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McDonald v Sanchez [2024] NZHC 2110 (31 July 2024)
Last Updated: 24 October 2024
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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
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND INVERCARGILL REGISTRY
I TE KŌTI MATUA O AOTEAROA WAIHŌPAI ROHE
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UNDER
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the Care of Children Act 2003
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IN THE MATTER
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of an appeal against a decision of the Family Court at Queenstown
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BETWEEN
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McDONALD
Appellant
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AND
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SANCHEZ
Respondent
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Hearing:
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23 April 2024
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Counsel:
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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
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Judgment:
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31 July 2024
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JUDGMENT OF OSBORNE J
Introduction
- [1] This is an
appeal from a judgment of Judge Dravitzki ordering that the 13-year- old son and
11-year-old daughter of the parties
be returned to Spain
(Judgment).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]
- [2] The
respondent (the mother) brought an application under s 105 of the Care of
Children Act 2004 (the Act). Section 105 and related
provisions are within subpt
4 of pt 2 of the Act. They incorporate into New Zealand law the Hague Convention
on the Civil Aspects
of International Child Abduction (the Convention).2
A prerequisite for making a s 105 order that the children be returned to
Spain was that they were habitually resident in that country
immediately before
their removal to New Zealand. The respondent submitted Spain was their country
of habitual residence. The appellant
(the father) submitted it was New Zealand,
as did Mr van Bohemen as lawyer for the children. In the event the children were
found
to have been habitually resident in Spain at that time, the appellant and
Mr van Bohemen submitted s 106 exceptions applied, and
that the Court should in
its discretion refuse the application.
- [3] The Judge
granted the application. He found:
(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).
- [4] The
appellant appeals two aspects of the judgment, being the finding of habitual
residence and the exercise of the discretion.
The Judge’s rejections of
the appellant’s acquiescence and grave risk grounds are not appealed by
the appellant. The
respondent has not cross-appealed on the children’s
objections ground.
The parties
- [5] The
father, Mr McDonald, was born in New Zealand and holds dual New Zealand and
British citizenship. The mother, Ms Sanchez, was
born in Spain and holds dual
Spanish and New Zealand citizenship.
- [6] The parties
met in France in 2007 at a time when they were both living in the United Kingdom
(UK). They returned to the UK to
live together before moving to Auckland, New
Zealand in early 2009. They were married in Spain in April 2009 but continued
living
in Auckland from 2009 until August 2016, with the exception of a year
spent living in Brisbane, Australia.
- [7] The
couple’s son, Andrew, was born in Auckland in November 2010 and their
daughter, Sophia, was born there in December 2012.
- [8] In September
2016 Ms Sanchez, Andrew and Sophia, moved to live in a large city in Spain. Mr
McDonald followed shortly afterwards.
Very soon after, the parties
separated.
Chronology
- [9] Counsel
provided for the Family Court a joint chronology which identifies relevant
events since the couple’s separation.
As did the Judge, I now adopt
matters set out in that chronology.
- [10] On 15
December 2016, the parties signed an agreement recording:
(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.
- [11] The
parties’ agreement was approved by the Spanish Court and formalised as a
court order on 22 February 2017.
- [12] The
children’s care was shared in Spain, in terms of their agreement and court
order for the five years from November 2016
to November 2021. Extended holiday
periods were spent in New Zealand in 2017 and 2018 (approximately a month each)
and in 2020 (six
weeks).
- [13] In 2019, Ms
Sanchez applied to the Spanish Court to remove the requirement that the parties
live in New Zealand for the 2020/2021
year. Her application was initially
granted on 16 December 2019 (2019 decision).
- [14] In March
2020, Mr McDonald appealed that decision. The Provincial Court, on 8 February
2021, overturned the 2019 decision and
reinstated a requirement that the
children live in New Zealand for one year.
- [15] By the
appeal decision (Spanish order), it was ordered:
(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.
- [16] I
interpolate that the New Zealand Government had, in late February 2020, closed
the country’s borders and imposed lockdown
restrictions in response to the
COVID-19 outbreak.
- [17] On 11
November 2021, Mr McDonald and the children travelled to New Zealand to live in
a small town in the South Island (“NZ
residence”). The children were
enrolled in the local school and have been actively engaged in school, family,
community and
sporting activities in the local district since then.
- [18] In February
2022, Ms Sanchez moved to Sydney, Australia and obtained employment there. She
visited the children in the NZ residence
in June 2022 and September
2022.
- [19] In November
2022 Ms Sanchez initiated family mediation in Australia.
- [20] On 5
December 2022, Mr McDonald emailed Ms Sanchez and advised that he and the
children would not be departing New Zealand on
18 December 2022, recording in
unequivocal terms:
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.
- [21] On 7
December 2022, Ms Sanchez cancelled the mediation process.
- [22] From 19
December 2022, Ms Sanchez spent a week visiting the children at the NZ
residence. On 20 December 2022, there was
a chance meeting between Ms
Sanchez and Mr McDonald. There were subsequent emails between the
two,
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).
- [23] Ms Sanchez,
on 17 March 2023, obtained an enforcement order from the Spanish Court enforcing
the Spanish Order by requiring the
children’s return to Spain.
- [24] Mr McDonald
unsuccessfully applied to the Spanish Court for an order that the children not
be required to return to Spain on
the basis that neither the parents nor the
children had their residence in Spain. The application was dismissed on 10 July
2023.
- [25] In the
meantime, on 13 April 2023, Ms Sanchez had applied to the Spanish Central
Authority for orders for the return of the
children under the Convention. Ms
Sanchez’s application was filed in the Family Court on 25 July 2023 and
was heard, on an
opposed basis, on 28 September 2023.
The legislation and the statutory provisions
Purpose
of the Convention
- [26] The purpose
of the Convention was explained by Glazebrook J in delivering the judgment of a
full Court of Appeal bench in Punter v Secretary for Justice (Punter
2):3
- [13] The Hague
Convention deals with the protection of rights of custody and rights of access
in a cross-border situation. The preamble
provides as
follows:
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.
- [14] Article 1
of the Convention states that its objects are:
(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.
- [15] One of the
most influential early commentators on the Hague Convention was Professor
Pérez-Vera, Professor of International
Law at the University of Madrid
and the Rapporteur to the Commission that drafted the Convention — see
Pérez-Vera, Explanatory Report to the Convention on the Civil Aspects
of International Child Abduction (Acts and Documents of the 14th Session,
Vol III, 1982) (“the Pérez-Vera report”).
- [16] In that
report, Professor Pérez-Vera points out (at para 19) that the Convention
makes no attempt to regulate the problem
of the award of custody or access
rights. Rather, it rests implicitly on the principle that any debate on the
merits of the question
should take place before the competent authorities in the
State where the child had its habitual residence prior to its removal or
retention. At para 11 she notes that both removal and retention result in a
child being taken out of the family and social environment
in which his or her
life has developed. She also speaks in that paragraph and the following
paragraphs of the aim of the Convention
being to avoid forum shopping by the
party abducting or retaining the child.
- [17] Insofar as
it relates to rights of custody, therefore, the primary emphasis of the Hague
Convention is on the prompt return of
children who have been wrongfully removed
from or retained away from the State of their habitual residence. The rationale
is to deter
such removal or retention but also (and importantly) to ensure that
it is the State where the child has the most personal ties that
will decide
custody and access disputes related to that child.
- [27] New Zealand
became a party to the Convention with effect from 1 August 1991, Spain with
effect from 1 September 1987.
