Case Law[2023] ZACC 37South Africa
Ad Hoc Central Authority for the Republic of SA and Another v Koch N.O. and Another (CCT 150/22) [2023] ZACC 37; 2024 (2) BCLR 147 (CC); 2024 (3) SA 249 (CC) (27 November 2023)
Constitutional Court of South Africa
27 November 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction — interpretation of Article 13(b) — determination of the threshold for “grave risk” of psychological harm or an intolerable situation
Judgment
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## Ad Hoc Central Authority for the Republic of SA and Another v Koch N.O. and Another (CCT 150/22) [2023] ZACC 37; 2024 (2) BCLR 147 (CC); 2024 (3) SA 249 (CC) (27 November 2023)
Ad Hoc Central Authority for the Republic of SA and Another v Koch N.O. and Another (CCT 150/22) [2023] ZACC 37; 2024 (2) BCLR 147 (CC); 2024 (3) SA 249 (CC) (27 November 2023)
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sino date 27 November 2023
CONSTITUTIONAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case CCT 150/22
In
the matter between:
THE
AD HOC CENTRAL AUTHORITY FOR THE
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
First Applicant
PB
Second Applicant
And
HK
N.O.
First Respondent
HK
Second Respondent
Neutral
citation:
The Ad Hoc Central Authority
for the Republic of SA and Another v Koch N.O. and Another
[2023]
ZACC 37
Coram:
Zondo CJ,
Kollapen J, Madlanga J, Majiedt J,
Makgoka AJ, Potterill AJ, Rogers J, Theron J and
Van Zyl AJ
Judgments:
Van Zyl AJ (dissenting): [1] to [145]
Majiedt J
(majority): [146] to [220]
Heard
on:
09 May 2023
Decided
on:
27 November 2023
Summary:
Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child
Abduction — interpretation of Article 13(b) —
determination
of the threshold for “grave risk” of
psychological harm or an intolerable situation
ORDER
On
appeal from the Supreme Court of Appeal (hearing an appeal from the
High Court of South Africa, Western Cape Division):
1.
Leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal is upheld.
3.
The orders of the Supreme Court of Appeal and the High
Court are
set aside.
4.
E (the minor child) shall be returned to the jurisdiction of the
Central Authority
for England and Wales (CAEW) in the
United Kingdom (UK) by the end of February 2024.
5.
Pending the return of E to the UK as provided in this order, the
second respondent
(the aunt) shall not, without the prior
written consent of the Central Authority for the RSA (CASA), remove E
from the province
of the Western Cape in the Republic of South Africa
(RSA) and shall keep CASA informed of her and E’s physical
address and
contact details.
6.
In the event of the second respondent intending to accompany E on her
return
to the UK, she shall notify CASA and the second applicant
(the father) in writing, within one week of the date of issue of
this order, and in that event she is granted leave and authorisation,
insofar as it may be necessary, to remove E from the RSA
and
accompany E on her return to the UK.
7.
In the event of the second respondent failing to notify CASA in terms
of para
6 and the second applicant intending to accompany E on her
return to the UK, he shall notify CASA and the second respondent in
writing, within one week of such failure, and he is granted leave and
authorisation, insofar as it may be necessary, to remove E
from the
RSA and accompany E on her return to the UK.
8.
In the event of the second respondent and the second applicant
failing to notify
CASA in terms of paras 6 and 7, CASA is authorised
to make such arrangements as may be necessary to ensure that E is
safely returned
to the custody of the CAEW and to take such steps as
are necessary to ensure that such arrangements are complied with.
9.
Pending the return of E to the UK and for as long as the second
applicant is
in the UK, contact between E and the second applicant
shall take place in accordance with the High Court’s Order of
10 September
2020.
10.
In the event of the second applicant being present in the RSA for the
purpose provided in
para 7, CASA shall liaise with the respondents’
legal representatives to establish a schedule for contact between E
and the
second applicant. Such schedule shall provide for the
second applicant’s enjoyment of contact with E on a daily
basis,
taking into account E’s daily activities and any other
factors relevant to E’s well-being at the time.
11.
Upon E’s arrival in the UK, the second applicant must procure
all appropriate social
and medical services to ameliorate E’s
return to the UK and cooperate with any assessment that the
Department of Health and
Social Care in the UK may wish to undertake
in relation to him and the welfare of E.
12.
Proceedings regarding the determination of parental rights are stayed
pending E’s
return to the UK.
13.
In the event of either the second respondent or second applicant
notifying CASA, in terms
of para 6 or para 7, CASA shall forthwith
give notice thereof to the Registrar of this Court, to the CAEW and
to the second respondent
and the second applicant. In the event
of either the second respondent or the second applicant making the
election provided
for in para 6 or 7 of this order respectively, then
the second respondent or the second applicant, as the case may be,
shall provide
the Central Authority with regular information in
writing of all logistical and other arrangements made for the return
of
E to the UK. This information shall include, but not be
limited, to information regarding flight dates and times, and
compliance
with any passport, visa or health requirements, if
applicable. CASA shall also be entitled to request from either
the second
respondent or the second applicant, as the case may be,
details of the arrangements made for the return of E to the UK.
Any
such request shall promptly be responded to.
14.
A copy of this order shall be transmitted forthwith by the first
applicant to the CAEW.
15.
Each party is to bear their own costs in this Court, the Supreme
Court of Appeal and
the High Court.
JUDGMENT
VAN ZYL AJ
(Madlanga J, Rogers J and Theron J concurring):
Introduction
[1]
This is an
application for leave to appeal the judgment of the
Supreme Court of Appeal. If we grant leave,
the
case is concerned with Article 13(b)
[1]
of the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International
Child Abduction (Convention).
[2]
The Convention provides for an internationally agreed mechanism for
dealing with the global phenomenon of child abduction.
With
limited exceptions, it provides for the prompt return of an abducted
child to their home country.
[2]
One of the exceptions is found in Article 13(b).
It provides
that the judicial or administrative authority in the state which is
hearing the application for the return of the abducted
child may
refuse to order the child’s return if it finds that there is a
grave risk that their return would expose the child
to physical or
psychological harm, or otherwise place the child in an intolerable
situation.
[3]
In
Danaipour
v McLarey
[3]
the Court accurately described its task of deciding whether to return
an abducted child to his or her home country under the Convention
as
one of the “most difficult and heart-rending tasks” when
a party to the Convention proceedings raises an Article
13(b)
defence. The task of the court is rendered difficult due to the
fact that Article 13(b) requires the court to make
a decision about
the interests of a particular child in a specific case in the context
of, on the one hand, a factual situation
that is more often than not
charged with emotion and expectation, and on the other, the very
limited determination of what constitutes
an exception to the duty of
the court to order the immediate return of the child. The
present matter has proven not to be
an exception.
Background
[4]
The facts concern a little girl who is six years
old and who lives
with her maternal aunt in SA (SA). To protect the child’s
anonymity, I shall call her E. She
was born in the United
Kingdom (UK) to parents who were both British nationals. Her
parents were not married. E’s
mother, who died after the
commencement of the proceedings for E’s return to the UK,
was originally from SA.
[5]
E travelled from the UK to SA with her parents
in September 2019.
At the time, E was two years and two months old. Her mother was
diagnosed with cancer in April of
that year. The family came to
SA in order for her mother to consult with doctors regarding the
possibility of further medical
treatment for her cancer. If
there were no treatment options for the mother in SA, E and her
parents were to return to the
UK in October 2019. They made
their travel arrangements accordingly. Upon their arrival in
SA, E and her parents stayed
with E’s maternal aunt and her
grandmother. E’s mother consulted with a medical
practitioner and she was scheduled
to undergo surgery during the
latter part of September. After she had undergone surgery, she
was unable to return to the
UK with E and her father as they
intended. E’s father left as planned in October 2019,
leaving E behind with her
mother.
[6]
By the time of the father’s return to the
UK, the relationship
between him and E’s mother had deteriorated and was strained.
This is evidenced by the fact that
the father moved to alternative
accommodation before his return to the UK, and the reasons advanced
by E’s mother for her
subsequent decision not to return with E
to the UK. Her evidence was that she came to the realisation
that her health would
not allow her to return to the UK, and that she
should make arrangements for E’s care after her death.
She did not
believe that E’s father would be in a position to
raise E and provide her with the necessary stability and security.
She informed the father that she was going to remain in SA with E,
and that her sister must raise E after her death. The
father
was opposed to the mother’s unilateral decision and he insisted
that E must be returned to the UK.
[7]
In February
2020, the father approached the UK Central Authority (UKCA)
[4]
under the Convention and sought their assistance in securing the
immediate return of E to the UK. His request was on the
basis
that he had not given consent for E to remain indefinitely in SA.
At the direction of the UKCA, the appointee of the
Ad Hoc Central
Authority in SA (AHCA)
[5]
asked
the mother to agree to the return of E to the UK, failing which it
intended to approach the court for appropriate relief.
E’s
mother, through her attorneys, refused the request. She instead
proposed that an assessment be made regarding E’s
best
interests after her death. The proposal was rejected by the
AHCA on the basis that the purpose of the Convention is
to secure the
return of a child to their country of habitual residence, and that it
was for the courts of that country, in this
case the UK, to decide
any questions regarding the custody of E.
Litigation
history
High Court
[8]
On 25 June
2020, before the AHCA could commence proceedings under the
Convention, E’s mother and aunt brought an application
in the
High Court of South Africa, Western Cape Division
(High Court) wherein they asked that certain parental rights
and
responsibilities in respect of E be conferred upon the aunt, and that
E be raised in SA. The father opposed the application,
and with
the assistance of the AHCA launched proceedings under the Convention
on 20 July 2020 by way of a counter application.
At that
stage E was just over three years old. The first applicant in
the Convention proceedings in the High Court was
the AHCA.
E’s father was the second applicant. As in this matter,
his participation in the proceedings as a cited
party was
unnecessary.
[6]
The
procedural aspects of the Convention are regulated by the Regulations
issued in terms of the Children’s Act 38
of 2005 (Children’s
Act).
[7]
In terms thereof,
proceedings under the Convention are initiated by the Central
Authority.
[8]
[9]
The respondents in the High Court were initially
E’s
mother and the maternal aunt. After the death of the mother,
which occurred shortly before the High Court
delivered its
judgment, the aunt was substituted for the mother as the executor in
the latter’s deceased estate, and so featured
as a respondent
in the High Court in both her personal and nominal capacity.
[10]
Article 16
of the Convention dictates that a judicial authority of the state to
which a child was removed to or in which they are
retained, shall not
decide the merits of a custody dispute until such time it has
determined that the child is not to be returned
under the
Convention
[9]
. The parties
accordingly agreed that the application for parental rights be stayed
pending the outcome of the Convention
proceedings. This
agreement and the agreement that E would in the interim continue to
reside with her aunt was embodied in
an order of the Court on 21 July
2020. At the same time, the Convention application was
postponed to 7 September 2020.
[11]
At the adjourned hearing the High Court raised a number of
concerns with
regard to the sufficiency of the information placed
before it, and allowed the parties to file further affidavits to
address those
concerns. On 10 September the Court adjourned the
proceedings for argument to 20 October 2020. The High Court
delivered its judgment on 11 December 2020, ordering the return of E
to the UK. E was now three years and five months old.
[12]
The aunt
applied for leave to appeal and filed a notice of appeal in
January 2021. On 11 February 2021, the
aunt was
granted leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal.
A notice of appeal was filed with that Court
on 4 March 2021.
Following the application for leave to appeal the AHCA and the father
launched an urgent application
in terms of section 18 of the Superior
Courts’ Act
[10]
for E to
be returned to the UK. The application was dismissed on
21 March 2021 by reason of the existence of the
agreed
terms of the 21 July 2020 order. On 23 April 2021
the aunt filed an application with the Supreme Court of Appeal
to admit an expert report by Ms Leigh-Anne Pettigrew (Ms Pettigrew),
an educational psychologist as further evidence
in the
appeal. That report was yet to be compiled at the time and only
became available nine months later in January 2022.
It was
not clear when the report was ultimately filed with the registrar of
the Supreme Court of Appeal.
[13]
The appeal was heard on 28 February 2022, some fourteen
months after
the High Court had ordered E to be returned to the
UK. The judgment of the Supreme Court of Appeal
was
delivered two months later on 26 April 2022. At
that time E was four years and seven months old. The
Supreme Court of Appeal
upheld the appeal.
Dissatisfied with the outcome of the appeal, the AHCA and E’s
father then applied for leave to appeal
the order of the
Supreme Court of Appeal. The application for
leave to appeal was opposed. The appeal
was heard by this Court
on 9 May 2023, at which time E was five years and ten
months old.
[14]
For convenience I shall continue to refer to the two applicants in
the present
proceedings as the “AHCA” and the “father”
respectively, and to the two respondents as the “aunt”.
Any reference to the AHCA will include the father unless the context
indicates otherwise.
[15]
In her
opposition to the Convention application, E’s mother raised
three defences. She firstly contended that E
was not
wrongfully detained in SA in breach of the applicant’s rights
of custody as defined in Article 3
[11]
read with Article 5 of the Convention.
[12]
Article 3 provides that the removal or retention of a child away from
their country of habitual residence is to be considered
wrongful.
When in breach of custody rights attributed to anyone, either
jointly or alone, and when those rights were actually
exercised
either jointly or alone, or would have been so exercised, but for the
removal or retention of the child. The High Court
rightfully found no merit in this argument. As the natural
father, E’s father’s rights of custody arose by operation
of law.
[16]
The second
defence raised was, with reliance on Article 20 of the
Convention,
[13]
that the Court
should construe the father’s consent for E to remain in SA with
her mother in such a manner so as not to limit
it to the period
during which the mother was receiving treatment for cancer. By
the time of the hearing of the application
by the High Court
this argument appears to have morphed into one that any order for the
return of E to the UK would be contrary
to the fundamental principles
under our law relating to human rights and fundamental freedoms.
These arguments were not pursued
with any vigour in the High Court.
Their rejection by that Court was not pursued in the
Supreme Court of Appeal,
or in this Court, and nothing
further needs to be said about them.
[17]
The third and primary defence raised was that E’s return to the
UK should
be refused as there was a grave risk that she would be
exposed to psychological harm or be placed in an otherwise
intolerable situation
as envisaged in Article 13(b) of the
Convention. This contention was, to paraphrase, based on the
following allegations that—
(a)
her father was not capable of providing her
with the necessary care
in the UK;
(b)
E had developed a bond with her aunt who was willing
and financially
able to raise her;
(c)
E was on a positive developmental trajectory;
(d)
her return to the UK would cause her to be dislodged
from her secure
environment;
(e)
the lack of continuity of everyday life would
be detrimental to her
having to deal with the loss of her mother; and
(f)
there existed the possibility of E
developing a complicated grief
disorder of early childhood, due to the combined loss of her mother
and an attachment figure in
the person of the aunt, with possible
adverse psychological consequences in the long-term.
[18]
On the evidence placed before it, the High Court found that
there was
no substance in the objections raised as to the ability of
the father to take care of E upon her return to the UK. The
Court
was further satisfied that the father would have the support of
family members and friends in the UK in taking care of E.
In
this regard the Court acknowledged the fact that a family friend, and
a mother of five children, who knew E from birth, had
given an
undertaking to accompany the applicant to SA, and to assist with the
transition and adjustment of E should she be returned
to the UK.
The Court found that it was satisfactorily demonstrated that the
social services available in the UK would be
able to provide the
necessary assistance to E, for example bereavement counselling, so as
to mitigate the risk of any harm.
It was further found that E’s
young age presented her with the advantage of being able to form a
relationship and an attachment
to a person who has physical contact
with her and is able to provide her with daily care. This made
it possible for E to
form (or re-establish) a bond with her father
should she be returned to the UK.
[19]
The High Court ordered the return of E to the UK, and in
addition made
appropriate orders aimed at ensuring E’s
transition into the care of her father. It ordered the parties
to bear their
own costs.
[20]
In dealing with the aunt’s subsequent application for leave to
appeal,
the Court considered that she had failed to demonstrate that
there were reasonable prospects of another court coming to a
different
conclusion or that there were compelling reasons to grant
leave to appeal. Nevertheless, and because the High Court
was concerned that protracted appeal processes in Hague Convention
matters could defeat the purpose and objective of the Convention,
the
High Court granted leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of
Appeal. The High Court was presumably worried
that, if it
refused leave to appeal, there would be a delay while the aunt
petitioned the Supreme Court of Appeal
for leave to
appeal. In retrospect, the wisdom of this decision by the
High Court may be doubted.
Supreme Court of Appeal
[21]
As I have already mentioned, in the Supreme Court of Appeal
the aunt applied for leave to introduce further evidence. This
application was premised on the psychological wellbeing of
E
following the death of her mother. The Supreme Court of Appeal
granted the aunt leave to introduce Ms Pettigrew’s
report into
evidence. It did so essentially based on a finding of
exceptional circumstances, namely that the report dealt
with E’s
position following her mother’s death, and the likely impact of
that event on E, should her return to the
UK be ordered. Such
an assessment, the Court found, could only have been made after the
death of E’s mother.
[22]
The application to introduce the further evidence of Ms Pettigrew was
initially
opposed by the AHCA and the father. However, at the
hearing of the appeal they undertook to abide by the decision of the
court. They were given an opportunity to place further evidence
of its own before the Supreme Court of Appeal,
but
elected not to do so. The reasoning was that the evidence of Ms
Pettigrew could not assist the aunt in her opposition
to the
application for E’s return and that obtaining further evidence
would only serve to delay the finalisation of the proceedings.
[23]
Having admitted Ms Pettigrew’s report into evidence, the
Supreme Court of Appeal
conducted what was effectively
a rehearing of the matter. It considered and dealt with two
issues. The first was the
mother’s defence that the
retention of E in SA was not wrongful as the father had consented
thereto or acquiesced to her
retention. Proceeding from the
premise that on the undisputed evidence the father’s consent
for E to remain in SA was
for as long as her mother was undergoing
treatment, the Court found that the mother had failed to establish on
the evidence that
the applicant consented to E’s continued
retention beyond the period of her treatment. The father’s
consent,
the Court found, was not unequivocal, and the mother
unequivocally signified her intention to no longer be bound to the
agreed
conditions for E to remain in SA. It also rejected the
defence of acquiescence as not having been established on the
evidence.
[24]
The Court
concluded, that this meant that the High Court was bound to
order the return of E to the UK unless the mother could
establish the
existence of the circumstances envisaged in Article 13(b).
Finding that the burden to prove the factual existence
of the defence
in the Article rests on the party raising it, and that factual
disputes which may arise must be resolved through
the application of
the
Plascon Evans
rule,
[14]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal considered whether the defence
in Article 13(b) was proved. The Supreme Court
of Appeal
found that on the evidence of Ms Pettigrew, Professor Astrid Berg
(Professor Berg) who is a child and adolescent psychiatrist,
and
E’s mother, the High Court was not obliged to order
the return of E to the UK, as the mother and E’s
aunt had
successfully established that her return would expose her to the risk
of psychological harm, or otherwise place her in
an intolerable
situation as contemplated in Article 13(b) of the Convention.
[25]
This finding was made on two bases. The first was that the
return of
E to the UK would expose her to a grave risk of
psychological harm or place her in an intolerable situation assessed
on the basis
of the evidence of Professor Berg and Ms Pettigrew.
The second was the existence of that risk on the basis of the
evidence
of the mother that, by reason of the personal circumstances
of E’s father, he was not capable of raising E and providing
her with the necessary care in the UK.
[26]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal then next considered whether
it was established that the authorities in the UK would
not be able
to mitigate the risks raised in the evidence of the aunt. It
found that there was compelling evidence that the
measures in place
in the UK would not be sufficient to ameliorate the psychological and
emotional harm to which E would be exposed
to on her return to the
UK. This finding was based on Professor Berg’s evidence
in her initial report that E would
be entering a completely new
environment upon her return to the UK, and what is said to be “much
uncertainty about the quality
of the care that E will receive in the
UK”.
