for the children to travel to another country (New Zealand) with a clear expectation they will be returned to their usual home (Spain) at a specific time;

(c) the order must have been made, at least partly, because the Spanish court was confident legal structures were in place to ensure the children’s return;

(d) put another way, if an order for return is not made in these circumstances, it is difficult to see how a court in any jurisdiction (including a New Zealand court) can have confidence that children will be returned at the end of a permitted period overseas (particularly a longer period) if the travelling parent changes their mind and refuses to return the children.

(a) Failing in respect of such discretion to exercise it in the best interests of the children, or even adequately assessing the best interests of the children

(b) Elevating the importance of the Spanish Court order and the goals of the Hague Convention beyond the best interests of the children

at [103]). In his submission the Judge was inappropriately concerned about the enforcement of foreign court orders when his focus ought to have been on the best interests of the children.

(c) Failing to give adequate weight to the views of the children as expressed through their lawyer, as required under the Care of Children Act 2023 and the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child

(d) Disregarding the evidence that the Appellant would be unable to return to live in Spain

(e) Failing to give proper weight to the potential psychological implications for the children if ordered to return

(f) Failing to take into account whether any assessment of the best interests of the children would be better carried out in New Zealand or in Spain

(g) Taking into account recent physical contact between the children and the Respondent (paragraphs [217] to [219]) when:

(i) Such contact was irrelevant, even on the exercise of a discretion, to the return of the children to Spain;

(ii) The parties had contemplated the Respondent living in New Zealand, and it was the Respondent’s choice to live in Australia;

(iii) A return of the children to Spain would bring about an even more pronounced dislocation between the Appellant and the children than any dislocation between the respondent and the children.

(a) there was no sufficient evidence as to what actually happened and the reasons for limited contact;

(b) if (which Mr McDonald denied) he had impeded physical contact, it was an incorrect response to force the children back to Spain in order to punish him;

(c) returning to Spain would effectively reverse the situation, with Mr McDonald having no contact;

(d) the Judge took no account of the possibility that Ms Sanchez had contributed to the difficulties of physical contact.

(h) Placing weight on the shared care arrangement in Spain up until the last travel to New Zealand in November 2021 in the actual circumstances in which there was no possible return to such arrangement

Submissions: lawyer for the children

(a) the Judge had incorrectly stated the law in relation to the exercise of the s 106 discretion;

(b) the Judge took into account irrelevant considerations;

(c) the Judge failed to take into account relevant considerations;

(d) the judgment was accordingly wrong; and

(e) this Court should exercise its discretion by quashing the order for return.

(a) the need for the children to have continuity in their care, development and upbringing under s 5(d) of the Act;

(b) the New Zealand Court being better placed to assess the best long term care arrangements for the children;

55 Mr van Bohemen referred also to Andrews v Buckley [2023] NZHC 2372 at [104] and [125]; and

Andersen v Lewis, above n 4, at [144].

(c) the interests of the children’s wellbeing through feeling socially included in New Zealand (and not in Spain);

(d) the prospect of disruption to the children’s sense of social inclusion if returned;

(e) the disempowerment the children will suffer through a decision contrary to their views; and

(f) the prospect the children may become biased against their mother if returned to Spain.

Submissions: respondent

56 Referring to the situation in LRR v COL, above n 8.

(a) the decision of the majority in HJ, which recognises the relevance of the legislative purpose, namely that the power to return a child in circumstances covered by s 106(1) is intended to be exercised in the context of the Convention, having regard in particular to what would give effect to the Convention’s purposes;57 and

(b) as observed by Lady Hale in Re M, the child’s views are properly matters for consideration – that does not mean those views are always determinative or even presumptively so. The older the child, the greater the weight their objections are likely to carry. But that is far from saying the child’s subjections should only prevail in the most exceptional circumstances.58

(a) the Judge had clearly had regard to the welfare and best interests of the children as “forefront” considerations (as identified in LRR v COL). The Judge identified the extent to which the important relationship

57 HJ, above n 27, at [136].

58 Re M (children) (abduction: rights of custody) [2007] UKHL 55, [2008] 1 AC 1288 at [46].

between the children and their mother had been and was continuing to be very limited while the children were in New Zealand;