- [28] As
indicated in the discussion in Punter 2 (above at [26]) regarding the
Convention’s aim, the Convention is fundamentally concerned with the issue
of forum. The Court
to which an application for return is made is concerned with
the forum for disputes over care and control of the children, rather
than with
the making of substantive determinations regarding those
issues.4 The judicial task is to decide the
appropriate forum for determination of the child’s interests, rather than
to undertake a
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.
- [29] The
Convention’s relevant operative provisions are implemented in New Zealand
by ss 105 and 106 of the Act as contained
in subpt 4 of Part 2 (entitled
“International Child Abduction”). The Convention itself is
incorporated as Schedule 1
to the Act, and some Convention obligations are
defined by reference to specific Convention provisions. In short, s 105 of the
Act
governs international child abduction. If the Court finds the factors in
this section are satisfied, subject to the defences in s
106, it is mandatory
that the child be returned to the contracting country.
- [30] While the
child’s welfare and best interests are generally paramount under the Act,
s 4(4) provides that the paramountcy
provisions in s 4 do not limit subpt 4 of
pt
- 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.
- 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”.
- 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].
- [31] In the
context of this appeal, the key Convention provisions relating to habitual
residence are Articles 3 and 4. They provide:8
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
- [32] Section 105
of the Act relevantly provides:
- 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
- [33] Section 4
of the Act establishes the welfare and best interests of the child as the
paramount consideration in proceedings under
the Act. That said, s 4(4)(a)
provides that s 4 “does not limit subpart 4 of Part 2” (being the
subpart of the Act, as
discussed above at [2], that implements the Convention).
How s 4(4) works was, as identified above at [30], explained in LRR v
COL.
Section 106 of the Act
- [34] Section 106
of the Act relevantly provides:
- 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
- [35] It was and
remains common ground that this first of the four prerequisites to an order
under s 105(1) is satisfied.
Section 105(1)(b)
— breach of rights of custody
- [36] It was and
remains common ground between the parties that, if the children were found to
have been habitually resident in Spain
immediately before their retention in New
Zealand, then Ms Sanchez’s rights of custody arising under the Spanish
Court orders
have been breached.
Section 105(1)(c)
— exercise of custodial rights
- [37] It was and
remains common ground that Ms Sanchez would have been exercising her rights of
custody but for the children’s
retention in New Zealand.
Date of retention of the
children
- [38] As noted
above (at [3](a)], the Judge found Mr McDonald had retained the children in New
Zealand on 16 December 2022. This was
the final day of the children’s 2022
school year upon which, in terms of the Spanish Court orders, Mr McDonald
was required
to return the children to Spain.
- [39] The 16
December 2022 date was that advanced by Mr Guest and Mr van Bohemen — they
had submitted, in reliance on Punter v Secretary for Justice
(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.
- [40] Ms
Blackford submitted the retention of the children had occurred on 5
December when (above at [20]), Mr McDonald
advised Ms Sanchez that he and the
children would not be leaving New Zealand for Spain on 18 December 2022.
Ms Blackford
invoked the concept of anticipatory breach which has been
recognised as applying in other Convention cases.10
- [41] The Judge
did not determine whether there had been an anticipatory breach. He instead
noted that little turned on the difference
between the two dates (11 days apart)
and simply adopted 16 December 2022 as the date of retention. As that ruling is
not the subject
of this appeal, I determine the appeal by reference to 16
December 2022 as the date of retention. That said, the Judge on the evidence
could reasonably have found that the children had been retained 11 days earlier
on the basis of a clear anticipatory breach —
Mr McDonald on 5 December
unequivocally stated the children would not be returning to Spain.
Habitual residence
The law
- [42] The
drafters of the Convention adopted the concept of habitual residence as the sole
connecting factor determining the applicability
of the Convention and other
issues. In neither the Convention nor (in the case of New Zealand) the Care of
Children Act or its predecessor
was the term “habitual residence”
defined.11 As a consequence, there were in succeeding decades
different interpretations in different jurisdictions and, within individual
jurisdictions,
developing approaches. The “different models” are
helpfully discussed in Dr Rhona Schuz’s study The Hague
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
- [43] All counsel
in this case recognise the Court of Appeal’s judgments in SK v KP
(in 2005) and in Punter 2 (in 2006) as leading cases establishing the
approach to “habitual residence” to be adopted in the New Zealand
courts.14 The cases establish that whether a
child is or is not habitually resident in a particular country is a question of
fact determined
by reference to all the circumstances of the individual case.
Courts are not to resort to presumptions or presuppositions.15 The
essentially factual and individual nature of the enquiry is not to be glossed
with legal concepts which would produce a different
result from that which the
factual inquiry would produce.16 The nature of inquiry required,
including by reference to an inclusive list of relevant factors, was identified
by the Court of Appeal
in Punter 2 in these
terms:17
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
- R
Schuz (ed) The Hague Child Abduction Convention: A Critical Analysis
(Hart Publishing, Oregon 2013) at Chapter 8.
- 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).
- SK
v KP, above n 14, citing re M
(Minors) (Residence Order: Jurisdiction) 1993 1 FLR 495 (CA) at 499.
- 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.
- [44] The
consideration of “settled purpose”, which will be reflected in the
evidence of parental purpose, is relevant
but is only one factor to be
considered.18 Consideration on settled purpose should not obscure the
broad factual nature of the inquiry.19
- [45] The Court,
in Punter 2, in commenting on Dr Schuz’s article, explained how
different approaches to the assessment of habitual residence (or
“models”)
may be required depending on the period of
residence:20
[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.
- [46] The Court
expressly adopted the SK v KP formulation:21
[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].
- 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)
- [47] The best
interests of the child must also be considered in proceedings under the
Convention — that inquiry is to be approached
in the manner contemplated
by ss 105–107 of the Act.22
- [48] The Court
of Appeal’s observation in LRR v COL (above at [30]) indicates the
consideration of parental intentions and interests must not dictate the outcome.
The welfare and best
interests of the child remain a very important
consideration, one that comes at the “forefront of the whole
exercise”.
That said, the context remains that the Court is making a
decision as to forum, the place where the child will be for the time being
and
whose courts will finally determine matters of custody. There will be a
heightened relevance of the child’s welfare and
best interests of the
child when the Court is exercising its discretion under s 106 of the Act.
Consideration of the welfare and
best interests of the child may assume critical
significance in a case such as LRR v COL where the relevant exception
invoked is, under s 106(1)(c)(ii) of the Act, that there will be a grave risk
that the child’s
return would place the child in an intolerable
situation.
- [49] I
respectfully adopt as a succinct summary of the correct approach to be taken by
a New Zealand court when assessing habitual
residence that provided by Dobson J
in Langdon v Wyler:23
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.
- [50] The Court,
in Punter 2, specifically considered the significance of agreed periods
of stay in a new state of “under a year” and of “2
years or
over”. In Basingstoke v Groot, the Court of Appeal summarised its
relevant Punter 2 discussion thus:24
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.
- [30] ... this
Court set out some themes that can be discerned from the cases on habitual
residence. It said that, where the stay in
a new state is intended to be for a
period of under one year and the purpose of the stay is temporary such as for
holidays or visiting
relatives, the courts have generally found that habitual
residence in the old state survives ... There are exceptions, SK v KP
being one, but that case had highly unusual facts. Where the intended stay
is between a year and two years, decisions have gone either
way – see the
cases discussed in P v Secretary for Justice at [127] –
[129].
- [31] Where the
intended stay is for two years or more and it is not so clear that the purpose
of the stay is temporary, habitual residence
in the old state has usually been
held to have been lost immediately on leaving the old state, although residence
for an appreciable
period is needed before habitual residence is acquired in the
new state - see SK v KP at [73] and [77] and P[unter] v Secretary for
Justice at [126] and [201].