[15]
[27]
With regard to the availability of bereavement counselling for E on
her return
to the UK, the Court again relied on the evidence of
Professor Berg that counselling cannot counter the trauma induced by
the loss
of two attachment figures. This finding does not
account for Professor Berg’s evidence in her supplementary
report
to the High Court that E could benefit from bereavement
counselling if returned to the UK, and that it may be possible for
her to transition into the care of the applicant in a relatively
short period of time. I deal more fully with the evidence
later
in this judgment.
[28]
Based on these findings, the Supreme Court of Appeal
granted
the application to admit Ms Pettigrew’s report with
costs, it upheld the appeal with costs, and it set the decision of
the
High Court aside. The order of the High Court was
replaced with an order dismissing the Convention application with
costs. It is this order that is the subject matter of the
proceedings before us. Importantly, there is no appeal against
the order pertaining to the admission of Ms Pettigrew’s
evidence.
In
this Court
The
submissions of the AHCA
[29]
The AHCA submits that this Court has jurisdiction as the matter
raises a constitutional
issue and arguable points of law of general
public importance. The constitutional issue is said to be
the fact that
the issues raised implicate the best interests of
the child in section 28(2) of the Constitution. The arguable
points
of law deal with the manner in which a court must conduct an
enquiry as envisaged in Article 13(b) of the Convention and what the
relevant considerations are when making an order in terms thereof.
These include the nature of the test that must be applied
in deciding
whether a grave risk of harm or an intolerable situation exists as
envisaged in Article 13(b), how to find a balance
between the short
and long-term interests of a child in the enquiry envisaged by the
Article, and the weight to be accorded in
this determination to the
fact that the party who seeks to resist the return of the child to
their country of habitual residence
with reliance on Article 13(b)
does not hold any existing rights of custody or access to the child
concerned.
[30]
With regard to the findings made by the Supreme Court of Appeal,
the AHCA submits that in her two reports submitted to the High Court
Professor Berg does not express the opinion that the
risk to E’s
mental health would be grave in the event of her return to the UK.
The AHCA argues that the consequences
of E’s return outlined by
Professor Berg are the inevitable disruption that is inherent in
a court-ordered and unwelcome
return of an abducted child to their
country of habitual residence. Further, with reliance on
Professor Berg’s
opinion, AHCA submits that the cognitive
capacity of a child under the age of ten to comprehend the concept of
death has the benefit
that it serves to postpone the initial
psychological impact that would typically arise from an immediate and
complete understanding
of the death of a primary caregiver.
[31]
Based on Professor Berg’s evidence that a young child tends to
bond with
the person who is responsible for their daily needs and
care, the AHCA argues that there was no evidence to substantiate why
E
would not or should not re-establish a bond with her father upon
her return to the UK. The AHCA contends further that the
Supreme Court of Appeal failed to give adequate consideration to
the evidence regarding the social services available to E
in the UK,
which may provide E with the necessary support should she be returned
to that country. Furthermore, that the expert
opinions relied
on by the Supreme Court of Appeal for its findings
failed to adequately consider, in E’s best
interests, the
importance of a continued relationship with her only biological
parent. The emphasis placed by the experts
on the bond that E
had with her aunt would result in her being deprived of the care and
affection of her father who is by law her
custodian. It
follows, so the argument goes, given all the circumstances of the
matter and the facts placed before the High Court,
that the
High Court was correct in finding that it was not demonstrated
that, if E’s return to the UK were ordered,
she would not be
protected from the potential consequences arising from her
court-ordered return.
The submissions of E’s
aunt
[32]
The aunt’s submission is that this Court’s constitutional
jurisdiction
is not engaged. The best interests of the child
are paramount in every matter involving a child and any consideration
of
section 28(2) in this matter could only have limited application
to other Convention applications.
[33]
The aunt
argues that this matter does not raise any new principle in respect
of the Convention that this Court has not previously
ruled on or that
warrants a ruling from this Court. It is disputed that what the
AHCA contends are legal questions or that
any arguable points of law
of general public importance are raised thereby. The submission
is that these questions have previously
been determined by this Court
in
Sonderup
,
[16]
that those determinations have consistently been applied by the lower
courts, and are consistent with that of courts in the majority
of
foreign jurisdictions.
[34]
With regard to the merits of the matter, the aunt submits, firstly,
that there
is no evidence that E would be able to establish a bond
with her father if she were to be returned to the UK. Based on
the
evidence of Professor Berg and Ms Pettigrew, it is submitted that
the Supreme Court of Appeal correctly found that
E’s
return to the UK would expose her to a grave risk of psychological
harm and an intolerable situation as envisaged in
Article 13(b).
The second submission is that the Supreme Court of Appeal
correctly concluded that the social
and other services available to E
in the UK would not be sufficient to mitigate the grave risk E would
face upon a return to that
country. The third submission is
that although Article 13(b) is forward looking, that is, it looks at
what the position would
be if a child were to be returned to their
home country, this does not mean that a court should not pay
attention to the past.
Accordingly, so it is submitted, the
Supreme Court of Appeal correctly relied on the
evidence of E’s mother
with regard to the past conduct of her
father in support of the submission that he would not be fit to care
for her, should she
be returned to the UK.
The
jurisdiction of this Court and leave to appeal
[35]
This matter deals with the interpretation of Article 13(b) of the
Convention.
The Convention implicates the rights of a
child in section 28(2) of the Constitution by mandating contracting
states to return
a child to the country of habitual residence when
the child was removed in the circumstances postulated by the
Convention.
The return of the child takes place without any
comprehensive determination of what the best interests of the child
may demand.
In the scheme of the Convention, that is the
function of the state where the child is habitually resident.
[36]
The court’s usual investigatory powers are as a result
inevitably constrained.
The defence in Article 13(b)
provides an exception to the court’s otherwise limited
function. However, the courts
in various jurisdictions have
consistently held that Article 13(b) should be narrowly interpreted.
This approach is based
on the purpose and the text of the
Convention. It is further given effect to in some jurisdictions
by a heightened burden
of proof by requiring the party opposing the
return of the child to establish by clear and convincing evidence
that a grave risk
of harm exists in the return of the child.
[37]
This approach places a limitation on the usual authority of the court
to investigate
and determine what would be in the best interest of a
child. The interpretation of Article 13(b) therefore
raises a
constitutional matter. It raises the question whether
Article 13(b) is capable of an interpretation that strikes a
fair
balance between the competing interests and constitutional
rights at stake in Convention proceedings. These aspects serve
to place a limitation on the rights of the child in section 28(2) of
the Constitution, and their consideration raises a constitutional
matter.
[38]
There are
also two important arguable points of law of general public
importance which ought to be considered by this Court.
Those
issues arise in the context of the application of the exception in
Article 13(b) and from the issues raised by the AHCA in
the appeal.
They are the legal principles which find application in the
determination of factual disputes in deciding whether
a defence
raised in terms of Article 13(b) has been established, and the nature
and the content of the discretion which a court
is required to
exercise following a finding that the defence in Article 13(b) has
been proved. Neither of these matters
were dealt with by
this Court in
Sonderup
,
and their determination involves the interpretation of Article 13(b)
in the wider scheme of the Convention. The general
public
importance of these issues is emphasised by the fact that the
Convention is, as a whole, designed to protect the interests
of
children generally,
[17]
and
its current application implicates the duty of the state, of which
the judiciary is the third arm, to comply with its international
obligations.
[18]
The
exercise of the discretion envisaged in Article 13(b) does not arise
very often, in that the defences raised in terms
thereof often fail.
[39]
In the circumstances, the AHCA must be granted leave to appeal.
The matter
raises issues of general public importance, it has
reasonable prospects of success and a decision thereon will be in the
interests
of justice in that it goes beyond the narrow interests of
the parties in this matter. The applicants must accordingly be
granted leave to appeal.
The
Convention
Introduction
[40]
The return
of children who have been wrongfully abducted from their place of
habitual residence is governed by the Convention.
It is an
international agreement to which SA acceded on 8 July 1997.
The Convention was first incorporated into
our domestic law by way of
the Hague Convention of Civil Aspects of Intentional Child Abduction
Act (Hague Convention Act).
[19]
This Act was later repealed, and the Convention was thereafter
incorporated into the Children’s Act.
[20]
The objective and the purpose of the Convention are found in its
preamble and in Article 1.
[21]
The purpose of the Convention is to protect children from the harmful
effects of their wrongful removal or retention, to
ensure their
prompt return to their state of habitual residence; and to secure
protection for rights of access. Its stated
objective is to
give effect to the paramount importance of the interests of children
in matters relating to their custody.
As will be demonstrated,
the provisions of the Convention seek to achieve its stated purpose
in a manner that promotes its overarching
objective of protecting the
interest of children.
[41]
To give
effect to the objectives of the Convention, Article 1 requires
contracting states to promptly return a child who has been
wrongfully
removed or retained, and to ensure that rights of custody and of
access under the law of one contracting state are effectively
respected in other contracting states. The purpose of return is
to enable the courts of the country of habitual residence,
rather
than the courts of the country to which the child has been wrongfully
removed to, to decide matters of custody and other
rights. A
removal or retention will be wrongful where it is in “breach of
rights of custody attributed to a person,
an institution or any other
body, either jointly or alone.”
[22]
The wrongfulness of the removal or retention of a child is
accordingly determined with reference to the applicable custody
laws. The rights of custody with which the Convention is
concerned are defined to include rights to the care of the child
and
the right to determine the child’s place of residence.
[23]
A child that is wrongfully removed or retained is considered to be an
abducted child, who is subject to the provisions of
the Convention.
[42]
The core provision in the Convention to give effect to its stated
objectives
is found in Article 12(1). It reads as follows:
“
Where
a child has been wrongfully removed or retained in terms of Article 3
and, at the date of the commencement of the proceedings
before the
judicial or administrative authority of the Contracting State where
the child is, a period of less than one year has
elapsed from the
date of the wrongful removal or retention, the authority concerned
shall order the return of the child forthwith.”
[43]
Article 12(1) thus requires contracting states to provide a process
which
will result in the mandatory return of an abducted child to
their country of habitual residence whenever an application is made
within a period of less than one year following the removal of a
child. The primary rule is therefore that if, following
the
wrongful removal of a child, the application for return is made
within twelve months, an order for return must forthwith be
made.
[44]
The drafters of the Convention realised, however, that the best
interests of
a particular child may not always be best served by
their speedy and compulsory return to their home country. It
accordingly
provides for exceptions to the mandatory return of a
child. An exception to the mandatory return of an abducted
child is
found in Article 12(2). In terms thereof, if the
return proceedings are commenced a year or more after the removal of
the child, the court or other administrative authority of the
contracting state remains obligated to order the return of the child,
unless it is demonstrated that the child is settled in their new
environment. It reads:
“
The
judicial or administrative authority, even where the proceedings have
been commenced after the expiration of the period of one
year
referred to in the preceding paragraph, shall also order the return
of the child, unless it is demonstrated that the child
is now settled
in its new environment.”
[45]
Article 12(2) thus recognises that where a lengthy period has passed
(twelve months) and the child has settled in their new
environment, the return of the child to their country of habitual
residence
may no longer be in their best interest.
The objectives of the Convention of securing a speedy return of
the child can
no longer be met and the return of the child might
cause further disruption and distress to the child. This
exception calls
for an assessment of whether a wrongfully removed
child has become integrated in their new environment. Not
unlike the other
exceptions to Article 12(1), it serves the
overall purpose of giving effect to the declared aim of the
Convention in its Preamble
of protecting the best interests of
affected children.
[46]
Further exceptions to Article 12(1) are found in Article 13. It
reads
as follows:
“
Notwithstanding
the provisions of the preceding Article, the judicial or
administrative authority of the requested State is not
bound to order
the return of the child if the person, institution or other body
which opposes its return establishes that—
(a)
the person, institution or other body
having the care of the person
of the child was not actually exercising the custody rights at the
time of removal or retention,
or had consented to or subsequently
acquiesced in the removal or retention; or
(b)
there is a grave risk that his or her
return would expose the child
to physical or psychological harm or otherwise place the child in an
intolerable situation.
The
judicial or administrative authority may also refuse to order the
return of the child if it finds that the child objects to
being
returned and has attained an age and degree of maturity at which it
is appropriate to take account of its views.
In
considering the circumstances referred to in this Article, the
judicial and administrative authorities shall take into account
the
information relating to the social background of the child provided
by the Central Authority or other competent authority of
the child’s
habitual residence.”
[47]
What Article 13 does is recognise that in some circumstances it might
not be
appropriate to order the return of a child. It gives the
court of the requested state the power not to return an abducted
child if the person opposing the return establishes one of the
grounds which Article 13 specifies. In summary, those grounds
are: the non exercise of custody rights, consent or acquiescence
in removal, the existence of a grave risk of harm to the
child or an
intolerable situation if the return of the child is ordered, or the
child, being of sufficient age and maturity, objects
to being
returned.
[48]
There are two important aspects to Article 13 that have significance
in the
context of the issues raised in this matter that must be
highlighted. The one is that, notwithstanding that the party
opposing
the return of a child establishes one of the grounds in
Article 13, the court retains a general discretion to order the
return
of the child. The existence of one of the grounds in
Article 13 means only that the Court is not obliged (“bound”)
to order the return of the child, but it may still do so. The
other is that Article 13 provides that, in considering the
specified
exceptions, the relevant authority in the requested state must take
into account the information relating to the social
background of the
child provided by the Central Authority of the requesting state.
[49]
The
Convention facilitates the return of the abducted child by requiring
contracting states to designate a Central Authority, that
is, a
specific government office, to perform the task of receiving
applications for assistance in securing the return of a child
and for
that authority to take or cause to take all appropriate measures to
obtain the voluntary return of the child. It
is important to
point out that the Convention does not seek to determine who should
have custody of a child.
[24]
It rests implicitly on the principle that any dispute with regard to
rights of custody or access must be determined by the
competent
authorities or the courts in the state where the child has their
habitual residence prior to their removal. The
purpose of the
return is to enable the courts of the country of the child’s
habitual residence, rather than the courts of
the country to which
the child was wrongfully removed, to decide matters of custody and
access.
[50]
The underlying premise of the Convention is therefore that the best
interests
of abducted children generally are best served by their
prompt return to their country of habitual residence. This is
based
on a number of assumptions that—
(a)
the wrongful removal of children from
their country of habitual
residence is not in their best interests;
(b)
the prompt return of children to their
state of habitual residence
will normally serve their best interests and facilitate the
resolution of custody disputes by avoiding
delays;
(c)
the courts of the country of habitual
residence are in a position to
protect the child upon their return; and
(d)
the expeditious and summary return
of a child protects children
generally by acting as a deterrent to their abduction.
[51]
The exceptions in Article 13 therefore serve to recognise this fact
by
enabling the court hearing a Convention matter to make a
determination with regard to the welfare and best interests of a
particular
child in their own circumstances. As I proceed it
will be pointed out, the determination is not made in isolation, but
within
the context of the objectives of the Convention.
The
Convention and the paramountcy of the child’s best interest in
section 28(2) of the Constitution
[52]
Section
28(2) of our Constitution provides that “[a] child’s best
interests are of paramount importance in every matter
concerning the
child”. In
Sonderup
[25]
this Court considered the fact that the duty placed by the Convention
on the court of the state where the child is located, to
return the
child to their home country, may place a limitation on what is, in
the short-term, in the best interests of the child.
This Court
accordingly proceeded to determine whether that limitation is
inconsistent with section 28(2). In conducting
the
proportionality analysis as envisaged in section 36 of the
Constitution,
[26]
this Court
concluded that the Convention goes no further than is necessary to
achieve its objective, and that the means employed
by it to achieve
that objective are proportional to the end it seeks to attain.
[27]
[53]
In arriving
at this conclusion, this Court considered the purpose of the
Convention, its overriding aim of protecting the best interests
of
children in general by the prevention of their abduction and its
negative impact, as well as the fact that the scheme of the
Convention is carefully crafted to mitigate the extent of the
limitation by providing for exceptions to the mandatory return of
a
child.
[28]
The
exceptions in Article 13, and what was referred to as the
appropriate application of the Convention and the ability
of the
court to shape an order ensuring that any limitation that the
Convention may place on the entrenched rights in section 28(2)
“[i]s
narrowly tailored to achieve the important purposes of the
Convention”, led to the finding that the Convention,
and the
Hague Convention Act, which incorporated its provisions into our
domestic law, are consistent with the Constitution.
[29]
The
interpretation of Article 13(b)
Sonderup
and Article 13(b)
[54]
In addition to the constitutionality of the Convention, this Court in
Sonderup
also dealt with the exception in Article 13(b) on the
facts before it. In the context of the issues raised in the
present
matter, the following aspects in the judgement are worth
mentioning:
(a)
The
interrelated nature of the provisions of the Convention in serving
its main purpose of protecting the interests of children
was
recognised. This is best achieved by: the hearing of custody
disputes by the appropriate courts; preventing that hearing
being
delayed by turning Convention proceedings into a custody
determination; preventing the wrongful circumvention of that
forum by
the unilateral actions of one parent; and recognising that there may
be specific circumstances of a particular child that
may dictate that
it is not in the interest of that child to be returned to their
country of habitual residence by the provision
of the exemptions of
Article 13.
[30]
The limited nature of these exemptions was emphasised by the
statement quoted earlier, namely that they are intended to provide
exceptions, in certain circumstances, to protect the welfare and best
interests of the child.
[31]
(b)
The
psychological harm relied upon in
Sonderup
was the compromising effect on the healthy psychological development
of the child by being exposed, upon her return to her home
country
(British Columbia in Canada), to the relationship of her parents that
was characterised by domestic abuse. The harm
contemplated was
found not to be harm of a serious nature as contemplated by Article
13(b): “[i]t is in the main harm which
is the natural
consequence of the child’s removal from the jurisdiction of the
courts of British Columbia, a Court ordered
return, and a contested
custody dispute in which the temperature has been raised by the
mother’s unlawful action”.
[32]
(c)
This Court
left the question open as to whether our courts should follow a
strict approach to the interpretation and application
of Article
13(b) set by courts in other jurisdictions.
[33]
(d)
The existence and the nature and incidence of any
burden of proof
which may arise in those instances where a party to Convention
proceedings seeks to rely on the exception in Article
13(b) was not
addressed.
(e)
Because of the finding that the Article 13(b)
defence was not proved,
this Court did not need to consider the nature of, and the
considerations relevant to the exercise of the
discretion implicit in
the terms of the Article.
(f)
Another aspect not addressed was the
approach to be adopted to the
resolution of factual disputes where the parties have elected to
place evidence on affidavit and
other documentary evidence before the
court hearing the return application.
The
scope of Article 13(b)
[55]
Recognising
that the interests of the child are of fundamental importance,
the Convention acknowledges, through the exceptions
to the duty
to secure the prompt return of a child, that there may be factual
situations which have to do either with the person
of a particular
child or with the environment with which that child is most likely
connected or to which the child is requested
to be returned, where
the return would be detrimental to the interests of the child and
contrary to the objectives of the Convention.
The Convention
accordingly makes it possible for a departure from the assumption
that a prompt return is generally in the best
interests of a child.
In this manner the Convention serves to protect the short-term best
interests of a particular child
by authorising the court seized with
an application under the Convention to have regard to the welfare and
best interests of that
child in specified circumstances, and to
refuse, in limited circumstances, to order the return of that child.
The focus is
on the child and the issue is the risk of harm to that
child in the event of their return.
[34]
[56]
The words “grave risk” in Article 13(b) indicate that the
exception
is “forward looking”, in that it requires
the court to look at the future by focusing on the circumstances of
the child upon their return, and on whether those circumstances would
expose the child to a grave risk as envisaged in Article 13(b).
The focus, in determining what constitutes a “grave risk”
of “psychological harm” as contemplated by Article 13(b),
is on the harm that is likely to eventuate should the child be
returned. The evidence must therefore be limited to the
psychological
and emotional impact of returning a child to their
habitual residence.