(b) The Judge identified the Spanish order as important in the context of the settled intention of the parents, as must have been communicated to the children, but equally recognised the Spanish order did not bind the New Zealand Family Court or impact its jurisdiction;

(c) the Judge, far from disregarding the views of the children as expressed through their lawyer, had clearly identified their objections, including by reference to large portions of Mr van Bohemen’s reports;

(d) the Judge expressly had regard to the difficulties Mr McDonald would have in returning to Spain and re-establishing himself there – that was taken into account alongside the fact that the children, upon return to Spain, would have their mother available again as a safe caregiver;

(e) the Judge had not disregarded “potential psychological implications” for the children if returned but had identified and weighed impacts on their “happiness” in light of their objections to returning and their comparative assessments of life in New Zealand and in Spain. Ms Blackford described the children’s current approaches as “unremarkable and mundane”, and matters which, in any event, properly form part of the Judge’s deliberations;

(f) Ms Blackford rejected the submission that the Spanish Court is less well equipped than a New Zealand Court to assess the children’s best interests. The Spanish Court has precisely done so previously and Mr McDonald had sufficient trust and confidence in the Spanish justice system to make applications there, both to bring the children to New Zealand and subsequently to approve his continued retention of the children in New Zealand. Ms Blackford identified that what is involved is a question of form – she submitted the Judge had correctly focused on the children’s place of residence at the time of wrongful detention.

(g) Ms Blackford submitted the Judge had regard to the minimal level of contact between Ms Sanchez and the children while they have been in New Zealand as the maintenance of a relationship with both parents is clearly in the best interests and welfare of the children. In any event, the Spanish order was framed not on the basis that Ms Sanchez would live in New Zealand while the children were staying here but, rather, that she might wish to and be able to visit the children in New Zealand with advance notice to Mr McDonald.

(h) Ms Blackford submitted the Judge had not erred in placing weight on the fact that a shared-care arrangement had been in place in Spain – that consideration was in the context of Mr Guest’s submissions relating to habitual residence. It was not directed to the subsequent exercise of the discretion which occupied a later (eight page) portion of the judgment.

Analysis

(a) the appropriate forum is to be considered having regard to potentially but not necessarily competing considerations, namely the welfare and

best interests of the children and the deterrence purpose of the Convention;

(b) the weighting of competing considerations will vary according to the s 106 exception established;

(c) the children’s objections to return to Spain are to be given weight given their age and degree of maturity;

(d) the children’s integration into New Zealand means remaining in New Zealand would be less disruptive for them and returning to Spain would be a major change for them and challenging. It was not established their return would be deeply traumatising or give rise to a grave risk of psychological harm;

(e) the promotion of the children’s relationship with both parents, for the purpose of their welfare and best interest, has occurred more meaningfully in Spain than in New Zealand;

(f) their mother has been largely physically absent from their lives while in New Zealand, and there are accordingly concerns for the children’s welfare and best interests if they remain in New Zealand;

(g) the principles of the Convention, providing for their home country to be the forum for decisions on substantive care and conduct, recognise it is generally in children’s interests not to be unilaterally removed by one parent;

(h) the objectives of the Convention also favour certainty of return in a case such as this, where (after five years of living in Spain) the children came to New Zealand on a time-limited specific base in accordance with a clearly defined, formal court order.

(i) courts could have little confidence in children being returned after permitted overseas travel if an order for return is not made in the present

circumstances, with the result that longer periods overseas would become “too risky” for courts to sanction and children would be denied the opportunity to have time with family members;

(j) beyond general Convention principles, respect for the decisions of a foreign country (comity) also favour an order for return.

until the Spanish court finally determined issues relating to the children. Were the children not to return to Spain now, their period of effective physical separation from their mother would be likely to extend to at least three years (commencing November 2021).

59 Care of Children Act 2004, s 94.

Outcome

(a) any applicant for costs is to file and serve a memorandum (four-page limit) by 16 August 2024;

(b) the respondent is to file and serve their memorandum (same limit) by

23 August 2024.

Osborne J

Solicitors:

Solomons, Solicitors, Dunedin for Appellant

Copy to: I M Blackford and J Gandy, Barristers, Auckland for Respondent Mr S van Bohemen, Barrister, Christchurch, Lawyer for Child


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