The judgment —
habitual residence
- [51] The Judge
recited the history of events as agreed in the parties’ chronology. He
noted the hearing was conducted on the
basis the parties’ affidavit
evidence and written and oral submissions, without cross-examination.
- [52] The Judge
identified the applicable provisions of ss 105–106 of the Act. He
identified the only controversial requirement
under s 105(1) was whether the
children were “habitually resident” in Spain at the date immediately
before their retention.
It was for Ms Sanchez to establish that on the balance
of probabilities. The Judge identified, if s 105 elements were proved, the
Court
must order the children’s return to Spain unless one of the positive
exceptions in s 106 of the Act was established,
a matter on which Mr McDonald
bore the onus. The Judge identified the s 106 exceptions invoked by Mr
McDonald.
- [53] For the
legal principles applying to the determination of habitual residence, the Judge
referred to passages in SK v KP and in Punter 2 (as well as the
discussion by Dobson J in Langdon v Wyler). He accepted the general
proposition that a child- centred focus of the inquiry is important. He
identified that he had previously
— in Kerslake v Wilson25
— reviewed the developing jurisprudence by reference to the cases
mentioned.
25 Kerslake v Wilson [2022] NZFC 8611 at
[21]–[33].
- [54] The Judge
then summarised submissions made by counsel, before turning to determine on the
facts the issue of habitual residence.
(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.
- [56] The Judge
noted Mr van Bohemen’s reference to the relevant factors identified by the
Court of Appeal in SK v KP and reiterated in Punter 2. The Judge
considered the submissions on behalf of Mr McDonald (supported by Mr van
Bohemen) focused only on factors about the children’s
degree of
involvement and integration into New Zealand and ignored the basis upon which
the children had come to New Zealand (covered
in the SK v KP list (above
at [43]) and under the factors “settled purpose”, the “actual
and intended length of stay in a State”,
and “the purpose of the
stay”).
- [57] The Judge
noted Mr Guest’s submission that “the children had settled here more
successfully than Mr [McDonald] had
expected or hoped” but found
difficulty with the submission. The Judge concluded the children had settled in
New Zealand exactly
how their father hoped they would. The Judge did not accept
it was unexpected or unforeseen that, when the children came to New Zealand
in
November 2021, they would do well in New Zealand and would be reluctant to
return to Spain when the time came.
- [58] The Judge
also rejected a submission that Ms Sanchez’s now living in Sydney lessened
the children’s connection to
Spain. The appeal decision specifically
contemplated Ms Sanchez living in New Zealand while the children were here.
Ms Sanchez
has made it clear that her move to Sydney was temporary in order to
be
closer to the children. The Judge did not view her temporary arrangements in
Sydney as significantly altering the children’s
connection with Spain.
- [59] The Judge
concluded the children were habitually resident in Spain when they travelled to
New Zealand in November 2021 and remained
habitually resident in Spain in
December 2022.
Children’s objections to return
The
law
- [60] Where a
party invokes the child objection exception to return under s
106(1)(d), the onus is on that party to
prove the exception applies. On this
appeal, the Judge’s finding the exception applied is not
challenged.
- [61] Once the
exception ground is established, neither party has an onus of proof in relation
to the exercise of the Court’s
residual discretion.
- [62] The Court
of Appeal in Re J (Abduction: Child’s Objection to Return), has
identified relevant (not exhaustive) matters to be considered in considering the
weight to be given to a child’s objection,
being:26
(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
- 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
- [63] As recorded
by the Judge, Mr van Bohemen obtained the children’s views through two
meetings, first for 45 minutes on 25
August 2023 and, second, for 10–15
minutes on 28 August 2023. Mr van Bohemen in his report recorded:
- ...
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 ...
- [64] Specifically
in relation to Sophia, Mr van Bohemen recorded:
- 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.
- My
notes of her views were:
a) She “loves” living where she is. Her reasons included:
- She,
[Andrew] and Mr [McDonald] live in a neighbourhood where there are lots of
neighbours, dogs, horses and animals.
- She
knows all the people in the neighbourhood;
- She
can bike to visit the neighbours and also into their [NZ residence];
- 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]);
- 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:
- That
she occasionally messages and talks to her aunt and grandmother in
Spain;
- That
she hadn’t talked to her friends in Spain for
“months”
- That
there were “high gates” around the school;
- 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.
- Before
I conducted my meeting with [Sophia] we reviewed my notes and she agreed to me
passing her views to the parties/the Court.
- [65] Specifically
in relation to Andrew, Mr van Bohemen recorded:
- [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;
- 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;
- 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.
- 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;
- He
knows that his father does not want to go back to Spain where he does not have a
house or family.
- 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;
- It
would be “nice” if Mum stayed in Australia and continued to visit
and he and [Sophia] were able to visit her there.
- 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
- [66] As noted,
the Judge found the children’s objections to return to Spain, although not
stated as strongly as seen in some
cases, qualified as objections to being
returned to live in Spain because the children are happy and settled in New
Zealand and wish
to remain living here. The Judge found that both children had
obtained an age and degree of maturity at which it was appropriate
to give
weight to their views — their objection to return to Spain and their
corresponding desire to remain in New Zealand
was entirely understandable and
rational. The Judge observed:
[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.
- [67] The Judge
briefly summarised his reasons for concluding that Mr McDonald had established
the children’s objections:
[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.
- [68] The Judge
found it was inevitable the children’s views were coloured by their most
recent experience of living in Spain,
during the period of COVID-19 lockdowns
and restrictions which they did not experience to the same extent in New
Zealand.
- [69] The Judge
concluded the children’s views were the result of their positive
experiences in New Zealand probably combined
with the unusual COVID-19-affected
environment in Spain immediately prior to their departure.
- [70] The Judge
also found there was no evidence the children were very unhappy and would not do
well in Spain when they lived there
and that, even now, they do not see the
return to Spain as a dire or disastrous proposition.
- [71] The Judge
then considered Mr McDonald’s assertions in relation to other exceptions
under s 106(1) (acquiescence and grave
risk) before finding those exceptions not
established.
- [72] The Judge
then turned to weigh the discretion in relation to the established exception,
being the children’s objections.
The discretion under s 106 of the Act
The
law
- [73] Section
106(1) of the Act (set out above at [34]) provides that, on a s 105(1)
application, the court may refuse to make an order for return in
identified circumstances.
- [74] The Supreme
Court considered the exercise of the discretion under s 106 in Secretary for
Justice v HJ (HJ).27 HJ was a case in which the
application under s 106 (1)(a) was made more than one year after removal of the
child and the child was now
settled — in fact, nearly two years after
removal. The judgment is to be read in that light because, as observed by the
plurality,
it is in the very nature of the s 106(1)(a) exception, quite apart
from s 4(1) of the Act, that the best interests of the particular
children at
that point play an essential part in the exercise of the
discretion.28
- [75] In
HJ, the plurality held striking the right balance between the best
interests of the child or children on the one hand, and the deterrent
policy of
the Convention on the other, lies at the heart of the exercise of the s
106(1)(a) discretion.29 That said, it was observed “the best
interests of the particular child in terms of s 4(1) cannot be the only or
indeed the dominant
factor in the exercise of the s 106
discretion”.30
- [76] The weight
to be given to competing considerations under s 106(1) will naturally vary
according to which exception has been established,
as is evident from the
discussions in HJ itself (in relation to the “one year
settled” exception). Similarly, in the more extreme situation of the grave
risk exception,
the Court of Appeal held in LRR v COL it is almost
impossible to conceive circumstances where return would not be ordered —
this is because the discouragement of
potential abductors has much less
significance as a factor when grave risk to the child or children is already
made out.31
- [77] The Court
of Appeal identified in LRR v COL, notwithstanding the heightened
relevance of the child’s welfare and best interests when the Court comes
to the exercise of
discretion, there is still to be a prompt and focused
enquiry. The Court explained:32
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].