[57]
The enquiry is, as a result, of a limited nature. It does not
allow the
court to otherwise turn the proceedings into an adversarial
contest on the merits of the dispute with regard to rights of custody
and access, which underlie the removal of the child from their home
country. This Court in
Sonderup
held:
“
It would be quite
contrary to the intention and terms of the Convention were a court
hearing an application under the Convention
to allow the proceedings
to be converted into a custody application. . . .
Rather, the Convention seeks to
ensure that custody issues are
determined by the court in the best position to do so by reason of
the relationship between its
jurisdiction and the child. That
court will have access to the facts relevant to the determination of
custody.”
[35]
[58]
The long-term best interests of a child are usually reserved for
custody proceedings
on the merits. Article 13(b) is concerned
with the short-term interests of the child if returned to the country
where the
custody proceedings are to be determined. It follows
that it is important to distinguish between those issues and evidence
which are relevant to a determination of the merits of a custody
question, and those which are relevant within the much narrower
scope
of determining whether a return order would create the risks
envisaged in Article 13(b). It would not be proper for
the
court, in the case of an Article 13(b) determination, to consider
issues and information pertaining to custody beyond what
is necessary
to determine the existence of an exemption.
[59]
Accordingly,
aspects such as the psychological profiles of the parents, detailed
evaluations of parental fitness, evidence concerning
lifestyles, and
the nature and quality of relationships, all bear upon the issues
that will ultimately be determined by the appropriate
tribunal in the
child’s home country. To this may be added the projected
long-term psychological consequences of the
return of the child in
the nature of that which was considered in
Sonderup
.
[36]
[60]
The terms
“grave risk” and “intolerable situation” are
not defined by the Convention. In some
jurisdictions,
Article 13(b) is construed narrowly.
[37]
In the United States of America, for example, this is achieved by the
imposition of a higher standard of proof: a party raising
an Article
13(b) defence in Convention proceedings must prove the defence by
“clear and convincing evidence”.
[38]
The reasoning behind the narrow interpretation of the exception
appears to be the fear that an Article 13(b) determination
might
otherwise morph into a best interests determination, and that it may
be exploited by parties attempting to forum shop by
substituting the
forum chosen by the abductor for that of the child’s habitual
residence. That would defeat the objectives
of the Convention
and may render it ineffective. This is a valid consideration.
That it is an aim of the Convention
to prevent forum shopping was
recognised by this Court in
Sonderup
:
“
Given
the inappropriateness of a specific forum, the Convention also aims
to prevent the wrongful circumvention of that forum by
the unilateral
action of one parent. Parents have a responsibility to
their children to allow the law to take its course
and not to attempt
to resolve the dispute by resorting to self-help”.
[39]
[61]
It is in my
view unnecessary to resort to an attempt to give Article 13(b) a
meaning that is any more restrictive than what is not
already clearly
conveyed by the plain meaning of its wording. In
KG
v CB
[40]
our Supreme Court of Appeal approved the approach
adopted by the United Kingdom’s Supreme Court in
Re
E (Children)
.
[41]
In that case the Court held:
“
[T]here
is no need for the Article to be narrowly construed. By its
very terms, it is of restricted application. The
words of
Article 13 are quite plain and need no further elaboration or gloss.
First,
it is clear that the burden of proof lies with the person,
institution or other body, which opposes the child’s return.
It is for them to produce evidence to substantiate one of the
exceptions. There is nothing to indicate that the standard
of
proof is other than the ordinary balance of probabilities . . .
Second,
the risk to the child must be ‘grave’. It is not
enough, as it is in other contexts such as asylum, that
the risk must
be ‘real’. It must have reached such a standard of
seriousness as to be classified as ‘grave’.
Although ‘grave’ characterises the risk rather than the
harm, there is in ordinary language a link between the two.
Thus a relatively low risk of death or serious injury might properly
be qualified as ‘grave’ while a higher level of
risk
might be required for other less serious forms of harm.
Third,
the words ‘physical or psychological harm’ are not
qualified. However, they do gain colour from the alternative
‘or
otherwise
’
placed ‘in an intolerable situation’ (emphasis
supplied). As was said in
Re
D
[42]
at para 52, ‘“Intolerable” is a strong word, but
when applied to a child must mean “a situation which this
particular child in these particular circumstances should not be
expected to tolerate”’. Those words were carefully
considered and can be applied just as sensibly to physical or
psychological harm as to any other situation. Every child has
to put up with a certain amount of rough and tumble, discomfort and
distress. It is part of growing up. But there are
some
things which it is not reasonable to expect a child to tolerate.”
[43]
[62]
The
approach that Article 13(b) does not require elaboration beyond
its terms must be endorsed. It is implied in the
plain meaning
of the words used in Article 13(b) that it sets a high
threshold, and any other approach will be inconsistent
with the
language used and the objectives of the Convention. The level
of the risk must be of a serious nature, and the words
“otherwise
place the child in an intolerable position” throw considerable
light not only on the degree of seriousness
of the risk of the harm,
but also the harm itself, that the Convention has in mind.
[44]
The word “otherwise” is indicative of a conclusion that
the physical and emotional harm contemplated is harm
to the degree
that also amounts to an intolerable situation.
[63]
The risk of harm that will meet the threshold in Article 13(b) will
inevitably
be determined by the facts of any particular case.
As a general proposition, it may be said that the risk of harm must
be
of a severity which is more than is inherent in the inevitable
disruption, uncertainty and anxiety which follows on an unwelcome
return to the jurisdiction of the child’s home country.
It is important to make the observation that Article 13(b)
does not
require there to be a certainty that harm will occur. What is
required is persuasion by applying the legal standard
of proof that
there is a risk which warrants the qualitative description of a
“grave risk” that the return will “expose”
the child to harm. Whether the risk reaches that threshold must
inevitably be determined on the facts of the case and by
the nature
of the projected harm.
[64]
It is
further necessary to place a caveat on the words in the last
paragraph of the above quoted passage from the judgment in
Re
E (Children)
.
It was certainly not intended to convey that any type of harm that is
more than the ordinary “rough and tumble”
of growing up
will constitute harm or an intolerable situation as envisaged in
Article 13(b).
[45]
Such a suggestion is contrary to the exceptional nature of the
exemptions in the Article, which exemptions, as stated in
Sonderup
,
were “intended to provide exceptions, in extreme circumstances,
to protect the welfare of children”.
[46]
[65]
The answer
to the concerns which underlie the notion that the exceptions must be
given a restrictive interpretation must rather
be found, as envisaged
in
Sonderup
,
in a balanced approach to the determination made in Article 13(b),
and the correct application of the Convention.
[47]
This requires the court to approach the enquiry in a manner that will
give effect to the meaning of the language of the Article,
the
objectives of the Convention, the limited nature of the assessment
the court is required to make with regard to what the short-term
best
interests of a particular child are, the location of the burden of
proof, and the summary nature of the proceedings.
[66]
An integral
part of the scope of the enquiry the court is required to conduct, in
determining whether there is a grave risk of harm
or an intolerable
situation as contemplated in Article 13(b), is the presence or
absence of ameliorative measures to ensure the
child’s safety
upon return to their home country.
[48]
Simply put, if the child can be sufficiently protected from grave
harm when returned, then the child does not in fact face
a “grave
risk” of serious harm as contemplated by Article 13(b).
This is consistent with the underlying premise
of the Convention that
the judicial and social authorities of the home country are in a
position to provide the necessary protection
and support in dealing
with any eventuality that may arise from the return of the child.
[67]
There must as a result be cogent evidence placed before the court by
the person
raising an Article 13(b) defence that establishes the
absence of adequate or effective measures which may either reduce the
risk
of the harm from occurring or the seriousness of the projected
harm itself. What the nature of such measures are, must
inevitably
be dictated by the nature of the harm and its accompanying
risk that is established on the evidence in any particular case.
The
burden of proof and summary nature of Convention proceedings
[68]
What is
evident from the foregoing is the exceptional nature of Article
13(b). It serves to moderate the obligation of the
court to
return an abducted child to their home country. It follows that
the duty rests on the person who invokes the exception
in defence to
an application for the return of the child to show that the factual
situation contemplated therein exists.
I am in agreement with
the conclusion in
KG
v CB
[49]
that the duty placed on the person raising a defence in Article 13 is
no higher than the ordinary standard of proof applicable
in civil
proceedings, namely a balance of probabilities.
[50]
What is not required is a standard of proof informed by the existence
or otherwise of “clear and convincing”
evidence found in
the American legal system, which is a standard somewhere between the
ordinary civil standard and the criminal
standard of beyond a
reasonable doubt found in the American legal system.
[51]
[69]
An aspect that must be emphasised, as made clear in
Re E
, is
that, in examining whether the exemption in Article 13(b) has been
established, the court is required to evaluate the evidence
against
the ordinary civil standard of proof whilst being mindful of the
limitations involved in the summary nature of Convention
proceedings. Flowing from this is that the evaluation by a
trial court of the evidence must be treated with the necessary
deference in any subsequent appeal proceedings.
[70]
Further,
the nature of the postulated harm will inform the degree of
persuasion that may be enough to conclude that the burden of
proof
has been discharged.
[52]
What the Court must be persuaded of is the existence of a grave
risk. A grave risk within the meaning of Article
13(b) may be
shown to exist even though the court cannot say that the risk is more
likely than not to eventuate. As was made
clear in
Re
E
, in
determining whether a particular risk is “grave”, there
is an inter-relationship between the feared harm and the
likelihood
of it occurring. A risk with a modest likelihood of occurring
may be a grave risk if the feared harm is very serious.
Conversely, if the feared harm is more mundane, a greater likelihood
of it occurring may be required in order to describe the risk
as
grave.
[53]
[71]
A
determination of the existence of a grave risk or an intolerable
situation as contemplated in Article 13(b) raises a factual question
that requires the party raising the defence, in the discharge of the
burden of proof, to place evidence of a factual nature before
the
court. This creates the obvious potential for factual
disputes. Following its earlier decision in
Pennello
[54]
the Supreme Court of Appeal dealt with the factual
disputes which arose in the present matter by applying the principles
articulated in
Plascon Evans
.
[55]
Namely, that where disputes of fact have arisen in application
proceedings, a final order may be granted only if the facts
alleged
in the respondent’s affidavits, together with those facts
alleged in the applicant’s affidavits that have been
admitted
by the respondent or which the respondent cannot dispute, justify
such an order.
[72]
I am unable
to agree with this approach to evidence in Convention proceedings.
Convention proceedings are designed to
provide a speedy resolution of
disputes over abducted children. As proclaimed in Article 1,
the aim of the Convention is
to secure the prompt return of children
removed from the country of habitual residence, and to restore the
status
quo ante
(the situation that prevailed before [the abduction]) so that the
custody and other issues that underlie the removal of a child
can be
decided by the courts of that country. Article 11 further
expressly directs the relevant authorities to act expeditiously.
[56]
Regulation 23 of the Regulations relating to Children’s Courts
and International Child Abduction (International Child
Abduction
Regulations) stipulates that “[p]roceedings for the return of a
child under the Hague Convention must be completed
within six weeks
from the date on which judicial proceedings were instituted in a
High Court, except where exceptional circumstances
make this
impossible”.
[57]
[73]
The nature
of the proceedings under the Convention, and the manner in which the
court hearing the matter decides to receive and
assess the evidence
placed before it, must inevitably be dictated by the aforementioned
objectives of the Convention and the legislation
that incorporates it
into our domestic law. Proceedings under the Convention are
clearly designed with the objective of providing
an expeditious
outcome. The compulsory procedure for initiating
proceedings is by way of an application to the High Court.
[58]
It is not open to SA’s Central Authority to choose the
procedural form of the proceedings under the Convention.
Also,
neither the Children’s Act
[59]
nor the Regulations
[60]
are
prescriptive as to how the court should receive evidence.
[74]
The Hague Regulations do not prescribe that an application in
Convention proceedings
must conform to rule 6 of the Uniform
Rules. The Regulations simply provide for the filing of:
(a)
an
“application”;
[61]
(b)
a
“response” to the application within five days from the
date of its service;
[62]
and
(c)
a
“statement” in reply within a further five days.
[63]
[75]
Ordinarily,
no doubt, the application, response and reply will be in the form of
affidavits but this is not made mandatory.
[64]
Regulation 33 in turn obliges the court to record the proceedings
before it, of which record must, amongst others, include
“all
viva
voce
evidence given in court”. These provisions are consistent
with proceedings which are intended to be of summary nature,
and the
vesting of a discretion in the court to allow evidence to be placed
before it of a nature enabling it to arrive at an informed
decision
with the speed that the Convention dictates. It is not
necessary to say anything with regard to how the discretion
of the
court to admit evidence must be exercised. It is a matter that
will be dictated by the circumstances of the particular
case, the
nature of the proposed evidence, as well as the contested issues
which that evidence seeks to deal with.
[76]
The body of evidence placed before the court in Convention
proceedings may
thus include evidence other than evidence on
affidavit. The present matter serves to confirm this. The
information
received from the UKCA was not under oath. Neither
were the reports of Professor Berg, Ms Anne Cawood (a social worker),
Ms Pettigrew or that of Ms Carstens, the Legal Aid
practitioner who provided this Court with a report at its request.
In addition to the prompt response required by the Convention and the
Regulations, the AHCA, as the applicant in proceedings
under the
Convention in this country, is likely to find itself at an evidential
disadvantage, since the person from whom the child
was taken will be
resident in another country, often on a different continent.
These considerations militate against
strict rules on the
adducing of evidence. The body of evidence placed before the
court in proceedings under the Convention
may accordingly consist of
a hotchpotch of different types of material. This is not
conducive to a determination of factual
disputes by applying the
Plascon-Evans
rule.
[77]
On the contrary, Article 13 itself makes the application of the
Plascon Evans
principle inimical to a determination of a
defence raised in terms thereof. The use of the word “shall”
in the
Article obliges the court tasked with making such a
determination, to “take into account the information relating
to the
social background of the child provided by the Central
Authority, or other competent authority of the child’s habitual
residence”.
Such evidence is bound to be factual in
nature, and the obligation placed on the court to take it into
account in making a decision
is inconsistent with the process of fact
selection that is inherent to the
Plascon-Evans
rule.
[78]
There are
two further considerations that militate against applying ordinary
motion principles to Convention proceedings.
The first is that,
as a general rule, competing factual versions on affidavit cannot, in
ordinary motion proceedings for final relief,
properly be
determined on a consideration of the probabilities.
[65]
The second is that, otherwise than with applications under the
Uniform Rules, it is not open to an applicant in Convention
proceedings to choose the procedural form of the proceedings.
By applying
Plascon-Evans
,
the applicant, that is, the AHCA and by extension the person from
whose custody the child has been taken, will accordingly find
themselves at “peril” not by reason of their own choice,
as in the case of elective application proceedings under the
Rules.
The Court in
Ngqumba
v State President
held:
“
A
litigant is entitled to seek relief by way of notice of motion.
If he has reason to believe that facts essential to the
claim will
probably be disputed he chooses that procedural form at his peril for
the Court in the exercise of its discretion might
decide neither to
refer the matter for trial nor to direct that oral evidence be placed
before it, but to dismiss the application.”
[66]
[79]
Proceedings
under Article 13(b) are therefore summary in nature, and a
determination made in terms thereof must be based on an overall
assessment of all the evidential material placed before the
court.
[67]
This is
consistent with the approach to Convention proceedings in other
jurisdictions. In
Re
CC (A Child)
the
Court held:
“
As
Dame Elizabeth Butler-Sloss P (as she then was) observed in
Re U
(L) (A Child)
(2) B (L) (
A Child) (Service Injury: Standard of
Proof)
[2004] EWCA Civ 567
, the court ‘invariably
surveys a wide canvas’. I take this precept to be no less
applicable in Hague Convention
cases. It is a fundamental tool
and technique of proper evidential analysis.
In
Re T (Children)
2004 EWCA Civ 558
, her Ladyship added:
‘
.
. . evidence cannot be evaluated and assessed in separate
compartments. A judge in these difficult cases has to have
regard
to the relevance of each piece of evidence to the other
evidence and to exercise an overview of the totality of the
evidence.’”
[68]
[80]
In evaluating the oral evidence that has been tested under
cross examination
should not present any difficulty. The
determination of disputes arising from contested affidavits and other
documentary
evidence must be approached by making an overall
assessment based on the common facts, those parts of the evidence
which are unchallenged
or not challenged in any seriousness, the
parts which are corroborated by other cogent independent evidence, as
well as the probabilities
as they arise from that evidence.
In the absence of the court being able to arrive at a decision, the
result would be
that the party who bears the burden of proof will
have failed to establish the defence in Article 13(b).
The judicial discretion
in Article 13(b)
[81]
The words
“is not bound to order the return” in the introductory
part of Article 13(1) makes it clear that the
court, upon it
being established that one of the exceptions in the Article exists,
is required to consider whether, notwithstanding
the availability of
the defence, the child must nevertheless be returned. Its
effect is simply that the court is no longer
forced to order the
return, as Article 12 would oblige it to do, but has a judicial
discretion not to do so.
[69]
In
Smith
v Smith
[70]
it was said without elaboration that this discretion is exercised in
the context of the approach to the Convention.
As already
indicated, the interpretation of Article 13(b) takes place in the
wider context of the objectives and purpose of the
Convention.
The discretion in Article 13 is approached no differently.
Whilst the Article seeks to protect the
short term best
interests of a particular child by providing for limited exceptions,
it does not displace the other policies
of the Convention. To
hold otherwise, would place an undue limitation on the exercise of
the court’s discretion.
Like any other discretion in
similar terms, it must be exercised judicially, having regard to the
subject matter, scope and purpose
of the Convention.
[82]
The exercise of the discretion takes place in the context of the
interrelated
nature of the provisions of the Convention that has as
its primary aim the best interests of the child. It requires
the balancing
of those considerations which inform the application of
the Convention. The Convention has two sides to it. The
one
side is its general purpose to prevent child abductions and of
one parent gaining an unfair advantage over the other by forum
shopping
in the hope of securing a favourable outcome to a custody
dispute. This is achieved by ensuring the prompt return of the
child as mandated by Article 12(2) and operates in the interests
of children generally.
[83]
The other side of the Convention is its recognition that it may not
always
be in the interests of a particular child to be returned to
their home country. This is consistent with its overall purpose
to protect the interests of all children. It gives effect to
this purpose by recognising in Article 12(2) that the interests
of a
child who has become settled in their new environment may not be best
served by their return to the country from which the
child was
removed and by providing in Article 13 for grounds to refuse the
return of a child.
[84]
Accordingly, in the shared context of the objectives of the
Convention, the
exercise of the discretion requires the court to
weigh and strike a balance between two considerations: the one is the
welfare
and the best interests of the child in the case
under consideration, and the other is the significance of the
deterrent policy
and the general purpose of the Convention in the
circumstances of the case. This is consistent with the approach
adopted
by the House of Lords in
Re M
, where Baroness Hale
said:
“
In
cases where a discretion arises from the terms of the Convention
itself, it seems to me that the discretion is at large.
The
court is entitled to take into account the various aspects of the
Convention policy, alongside the circumstances which gave
the court a
discretion in the first place and the wider considerations of the
child’s rights and welfare.
I would,
therefore, respectfully agree with Thorpe LJ in the passage quoted at
para 32 above, save for the word ‘overriding’
if it
suggests that the Convention objectives should always be given more
weight than the other considerations. Sometimes
they should and
sometimes they should not.”
[71]
The
correctness of the findings of the Supreme Court of Appeal
[85]
I next proceed to consider the correctness of the findings of the
Supreme Court of Appeal
in the context of the
principles underlying Article 13(b). The jurisdictional
facts necessary for the operation of the
obligatory provisions of
Article 12 to find application were all present. It was
not in dispute that E was habitually resident
in the UK as
contemplated by the Convention. Her retention in SA by her
mother beyond the agreed time was found to be unlawful,
and less than
a year had elapsed between E’s retention and the date when the
AHCA launched the Convention proceedings
in the High Court.