- 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.
- [78] These
considerations have more recently been applied by this Court by Mander J in
Andersen v Lewis when considering the exercise of the
discretion:34
[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
- [79] The Judge,
having concluded the children’s objection exception was established,
turned to the discretion to refuse to make
an order for return under s 106(1) of
the Act.
- [80] The Judge
identified the plurality decision in HJ as the leading authority on the
exercise of the discretion. He referred to the requirement to weigh potentially
but not necessarily
competing considerations — the welfare and best
interests of the children on the one hand and the deterrence purpose of the
Convention on the other.
- [81] The Judge
recognised the competing considerations will vary according to which exception
is established. He noted, with reference
to the establishment of the grave risk
exception in LRR v COL, that it is almost impossible to conceive of
circumstances where, in that situation, return would be ordered. On the other
hand,
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.
- [82] The Judge
referred to the provisions of s 4 of the Act, observing:
[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
- [83] The Judge
then made two observations as to the exercise of the discretion:
- [213] Firstly,
Hague Convention provisions are welfare and best interest based. Generally, the
welfare and best interests of a child
will be promoted by returning children to
their country of habitual residence and for the Court in that jurisdiction to
determine
their longer-term care arrangements.
- [214] Secondly,
the Care of Children Act allows a court not to make an order for return even
though the necessary requirements of
s 105 are satisfied if one of the s 106
exceptions is established. That must be on the basis that, in certain
circumstances, return
is not in the welfare and best interests of that
particular child.
- [84] At the
conclusion of that discussion, the Judge in relation to s 4 of the Act quoted in
its entirety that part of Mander J’s
judgment in Andersen v Lewis
that is set out above at [78].
- [85] The Judge
recorded Mr Guest had submitted the welfare and best interests of the children
strongly favour their remaining in New
Zealand while issues in relation to their
long-term care are resolved, having regard to the fact the children are settled
and happy
in New Zealand.
- [86] The Judge
then set out the factual matters he considered in the exercise of the
discretion:
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.
- [87] The Judge
then returned to the consideration of the welfare and best interests
considerations. He observed that the promotion
of a relationship between the
children with both parents in a substantial and meaningful way had occurred far
more in Spain than
since the children had been in New Zealand. The Judge
recognised, if the children return to Spain, there will not be shared care
if Mr
McDonald did not return to Spain. But the Judge noted his understanding the
shared care order remains in force in Spain and
that Ms Sanchez is willing to
give effect to it.
- [88] The Judge
recorded he had concerns about the welfare and best interests of the children
should they remain in New Zealand, even
if only while final decisions are made
about their care, as the consequence would be their mother being largely
physically absent
from their lives, with even remote contact at times
problematic.
- [89] The Judge
recognised it was not possible to say whether the same difficulties would be
experienced if the children were living
with their mother in Spain and their
father was in New Zealand.
- [90] The Judge
then turned to the principles of the Convention, as being important in weighing
the discretion in the present case.
He identified as a core aspect of the
Convention that it is not generally in the children’s interests to be
removed from their
usual home (or be prevented from returning to it) by one
parent seeking to unilaterally relocate them — it is in their usual
home
country that issues about substantive care and contact are to be
resolved.
- [91] The Judge
then referred to the parents’ arrangements in Spain over the five- year
period to November 2021, following which
their visit to New Zealand was on a
time-limited, specific basis. The Judge noted “[t]he Spanish court was
presumably reassured
by the existence of the Convention and the
knowledge that if Mr [McDonald] refused to return the children, the
authorities here could order it”. There was an underlying international
convention to ensure return, one of its most
fundamental objectives being to establish an international order under which
there would be certainty about return.
- [92] The Judge
considered it difficult to identify a clearer case than the present where a
foreign court makes an order for children
to travel to another country with a
clear expectation they will be returned to their usual home at a specific given
time.
- [93] The Judge
therefore distinguished other cases where parties had informal agreements or
understandings about living in another
country for a period, often not clearly
defined and with the parties’ agreed purposes less certain and not
formalised through
Court orders.
- [94] The Judge
also distinguished other cases, including Andersen v Lewis, in which the
parties had chosen not to closely follow existing court orders in a foreign
jurisdiction. By contrast, the ultimate
Spanish order was very specific and
time- limited, and granted over opposition and after argument, without Ms
Sanchez thereafter
agreeing to any extension of the ordered time
limit.
(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.
- [96] The Judge
concluded, on the specific facts of the present case, the Convention principles
favouring return have significant importance.
He also identified a need for
respect of the decisions of a foreign country (comity).
- [97] The Judge
recorded, weighing and considering all those matters, he was satisfied it was
appropriate and correct to make an order
for the children’s return to
Spain despite their objections.
- [98] In
introducing his submissions on the appeal, Mr Guest highlighted six passages in
the Judge’s findings that, in Mr Guest’s
submission, made it
surprising the Judge ordered the return of the children. By their nature, these
passages’ relevance is
primarily in relation to the exercise of the
Judge’s discretion under s 106 of the Act. Given the importance placed on
these
passages, I reproduce them here verbatim:
[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.
...
- [187] However, I
accept, for the purposes of considering the exception, Mr McDonald’s
evidence that he cannot return to Spain
with the children if they were ordered
back. In that case, that would be a significant change in the children’s
care arrangements.
Mr McDonald has been the children’s
primary
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).
- [188] ... I
readily accept that would be a significant change for the
children.37
- [189] ... They
are at an age and stage where going against their views could cause real
conflict and potential resistance, particularly
from Andrew.
...
[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
- [99] As
the Judge made a final order, s 143 of the Act provided the parties with the
right to appeal the decision to this Court.
- [100] In their
submissions, Mr Guest and Ms Blackford recorded they agreed this appeal proceeds
by way of rehearing, in accordance
with the principles established in Austin,
Nichols & Co Inc v Stichting Lodestar [Austin, Nichols].38
Mr Guest (without reference to authority) suggested that, although the
choice in the words “may refuse” in s 106 of the
Act often referred
to as the Court’s “discretion”, appeals which engage s 106 are
inevitably still treated as general
appeals. For his part, Mr van
Bohemen
- 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
- [101] The
authorities indicate that the principles applying to appeals in relation to
decisions under ss 105 and 106 of the Act are
somewhat more nuanced than Mr
Guest and Ms Blackford suggested.
- [102] Insofar as
the appeal relates to a decision under s 105 of the Act, it is to be decided on
the general appeal principles in
Austin, Nichols.
- [103] The
position differs in relation to decisions on applications under ss 105–106
for the return of a child abducted to New
Zealand. In making such decisions the
Court first has to make factual determinations under s 105(1). If relief under s
106 of the
Act is invoked, the Court must also make findings of fact as to
whether any of the five situations identified in s 106(1) of the
Act exists and
then, if such a situation is found to exist, the Court has a discretion to
exercise under the same subsection. The
principles in May v May, as Mr
van Bohemen suggested, apply to the appeal against the exercise of the s 106(1)
discretion.
- [104] In this
regard, I adopt the explanation of Andrews J in AHC v
CAC:40
- [20] A judgment
on an application for an order for the return of a child involves findings of
fact and the evaluation of factual matters,
as well as the exercise of a
discretion under s 106(1) of the Act as to whether to refuse to make an order
for the return of the
children.
- [21] As noted by
Heath J in B v F, to the extent that the judgment appealed from involved
findings of fact, and the evaluation of factual matters, the principles
expressed
by the Supreme Court in Austin, Nichols & Co Inc v Stichting
Lodestar apply, and this court is free to reconsider the judgment of the
Family Court and to substitute its own views on questions of fact
and
evaluation, if satisfied that the Family Court decision was wrong. To the extent
that the Family Court Judge exercised a discretion,
then this court should only
interfere if satisfied that the Judge acted on a wrong principle, took into
account irrelevant matters,
failed to take relevant matters into account, or was
plainly wrong.
(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
- [105] Mr
McDonald, by his notice of appeal, asserted the Judge incorrectly determined
that at 16 December 2022 the children’s
habitual residence was in Spain,
and in particular:
(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
- [106] Mr Guest
first addressed the legal approach to determining “habitual
residence”. He submitted the Judge did not
apply current jurisprudence
which has involved a change over time to a liberal child-centred approach. He
submitted the “older
leading cases” such as Punter remain
very important on “habitual residence”,
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
- [107] Mr Guest
summarised the current jurisprudence as establishing:
(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.
- [108] Mr Guest
submitted, having regard to the ages of the children, the child-centred approach
ought to have been “robustly”
applied in this case, by asking the
question “what is the reality for these children — do they see the
NZ residence or
the Spanish residence as their home?”. In Mr Guest’s
submission, the compelling conclusion is that the children have
settled into
their NZ residence, are happy, are doing well, and therefore the NZ residence
stands out as their home, making New Zealand
their habitual residence acquired
at the latest of 16 December in 2022.
- [109] Mr Guest
identified what he submitted are the facts which should have been treated as
crucial in determining the children’s
habitual residence:
(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);
- 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.
- [110] Mr Guest
in five summarised headings submitted the Judge had misdirected himself or erred
in five particular ways:
(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.
- [111] Mr Guest
submitted the evidence identified no continuing ties with Spain, there simply
being “historic ties of having
lived there in the past”.
He suggested Ms Sanchez’s remaining family connections in Spain are weak
and do not
make Spain “home” for the children, Andrew having
indicated his second choice (that is second to remaining in New Zealand)
would
to be live with Ms Sanchez in Sydney and Sophia having indicated she found her
hometown in Spain frightening.
Submissions: lawyer for the children
- [112] As lawyer
for the children, Mr van Bohemen also submitted the children were at the date of
retention habitually resident in
New Zealand because they:
(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.
- [113] Mr van
Bohemen submitted, despite the Judge’s findings of facts identifying those
conclusions, the Judge concluded this
was not a case of habitual residence in
New Zealand because, when the children came to New Zealand, they did so on the
basis their
stay would be “time-limited” and
“impermanent”.
- [114] Mr van
Bohemen noted Punter appeared to be the only New Zealand case in which
the issue of changes to habitual residence arose in the context of children
coming
to New Zealand by agreement for a “time-limited period”. On
the other hand, there are unsurprisingly overseas examples
and Mr van Bohemen
referred to two United Kingdom cases, Re R (Children) (Reunite International
Child Abduction Centre and others intervening) (Re
R),43 Re M (Children) (Habitual
Residence: 1980 Hague Convention Abduction Convention) (Re
M),44 and F v
M.45
- [115] In Re
R, two young children (one an infant) who had previously lived in France
were found at first instance to have not lost their habitual
residence in France
after their mother had left by agreement to live in Scotland for the duration of
her maternity leave and they
had spent some four months in Scotland. On appeal,
the children were found to have in fact been habitually resident in Scotland at
the date of retention, a decision which was upheld by the United Kingdom Supreme
Court on further appeal. The Supreme Court referred
to its previously-settled
approach to the concept of habitual residence, observing that
it:46
... 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.
- [116] Mr van
Bohemen submitted that of particular relevance in the present case is the
Supreme Court’s observation that:47
- Re
R (Children) (Reunite International Child Abduction Centre and others
intervening) [2015] UKSC 35, [2016] AC 76 [Re R].
- 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.
- [117] In Re
M, two somewhat older children (aged six and eight) had been born and raised
in Germany. The parents agreed in July 2018 that the children
and their mother
would move to England to stay until approximately 2019 but with the parents to
re- evaluate the children’s
situation in December 2018, that the children
would spend “nearly equal time” with each parent and the
children’s
home would remain in Germany. Upon review in December 2018, the
parents agreed that the return date would be sometime in mid-2019.
In July 2019,
the mother retained the children in England.
- [118] At first
instance the Judge held the children had not lost their habitual residence in
Germany.
- [119] The Court
of Appeal allowed the appeal, finding the children were habitually resident in
England at the date of retention. The
Court adopted the same approach to
“habitual residence” as adopted in Re R. The Court found the
High Court judge had erred by not focusing, as the “essential
question”, on whether the children
had achieved a sufficient degree of
integration into a social and family environment in England such that their
residence was ‘habitual’,
instead focusing on the secondary
question, namely whether the children were still spending time with the family
in Germany and still
had a life there.48
... 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].
- [120] Mr van
Bohemen submitted that five particular features of the children’s
experience and integration in Re M, which are salient for this case, were
that the children in Re M: 49
(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
- [121] The Court
of Appeal, in Re M, observed that in such circumstances there
“would have to be some very powerful countervailing factors to lead to the
conclusion
that the children were not habitually resident in England by July
2019”.51
- [122] For
overseas authority in relation to “habitual residence”, Mr van
Bohemen finally referred to the Scottish decision
in F v M (a decision of
the Outer House, Court in Session).
- [123] F v M
concerned two children who had been born in New Zealand to United Kingdom
citizens while the couple were living in New Zealand. The
parents entered into
an agreement to return to the United Kingdom for a trial period of up to 15
months. By their agreement they
recorded the children’s habitual residence
would remain in New Zealand. At the end of the trial period, the mother wanted
to
remain in Scotland with the children and the father sought the return of the
children under the Convention. It was not disputed the
children had settled into
their life in Scotland.
49 At [73].
50 At [73].
51 At [74].
- [124] Lady Wise
concluded the children had become habitually resident in Scotland in the course
of the year of trial period. Mr van
Bohemen invoked the concluding discussion in
the F v M judgment in which Lady Wise explained, despite agreements
between parents being relevant, the primary focus in determining habitual
residence is on an analysis of the circumstances of the children at the material
time:52
[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.
- [125] In Mr van
Bohemen’s submission, the statements of law and approach identified in the
United Kingdom cases are not at odds
with the way in which the law has been
stated in this country, in leading authorities such as Punter 2 and
LRR v COL.
- [126] Mr van
Bohemen referred to the Court of Appeal’s explanation in LRR v COL
as to the application of s 4 of the Act to Convention cases with the
emphasis on the interests of the child rather than the parents
or guardians of
the child. Mr van Bohemen in particular referred to this
passage:53
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)
- [127] In Mr van
Bohemen’s submission, the Judge erred in a similar way to the Judge at
first instance in Re M, (above at [119]) by focusing on the parental
intention as to a time-limited and impermanent stay for the children in New
Zealand
and on the links they retained with Spain rather than focusing on the
children’s cultural integration in New Zealand.
Submissions: respondent
- [128] For Ms
Sanchez, Ms Blackford submitted the Judge, in determining the children’s
habitual residence remained in Spain at
the date of retention, had correctly
undertaken the broad factual enquiry that is required in terms of the
authorities, and especially
Punter 2.