This meant that the Supreme Court of Appeal was bound
to confirm the High Court’s
order for E’s return to
the UK unless it was found that the aunt had established, in the
language of Article 13(b),
the existence of a grave risk that
E’s return would expose her to physical or psychological
harm or place her otherwise
in an intolerable situation.
[86]
Applying the principles discussed above to the present case,
the Supreme Court of Appeal
erred in its approach
to the application of Article 13(b). The first and more
obvious error was the manner in which
it dealt with the evidence.
Its application of the principles in
Plascon-Evans
meant that
it effectively decided the matter solely on the evidence of the aunt,
and disregarded the evidence of the AHCA on matters
such as the
social services and other levels of support available in the UK to
mitigate the projected harm.
[87]
Flowing therefrom, the second error relates to its finding, based on
the evidence
of E’s mother, that the father would not be able
to raise E and provide her with the necessary emotional and financial
security.
Contrary to the High Court, which correctly did
not attach any weight to that evidence, the Supreme Court of Appeal
accepted that evidence when dealing with the contention that matters
such as the applicant’s history of mental health issues,
abuse
of alcohol and other substances, and his unstable employment history
created the risk of exposing E to psychological harm
and an
intolerable situation envisaged in Article 13(b).
[88]
As
explained earlier, it is important to bear in mind that the
Convention is concerned with the return of a child to the
jurisdiction
of their country of habitual residence to enable the
appropriate authorities and the courts of that country to decide
issues relating
to custody.
[72]
Issues about who would be the more suitable person to be given rights
of custody or access to the child are to be determined
by the
appropriate judicial or other authorities that will eventually be
asked to determine the long-term best interests of
the child.
Matters such as lifestyle and parental fitness bear upon the ultimate
issues to be determined in a full hearing
by the appropriate forum.
At the stage of Hague proceedings for the return of an abducted
child, the enquiry should rather
be focused on a consideration of the
availability of adequate and effective measures of protection in the
state of habitual residence
pending the final determination of care
proceedings.
[89]
The AHCA is correct that, unlike the High Court, the
Supreme Court of Appeal
effectively embarked on
deciding issues outside the scope of Article 13(b). In
any event, the High Court comprehensively
dealt with the
evidence of E’s mother in support of her contention that the
return of E into the care of her father posed
a risk of harm as
contemplated by Article 13(b). On the evidence placed before
it, the High Court correctly, in
my view, found that such a
risk did not exist, and that E could be adequately protected from the
projected harm arising from her
father’s personal circumstances
in the UK by the administrative, judicial, and social services of
that country.
[90]
The third error relates to the discretion that follows upon the
finding that
the exception in Article 13(b) was established.
The Supreme Court of Appeal failed to address the
question
whether the High Court, in the exercise of its
discretion, or more correctly, its own discretion following its
decision
to admit the evidence of Ms Pettigrew, E should be
returned to the UK. It is not clear from the judgment of the
Supreme Court of Appeal
that it made any attempt to
exercise such a discretion. It certainly does not say that
it did, and even if it did do
so, it quite clearly failed to make any
attempt to balance both the interests of the child and the general
purposes of the Convention.
[91]
It follows that the Supreme Court of Appeal erred in
its application
of Article 13(b). That being so, it is the
task of this Court to reconsider the matter. How Article 13(b)
should be applied in the case will require an examination of
the evidence, to which I now turn.
The
evidence
[92]
The evidence of Professor Berg was, without the addition of the later
evidence
of Ms Pettigrew, insufficient to establish the likelihood of
a grave risk of psychological harm as envisaged in Article
13(b),
and the High Court correctly found that it did not meet
the threshold set by the Article. Like Ms Pettigrew, Professor
Berg’s evidence was based on what was referred to as the “child
attachment theory”. This is a theory that
seeks to
describe the cognitive and psychological development of children
generally during their age related phases of development,
and their
ability to form relationships with those around them. The
central position taken by Professor Berg was that E,
whose mother was
still alive at the time, had formed a bond with her aunt, who was
providing her with the necessary care during
her mother’s
illness. E was provided with a safe and secure environment
where she was receiving the necessary care
and support that was
conducive to her having to deal with her mother’s anticipated
death.
[93]
In dealing with the short-term consequences of E’s return to
the UK,
Professor Berg could not place it any higher than that E
“could develop a Complicated Grief Disorder of Early Childhood
– that the loss of her mother as well as her aunt could result
in persistent crying, and searching for the lost person”.
Long-term, Professor Berg’s opinion was that there is
“some” indication that young children that have lost
an
attachment figure may develop depression and suicidal thoughts later
in life. In a supplementary report which Professor
Berg
provided in response to questions which the Judge in the High Court
posed to her, Professor Berg acknowledged that E
would benefit from
bereavement counselling if she was returned to the UK.
She qualified this by stating that bereavement
counselling in
and of itself could not make up for the loss of E’s mother and
other relationships she had formed, and that
“a once a
week hourly session cannot counter the trauma induced by the losses”.
[94]
Professor Berg’s evidence does not raise the predicted harm
above the
inevitable disruption, uncertainty and anxiety that would
follow a court ordered return. The wording of Article
13(b)
requires evidence of the existence of a grave risk of harm.
Professor Berg’s evidence does not address the seriousness
of
the anticipated harm, the occurrence of which she sets no higher than
a possibility. Further, the question is not whether
bereavement
counselling may serve to counter the predicted harm, but rather
whether it can serve to reduce the risk of the harm
occurring or the
seriousness thereof. It further begs the question whether, if
one session of therapy a week is insufficient,
how many sessions
would be sufficient?
[95]
Professor Berg also did not address the question whether there are
any other
measures available that may reduce the risk of harm or the
seriousness thereof if it does occur. On the contrary, her
evidence in her supplementary report to the High Court –
that E could, if managed correctly, transition
into the care of her
father within two to three months – points to the prospect of E
forming a relationship with her father,
which would in turn give her
the coping mechanisms to deal with the loss of her mother and the
disruption of having to return to
the UK.
[96]
That brings me to the evidence of Ms Pettigrew. The declared
focus of
her assessment was the impact on E’s psychological
functioning at her stage of development at that time, in the context
of
the childhood attachment theory, should she be taken away from the
aunt and from her known environment. In summary, she expressed
the following view:
(a)
A child in E’s position will form an attachment to those who
have regularly been available
to her both physically and emotionally,
and who have responded positively to her needs. Until her
death, E’s mother
was her primary attachment figure.
After her mother’s death, that role was filled by the aunt.
(b)
Children with a secure attachment exhibit a greater capacity for
adaptive coping skills.
At E’s age and her stage of
development in terms of the child attachment theory, a child starts
to launch herself fully into
the world by entering a phase where
negotiation and compromise can be successfully applied. The
child does so from the physical
and psychological security of the
primary attachment figure and in the knowledge that the primary
attachment figure is ever-present.
(c)
From six to seven years of age, the child enters a new phase, in
which the child may be
able to avoid separation distress if there is
a trusted plan for the caregiver’s departure and arrival.
Attachment
is then less focused on the physical presence of the
caregiver, and is more of a psychological nature, that is, the
awareness of
the availability of the caregiver.
[97]
Ms Pettigrew expressed the opinion that the aunt had become E’s
primary
caregiver to whom she has securely attached. She then
proceeded to consider the potential impact on E’s psychological
well-being should she be removed from the care of the aunt. It
would, said Ms Pettigrew, in effect result in a second maternal
death
for E. In the context of the stage of her development, E’s
perception of death is limited to an understanding
that her mother
disappeared altogether and she has very little ability to fully
understand her apparent “disappearance”
for some time.
Developing an emotional understanding of her mother’s death
will continue through E’s different
stages of development with
the assistance of an emotionally available and trusted carer who can
guide her through these phases.
The absence of a carer will
likely in moments of need lead to a high level of distress and
emotional trauma.
[98]
Dealing with the impact on E should she return to the UK, Ms
Pettigrew was
of the opinion that, although E may have had an
attachment with her father when she came with him and her mother to
SA in September 2019,
it was not a secure bond, and that it is
unlikely that she would form a secure bond with him if she were to be
returned to the
UK. She reasoned that, because E is no longer
in the attachment formation phases of the attachment theory, there
would be
no transition for her from her aunt’s care into that
of her father, and that she would not form an attachment with him if
placed in his care. Her return to the UK would mean that E
would be placed with a person who is a stranger to her.
In
addition to coming to terms with this, she will be grieving the loss
of her two attachment figures, namely her mother and the
aunt, in
addition to the loss of the safe and predictable structures of her
life in SA.
[99]
Faced with these losses, Ms Pettigrew was of the opinion that E’s
coping
resources would in all likelihood be overwhelmed, and that
there was a significant risk of a complete breakdown with psychosis
and psychological damage to her, in the short and long-term.
Therapy, said Ms Pettigrew, would not ameliorate the sense of
loss
that E would experience nor the emotional damage to her, and it would
be challenging for her to develop a trust relationship
with a
therapist in the UK in the absence of her also having established a
bond with the applicant.
[100]
The main thrust of Ms Pettigrew’s evidence may be summarised
thus. There is a likelihood
that E will suffer serious
psychological harm by being removed from the aunt who has become her
primary attachment figure.
The basis of this evidence is that E
will not have the capacity to deal with the trauma of being removed
from the aunt who has
become her primary attachment figure. Her
ability to cope with stresses of this nature is grounded in the
psychological and
physical security, safety and the predictability
that is currently provided by the aunt. E is, according to Ms
Pettigrew,
no longer in a stage of developing primary attachments.
If placed with a person who is effectively a stranger to her, and
faced with the loss of her mother, of her aunt and of her safe
environment, her coping resources would in all probability be
overwhelmed.
Ms Pettigrew expressed the opinion that “[f]aced
with all these losses and adjustments, [E’s] coping resources
will
with high probability be completely overwhelmed and there is a
significant risk for a psychosis and emotional and psychological
damage to her in the short, medium, and long-term”.
[101]
Ms Pettigrew was further of the opinion that therapeutic intervention
would not serve to ameliorate
the significant losses E would
experience and the emotional damage she was likely to suffer.
This is similarly attributed
by Ms Pettigrew to the fact that her
return to the UK would leave her without a primary attachment
figure. In the absence
of a primary attachment figure who can
provide the necessary care and a secure environment, therapy
would have little benefit,
and E would be unable to develop a trust
relationship with a therapist. In short, nothing would serve to
mitigate the harm
to E in the absence of the support of a primary
attachment figure.
[102]
In deciding whether the evidence of Ms Pettigrew is sufficient to
establish the threshold for the
risk of harm as contemplated in
Article 13(b) on the required standard of proof, and that there are
insufficient measures that
would reduce the risk of the harm
eventuating or the harm itself, it is important to recognise that her
evidence goes beyond that
of Professor Berg and the other evidence
that was placed before the High Court. Ms Pettigrew
dealt with the position
of E more than a year after the death of her
mother. Her evidence was premised on the fact that E was now
older; that she
had moved into a new age related phase in terms of
the child attachment theory; and that following the death of her
mother E had
formed a secure bond with her aunt and had become
settled in a stable and secure environment that is assisting her to
deal with
the loss of her mother who was previously her primary
carer.
[103]
Ms Pettigrew’s evidence stands uncontroverted. That being
so, the question that must then
be asked is whether there is anything
in the evidence that the AHCA placed before the High Court with
regard to the probability
of the predicted risk of harm
materialising, or which otherwise points to the availability in the
UK of measures that may ameliorate
the probability of the harm
predicted by Ms Pettigrew from materialising or reducing the impact
thereof.
[104]
The decision of the AHCA not to respond to Ms Pettigrew’s
evidence in the Supreme Court of Appeal
meant that
there was no evidence to contradict her evidence on these aspects.
Ms Pettigrew’s evidence was that there
is a significant risk
for a complete breakdown and a psychosis should E be returned to the
UK and that there are no measures that
would serve to mitigate the
anticipated harm. Any weight that is to be attached to the
evidence of the AHCA that initially
served before the High Court
must be assessed in light of the absence of evidence contradicting
this new evidence.
[105]
In addition, it is important to recognise what the focus was of the
evidence placed by the AHCA before
the High Court. It was
meant to deal with the evidence of E’s mother and her aunt and
the issues raised thereby.
The focus was consequently on
dealing with matters such as the anticipated death of E’s
mother, the availability of bereavement
counselling in the UK should
E’s mother pass away, the structures and services in the UK
which might serve to allay the fear
expressed with regard to the
ability of E’s father to care for her should she be returned to
the UK, and dealing with Professor Berg’s
postulated
possibility of psychological harm arising from E having to deal with
the loss of her mother upon her return to the UK.
These
considerations have all effectively been overtaken by Ms Pettigrew’s
evidence that deals with the changed circumstances
following the
death of E’s mother, and in particular her evidence that there
is nothing that will serve to prevent or reduce
the harm that she
says E will in all probability suffer if she is returned to the UK at
this time.
[106]
I am satisfied that the evidence established the primary facts on
which Ms Pettigrew based her
opinion. It was not in
dispute that a child of E’s age and her stage of development
forms an attachment to the person
who, in the words of
Professor Berg, takes care of the child the best and whom the
child gets to know, rely on, and feel safe
with. A primary
attachment figure may be someone other than a biological parent.
It is the person who is the most consistently
and predictably
prominent in the child’s day-to-day life.
[107]
E was two years and two months old when she came to SA with her
parents. It is uncontentious
that the parent’s
relationship was not stable and marred by conflict. The result
was that E’s contact with her
father was not consistent and she
was mostly in the care of her mother. There was a time in the
UK when her parents were
living apart and E would only see her father
during weekends. After their arrival in SA, the relationship
of the parents
again reached a stage where the father had to move to
alternative accommodation.
[108]
Since then E has lived with her mother (until her death) and her
aunt. E was three years and
five months old at the time of her
mother’s death. Her father only saw E once since his
departure in 2019 when he came
to SA in December 2020 following
the mother’s death and the High Court’s return
order. He stayed until
March 2021 during which time he had
contact with E. His contact with her was otherwise limited to
communicating virtually
with her. Ms Pettigrew’s own
observation of E was that her behaviour around her aunt was very
typical of a child who
seeks out her primary attachment figure.
This is consistent with the report submitted to this Court by
Ms Carstens,
the Legal Aid practitioner appointed for E, that E
has formed a bond with the aunt and is well established in her
present environment.
[109]
It can accordingly safely be accepted, on the undisputed evidence and
the probabilities as they arise
therefrom, that E’s mother was
her primary attachment figure until her death, and that she was
subsequently replaced by E’s
aunt in whose care she has
remained since. Ms Pettigrew’s evidence, based on the
attachment theory, that E has moved
through the window period for
developing primary attachments, and that her return to the UK would
result in a second maternal death,
which, in addition to the loss of
her known environment, is likely to lead to a complete breakdown and
a child presenting with
psychosis, is opinion evidence.
[110]
As stated,
Ms Pettigrew’s evidence stands uncontroverted. That does
not mean that it must simply be adopted. As
in the case of any
expert opinion evidence, it remains the task of a court to examine
the evidence in order to determine whether
it should be
accepted.
[73]
Whilst the
court would not subject an uncontroverted expert report to the same
kind of scrutiny as when evaluating a contested
report, the opinion
must be reasoned and be supported by the evidence on which it is
based.
[74]
If the
unchallenged opinion is on the face of it based on sound logical
reasoning, the expert has reached a defensible position
supported by
the basic facts and the probabilities, and there is no other reason
not to accept the evidence, “. . . it
is
difficult to envisage a situation in which it would be appropriate to
decide that it is wrong”.
[75]
[111]
In this case Ms Pettigrew’s report represents a reasoned
conclusion based on the facts set out
in her report. That does
not mean that there are no shortcomings in her evidence. It is
so that her opinion is predicated
on human behaviour in response to a
certain set of circumstances, which as a matter of logic must have an
inherent uncertainty
to it. Further, Ms Pettigrew did not
pertinently address the impact, if any, of the natural relationship
of father and daughter
that exists between them, and the father’s
familial support system in the UK on the likelihood of the postulated
poor outcome
of E’s return to the UK.
[112]
However,
the election of the AHCA not to place expert evidence of their own
before the court left the evidence of Ms Pettigrew
uncontradicted and consequently without the need for her to expand
upon her reasoning.
[76]
The aforementioned aspects cannot as a result detract from the
reasoned evidence of Ms Pettigrew, at least not to the extent
where
it must be found that her expressed opinion is wrong, or that it is
unreliable and lacking in probative value that justify
its rejection
without more.
[113]
The evidence of Ms Pettigrew is directly relevant to the issue which
the High Court and the Supreme Court of Appeal
were asked to decide by the raising of the defence in Article 13(b).
The question is then whether her evidence is sufficient
to establish
the existence of a “grave risk” of harm or intolerable
situation as contemplated in Article 13(b):
(a)
Other than Professor Berg, Ms Pettigrew raised the postulated harm
occurring to the level
of a probability that is high.
(b)
The nature of that harm is also of a much more serious nature.
The likelihood of E
experiencing a psychosis and “significant”
short to long term psychological damage and harm constitutes a
grave
risk of psychological harm as contemplated in Article 13(b).
It is more than the uncertainty, disruption or anxiety which
could
naturally be expected to follow on the forced return of any child to
the country of their habitual residence.
(c)
Rather, it arises from a consideration of external factors which are
inter alia comprised
of E’s age and the dynamics created
thereby; the loss of her mother; her attachment to a person who has
become her primary
attachment figure; the fact that she had become
settled in a safe and secure environment; and that her return to
the UK would
be to a person and environment she has very little
connection with.
(d)
The probability of the risk of harm occurring is supported by the
fact of E’s young
age; the circumstances in which she came to
be in the care of the aunt; the length of time she has been in the
care of the aunt,
who has now become her primary attachment figure;
the absence of the formation of any significant bond with her father;
and the
fact that her return to the UK will take her away from her
primary attachment figure and out of her known family and social
environment
to a country of which she is unlikely to have much
recollection, and to family members with whom she has not as yet
formed any
relationships.
(e)
The extent of the risk of the projected harm and the seriousness of
the harm itself must
be assessed against Ms Pettigrew’s
uncontroverted evidence that therapy will not ameliorate the
projected harm.
[114]
I, accordingly, conclude that by the time of the hearing in the
Supreme Court of Appeal
the aunt established on a
balance of probability that which she and E’s mother had failed
to establish in the High Court,
namely the existence of a grave
risk of psychological harm as contemplated in Article 13(b). As
discussed earlier, this finding
establishes a ground for the refusal
of an order for the return of a child to their home country.
[115]
Before I proceed to consider whether, despite this finding, E must
nevertheless be returned to the
UK, it may be convenient to deal with
the main reasons advanced in the judgment by my Colleague Majiedt J
(second judgment)
for his disagreement with the finding. The
first matter of disagreement is in relation to the evidence of
Ms Pettigrew.
It is whether it meets the threshold of the
risk of harm in Article 13(b) or whether it is not simply a risk of
harm that may typically
be expected to follow from E’s return
to the UK following her wrongful retention in SA.
[116]
For the reasons mentioned earlier, Ms Pettigrew’s expert
opinion in my view meets the requirements
for evidence of this
nature. It presents a reasoned conclusion that is supported by
the facts and the probabilities.
Her evidence went beyond that
of Professor Berg, and the AHCA elected not to put up anything in
answer thereto. In the absence
of evidence to the contrary,
there is simply no reason to question the reliability or the
correctness of Ms Pettigrew’s evidence,
which raises the
projected harm, other than that of Professor Berg, to that of a
probability that is said to be high.
[117]
I am unable to agree that the harm postulated by Ms Pettigrew is the
risk of harm that will arise
ordinarily from a court ordered return
of a child who was wrongfully retained. The evidence of Ms
Pettigrew that E is likely
to suffer a complete breakdown and a
psychosis is based on E’s age-related inability to deal with
the trauma of being removed
from a second primary attachment figure
and to cope with the stresses of such a removal. It is grounded
in the physical and
psychological security, safety and predictability
that is provided by her aunt. This opinion of Ms Pettigrew is
informed
by external features such as E’s age, the death of her
mother, her inability to form an attachment with her father should
she be returned to the UK, and the absence of, in Ms Pettigrew’s
opinion, any measures that may serve to mitigate the
projected risk
of harm.
[118]
The first step in an Article 13(b) enquiry is whether the evidence of
the person who invokes the Article
in defence establishes the risk of
harm or an otherwise intolerable situation. The exception in
Article 13(b) is often raised
in the context of an attempt to avoid
the return of an abducted child to an environment where the child
might face sexual or physical
abuse, domestic violence, disease or
regional conflict. In the present matter the harm
does not lie in circumstances
of this kind but rather in her being
taken away from the person to whom she had become attached and who
has filled the void left
by the death of her mother, and from a
secure and safe environment in which she has become settled.
[119]
Ultimately the question is the existence of harm of the kind
contemplated by Article 13(b).
It does not matter where
that harm is coming from. It may be harm arising from removing
the child from the country where
the child was retained or harm that
is awaiting the child upon return to the requesting state:
“
The
focus of Article 13(b) is on the risk to the child: if there is a
grave risk that return would expose the child to physical
or
psychological harm or otherwise place the child in an intolerable
situation, then the source of the risk and how it arises is
irrelevant.”
[77]
[120]
That the separation of a child from her primary attachment figure can
establish the required grave
risk is consistent with the position in
other jurisdictions:
“
It
is also clear that the effect of the separation of a child from the
taking parent can establish the required grave risk. This
situation is one of those listed as potentially falling within the
scope of this provision, at [36], in the
Guide
to Good Practice under the Convention of 25 October 1980 on the Civil
Aspects of International Child Abduction, Part VI Article
13(1)(b)
published
in 2020 by the Permanent Bureau of the Hague Conference on Private
International Law . . . . This was the basis on which
a return order
was set aside by the Court of Appeal in
Re
W and another (Children)
[2019]
Fam 125.”
[78]
[121]
The second
judgment proposes that a finding that E should not be returned to the
UK will have the effect of giving insufficient
weight to the evidence
of the support systems in the UK. I don’t agree. I
have dealt with this aspect in sufficient
detail earlier in this
judgment.
[79]
Ms
Pettigrew’s uncontradicted evidence was that there are no
measures that would serve to mitigate the anticipated
harm. Any
weight that is or can be attached to the evidence which the AHCA
initially placed before the High Court was
intended to deal with
the evidence of E’s mother with regard to the father’s
supposed inability to provide for E should
she be returned to the UK,
and Professor Berg’s evidence about the effect that her
mother’s anticipated death would
have on E. Accordingly,
the evidence was never meant to deal with Ms Pettigrew’s
evidence that the proposed harm is
incapable of being prevented.
[122]
With regard to the criticism that the evidence of Ms Pettigrew does
not give consideration to the
harm that E is likely to suffer from
her father’s absence and that the father’s position
should receive more attention
in the determination of the issue
raised by the Article 13(b) defence, the answer in my view is
twofold. It is so that
Ms Pettigrew does not deal with the
need for the continuation of a relationship by E with her
father. I have raised
that as a possible criticism of her
report. The question however is whether it means that her
evidence regarding the nature
of the anticipated harm and the absence
of any measures to prevent it materialising must be rejected.
I do not think so.
As stated, the focus of
Ms Pettigrew’s assessment was the impact on E’s
psychological functioning at her stage of development
at the time of
the report, should E be taken away from her aunt. There is no
evidence that a failure to return E to the UK
will cause her to
suffer harm. There was therefore strictly no need for
Ms Pettigrew to elaborate beyond the focus of
her report, as she
was not called upon to do so.
[123]
It is important to keep in mind that the focus of Article 13(b) is on
the abducted child.
It deals with the risk of harm to the
child in the short-term. Any harm that is of a long-term nature
or matters relating
to the interests of a left-behind parent are, in
the scheme of the Convention, to be dealt with by the court that will
eventually
be asked to determine issues relating to custody and other
rights to the child. A final observation is to emphasise that
ultimately each case must be decided on its own facts and
circumstances. Findings and statements in other judgments are
of
limited use, as they are made in their own context and with
reference to the particular evidence placed before the court.
Each matter is bound to have its own features and the court’s
findings are bound to be informed by those features.
Should
E be returned to the UK?
[124]
The decision whether or not to return E to the UK requires the court,
as the next step, to exercise
a discretion by having due regard to
the objectives of the Convention and those considerations which
represent what is the best
short-term interests and welfare of E.
As discussed earlier, an important policy consideration of the
Convention is that
it serves: to discourage one parent from taking
the law into his or her own hands; to prevent one parent from gaining
an unfair
advantage, by his or her own unlawful conduct, over the
other parent by placing that parent in a position where it is
impossible
or difficult to either establish or to maintain a
relationship with the child; and to prevent a parent from
establishing, through
his or her own unlawful conduct, the factual
situation for one of the exceptions in Article 13(b). What the
Convention envisages
is an enquiry into whether its deterrent purpose
should, in the circumstances of the case, outweigh the interests of
the child
in question.
[125]
In this matter, the decision of E’s mother to retain her in SA
beyond the agreed time meant
that during the relevant phases of her
development E did not establish a secure bond with her father.
Instead, she bonded
with her aunt who has become her primary
attachment figure. It is among other factors the “loss”
of her aunt
as the primary caregiver and the safe and secure
environment that was established by her continuous stay in SA, that
will
be the cause of the predicted harm should she be returned to the
UK. It is thus apparent that it was primarily on account
of the
mother’s actions that the aunt has established the ground in
Article 13(b).
[126]
It may therefore be argued, as the AHCA did in this matter, that to
refuse an order for the return
of E to the UK would reward unlawful
conduct, and act as an incentive that is inherent in such an order in
the present circumstances,
and that this outweighs the interests of
E. This is undoubtedly a relevant consideration.
However, the weight
to be given to any relevant consideration
will be dictated by the facts and circumstances of the case.
Put differently, the
significance of the general purpose of the
Convention must be determined in the circumstances of the case.
[127]
E’s mother did not abduct her from the UK. E came to SA
with her parents to seek treatment for
her mother’s illness.
The decision of E’s mother to retain her in SA was made in
circumstances which point to
an acknowledgement that her relationship
with the father had broken down, and the fact that she was terminally
ill. It can
safely be accepted that the aunt had no role to
play in the decision of the mother to retain E in SA in the
circumstances, and
that she is simply carrying out the wish of her
late sister that she must raise her child. Considering the
circumstances
in which E was retained in SA, I do not believe that an
order refusing her return to the UK will send the wrong message or
undermine
the integrity of the Convention, particularly when weighed
against the lack of culpability on the part of the aunt and what are
the best interests of E in the circumstances.
[128]
With regard to what represents the best interests of E, there are
three considerations that must be
given due weight. The first
is the length of time that has elapsed since E’s initial
retention in SA:
(a)
The scheme of the Convention is one of hot pursuit and the
restoration of the
status quo ante
. This policy
consideration can carry little weight in this matter, in that the
primary objective can no longer be fulfilled.
It can no longer
be assumed that the country of origin is the better forum for the
resolution of the dispute over parental rights.
(b)
The Convention acknowledges in Article 12 that, if no timeous steps
were taken following
the removal or retention of a child, eventually
a point may be reached when the child becomes settled in their
environment and
that the return of the child might well cause further
distress and a disruption.
[80]
This emphasises the importance of the expeditious finalisation of
proceedings under the Convention, an aspect I will next
address.
(c)
In the absence of evidence of a manipulative delay caused by the
conduct of a party opposing
an order for the return of a child, the
fact that E has become settled in a new environment where she has
stability is a relevant
factor as to what is in her best interests.
Her return to the UK will mean that she will leave the place where
she has been
living for the past nearly four years, away from her
primary carer, her school and her friends.
(d)
In the circumstances, the assumed interests which could otherwise
have been expected to
be served by the prompt return of the abducted
child were no longer able to be fulfilled by the time the matter was
heard in the
Supreme Court of Appeal.
[129]
The second consideration is the fact that E was only two years and
two months old when she came to
SA with her parents. She has
since spent nearly two thirds of her life in SA. By reason of
her age at the time, it
is unlikely that she had formed any
meaningful relationships with anyone in the UK before her departure,
or that she would have
any recollection of that country. Any
assumption that her removal from the UK would per se have had a
harmful effect on her
therefore similarly does not exist.
The only consideration is the harm which the absence of a
relationship with her
father may cause in the long-term, in respect
of which no evidence was placed before the courts by any of the
parties. It
is however an aspect that would most certainly be
addressed by the court tasked with determining the aunt’s
application for
parental rights.
[130]
The third and important consideration that relates to the welfare of
E is the finding of the likelihood
of a grave risk of psychological
harm should she be returned to the UK. The implication of this
finding, the nature of the
anticipated harm, and the absence of there
being any protective measures to reduce the risk or the seriousness
thereof, mean that
an order for the return to the UK is likely not to
be in her best interests. This conclusion is strengthened by
the absence
of any evidence of meaningful undertakings by the
authorities in the UK to provide reasonable protection against the
harm postulated
by Ms Pettigrew in her evidence. I hasten to
add that there is no indication that the authorities in the UK were
invited
by the AHCA to consider Ms Pettigrew’s report and
to set out the undertakings they could give in that regard.
[131]
Accordingly, on balance, I do not consider that the exercise of the
discretion in Article 13 in the
circumstances of this case
favours the return of E to the UK. At this point, the
policy of the Convention is probably
best served by allowing her to
remain in SA, and for an appropriate forum in this country to
consider and decide what would be
in her long-term best interests.
I accordingly disagree with the suggestion in the second judgment
that a refusal to
return E to the UK will undermine the objective of
the Convention to ensure an expeditious restoration of the
status
quo ante
. Expeditious return as envisaged by the Convention
is no longer possible. As correctly stated in
Re M
:
“
[T]he
policy of the Convention does not yield identical results in all
cases, and has to be weighed together with the circumstances
which
produced the exception and such pointers as there are towards the
welfare of a particular child. The Convention itself
contains a
simple, sensible and carefully thought out balance between various
considerations, all aimed at serving the interests
of children by
deterring and where appropriate remedying international child
abduction.”
[81]
The
obligation to ensure the expeditious return of children under the
Convention
[132]
The proceedings in this matter were not dealt with the urgency which
the Convention demands.
From the time the application was
launched in the High Court, it took nearly three years before
the matter was heard by this
Court. It is undeniably so that
the passing of time that had elapsed since the proceedings were
instituted contributed to
E having become settled in SA following the
death of her mother, a consideration that has played a significant
role in my decision
to refuse her return to the UK.
[133]
The prompt
return of children wrongfully removed or retained is one of the
primary objectives of the Convention.
[82]
Several provisions of the Convention are intended to reinforce the
Article 1 mandate of prompt action. Article 2 requires
that
“Contracting States shall take all appropriate measures to
secure within their territories the implementation of the
objects of
the Convention. For this purpose they shall use the most
expeditious procedures available”. Article
7 mandates
that “Central Authorities shall co-operate with each other and
promote co-operation amongst the competent authorities
in their
respective States to secure the prompt return of children”.
Article 11 provides that “[t]he judicial
or
administrative authorities of Contracting States shall act
expeditiously in proceedings for the return of children”.
In addition, in terms of Article 11 “[i]f the judicial or
administrative authority concerned has not reached a decision
within
six weeks from the date of commencement of the proceedings”,
the applicant can request a statement of the reasons
for the delay.
The Convention therefore envisages the determination of a
Convention application within six weeks.
This requirement is
embodied in regulation 23(1) of the International Child Abduction
Regulations issued in terms of the Children’s
Act. It
reads:
“
Proceedings
for the return of a child under the Hague Convention must be
completed within six weeks from the date on which judicial
proceedings were instituted in a High Court, except where
exceptional circumstances make this impossible.”
[134]
The
obligation to act expeditiously in Convention proceedings means,
according to the 1980 Explanatory Report
[83]
by Professor Elisa Perez-Vera, the Rapporteur to the 1980 sessions of
the Hague Conference that produced the Convention, that contracting
states must use the most expeditious procedures available, and that
applications are as far as possible to be granted priority
treatment. This would include any appeal process. The
Guide to Good Practice under the 1980 Convention, drafted by
the
Permanent Bureau of the Hague Conference on Private
International Law, states as one of its “key operating
principles”
that “expeditiousness is essential at all
stages of the Convention process including appeals”.
[84]
[135]
At the fifth meeting of the Special Commission of the Convention held
in 2006, the Commission reaffirmed
the following recommendations made
at the 2001 meeting:
“
3.3
The Special Commission underscores the obligation (Article 11) of
Contracting States to process return
applications expeditiously, and
that this obligation extends also to appeal procedures.
3.4
The Special Commission calls upon trial and appellate courts to set
and adhere to timetables
that ensure the speedy determinations of
return applications.
3.5
The Special Commission calls for firm management by judges, both at
trial and appellate
levels, of the process of return
proceedings.”
[85]
[136]
It therefore rests with each contracting state to ensure that
Convention proceedings proceed
with the necessary speed at all
levels. To achieve the objective of the prompt return of
children, the obligation to proceed
with expedition cannot only
extend to the courts. It must necessarily include all those who
are directly or indirectly included
in Convention proceedings.
In regulation 23(2) referred to earlier, a number of procedural steps
are listed, the stated purpose
of which is “to ensure that
applications under the Hague Convention are handled expeditiously”.
These steps are
the following:
“
(a)
A High Court file must be clearly marked and must –
(i)
draw attention to the nature of the application; and
(ii)
state the date on which the six week period will expire;
(b)
priority must, where necessary, be given to these applications;
(c)
the transcript of the judgment and its approval must be expedited;
and
(d)
the transcript of the judgment and its approval must be sent to the
Central Authority
of the Republic without delay.”
[137]
These
steps, in the absence of court rules to support the obligation to
determine Convention proceedings expeditiously, do not seem
to be
very effective.
[86]
The
delay in dealing with Conventions proceedings is not a problem unique
to SA. In several decisions of the Supreme
Court of the United
States of America similar delays were lamented.
[87]
In
Chafin
v Chafin
Chief
Justice Roberts, writing for the Court, noted that Convention cases
in American courts “often take two years from filing
to
resolution”.
[88]
In her judgment Justice Ginsburg noted the absence of rules for
expedited Convention proceedings and referred with apparent
approval
to the procedural limitations imposed in England and Wales on the
filing of appeals in such proceedings.
[138]
A measure that may assist in expediting the finalisation of
Convention applications and give effect
to the call by the Special
Commission of the Convention for “firm management by judges”,
is found in regulation 24.
It provides:
“
Where
an application has been made to a High Court by the Central
Authority of the Republic under the Hague Convention, that
Court may,
at any time before the application is determined, give any interim
direction that it deems fit in order to regulate
any aspect of the
process if an application under the Hague Convention and to ensure
the welfare of the child in question and to
prevent any changes in
the circumstances relevant to the determination of the
application.”
[89]
[139]
This provision enables a High Court seized with a Convention
application to case manage the matter
by the issuing of directions.
It is a very useful measure, the use of which must be strongly
encouraged. Judicial case
management would allow the court to
determine strict time frames for the filing of reports and other
evidence, and putting measures
in place that will not only facilitate
the expeditious hearing of the matter, but could also prevent one
parent from obtaining
an advantage over the other by making
appropriate orders aimed at ensuring effective contact between a
parent and the child pending
the resolution of the case.
[140]
A step towards expeditious hearings of these matters can be achieved
by practice directives.
The Western Cape Division, the Gauteng
Local Division and the North West Division of the
High Court have issued
practice directives dealing with
Convention matters. These directives, however promising, do not
negate the delay that arises
when these cases are taken on appeal and
result in further delays.
[141]
If the hearing of Convention matters are not properly managed, it not
only defeats the objectives
of the Convention, it harms both parents
and the child. It may result in the child being deprived of the
consortium of one
of their parents. The child will be
acclimated in their new environment and will find it difficult to
reintegrate once returned.
In addition to the emotional toll of
delay on the child and on each party to the proceedings, it will
inevitably also lead to a
delay in finalising the custody
proceedings.
[142]
To conclude, it is necessary that the court rules must give priority
to Convention matters and facilitate
its expeditious finalisation.
This must include court rules to fast track the hearing of
appeals such as limiting the
time for the filing of appeals and
prioritising its enrolment for hearing in the courts of appeal.
Costs
[143]
There is in my view no justification for the costs order made by the
Supreme Court of Appeal.
For the reasons stated,
it erred in relying on the evidence of E’s mother and Professor
Berg for its finding that the Article
13(b) defence was proved and
that the order of the High Court had to be set aside. In
the final analysis, the defence
was proven by the evidence by Ms
Pettigrew, whose evidence was not before the High Court and was
considered for the first
time in the appeal. A more appropriate
order in the circumstances would have been one ordering the parties
to bear their
own costs.
[144]
With regard
to the costs of the hearing of the appeal in this Court, counsel for
the aunt quite fairly indicated during argument
that the aunt does
not press for a costs order against the AHCA or the father. As
pointed out in
Sonderup
,
[90]
the Chief Family Advocate is the official charged with the duty of
securing the return of an abducted child. In terms of
section
276 read with section 277 of the Children’s Act, the Chief
Family Advocate or their delegate will represent an applicant
in any
court proceedings necessary to give effect to the provisions of the
Convention in those cases where the applicant does not
qualify for
legal aid or does not wish to appoint their own legal
representative. In light of these provisions, and in the
absence of conduct that is deserving of censure, the most equitable
outcome is that each party should pay their own costs.
The
Order
[145]
Accordingly, the following order is made:
1.
Leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal is upheld in part.
3.
Paragraphs 2 and 3 of the Supreme Court of Appeal’s
order
are set aside and replaced with the following:
“
2.
The appeal succeeds.
3.
The order of the High Court of South Africa, Western Cape Division,
Cape Town is set aside and replaced with the following:
(a)
The application is dismissed.
(b)
The parties are to pay their own costs.
4.
There is no order as to costs.”
4.
The parties are to pay their own costs in this Court.
MAJIEDT J
(Zondo CJ, Kollapen J, Makgoka AJ and Potterill AJ concurring):
[146]
I have read
the judgment prepared by my colleague, Van Zyl AJ (first
judgment). I agree with the first judgment that
this Court has
general jurisdiction in this case, for the reasons articulated.
There is a need, transcending the narrow interests
of the parties
here, for finality in terms of what constitutes harm as contemplated
in Article 13(b) of the Hague Convention on
the Civil Aspects of
International Child Abduction 1980 (the Convention), discussed
but not finally resolved by this Court
in
Sonderup
.
[91]
But I take a different view in respect of the outcome regarding the
merits of the appeal. In my view, leave
to appeal
ought to be granted and the appeal against the order of the
Supreme Court of Appeal ought to be upheld.
[147]
I gratefully adopt the detailed narration of the background facts of
the first judgment and will amplify
them only insofar as it may be
necessary for context or emphasis. At the heart of the case, as
the first judgment makes plain,
is the Article 13(b) defence
advanced by the aunt. Given its importance, I quote Article 13
again:
“
Notwithstanding
the provisions of the preceding Article, the judicial or
administrative authority of the requested State is not
bound to order
the return of the child if the person, institution or other body
which opposes its return establishes that—
(c)
the person, institution or other body
having the care of the person
of the child was not actually exercising the custody rights at the
time of
(d)
removal or retention, or had consented
to or subsequently acquiesced
in the removal or retention; or
(e)
there is a grave risk that his or her
return would expose the child
to physical or psychological harm or otherwise place the child in an
intolerable situation.
The
judicial or administrative authority may also refuse to order the
return of the child if it finds that the child objects to
being
returned and has attained an age and degree of maturity at which it
is appropriate to take account of its views.