- [129] She
invited this Court to reject the appellant’s suggestion that the Judge for
the purposes of the application before
him had determined the place of habitual
residence by reference to the time at which the children left Spain for New
Zealand —
the Judge expressly determined (above at [59]) the children were
habitually resident when they left Spain and also they remained
habitually
resident in Spain in December 2022 (at the date of retention).
- [130] Ms
Blackford referred to the relatively young age of the children (12 years and 10
years at the date of retention). She submitted
the “settled purpose”
consideration (parental intention) has more significance in this case than may
apply in the case
of older children. She submitted the existence of the order of
the Spanish Court forms a central part of the factual matrix of this
case
because it identifies clearly the parents’ settled intention. The Family
Court’s making of an order for return,
by giving effect
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.
- [131] Ms
Blackford submitted that, without question, all parties including the children
knew, in terms of the Spanish order, the children
would be in New Zealand for a
time-limited period and they would be returning to Spain to live there at the
end of the New Zealand
school year (December 2022).
- [132] Ms
Blackford submitted it is clear on the evidence Mr McDonald has attempted to use
the passage of time to try to develop roots
for the children in New Zealand
while isolating them from their mother and from Spain. She refers to Mr
McDonald’s refusal
to allow the children to travel to have contact with
their mother outside New Zealand, with Mr McDonald permitting only access in
New
Zealand at Ms Sanchez’s cost. All these matters, in Ms Blackford’s
submission, reinforce the self-evidently temporary
nature of the
children’s stay while they have been in New Zealand.
- [133] Ms
Blackford submits the appeal is largely reliant on a claim the children have
enjoyed their time in New Zealand and want to
stay. She submits that does not
equate to a change in habitual residence.
- [134] Ms
Blackford referred to the Judge’s observation (criticised by Mr Guest)
that it was not unexpected or unforeseen that
the children might do well in New
Zealand and in December 2022 might be reluctant to return to Spain. Ms Blackford
submitted there
is ample evidence to support that conclusion when the contrast
between Spain at the time the children left (in the midst of the COVID-19
pandemic, with its restrictions) and the exhilarating freedom of life in the NZ
residence. Ms Blackford referred to what the children
themselves had said
(through Mr Guest) as recorded by the latter after interviewing the children,
namely that:
(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
- [135] Section
105(1) of the Act sets out the criteria upon which Ms Sanchez could make her
application for return of the children.
Once 16 December 2022 was established as
the date of their retention, the single issue arising under s 105(1) was whether
the children
were habitually resident in Spain immediately before
16 December 2022.
- [136] The onus
of establishing the s 105(1) criteria was upon Ms Sanchez and the Judge
proceeded on that basis.
- [137] The Judge
correctly identified the relevant authorities which bound him, particularly
SK v KP, Punter 2 and Langdon v Wyler.
- [138] The Judge
commenced his consideration of the facts (as summarised at [55](a)–(h)) by
considering the connections the children
had with Spain and New Zealand
respectively. In doing so the Judge was addressing the central enquiry,
identified by Dr Schuz and
referred to by the Court of Appeal in Punter 2
(above at [45]). That enquiry, combining parental rights and child-centred
models in a hybrid model — whether there has been
sufficient time, in
light of the respective connections with the relevant countries, for the new
country to have become the forum
conveniens.54
- [139] The Judge
correctly summarised (above at [55](a)−(d), (f) and (h)) the relevant
connections the children had with Spain.
- [140] The Judge
also summarised the children’s connection with New Zealand where they are
“settled and engaged”.
The Judge set out extensively (in that part
of
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.
- [141] On my
review of the Judgment and the evidence before the Family Court, the Judge
neither neglected nor misconstrued any material
evidence identifying the
respective connections the children had with the two countries.
- [142] I consider
the Judge correctly rejected Mr Guest’s suggestion that the evidence
identified the children had no continuing
ties with Spain. The Judge identified
the five-year period of shared care in Spain when Andrew and Sophia were
respectively aged
6 to 11 years and 4 to 9 years. He reasonably found it must
have established strong ties for the children with Spain. It is significant
that
Mr van Bohemen’s interview with the children which resulted in his report
on their views, took place in August 2023. That
was eight months after the date
of the children’s retention in New Zealand (December 2022), and eight
months beyond their intended
one-year stay. Even after the passage of that
additional time from the date at which the children’s habitual residence
is to
be determined, the children appeared to be speaking of their preferences
rather than of an outright sense of disconnection or rejection
of Spain as a
place of residence.
- [143] In
assessing the children’s expressions of view in relation to residing in
Spain and New Zealand respectively, it is fundamentally
important to have regard
to all the circumstances of their stay in New Zealand. The assessment of the
habitual residence could otherwise
(as Ms Blackford submits) come close to
determining the children’s habitual residence by reference to the level of
enjoyment
they have had in New Zealand and the preference they now express to
stay in New Zealand.
- [144] Two
particular matters provide further, important context.
- [145] First, I
consider the Judge correctly rejected the submission that Ms Sanchez’s now
living in Sydney lessened the children’s
connection to Spain. As the Judge
explained, the expectation was always that (in order to maintain her contact
with the
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.
- [146] Secondly,
the children’s expressed preferences must be considered, as Ms
Blackford submitted, in the context of
the contrast between Spain at the time
the children left (with COVID-19 restrictions in place) and the comparative
freedom of their
lifestyle in New Zealand. The focus must remain on association
with the place of residence rather than on peculiar circumstances
that prevailed
at the time of departure (and which no longer exist). The younger the child, the
more difficult it will be for them
to objectively assess how they will enjoy a
particular environment when temporary conditions pass.
- [147] In
summary, a child-centred model for assessing habitual residence would recognise
not only that the children have acquired
significant ties to New Zealand and
have been significantly assimilated into New Zealand including in their living
and schooling
arrangements, and in cultural, social and economic integration. A
child- centred model also recognises that the children retain a
significant
strength of ties to Spain.
- [148] It is then
important to consider the other factors identified as relevant in SK v KP
and Punter 2 (above at [43]).
- [149] For
children of the ages of Andrew and Sophia at the time of retention (13 years and
11 years respectively) the settled purpose
of their parents is important
(although not necessarily decisive). This was correctly recognised by the
Judge.
- [150] The
settled purpose in this case was, as the Judge described it, a “strictly
temporary time-limited impermanent move”.
After five years of working,
shared-care arrangements with parents living and working in Spain, the children
departed for New Zealand
in the context of carefully negotiated arrangements
ultimately reinforced by the Spanish judgment with a committed time for the
return
to Spain. The situation, as the Judge found, is appreciably removed from
the relatively informal and changing arrangements in many
other cases where
parents have done no more than privately negotiate over and/or informally relax
the arrangements for their children.
The
Spanish courts considered, approved and ultimately reimposed the arrangements
agreed on by the parents.
- [151] The agreed
and ordered stay was well short of the “two years or more” which was
recognised in Punter 2 as not so clearly being temporary, with the result
that habitual residence in the old state has usually been held to have been lost
immediately on leaving the old state.
- [152] In this
case the settled purpose, having regard to the actual and intended length of
stay in New Zealand and the purpose of
the stay, pointed to the children
remaining habitually resident in Spain for the period of their temporary stay in
New Zealand.
- [153] The Judge
was also correct to find that the children must have known their move to New
Zealand was temporary and time limited
and that their departure from Spain to
New Zealand had been authorised on a finite basis. So too they would have
understood concepts
of time and that their return to Spain was not at an
undefined time. This was accordingly not a case in which the affected children
were of such a young age that the settled purpose of the parents would not have
been known and understood by the children leading
up to and throughout their
intended period of stay.