In
considering the circumstances referred to in this Article, the
judicial and administrative authorities shall take into account
the
information relating to the social background of the child provided
by the Central Authority or other competent authority of
the child’s
habitual residence.”
[148]
In the
High Court, the aunt
[92]
had raised both Article 13(a) and (b) defences in response to the Ad
Hoc Central Authority (AHCA)’s
[93]
Article 3 application.
[94]
That Court rejected both defences and held that no consent or
acquiescence had been proved, nor was there proof of a
grave risk of
physical harm to E in the event of her return to the United Kingdom
(UK). The High Court consequently
ordered that E be
returned to the UK.
[149]
The aunt persisted with both the Article 13(a) and (b) defences in
the Supreme Court of Appeal,
which upheld only the
Article 13(b) defence. The Court granted leave for further
evidence to be adduced, that of Ms Leigh
Pettigrew, an educational
psychologist. As will appear, the approach to her evidence is
one of the primary areas of
difference between this and the first
judgment. A further point of divergence is the lapse of time
since E arrived in SA.
This judgment disagrees with the first,
inasmuch as this judgment holds that the factor of delay cannot
redound to the detriment
of E’s father and the AHCA, the
statutory applicant. As I will demonstrate, that would subvert
the objectives of the
Hague Convention.
[150]
It is necessary to repeat in brief some of the salient background
facts as to how E ended up remaining
in SA with the maternal aunt.
It is imperative that the narration recount the perspective of both
parents. After E’s
mother had been diagnosed with
colorectal cancer and had undergone treatment in the UK, a joint
decision was taken by E’s
parents that they and E ought to
travel to SA to investigate alternate treatment options. That
was because all treatment
options in the UK had been exhausted.
The family travelled to this country on 5 September 2019 and, as
agreed between the
parents, they were scheduled to return to the UK
on 2 October 2019.
[151]
E’s mother underwent surgery on 26 September 2019 in SA after
which she was unable to return
to the UK. During their time in
SA, the relationship between E’s parents deteriorated. As
planned, E’s
father returned to the UK on 2 October 2019.
E remained in SA with her ill mother, the aunt and her maternal
grandmother.
The father’s understanding was that E
would remain with her mother while she underwent treatment, after
which both of
them would return to the UK. This
agreement was confirmed by E’s mother in an email addressed to
the father
on 14 October 2019, which stated that E would remain
in SA until her mother was well enough for both of them to return to
the UK.
[152]
It was after this email that E’s mother informed the father
that E would remain in SA permanently.
The reason given was
that the mother had decided that, in the event of her death, her
sister, the aunt, should care for the child.
This was, in all
probability, at the time that E’s mother became aware that the
treatment in SA was not having the desired
result and that she was
terminally ill. It is also common cause that the father agreed,
on compassionate grounds, that E
could remain in SA for as long as
her mother was undergoing medical treatment. He later agreed,
after active treatment for
the mother had ceased to be feasible, that
E could remain in SA for as long as the mother was alive, even though
she was by then
only receiving palliative care. The father’s
consent did not extend any further. The mother’s changed
outlook
and her wish that after her death E should live with the aunt
did not accord with the earlier agreement and did not find favour
with the father. The terms of the parents’ agreement have
always been, and remain, undisputed.
[153]
When it became known to E’s father that the mother wished for E
to stay in SA permanently, he
approached the Central Authority for
England and Wales (UKCA) and submitted a request for E’s return
from SA to the UK on
the grounds that E’s retention in SA by
her mother without his consent was in breach of the Convention’s
terms.
[154]
This brief outline makes plain that this is an allegedly unlawful
retention case and not one of alleged
unlawful removal/abduction.
This case is unusual inasmuch as the mother who retained the child
here has subsequently passed
away and, as a consequence, the child
remained in SA, separated from her surviving father, instead of
returning to the UK with
her mother as the agreement had been all
along. Furthermore, this case presents unique challenges which
include what weight
to afford to the impact, in the short-term, of
the result of the mother’s death on the child, juxtaposed to
the weight to
be given to the impact, in the long-term, of the child
having been removed from her state of habitual residence with the
resultant
estrangement from her only living parent, her father.
[155]
A further
unusual dimension is that the father has, under the Convention,
rights of custody and access to the child and has parental
rights and
responsibilities to her in the UK. The aunt, who seeks to
assert parental rights, has neither rights of custody
nor access
under the Convention, nor does she have parental rights and
responsibilities in terms of the Children’s Act.
[95]
[156]
I must
emphasise right at the outset that I accept that the
Supreme Court of Appeal was correct in admitting the
further evidence of Ms Pettigrew. That evidence
unquestionably meets the requirements laid down in
Lawrence
[96]
and
Rail
Commuters
.
[97]
Undoubtedly, E’s status and circumstances after the death of
her mother were of the exceptional kind envisaged by this
Court in
those cases. Its previous exclusion in the High Court was
not due to remissness or negligence on the part of
the then
respondents, the late mother and aunt. The evidence is material
in this case as it speaks to the psychological state
of the child.
The factual scenario and circumstances of the child have changed
drastically and should be taken into account.
[157]
The first judgment provides an extensive explication of the
Convention’s material provisions.
Article 12 of the
Convention provides:
“
Where
a child has been wrongfully removed or retained in terms of Article 3
and, at the date of the commencement of the proceedings
before the
judicial or administrative authority of the Contracting State where
the child is, a period of less than one year has
elapsed from the
date of the wrongful removal or retention, the authority concerned
shall order the return of the child forthwith.
The
judicial or administrative authority, even where the proceedings have
been commenced after the expiration of the period of one
year
referred to in the preceding paragraph, shall also order the return
of the child, unless it is demonstrated that the child
is now settled
in its new environment.
Where
the judicial or administrative authority in the requested State has
reason to believe that the child has been taken to another
State, it
may stay the proceedings or dismiss the application for the return of
the child.”
[158]
The Article
13(b) defence plainly lies at the heart of this case. The aunt
had to prove on a balance of probabilities that
there is a grave risk
that E’s return to the UK would expose her to physical or
psychological harm or otherwise place the
child in an intolerable
situation.
[98]
In
G
v D
,
[99]
the Court cited
Re
E,
where
the UK Supreme Court set out the principles applicable in Article
13(b) defences.
[100]
These are (with my emphasis):
(a)
There is no need for Article 13(b) to be
narrowly construed. By
its very terms, its application is restricted. The words of
Article 13(b) are quite plain and
need no further elaboration or
gloss.
(b)
The burden lies on the person (or institution or
other body) opposing
return. It is for them to produce evidence to substantiate one
of the exceptions. The standard
of proof is the ordinary
balance of probabilities but, in evaluating the evidence, the court
will be mindful of the limitations
involved in the summary nature of
the Convention process.
(c)
The risk to the child must be “grave”.
It is not
enough for the risk to be “real”. It must have
reached such a level of seriousness that it can be characterised
as
“grave”. Although “grave” characterises
the risk rather than the harm, there is in ordinary language
a link
between the two.
(d)
The words “physical or psychological harm”
are not
qualified but do gain colour from the alternative “or
otherwise” placed “in an intolerable situation”.
“Intolerable” is a strong word but, when applied to a
child, must mean “a situation which this particular child
in
these particular circumstances should not be expected to tolerate”.
(e)
Article 13(b) looks to the future: the situation
as it would be
if
the child were returned forthwith to his or her home country.
The situation which the child will face on return depends
crucially on the protective measures which can be put in place to
ensure
that the child will not be called upon to face an intolerable
situation when he or she gets home.
Where the risk is
serious enough, the court will be concerned not only with the child’s
immediate future because the
need for protection may persist.
(f)
Where the defence under Article 13(b)
is said to be based on the
anxieties of a respondent mother about a return with the child, which
are not based upon objective risk
to her but are nevertheless of such
intensity as to be likely, in the event of a return,
to destabilise her parenting
of the child to a point where the
child’s situation would become intolerable, in principle, such
anxieties can found the
defence under Article 13(b).
[159]
The harm
that the aunt must prove extends beyond the harm that flows naturally
from a court-ordered return.
[101]
In
Sonderup
,
this Court pointed out that parental
disputes almost always have an adverse effect on children of the
relationship, more so where there is a custody dispute.
This
Court said:
“
The
law seeks to provide a means of resolving such disputes through
decisions premised on the best interests of the child.
Parents
have a responsibility to their children to allow the law to take its
course and not to attempt to resolve the dispute by
resorting to
self-help. Any attempt to do that inevitably increases the
tension between the parents and that ordinarily adds
to the suffering
of the children. The Convention recognises this. It
proceeds on the basis that the best interests
of a child who has been
removed from the jurisdiction of a court in the circumstances
contemplated by the Convention are ordinarily
served by requiring the
child to be returned to that jurisdiction so that the law can take
its course.”
[102]
[160]
Citing
the dictum of
L’Heureux-Dubé J in
the Canadian case
W(V)
v S(D)
,
[103]
this Court in
Sonderup
held:
“
In
applying the Convention ‘rights of custody’ must be
determined according to this definition independent of the meaning
given to the concept of ‘custody’ by the domestic law
of any state party. Whether a person, an institution
or any
other body has the right to determine a child’s habitual
residence must, however, be established by the domestic law
of the
child’s habitual residence.”
[104]
[161]
Article 13(b) sets a high threshold. In
Re C (Abduction:
Grave Risk of Psychological Harm)
, Ward LJ held:
“
There
is . . . an established line of authority that the court should
require clear and compelling evidence of the grave risk of
harm or
other intolerability which must be measured as substantial, not
trivial, and of a severity which is much more than is inherent
in the
inevitable disruption, uncertainty and anxiety which follows an
unwelcome return to the jurisdiction of the court of habitual
residence”.
[105]
[162]
The harm
must be grave. In
Sonderup
,
this Court held that t
he
words “otherwise place the child in an intolerable
situation” is indicative of the harm contemplated in Article
13(b) being of a serious nature. The Court refrained, however,
from defining that concept or considering “whether in
the light
of the provisions of our Constitution, our courts should follow the
stringent tests set by courts in other countries”.
[106]
[163]
As the
first judgment indicates, in other jurisdictions the threshold is set
very high and Article 13(b) is construed narrowly.
[107]
Apart from the United States of America, other
countries like England, Canada, Australia also set a high
threshold.
[108]
Nonetheless, I accept the approach adopted in the first judgment that
it is not necessary to afford Article 13(b) a
more restrictive
meaning than that conveyed by its plain meaning.
[109]
[164]
Courts
vigilantly ensure that the parent who has removed the child should
not be able to rely on the consequences of that removal
to create a
risk of harm or an intolerable situation on return. An example
is
Re C
(A Minor) Abduction
,
[110]
where the Court of Appeal in England had to determine
whether an Article 13(b) defence was proved by the mother who had
left Australia
for
England with the child without informing the father or obtaining his
consent. The mother raised as defences in Hague Convention
proceedings that neither the removal nor the retention were wrongful
and, in any event, if they were, there was grave risk that
the return
of the child would expose him to psychological harm. In
rejecting the Article 13(b) defence, Butler Sloss
LJ stated
:
“
The
grave risk of harm arises not from the return of the child, but the
refusal of the mother to accompany him. The Convention
does not
require the court in this country to consider the welfare of the
child as paramount, but only to be satisfied as to the
grave risk of
harm. I am not satisfied that the child would be placed in an
intolerable situation, if the mother refused
to go back. In
weighing up the various factors, I must place in the balance and as
of the greatest importance the effect
of the court refusing the
application under the Convention because of the refusal of the mother
to return for her own reasons,
not for the sake of the child.
Is a parent to create the psychological situation, and then rely
upon it? If the
grave risk of psychological harm to a child is
to be inflicted by the conduct of the parent who abducted him, then
it would be
relied upon by every mother of a young child who removed
him out of the jurisdiction and refused to return. It would
drive
a coach and four through the Convention, at least in respect of
applications relating to young children. I, for my part, cannot
believe that this is in the interests of international relations.
Nor should the mother, by her own actions, succeed in preventing
the
return of a child who should be living in his own country and deny
him contact with his other parent.”
[111]
[165]
The
Convention envisages a two-part process that has to balance the long-
and short-term interests of the child.
[112]
The long-term interests of the child include the determination of
custody matters. The short-term interests of the
child centre
around jurisdictional matters. The interplay between these two
goals is the crucial inquiry that goes to the
very purpose of the
Convention, namely that “the Convention seeks to ensure that
custody issues are determined by the court
in the best position to do
so by reason of the relationship between its jurisdiction and the
child. That Court will have
access to the facts relevant to the
determination of custody”.
[113]
[166]
In
Re C (A Minor) Abduction
, Lord Donaldson MR set out this
dual approach:
“
We
have also had to consider article 13, with its reference to
‘psychological harm’. I would only add that
in
a situation in which it is necessary to consider operating the
machinery of the Convention, some psychological harm to the child
is
inherent, whether the child is or is not returned. This is, I
think, recognised by the words ‘or otherwise place
the child in
an intolerable situation’ which cast considerable light on the
severe degree of psychological harm which the
Convention has in
mind.
It
will be the concern of the court of the State to which the child is
to be returned to minimise or eliminate this harm and, in
the absence
of compelling evidence to the contrary or evidence that it is beyond
the powers of those courts in the circumstances
of the case, the
courts of this country should assume that this will be done.
Save in an exceptional case, our concern, i.e.
the concern of these
courts, should be limited to giving the child the maximum possible
protection until the courts of the other
country, Australia in this
case, can resume their normal role in relation to the child
.”
[114]
(Emphasis added.)
[167]
The respondent’s Article 13(b) defence places primary reliance
on the two expert reports of
Professor Astrid Berg dated 1 September
2020 and 8 October 2020 and that of Ms Pettigrew. I
commence with a discussion
of the reports of Professor Berg.
She did not express the opinion that the risk to E’s mental
health would be grave
in the event of her return to the UK. The
high water mark of Professor Berg’s concern in her second
report was that
for E to lose the relationships she has formed with
her aunt and grandmother, in addition to losing her mother, could
have serious
consequences for her mental well-being. In her
first report, Professor Berg furnished the High Court with her
opinion
regarding the potential consequences for E in the event of
her return to the UK. That is, as at the time of the first
report,
1 September 2020. Professor Berg alluded there to the
fact that E was on a positive developmental trajectory in SA as she
had settled into playschool, has friends and a primary caregiver (her
aunt) and a grandmother whom she has come to know.
According to
Professor Berg, E’s return to the UK would significantly
disrupt her positive development, inasmuch as she would
lose her aunt
as well as her nurturing and stimulating environment.
[168]
It seems to me that the disruptive consequences described by
Professor Berg are of the kind that naturally
flow from a
court-ordered return to the jurisdiction of the court of an abducted
child’s habitual residence. As I will
show presently,
that approach, also adopted by the Supreme Court of Appeal,
fails to take into account, either adequately
or at all, the
extensive support services available in the UK to mitigate the
effects of this disruption. Thus, this disruption
on its own
does not meet the stringent test for a grave risk of harm or other
intolerability required by Article 13(b).
[169]
In her
first report, Professor Berg laid much emphasis on the effect that
her mother’s death would have on E.
[115]
But, as Professor Berg’s report itself acknowledged, in this
regard, E’s pre-school age, to some extent, redounds
to her
advantage. Professor Berg stated that at E’s age,
she does not yet possess the capacity to fully appreciate
the fact of
her mother’s passing and instead, because of her age, holds the
belief that her mother has gone away temporarily,
to return later.
This has the effect of delaying the immediate psychological insult to
E that would ordinarily follow from
an immediate and full
appreciation of not only the fact of her mother’s passing, but
also its irreversibility and permanence.
So, it seems to me
that this position will prevail for some time if E is to be returned
to the UK.
[170]
In this
regard, there is also the bereavement counselling that E will receive
when she returns to the UK. Professor Berg alluded
to this
aspect in her second report.
[116]
Bereavement counselling, according to Professor Berg, would entail
support to E’s father in respect of assistance
he may
require when the time comes for him, in response to E’s needs,
to give her simple and repeated explanations about
her mother’s
death, its permanence and irreversibility, and to do so in the
sensitive manner that is required.
[171]
Professor Berg pointed out in her second report that “it is the
immediacy of the physical contact
and care – such as feeding,
putting to bed, bathing, taking to and fetching from preschool –
that matter to a young
child”. She pointed out that all
these things had been done by E’s aunt, maternal grandmother,
and the aunt’s
house help, over the year preceding her second
report. This has forged strong relationships between E and
these persons,
as she is still a very young child, “whose
experiences are tied to currently lived physical realities.”
According
to Professor Berg, “[l]osing these relationships, in
addition to losing her mother, could have serious consequences for
[E’s]
mental well-being”.
[172]
But all of this does not detract from the fact that a bond of the
nature described can also be established
between E and her father, if
he were to be afforded the opportunity to extend the same care to
her. E’s father has
in the papers expressed his intention
to routinely perform for E these same tasks upon her return to the
UK. He is prepared
to attend to her physical care and to the
contact tasks of feeding, putting to bed, bathing, taking to and
fetching her from pre-school.
This is the care that has enabled
the aunt, grandmother and their helper to forge bonds with E.
Professor Berg does not express
the opinion in her second report that
such a relationship between E and her father cannot be established.
[173]
In sum, there is nothing in Professor Berg’s two reports that
established a grave risk that
the return of E to the UK will expose
her to physical or psychological harm, or otherwise place her in an
intolerable situation.
That brings me to Ms Pettigrew’s
report.
[174]
Ms Pettigrew’s evidence is comprehensively detailed in the
first judgment. I confine
this judgment to a
recapitulation of its salient features. Her declared mandate
was to assess the impact on E’s psychological
functioning in
the context of the childhood attachment theory, should she be taken
away from the aunt and from her known environment.
After her
death, E’s mother’s primary attachment role was taken
over by the aunt. Removing E from the aunt’s
care would
effectively result in a second maternal death for E. Developing
an emotional understanding of her mother’s
death will continue
through E’s different stages of development with the assistance
of an emotionally available and trusted
carer who can guide her
through these phases. Absent that carer in times of need, there
will likely be a significant level
of distress and emotional trauma
for E.
[175]
Ms Pettigrew expressed the view that there is no secure bond between
E and her father and it is unlikely
that a secure bond would be
established with him if E were to be returned to the UK.
According to Ms Pettigrew, because E
is no longer in the attachment
formation phases of the attachment theory, there would be no
transition for her from the aunt’s
care into that of her
father, and that she would not form an attachment with him if placed
in his care. In effect, her return
to the UK would mean that E
would be placed with a person who is a stranger to her.
Moreover, E will be grieving the loss
of her two attachment figures,
namely her mother and the aunt, in addition to the loss of the safe
and predictable structures of
her life in SA.
[176]
Ms Pettigrew was of the opinion that, faced with these losses, E’s
coping resources would in
all likelihood be overwhelmed, and that
there was a significant risk of a complete breakdown with psychosis
and psychological damage
to her, in the short-and long-term.
Therapeutic intervention would not ameliorate the sense of loss that
E would experience
nor the emotional damage to her, and it would be
challenging for her to develop a trust relationship with a therapist
in the UK
in the absence of her also having an established a bond
with her father.
[177]
Based on this assessment, Ms Pettigrew concludes that there is a
likelihood of E suffering serious
psychological harm if she is
removed from the aunt. That is because E will not have the
capacity to deal with the trauma
of being removed from her primary
attachment figure.
[178]
The first judgment holds that Ms Pettigrew’s report “represents
a reasoned conclusion
based on the facts set out in her report”.
I disagree. As I see it, the first judgment and the
Supreme Court of Appeal’s
place too much
emphasis on Ms Pettigrew’s report and fail to consider (in
the case of the Supreme Court of Appeal)
or place
inadequate weight on (in the case of the first judgment) the evidence
of the support systems available in the UK.
While Ms
Pettigrew’s evidence may be uncontroverted, as the first
judgment holds, it only tells one side of the story.
When all
the evidence, including the evidence concerning the UK support
systems, is placed on the scale, as it should be, the alleged
grave
risk of harm or intolerable situation averred by Ms Pettigrew
does not meet the threshold of Article 13(b).