- [154] Notwithstanding
the submissions made by Mr Guest and Mr van Bohemen suggesting
“advances” in the law as it relates
to habitual residence, the
application of the authorities which bound the Family Court and bind this Court
leads clearly to the conclusion
that the Judge reached, namely that Ms Sanchez
had established that all requirements of s 105 of the Act (including that the
children
were habitually resident in Spain immediately before their retention),
were satisfied. In short, I am not satisfied the Judge was
wrong to conclude the
children were at 16 December 2022 habitually resident in Spain.
Issue 2 — the discretion to refuse return
Introduction
- [155] As the
full criteria under s 105(1) of the Act (including as to habitual residence)
were established, the Family Court was required
to make an order that the
children be
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.
- [156] Mr
McDonald failed to establish two other asserted grounds for refusal, including
that there was a grave risk to the children’s
wellbeing in the event they
were returned to Spain.
- [157] The Judge,
as summarised above at [79]–[98] exercised his discretion against refusing
to order the return of the children
and therefore ordered their
return.
Grounds of appeal
- [158] Mr
McDonald, by his notice of appeal, asserted the Judge incorrectly exercised his
discretion to return the children, particularly
by:
(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
- [159] Mr Guest
began his submissions in relation to the exercise of the discretion by observing
the children had been firm in their
views that they did not wish to return to
Spain. Mr Guest then observed the Judge “held that this defence had been
made out,
but then undermined it by requiring them to be returned
anyway”.
- [160] I will
very briefly deal with this submission here so that I do not need to return to
it in my analysis. As Ms Blackford submitted
in response, Mr Guest’s
submission comes very close to a proposition that whenever children’s
objections are firmly held
the Court should not exercise the discretion it is
given under s 106(1) of the Act. That is clearly incorrect. The five grounds for
refusal identified in s 106(1) of the Act are grounds on which the Court, in its
discretion, may refuse to make an order for return.
- [161] Mr Guest
particularly attacked the “great weight” the Judge placed on the
circumstances and basis on which the children
came to New Zealand. Mr Guest
noted his submissions to the Judge had invited the Court to focus on the date of
“wrongful retention”
as the date for assessment.
- [162] Mr Guest
submitted the Judge appeared to have been very heavily influenced by
“background circumstances” and in
particular the orders made by the
Spanish Court. Mr Guest identified four particular passages in the judgment in
which the Judge
discussed the basis upon which the Spanish Court must have made
the Spanish Order:
(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.
- [163] Mr Guest
submitted these examples showed fundamental errors in the Judge’s
approach, which appear to be based on the enforcement
of foreign court orders
instead of (as required) proceeding on a “best interests of the
child” basis.
- [164] Following
his introductory submissions, Mr Guest presented his submissions by reference to
the points on appeal (above at [158]):
(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
- [165] Mr Guest
accepted the Judge had assessed aspects of the children’s welfare and best
interests in the early parts of the
judgment but submitted the Judge did not
bring those matters into account in relation to the exercise of the discretion
to return.
(b) Elevating the
importance of the Spanish Court order and the goals of the Hague Convention
beyond the best interests of the children
- [166] Mr Guest
repeated the submission made in relation to the habitual residence issue, namely
that the Judge had incorrectly placed
great weight on the circumstances and
basis on which the children came to New Zealand and in particular on the Spanish
Order. Mr
Guest adopted, in relation to the Judge’s exercise of the s 106
discussion, the submissions he had made (in the habitual residence
context) as
to the Judge being heavily and incorrectly influenced by the circumstances of
the Spanish Order (above
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.
- [167] Mr Guest
referred to the Court of Appeal’s explanation in LRR v COL (above
at [30]) that the interests of the child are at the forefront of the whole
exercise (under the Convention). Mr Guest noted
that the Judge had quoted this
discussion by the Court of Appeal but, in his submission, the Judge did not take
the dictum into account
in reaching the decision to order a return.
- [168] Mr Guest
took issue with the Judge describing the majority decision in HJ as the
“leading authority” on the exercise of the s 106 discretion. He
submitted that HJ is “now out of date as to the exercise of the
discretion” and that LRR v COL should be considered in its place
— he stated “a plain position now is to concentrate on the welfare
of the child or children,
not deterring future abductions or
attentions”.
(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
- [169] Mr Guest
described Andrew and Sophia as “mature children”. He submitted the
Judge had been incorrect to “put
to one side” clearly expressed
views held for good reasons by those mature children for reasons entirely
unrelated to them
(namely the movement of children internationally).
(d) Disregarding the
evidence that the Appellant would be unable to return to live in Spain
- [170] Mr Guest
indicated this ground of appeal was poorly worded as the Judge had expressly
accepted that Mr McDonald would be unable
to return to live in Spain. Mr Guest
identified the intended ground as being that the Judge did not adequately take
that situation
into account in the exercise of his discretion.
(e) Failing to give
proper weight to the potential psychological implications for the children if
ordered to return
- [171] Mr Guest
identified the Judge had accepted, as a matter of commonsense, that returning
the children to Spain would present a
challenging and an unsettling time for
them. Mr Guest submitted the Judge had failed to give any identifiable weight to
that consideration,
instead allowing his considerations to be dominated by
factors concerning the children travelling internationally and the
Convention.
(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
- [172] Mr Guest
submitted the evidence about the “here and now” of the
children’s lives indicates it is almost certain
the Family Court at
Queenstown would be in a much better position than the court in Spain to
determine where the children should
live.
(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.
- [173] Mr Guest
referred to the Judge’s observation [above at [86](c)] that Ms
Sanchez, during the period the children
had been in New Zealand, has had no
meaningful role in their day-to-day care and only limited physical contact with
them. Mr Guest
described the Judge as thereby misleading himself with an
irrelevant consideration on contact. Mr Guest noted it had initially
been
envisaged that Ms Sanchez would be in New Zealand while the children were
here. Mr Guest submitted it was wrong for the
Judge to weigh the limited contact
in his assessment because:
(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.
- [174] Mr Guest
emphasised that Ms Sanchez is a New Zealand citizen who can live and work here
and that, while living in Sydney there
is a better possibility of physical
contact between parent and children than (for Mr McDonald) if the children are
returned to Spain.
(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
- [175] Mr Guest
referred to the Judge’s acceptance that Mr McDonald cannot return to Spain
to work and live. Mr Guest submitted
that, in that circumstance, the Judge was
incorrect to place any weight on the historic shared care arrangement.
Submissions: lawyer for
the children
- [176] For the
children, Mr van Bohemen supported Mr McDonald’s appeal. He
submitted:
(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.
- [177] Mr van
Bohemen reflected Mr Guest’s submissions as to the (obiter) observations
of Blanchard, Tipping and Andersen JJ
in HJ being no longer good law in
relation to the proposition that, where a s 106 exception is made out, it may
nonetheless be appropriate
to exercise the discretion in favour of an order for
return in order to deter further abductions. In particular, Mr Guest referred
to
the Court of Appeal’s judgment in LRR v COL, where the Court
expressed some “reservations about the suggestion” and expressed an
attraction for the different view
expressed in HJ by Elias CJ to the
effect that, in that situation, the discretion mut be exercised in the best
interests of the child having regard
to the circumstances that established the
exception.55
- [178] The thrust
of Mr van Bohemen’s submission was that the interests of deterrence are
irrelevant where the welfare and best
interests of children will be served by
their remaining in the new country until the dispute is resolved.