[179]
The first
judgment attributes the risk of the harm to: E’s young age; the
circumstances in which she came to be in the care
of the aunt; the
length of time that she has been in the care of the aunt, who has now
become her primary attachment figure; the
absence of the formation of
any significant bond with the applicant; and the fact that her return
to the UK will take her away
from her primary attachment figure and
out of her known family and social environment to a country of which
she is unlikely to
have much recollection, and to family members with
whom she has not as yet formed any relationships.
[117]
[180]
This summation graphically demonstrates the unbalanced nature of the
approach adopted by the first
judgment. It fails to recognise
that these factors do not redound negatively on E’s father’s
position –
on the contrary these are factors over which he had
and still does not have any control. This recognition is not a
misdirected
focus on the father’s interests, but in fact has a
direct bearing on E’s best interests. Most of these
factors
(save for E’s young age and the circumstances in which
she came to be in the aunt’s care) are the result of the
inordinate
delay in finalising this case, primarily in the
Supreme Court of Appeal, an aspect to which I will
revert presently.
[181]
E’s
grief, although deeply tragic, is not uniquely UK specific. She
will experience this grief even if she were to remain
in SA. It
is not harm of sufficient severity so as to require E to avoid
returning to the UK.
[118]
The risk of harm in separating E from her aunt, to be returned to the
UK and placed with her father, results solely from
the wrongful
retention and the unfortunate delay in finalising this litigation,
particularly in the Supreme Court of Appeal.
Absent the wrongful retention, there would be no need for E to evade
this harm. This is precisely the harm that is expected
to
follow E’s return following a court order. It is also the
harm that can be created by anyone that wrongfully retains
a child in
another country, a scenario that the Convention serves to
discourage. Furthermore, it is not harm that is serious
enough
that “is not reasonable to expect a child to tolerate”.
[119]
[182]
The
collective harm of E’s mother’s death and a separation
from the aunt pursuant to a court-ordered return to the UK
does not
to my mind meet the high Article 13(b) threshold. I say
this based on my findings here, but also, accepting
that no two cases
are identical, considering that the potential harm facing the
children in
Sonderup
[120]
and
KG v
CB
[121]
was of a more serious nature than the potential harm facing E.
Nevertheless, this Court and the Supreme Court of Appeal
both ordered the return of the children to their countries of
habitual residence. It bears emphasis that the correct approach
to determining a dispute of this nature is that:
“
A
South African court seized with an application under the Convention
is obliged to place in the balance the desirability, in the
interests
of the child, of the appropriate court retaining its jurisdiction, on
the one hand, and the likelihood of undermining
the best interests of
the child by ordering her or his return to the jurisdiction of that
court.”
[122]
[183]
A striking lacuna in the reasoning of the Supreme Court of Appeal
and the first judgment
is that there is no consideration at all
of the harm that E would likely suffer from her father’s
absence, including having
an estranged parent and a sense of
abandonment and trauma similar to that experienced by some adopted
children. This harm
could conceivably be worse than the harm
that Ms Pettigrew envisions E would suffer if she were to be returned
to the UK.
No evidence was placed before the courts in relation
to the harm E would likely suffer from the absence of her father.
The
first judgment places undue emphasis on the time that E has
been away from her father, ignoring the fact that this is exactly
the
unenviable position the father finds himself in due to the failure to
return E to the UK after her mother’s death.
[184]
The aunt bears the burden of proof to demonstrate the grave risk of
harm. It would then be for
the father to refute this. The
objective of the Convention enunciated in Article 1 is to secure the
prompt return of a child
removed from the country of habitual
residence, and to restore the previous prevailing situation before
the unlawful removal or
retention, in order to have issues like
custody and others that may underlie the removal of a child, decided
by the courts of the
country of habitual residence. The
rationale behind this is to preserve whatever custody arrangement
existed immediately
before an alleged wrongful removal or retention,
thereby deterring a parent from crossing international borders in
search of a
more sympathetic court.
[185]
That brings me to the evidence adduced concerning the structures and
systems available for E’s
support in the UK upon her return.
This evidence was completely disregarded by the
Supreme Court of Appeal
and is trivialised by the
first judgment. It is necessary that I set out that
evidence in some detail, for a more
balanced perspective.
It is of some significance that E’s mother’s own case
notes, which form part of the
record, testify to the elaborate
support systems available to E in the UK. In those
notes, the social workers assigned
to E’s mother, Ms
Anna Phillips and Ms Giorgia Chatwin, meticulously recorded her
own treatment and the support services
she had received in
Herefordshire.
[186]
There is a report by Mr Samuel Njini, a qualified social worker
registered with Social Care Wales
and the
Health Professionals Council of England, employed
as a social worker at Herefordshire Children’s Services.
He had consulted with the father and had conducted an inspection of
his living quarters. Mr Njini reported that the father
lives in
a two-bedroom house and that E’s room has been prepared for
her. He described E’s room as beautifully
decorated.
According to the report, the father is employed by a local company,
Hut Builders, which builds wooden play huts
for children. He
earns £10 an hour and he works 20 to 30 hours a week. The
father is entitled to universal benefits,
and will be able to care
for E upon her return. He lives in a community with a network
of support from friends who live in
the same village and have
children the same age as E.
[187]
In addition to these observations, Mr Njini also recorded that Social
Services are able and will continue
to provide support to E and her
father. A referral would be made to the bereavement counselling
service to support E.
The father had confirmed to him that E is
still registered with a local general practitioner and the
National Health Service
will continue to meet her health
needs as and when required. E will be allocated to a health
visitor who will visit her at
home to ensure that her health needs
are met and that she meets all her developmental milestones. In
terms of further checks
and balances, Social Services, the
health visitor, the nursery school and the bereavement counselling
service will ensure
that E’s safety and emotional wellbeing are
fully safeguarded.
[188]
All this evidence indicates that E would be provided with suitable
accommodation were she to return
to the UK; that her father is
committed to and has the ability to take care of her; that he has a
network to support him with E’s
care and that the social and
medical services under the local authority would be involved in
attending to her needs.
[189]
Mr Njini’s report was confirmed by Mr James Twist, who is
employed at the
International Child Abduction and Contact Unit (ICACU).
He performs the functions assigned to the UKCA under the Hague
Convention. Mr. Twist is the case worker at ICACU responsible
for South African matters. He was contacted by
Ms Shirin Ebrahim, a Family Advocate who deposed to an
affidavit
in the High Court in response to questions from that
Court during the hearing. Mr Twist confirmed that there were
social
services available for E in Herefordshire, where she would
live with her father, if she were to return to the UK.
[190]
There is also a report by Dr Onyoja Momah, a barrister in the UK and
an expert in family law and cross-jurisdictional
cases.
According to his report, due to the unique nature of this case, even
if a return order was made, the hearing to determine
parental rights
and responsibilities would likely be held in SA due to
forum
conveniens
(the most convenient forum to hear the matter).
A report from Dr Ester Scotland, a medical doctor in
Herefordshire,
stated that the father had undergone a health
assessment in 2019 and was prescribed medication which he at that
stage had continued
to take.
[191]
The record of a meeting held on 12 June 2019 between the family
(E, her father and mother)
and members of the social
services professional team in the UK is instructive. The team
included Ms Georgia Chatwin described
as Care Coordinator/CPN
Recovery Mental Health Nurse, Ms Sally Hampton described as Support
Worker Recovery, Mr Tim Williams
from the Early Help Team and
Ms Jennie Swain, a Health Visitor. The record states:
“
Each
member of the family got a chance to express their feelings and needs
in a safe space and as health professionals we agreed
our roles in
supporting each person ensuring that each person within the unit
receives support going forward. . . .
P and E will receive ongoing
support from Jennie and Tim moving forward.
”
(Emphasis added.)
[192]
These reports and the case notes referred to earlier demonstrate that
the social and medical
services available in the UK can and will
respond to the needs of E and her father. There are not only
strong medical, but
also strong social support systems available.
Her father has accommodation available for her and he appears to have
gone to some lengths to create a happy living space for her,
according to Mr Njini’s report.
[193]
The father’s position as the only surviving parent receives
very little attention in the judgment
of the Supreme Court of Appeal
and the first judgment. There is no recognition of him having
been involved
in E’s life right from the outset.
He is no stranger to E. Their relationship was
established
before E travelled to SA. What underpins the
attachment theory advanced by both Professor Berg and Ms Pettigrew,
and
relied upon by the aunt, amounts to a dismissal of the
father’s existence and his role in E’s life.
It fails
to acknowledge and give due weight to the relationship
between father and child. On this approach, E’s
attachment to
the aunt effectively discourages all involvement
of the father. There is a diminution of the presence of the
father,
resulting in E being deprived of the love, affection and care
of her father, to which she is entitled. This deprivation is
exacerbated by the tragic loss of her mother.
[194]
There is
some passing acknowledgment in the first judgment of some
shortcomings in Ms Pettigrew’s evidence. It says
that she
“did not pertinently address the impact, if any, of the natural
relationship of father and daughter that exists
between E and the
applicant, and the father’s familial support system in the UK
on the likelihood of the postulated poor
outcome of E’s return
to the UK materialising”.
[123]
But it then immediately criticises the AHCA and the father for not
placing expert evidence of their own before the
Supreme Court of Appeal,
thus leaving Ms Pettigrew’s
evidence uncontroverted. As the first judgment itself accepts,
even if uncontradicted,
expert evidence remains opinion that
must be scrutinised by a court to determine its value. For the
reasons enunciated,
I do not accept that Ms Pettigrew’s
evidence establishes an Article 13(b) defence.
[195]
I must not
be misunderstood. I do not take the view that Ms Pettigrew’s
evidence is unreliable or that it should be
disputed or rejected as
the first judgment appears to interpret my approach.
[124]
The point is rather that, even though her evidence is accurate, the
harm Ms Pettigrew describes is not grave enough to meet
the Article
13(b) threshold. The first judgment holds that it is grave
enough I hold the contrary view that it
is not. The
situation that E finds herself in naturally evokes much empathy, but
it is not grave enough to warrant E staying
in SA. As stated,
the harm that will arise is of the exact nature associated with an
order of return contemplated by the
Convention.
[196]
To illustrate, if E had stayed in the UK with her father while her
mother came to SA for treatment,
she would not face the harm of
separating from her aunt or returning to her father, now a
“stranger”. She would
face the grief of losing her
mother only and, as I have attempted to explain, this harm is not one
that E faces all of a sudden
by returning to the UK.
[197]
Every child that is removed from their country of habitual residence
and left behind parent,
and instead stays in another country for
some time with only one attachment figure would face the dual harm of
separating from
the sole attachment figure, and returning to their
now left-behind parent, a “stranger”.
[198]
The first
judgment points out that E’s return to her father is
effectively her being “placed with a person who is a
stranger
to her”.
[125]
This is problematic, as it completely discounts the father’s
parental rights and, again, is a consequence arising solely
from the
retention (as would be the case for any left-behind parent from whom
there has been some distance). E’s attachment
to her aunt
effectively discourages all involvement of the second applicant as
the father. This latter relationship is being
totally
obliterated by the attachment to her aunt. Ms Pettigrew alludes
to the fact that E’s aunt made links between
herself and E, her
mother and the domestic helper during the time spent together from
the time of their arrival in SA until the
mother’s death.
The presence of the father hardly gets any mention and is being
diminished. The result is
that for E, the unfortunate loss of
her mother in the circumstances in which she lost her – after
her mother wrongfully retained
E in SA – means that she is
being deprived of the love, affection and care of her father, to
which she is entitled.
[199]
It bears emphasis that the need to afford a balanced assessment in
this enquiry to the father’s
position is not merely out of
maudlin sympathy. His situation bears directly on E’s
well-being, as she is being deprived
of her only surviving parent’s
care and affection, through the improper and unbalanced approach to
the matter advanced by
the first judgment.
[200]
Reliance is
placed in the first judgment on Ms Pettigrew’s view that
therapy would not ameliorate E’s harm.
[126]
But, to my understanding, effective therapy is not what is required
to mitigate potential harm. The requirement of
effective
therapy sets a higher standard than what is actually required.
Instead, what is required is a court system in the
country of
habitual residence that can deal with the harm.
[127]
The Convention’s purpose is to determine which
jurisdiction is effectively responsible for the child, and this
includes addressing the harm the child would face. In other
words, if a child was returning to a jurisdiction with a failed
court
system or no child protection laws or enforcement of such laws, then
there is no way of mitigating the harm.
[201]
The first
judgment relies on the evidence that “there are no measures
that would serve to mitigate the anticipated harm”.
[128]
As I have attempted to show, this is not the case.
[202]
The absence
of culpability on the part of E’s aunt alluded to in the first
judgment bears no relevance to this enquiry.
[129]
It loses sight of the requirements of the Convention. The
question is simply whether, on a balance of probabilities,
in the
event that E is ordered to be returned to her state of habitual
residence, she would be faced with the risk of grave psychological
and physical harm or that she may otherwise be placed in an
intolerable situation.
[203]
A recent
judgment of the Family Division of the High Court in England
provides insight into how an Article 13(b) defence is
to be
approached in these circumstances.
TMS
v AMS
[130]
concerned an application under the Convention in respect of
two children, AS and VS. Their parents were Russian and
the mother lived in Moscow and the father in London.
[131]
AS and VS went to London for a two-week holiday with the father, as
agreed between the parents. At the end of the two
weeks, the
father did not reunite them with the mother as planned and emailed
the mother saying that he had decided that AS and
VS will remain with
him in London.
[204]
The mother instituted Hague Convention proceedings in London
within a few days of the
children’s retention.
The father conceded that the children were habitually resident in
Russia up until that point
and that his retaining them in London
constituted a wrongful retention within the meaning of the
Convention. He also conceded
that there was no question of an
exception being raised under either acquiescence or consent.
Thus, the issues for determination
by the Family Court were whether a
return of the children, or either of them, would give rise to a grave
risk of physical or psychological
harm or place them in an
intolerable situation if they were to be returned to Russia.
[205]
The father’s defence in terms of Article 13(b) of grave risk of
harm included allegations that
a return against AS’ wishes
would expose him to a deterioration in his psychiatric state such
that he may become suicidal
again. The father contended that
this would meet the Article 13(b) threshold. He also alleged
that there was a real
risk of the children being exposed to physical
and emotional harm from their mother, both in terms of physical
beatings and threats
from her to kill herself or to kill AS, and that
the maternal grandfather posed a physical risk of abuse to them as
well.
The impact on AS of returning to Russia to his school was
also relied upon, he having been unhappy at that school.
Furthermore,
the father relied upon the risk of the Ukraine/Russia
war extending into Russia with the attendant risks of harm, and also,
in
particular, an alleged risk to the children of dissidents being
targeted by the State and either removed from their family’s
care or being subjected to other forms of physical abuse at the hands
of the State.
[206]
In following
Re E
, Williams J approached the enquiry as
follows:
“
[T]he
court takes the allegations at the highest and asks the question:
would, taken at their highest, the allegation or the allegations
cross the Article 13(b) threshold. If the answer to that is no,
taken at their highest they would not, then the Article 13(b)
exception cannot be established. If the allegations taken at
their highest would cross the Article 13(b) threshold, then
the
second stage is to ask whether the protective measures could be
effective rather than theoretically reduce a risk but could
be
effective, in practice, to reduce the risk to the children to a level
below the Article 13(b) threshold.”
[132]
[207]
The Court
summarised the present approach of the UK courts as being an emerging
difference in the cases in the Court of Appeal and
the Family Court
since
Re E
from the relatively straightforward approach that the UK Supreme
Court adopted in the latter case. According to Williams
J, the
courts now consider, based on the Good Practice
Guide,
[133]
whether the
allegations made by the respondent are of such a nature and of
sufficient detail and substance, in terms of evidence,
that they
could constitute a grave risk. In addition, the question is
asked whether the maximum level of risk is supported
by “reasoned
and reasonable assumptions”. This, said Williams J,
is a rather more nuanced and detailed exercise
than the pragmatic
solution suggested in
Re
E.
[208]
The Court noted that, in addressing the question whether a respondent
has established that there is
a grave risk that the child’s
return would expose the child to physical or psychological harm or
otherwise place the child
in an intolerable situation, the range of
approaches and outcomes include the following:
(a)
The evidence on the papers satisfies the
judge on a balance of
probabilities that the grave risk exists. The court then
determines, in the light of its findings on
the level and nature of
risk, what protective measures are available and whether or not they
would be effective to ameliorate that
determined risk.
(b)
The evidence on the papers satisfies the judge
on a balance of
probabilities that there is no grave risk. This may be because
the nature of the allegation taken at its
highest simply could not
establish a grave risk of harm or other intolerable situation or
because the evidence in relation to the
alleged risk is sufficiently
clear on paper that a clear adverse conclusion can be reached.
No Article 13(b) protective measures
are then required.
(c)
The judge can on the papers confidently discount
the allegation that
there is a grave risk of harm. Forensically this would suggest
that the evidence is insufficient to determine
on balance that the
grave risk does not in fact exist but is sufficiently weak (lacking
in substance and detail, based on unreasoned
and unreasonable
assumptions perhaps) that it is not established. No Article
13(b) protective measures are then required.
(d)
The court
cannot confidently discount the allegations, as the evidence is of
such substance and detail, or the allegations are based
on reasoned
or reasonable assumptions such that it should take the allegations at
their highest and determine that the grave risk
of harm threshold is
passed. This approach is consistent with the legal burden
which lies on a respondent to establish
the defence. In these
cases, the court’s evaluation of the protective measures will
encompass more flexibility in terms
of the range of protective
measures required and the way in which the court approaches how
effective they need to be.
[134]
[209]
According
to Williams J, in the event that an exception is established,
the approach to the exercise of the resulting discretion
is set
out in
Re M (Abduction: Zimbabwe)
,
[135]
where the House of Lords confirmed that the discretion is at large.
In that case, policy considerations which accompany the
Convention
will be weighed in the balance, along with any factors relating to
the exception which has been established, and any
welfare
considerations which go to support either a non-return or a return.
It has been recognised that in cases where the
grave risk of harm
exception has been established, it is quite difficult to envisage a
situation where the court would in the exercise
of its discretion
order a return, nonetheless. So, the discretion on an Article
13(b) defence of this sort is more notional
or more theoretical than
real.
[210]
Ultimately, the Court held that the risk to the child, AS, was
limited and there were advantages to
AS in welfare terms in being
reunited with his family unit and extended family. Taking those
factors into account and the
weight to be given to the Convention
considerations in the case, the Court held that AS had to be returned
to Russia to allow the
Russian courts to determine his future in a
considered and holistic fashion.
[211]
In
Friedrich
,
the mother made no allegations of abuse, but instead raised concerns
that the child would have adjustment problems if forced to
return to
Germany. The Sixth Circuit held that this was not enough to
invoke the grave risk exception because grave risk
implies much more
than “serious risk”.
[136]
[212]
The first judgment lists three primary considerations in respect of
E’s best interests that
lead it to the conclusion that it is
best for her to remain in SA and for a court here to decide what
would be in her best long-term
interests. These considerations
are:
(a)
the length of time that has elapsed since
E’s initial retention
in this country;
(b)
the fact that E was only two years and two months
old when she came
to SA with her parents and that it is therefore unlikely that she had
formed any meaningful relationships with
anyone in the UK or that she
would have any recollection of that country; and
(c)
the finding
of the likelihood of a grave risk of psychological harm should E be
returned to the UK. The first judgment holds
that “[t]he
implication of this finding, the nature of the anticipated harm, and
the absence of there being any protective
measures to reduce the risk
or the seriousness thereof, mean that an order for the return to the
UK is likely not to be in her
best interests.”
[137]
It adds: “[t]his conclusion is strengthened by the absence of
any evidence of meaningful undertakings by the authorities
in the UK
to provide reasonable protection against the harm postulated by
Ms Pettigrew in her evidence.”