- [179] Given that
legal position, Mr van Bohemen submitted the Judge had taken irrelevant
considerations into account, by referring
to the interests of comity (as between
the Spanish and New Zealand courts) and the desirability of parents being able
to make arrangements
for children’s travel to a parent’s home
country with assurance the children will be returned.
- [180] Mr Guest
submitted further that the Judge failed to take into account six relevant
considerations:
(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.
- [181] Mr van
Bohemen referred to this Court’s decision in Andrews v Buckley
where, having regard to psychological evidence, the Judge concluded there
was a likelihood of psychological risk for the child
(a 12-year-old) if
returned to Australia. Mr van Bohemen submitted that, logically, the same
risks apply in this case to
the children. Mr van Bohemen concluded by submitting
the appeal should be granted so as to “give effect to the children’s
objections”.
Submissions: respondent
- [182] Ms
Blackford submitted the Judge had correctly exercised his discretion in not
refusing to make an order for return.
- [183] Ms
Blackford submitted the exercise of a discretion will be informed by differing
considerations, depending on the s 106(1)
exception that is established –
for instance, where the grave risk offence is established, the subjective
interests of the
child will be of such a magnitude that it is hard to imagine
policy considerations outweighing them.56
- [184] For the
range of considerations that may be relevant, Ms Blackford referred in
particular:
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
- [185] Ms
Blackford submitted it was important, in the context of the exercise of the
discretion, that the Judge had unequivocally
found there to be no evidence that
the return of the children to Spain would be deeply traumatising or give rise to
a grave risk
of psychological harm and found the grave risk exception was
therefore not established.
- [186] Ms
Blackford submitted the Judge was also correct, in that particular context, in
having regard to the Convention’s purposes
viewed in light of arrangements
entered into, in accordance with the Spanish order, for the children to travel
to New Zealand.
- [187] In Ms
Blackford’s submission, the exercise of the discretion in this case
weighed heavily in favour of an order for return.
- [188] Ms
Blackford submitted, in relation to Mr McDonald’s points on
appeal:
(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.
- [189] Finally,
Ms Blackford addressed suggestions advanced on the appeal to the effect that it
was unlikely Ms Sanchez would be returning
to Spain and that the future prospect
for the children involved their mother living in Australia. Ms Blackford noted
the clear evidence
from Ms Sanchez has been that she is “waiting in
Australia”, a place in which she was able to obtain work in her
specialised
area, and that Australia is not the place she intends to live in or
permanently relocate to.
- [190] In
conclusion, Ms Blackford submitted the welfare and best interests of the
children was and is best served by an order for
their return to Spain without
delay.
Analysis
- [191] At the
risk of doing a disservice to the Judge’s detailed reasoning, I will
endeavour to isolate the key considerations
that led the Judge to exercise his s
106(1) discretion against refusing to make an order for return under s 105 of
the Act.
- [192] The Judge
identified:
(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.
- [193] There is
no basis, on a proper reading of the Judgment, to infer the Judge dealt with the
consideration of the children’s
welfare and best interests as a
consideration not at the “forefront” of the exercise — the
Judge expressly referred
to the Court of Appeal’s observation in LRR v
COL to that effect. The Judge then focused specifically, for the next full
three pages, on the welfare and best interests of the children.
- [194] In my
view, and contrary to Mr Guest’s submission, the Judge very carefully
considered the welfare and best interests
of the children. His earlier analysis
of their objections (having regard to their age and degree of maturity) fully
identified the
basis of their objections. Those were the objections not of (as
Mr Guest described them) “mature” children but rather
of what might
be described as still relatively young children. It was unsurprising that
children who had left Spain in the context
of COVID-19 restrictions to enjoy the
environment of their New Zealand residence and New Zealand family, schooling and
recreational
opportunities, would have expressed a strong preference for New
Zealand when interviewed by Mr van Bohemen in August 2023. Against
the immediacy
of those experiences, the Judge was correct to focus also on the quality of the
children’s experience for their
five years’ residence in Spain,
including the quality of relationship with their mother. The Judge was entitled,
having regard
to the ages of the children and the extent of evidence as to the
preferences and concerns, to find their adjustment back to living
in Spain would
be achievable and consistent with their welfare and best interests. It would
also, very importantly in their welfare
and best interests, restore their
regular physical contact with their mother after they had had minimal physical
contact with her
not only for their intended 12-month stay in New Zealand but
also through to the Family Court hearing in September 2023 and the delivery
of
judgment in November 2023. In the context of a discretion decision primarily
about forum, the decision to order return meant the
important relationship
between mother and children could fully recommence, at least for a
period
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).
- [195] The Judge
correctly placed no weight on Mr McDonald’s assertions that Ms
Sanchez’s residence in Sydney, Australia
should be taken into account in
the exercise of the s 106 discretion. There was no basis to doubt Ms
Sanchez’s evidence that
her intention was to return to Spain to resume her
permanent residence there. Her relocation to this part of the world while her
children were living in New Zealand was clearly (in their best interests as well
as hers) an expedient to retain her relationship
with them while they had their
year in New Zealand.
- [196] The Judge
correctly placed no weight on the proposition that a New Zealand court would
assess the best interests of the children
better than a Spanish court.
- [197] In my
view, the Judge’s assessment of the welfare and best interests of the
children of itself led properly to the conclusion
the s 106 discretion should be
exercised against refusing to make an order under s 105.
- [198] It was
only after those welfare and best interests considerations that the Judge turned
to consider the principles under the
Convention.
- [199] I did not
understand either Mr Guest or Mr van Bohemen to suggest that what the Judge then
identified as “general Convention
principles” were not correctly
identified. The very purpose of the provisions in the Act relating to
international child abduction
is to implement in New Zealand law the
Convention.59
- [200] As I
understood the submissions in support of the appeal, the criticism was not of
the Judge’s description of the objects
and principles of the Convention
but involved the proposition (relying on observations in LRR v COL) that
the Judge had in some way elevated the importance of the Spanish order and the
objects of the Convention beyond the best interests
of the children.
59 Care of Children Act 2004, s 94.
- [201] There are
two responses to that submission.
- [202] First,
there is a fundamentally important difference between a case such as this, where
the relevant s 106(1) exception involves
the objections of children aged 13 and
11 years, and the fact situation in LRR v COL where it was established
there was a grave risk the child’s return to Australia would place him in
an intolerable situation.
The father in LRR v COL faced charges of
assault and breach of family violence orders, and had since been convicted on a
number of those charges). Nothing
in the Court of Appeal’s observations in
LRR v COL addressed to the latter situation required the Judge in the
quite different factual circumstances of this case to disregard or place
little
weight on broader Convention principles.
- [203] Secondly,
the Judge’s analysis was grounded in a consideration of the welfare and
best interests of the children. The
Judge’s consideration of Convention
principles and objects reinforced the earlier part of his analysis. It did not
elevate
Convention principles or considerations to a level that cut across the
children’s welfare and best interests. In that regard
it is properly
viewed as complementing the primary focus on welfare and interests.
- [204] I am not
satisfied the Judge, in exercising his discretion, relied on a wrong principle,
took into account irrelevant matters,
failed to take relevant matters into
account, or was plainly wrong.
Outcome
- [205] The
appeal is dismissed.
- [206] The
proceedings are remitted to the Family Court for the immediate convening of a
case management conference to consider implementation
of the order for return
and any further steps required in the proceedings.
- [207] Costs are
reserved. In the event the parties are unable to agree on costs the issue will
be determined on the papers. I direct:
(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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