[138]
[213]
I have already advanced reasons why I disagree with the consideration
in (c). It is necessary
to observe, though, that the last
sentence quoted, vividly illustrates why I say that the first
judgment largely ignores the evidence
adduced relating to the support
services available to E in the UK (and, of course, the
Supreme Court of Appeal ignored
that evidence
altogether). This is not a balanced approach and it improperly
elevates Ms Pettigrew’s expert opinion.
[214]
The
first judgment impermissibly overemphasises E’s attachment to
the aunt, as outlined in Ms Pettigrew’s report.
This
factor has a double dimension, according to Ms Pettigrew.
First, there is the fact that E’s mother’s primary
attachment role has been taken over by the aunt. And, secondly,
Ms Pettigrew alludes to the fact that, since E is no
longer in
the attachment formation phase, there would be no transition for her
from the aunt’s care into that of her father,
and that she
would not form an attachment with him if placed in his care.
This attachment factor appears to me to be the
overriding
consideration advanced as motivation for Ms Pettigrew’s
conclusions and recommendations. It also seems to
hold great
sway with the first judgment. But that misapplies the test
in Hague Convention proceedings. As stated,
the test is whether
there is grave harm of the nature envisaged in Article 13(b) by the
words “
place
the child in an intolerable situation”.
[139]
The attachment factor does not belong in that enquiry;
it
is a test utilised for custody and care proceedings.
[140]
In the course of discussing the constitutionality of the Hague
Convention Act, this Court in
Sonderup
held:
“
A
South African court seized with an application under the Convention
is obliged to place in the balance the desirability, in the
interests
of the child, of the appropriate court retaining its jurisdiction, on
the one hand, and the likelihood of undermining
the best interests
of the child by ordering her or his return to the jurisdiction of
that court.
As
appears below, the court ordering the return of a child under the
Convention would be able to impose substantial conditions designed
to
mitigate the interim prejudice to such child caused by a court
ordered return. The ameliorative effect of Article 13,
an
appropriate application of the Convention by the court, and the
ability to shape a protective order, ensure a limitation that
is
narrowly tailored to achieve the important purposes of the
Convention
.
It goes no further than is necessary to achieve this objective, and
the means employed by the Convention are proportional
to the ends it
seeks to attain.”
[141]
(Emphasis
added and footnotes omitted.)
[215]
It is
convenient to address considerations (a) and (b) together. This
approach seriously undermines the primary objective
of the
Convention, to ensure an expeditious restoration of the status quo
ante in cases of unlawful retention or removal.
To hold the
inordinate delay in this case against the AHCA and the father is to
subvert the Convention’s aims.
The first judgment
invokes Article 12 for its stance. But that Article
envisages that the child be returned forthwith.
The prompt
return of the child lies at the heart of the Convention’s
entire scheme. The history of this case is that
it proceeded
fairly rapidly to and through the High Court.
[142]
Not so in the Supreme Court of Appeal.
[143]
In this Court too, it has taken some time for the matter to be
finalised. But, by the time the matter arrived in this
Court,
the damage was done insofar as inordinate delay is concerned,
primarily in the Supreme Court of Appeal.
[216]
Accepting this delay as a valid cause of E becoming settled in SA, as
the first judgment holds, would
mean that anyone with an interest in
wrongfully retaining a child in another country can draw out
litigation proceedings to enable
the child to settle and so escape
the reach of the Convention. Delay would become a strategic
tool to evade the Convention’s
objectives, not only to protect
children from the harmful effects of international child abduction
and retention by a parent, but
importantly also to secure the
prompt
return
of the abducted or retained children to their state of
habitual residence. Promptitude is an indispensable part of the
process.
Article 12 requires that w
here
a child has been wrongfully removed or retained, and a period of less
than a year after the wrongful removal or retention has
elapsed, the
judicial or administrative authorities of the requested state “shall
order the return of the child
forthwith.
”
That is precisely what the High Court did – order E’s
return to the UK within a year of her retention
in SA. The
subsequent delays of the appeal in the Supreme Court of Appeal
and application for leave to appeal
in this Court cannot subvert the
Convention’s aims and the provisions of Article 12.
[217]
The first judgment correctly enumerates the flaws in the judgment of
the Supreme Court of Appeal.
To recap, they are:
(a)
First, that
Court erred in its approach to the correct application of
Article 13(b) by applying the principles in
Plascon-Evans
to its evaluation of the evidence.
[144]
In doing so, the Court impermissibly decided the matter solely on the
evidence adduced by the aunt. It completely disregarded
the
evidence of the applicant on crucial matters. That aspect has
been addressed in some detail in this judgment.
(b)
Secondly, as a corollary of the first mistake,
the
Supreme Court of Appeal decided, solely on the
evidence of E’s mother, that the father would not be able
to
raise E and provide her with the necessary emotional and financial
security. That evidence was premised on factors like
the
father’s history of mental health issues, abuse of alcohol and
other substances, and his unstable employment history.
These
factors were claimed to create the risk of exposing E to harm and an
intolerable situation envisaged in Article 13(b),
a claim which
the Supreme Court of Appeal accepted in applying
Plascon-Evans
.
(c)
And,
thirdly, the Supreme Court of Appeal, once it found
that the Article 13(b) defence was established, had
to exercise
its discretion and was duty bound to consider whether E should be
returned to the UK. This it did not do.
As is
correctly pointed out by the first judgment, that Court’s
judgment has no reference at all to it exercising such a
discretion.
Absent any statement to that effect, one must accept that if failed
to exercise that discretion. But, even
if it did, the
Supreme Court of Appeal plainly failed to balance both
the interests of the child and the general
purposes of the
Convention, as it must do.
[145]
[218]
To these I would add that the Supreme Court of Appeal
appears to have erred in its
conflation of the two inquiries of what
was referred to in
Sonderup
as the long term interests of
the child, including the determination of custody matters, and the
short-term interests of the
child, which concern jurisdictional
matters. That Court seems to me to have conflated the
assessment of the short-term jurisdictional
question of which court
is best placed to deliberate on issues of care, custody and
guardianship and the longer term question
that concerns an
assessment of the best custodial arrangement for the child.
That is why it regarded Ms Pettigrew’s
report as determinative
and held that E’s father’s care would be unsuitable.
That was not an assessment for the
Supreme Court of Appeal
to make, or, for that matter, for this Court to make now. What
is required is a determination
of whether the Article 13(b) defence
holds good in the face of an Article 12 mandatory return. Once
E has been returned to
the UK under the auspices of the UKCA, a full
enquiry into her father’s competency as a carer will follow by
way of a custody
hearing. This is precisely what the Convention
envisages.
[219]
In conclusion, I hold that, on a consideration of the totality of the
evidence, including the evidence
adduced by the father and the AHCA,
the aunt has not proved the Article 13(b) defence. I am
not satisfied on a balance
of probabilities that, in the event that E
is ordered to be returned to her state of habitual residence, she
would be faced with
the risk of grave psychological and physical harm
or that she may otherwise be placed in an intolerable situation.
Moreover,
the aunt failed to establish that the UK is not able to
mitigate any of the risks that she has raised or alluded to by
Professor
Berg and Ms Pettigrew should E be returned to the UK.
On the evidence, there are adequate support services and systems in
place in the UK. These would mitigate the impact of E’s
return to the UK. The delay occasioned by the litigation
cannot
be permitted to impede the objectives of the Convention.
The
Order
[220]
The following order is made:
1.
Leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal is upheld.
3.
The orders of the Supreme Court of Appeal and the High
Court are
set aside.
4.
E (the minor child) shall be returned to the jurisdiction of the
Central Authority
for England and Wales (CAEW) in the
United Kingdom (UK) by the end of February 2024.
5.
Pending the return of E to the UK as provided in this order, the
second respondent
(the aunt) shall not, without the prior
written consent of the Central Authority for the RSA (CASA), remove E
from the province
of the Western Cape in the Republic of South Africa
(RSA) and shall keep CASA informed of her and E’s physical
address and
contact details.
6.
In the event of the second respondent intending to accompany E on her
return
to the UK, she shall notify CASA and the second applicant
(the father) in writing, within one week of the date of issue of
this order, and in that event she is granted leave and authorisation,
insofar as it may be necessary, to remove E from the RSA
and
accompany E on her return to the UK.
7.
In the event of the second respondent failing to notify CASA in terms
of para
6 and the second applicant intending to accompany E on her
return to the UK, he shall notify CASA and the second respondent in
writing, within one week of such failure, and he is granted leave and
authorisation, insofar as it may be necessary, to remove E
from the
RSA and accompany E on her return to the UK.
8.
In the event of the second respondent and the second applicant
failing to notify
CASA in terms of paras 6 and 7, CASA is authorised
to make such arrangements as may be necessary to ensure that E is
safely returned
to the custody of the CAEW and to take such steps as
are necessary to ensure that such arrangements are complied with.
9.
Pending the return of E to the UK and for as long as the second
applicant is
in the UK, contact between E and the second applicant
shall take place in accordance with the High Court’s Order of
10 September
2020.
10.
In the event of the second applicant being present in the RSA for the
purpose provided in
para 7, CASA shall liaise with the respondents’
legal representatives to establish a schedule for contact between E
and the
second applicant. Such schedule shall provide for the
second applicant’s enjoyment of contact with E on a daily
basis,
taking into account E’s daily activities and any other
factors relevant to E’s well-being at the time.
11.
Upon E’s arrival in the UK, the second applicant must procure
all appropriate social
and medical services to ameliorate E’s
return to the UK and cooperate with any assessment that the
Department of Health and
Social Care in the UK may wish to undertake
in relation to him and the welfare of E.
12.
Proceedings regarding the determination of parental rights are stayed
pending E’s
return to the UK.
13.
In the event of either the second respondent or second applicant
notifying CASA, in terms
of para 6 or para 7, CASA shall forthwith
give notice thereof to the Registrar of this Court, to the CAEW and
to the second respondent
and the second applicant. In the event
of either the second respondent or the second applicant making the
election provided
for in para 6 or 7 of this order respectively, then
the second respondent or the second applicant, as the case may be,
shall provide
the Central Authority with regular information in
writing of all logistical and other arrangements made for the return
of
E to the UK. This information shall include, but not be
limited, to information regarding flight dates and times, and
compliance
with any passport, visa or health requirements, if
applicable. CASA shall also be entitled to request from either
the second
respondent or the second applicant, as the case may be,
details of the arrangements made for the return of E to the UK.
Any
such request shall promptly be responded to.
14.
A copy of this order shall be transmitted forthwith by the first
applicant to the CAEW.
15.
Each party is to bear their own costs in this Court, the Supreme
Court of Appeal and
the High Court.
For
the First and Second Applicants
Ncumisa
Mayosi and Khanyisa Ngqata
Instructed
by State Attorney, Cape Town
For
the First Respondent
Janet L McCurdie SC and Lana C
Bezuidenhout
Instructed
by Ross McGarrick Attorneys, Cape Town
[1]
Article
13(b) is comprehensively dealt with in paras [40] to [65] of the
first judgment.
[2]
The
Convention was created by the Fourteenth Session of The Hague
Conference on Private International Law and was adopted at The
Hague
on 25 October 1980.
[3]
Danaipour
v McLarey
286 F. 3d 1
(1st Cir. 2002) at para 4.
[4]
Article
6 of the Convention requires the appointment of a “Central
Authority” as the relevant official to ensure that
the
provisions of the Convention are implemented. The United
Kingdom’s Central Authority is called the International
Child
Abduction and Contact Unit.
[5]
Section
276(1) of the Children’s Act 38 of 2005 states that the
“‘
Central
Authority
’–
(a)
in relation to the Republic, means the
Chief Family Advocate appointed by the Minister of Justice
and Constitutional
Development in terms of the
Mediation in Certain Divorce Matters Act; or
(b)
in relation to a convention country, means a
person or office designated for such convention country under
Article 6 of the Hague
Convention on International Child Abduction.”
[6]
Unlike in some other jurisdictions such as New Zealand, where the
Central Authority performs a facilitative role rather than
initiating proceedings as a party, the AHCA is obliged to initiate
proceedings for the return of a child under the Convention.
Regulation 17 of the regulations issued under sections 75 and 280 of
the Children’s Act provides:
“
(1)
If a child has been wrongfully removed to the Republic or retained
in the
Republic, the Central Authority of the Republic must—
(a)
upon receipt of the documents
from the other country's Central
Authority, study the application; and
(b)
within 10 days after the child has
been located, bring an
application to the High Court on behalf of the parent or person with
parental rights and responsibilities
from whom the child has been
wrongfully removed, to have the child returned to his or her place
of habitual residence.
(2)
An application for assistance made by an applicant to the Chief
Family Advocate must, unless the contrary is proved, be deemed to
constitute authorisation by the applicant for the Chief Family
Advocate or a Family Advocate to exercise any power and perform any
duty conferred or imposed on him or her under the Hague Convention,
and to appear on the applicant’s behalf in any proceedings
that may be necessary under the Hague Convention.”
[7]
Regulations relating to Children’s Courts and International
Child Abduction, GN R250
GG
33067, 31 March 2010 (International Child Abduction Regulations).
[8]
Pennello
v Pennello
[2003]
ZASCA 147
; [2004] 1 All 32 (SCA) (
Pennello
)
at para 5
and
Central
Authority v H
[2007]
ZASCA 88
;
2008 (1) SA 49
(SCA) (
Central
Authority v H
)
at
para 22.
[9]
Article
16 of the Convention reads:
“
After
receiving notice of a wrongful removal or retention of a child in
the sense of Article 3, the judicial or administrative
authorities
of the Contracting State to which the child has been removed or in
which it has been retained shall not decide on
the merits of rights
of custody until it has been determined that the child is not to be
returned under this Convention or unless
an application under this
Convention is not lodged within a reasonable time following receipt
of the notice.”
[10]
10
of 2011.
[11]
Article 3 of the Convention reads:
“
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.”
[12]
Article
5 of the Convention reads:
“
For
provides for purposes of the Convention –
(a)
‘rights of custody’
shall include rights relating to the
care of the person of the child and, in particular, the right to
determine the child’s
place of residence;
(b)
‘rights of access’ shall
include the right to take a
child for a limited period of time to a place other than the child’s
habitual residence.”
[13]
Article
20 of the Convention provides
:
“
The
return of a child under the provisions of Article 12 may be refused
if this would not be permitted by the fundamental principles
of the
requested State relating to the protection of human rights and
fundamental freedoms.”
[14]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984]
ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A) (
Plascon Evans
)
at paras 634E-635C. In summary, the rule is that, where there
are material and bona fide disputes of fact in motion proceedings,
the case must be decided on the respondent’s version of the
disputed facts.
[15]
Koch
N.O. v Ad Hoc Central Authority for the Republic of South Africa
[2022]
ZASCA 60
;
2022 (6) SA 323
(SCA)
at
para 50.
[16]
Sonderup
v Tondelli
[2000]
ZACC 26
;
2001 (1) SA 1171
(CC);
2001 (2) BCLR 152
(CC) (
Sonderup
)
.
[17]
An
entrenched right in section 28(2) of the Constitution.
[18]
Section
231 of the Constitution.
[19]
72 of 1996.
[20]
In
terms of section 275 of the Children’s Act the provisions of
the Convention are law in the Republic “subject to
the
provisions of this Act”.
[21]
Article
1 of the Convention provides:
“
The
objects of the present Convention are –
(a)
to secure the prompt return
of children wrongfully removed to or
retained in any Contracting State; and
(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.”
[22]
Article
3(a) of the Convention.
[23]
Article
5(a) of the Convention.
[24]
Article
16 of the Convention provides that:
“
the
judicial or administrative authorities of the Contracting State to
which the child has been removed or in which it has been
retained
shall not
decide on the merits of rights of custody until it has been
determined that the child is not to be returned under the
Convention.”
(Emphasis added.)
[25]
Sonderup
above
n 16 at para 28.
[26]
Section
36 of the Constitution provides —
“
(1)
The rights in the Bill of Rights may be limited only in terms of law
of general
application to the extent that the limitation is
reasonable and justifiable in an open and democratic society based
on human
dignity, equality and freedom, taking into account all
relevant factors, including —
(a)
the nature of the right;
(b)
the importance of the purpose of the limitation;
(c)
the nature and extent of the limitation;
(d)
the relation between the limitation and its purpose; and
(e)
less restrictive means to achieve the purpose.
(2)
Except as provided in subsection (1) or in any other provision of
the Constitution, no law may limit any right entrenched in the
Bill of Rights
.”
[27]
Sonderup
above
n 16 at para 35.
[28]
Id
at para 32.
[29]
Id
at para 37.
[30]
Id
at paras 29 and 31.
[31]
Id
at para 32.
[32]
Id
at para 46.
[33]
Id
at para 44.
[34]
Re
IG
[2021]
EWCA Civ 1123
(
Re
IG
)
at para 47 and
Z
v Z
[2023]
EWHC 1673
(Fam) (
Z
v Z
)
at para 28.
[35]
Sonderup
above
n 16 at para 30.
[36]
Id.
[37]
See
the cases referred to in para 44 in
Sonderup
above
n 16.
[38]
Friedrich
v Friedrich
78
F 3d 1060
(6th Cir. 1996) (
Friedrich
).
[39]
Sonderup
above
n 16 at paras 31 and 43.
[40]
KG
v CB
[2012]
ZASCA 17
;
2012 (4) SA 136
(SCA) (
KG
v CB
)
at para 50.
[41]
Re
E (Children) (Wrongful Removal: Exceptions to Return)
[
2011]
UKSC 27
(
Re
E
)
at para 31.
[42]
Re D (a
child)
[2006]
UKHL 51.
[43]
Id
at
paras 31-4.
[44]
Sonderup
above
n 16 at para 44.
[45]
Re
E
above
n 41
at
para 34.
[46]
Sonderup
above
n 16 at para 32.
[47]
Id
at para 35.
[48]
Re
IG
above
n 34
at
para 49 and
Z
v Z
above n 34
at
para 28.
[49]
KG
v CB
above
n 40.
[50]
Re
E
above
n 41
at
para 38.
[51]
Addington
v Texas
[1979] USSC 77
;
441
US 418
(1979).
[52]
Re
E
above
n 41 at para 33.
[53]
Id.
[54]
Pennello
above
n 8
at
paras 39-41.
[55]
Plascon-Evans
above
n 14
at
634E-635C.
[56]
Article
11 of the Convention provides:
“
The judicial or
administrative authorities of Contracting States shall act
expeditiously in proceedings for the return of children.
If the judicial or
administrative authority concerned has not reached a decision within
six weeks from the date of commencement
of the proceedings, the
applicant or the Central Authority of the requested State, on its
own initiative or if asked by the Central
Authority of the
requesting State, shall have the right to request a statement of the
reasons for the delay. If a reply
is received by the Central
Authority of the requested state, that Authority shall transmit the
reply to the Central Authority
of the requesting State, or to the
applicant, as the case may be.”
[57]
International Child Abduction Regulations above n 7.
[58]
Regulation 17(1) of the Hague Regulations provides:
“
If
a child has been wrongfully removed to the Republic or retained in
the Republic, the Central Authority of the Republic
must:
(a)
upon receipt of the documents
from the other country’s Central
Authority, study the application; and
(b)
within 10 days after the child has
been located, bring an
application to the High Court on behalf of the parent or person
with parental rights and responsibilities
from whom the child has
been wrongfully removed, to have the child returned to his or her
place of habitual residence.”
[59]
38
of 2005.
[60]
International Child Abduction Regulations above n 7.
[61]
Regulation 17(1) id.
[62]
Regulation 29(1) id.
[63]
Regulation 29(3) id.
[64]
A court hearing a Hague application is given wide procedural powers
in terms of regulation 24 id:
“
Where an
application has been made to a High Court by the Central Authority
of the Republic under the Hague Convention, that Court
may, at any
time before the application is determined, give any interim
direction that it deems fit in order to regulate any
aspect of the
progress of an application under the Hague Convention and to ensure
the welfare of the child in question and to
prevent any changes in
the circumstances relevant to the determination of the application.”
[65]
Administrator
Transvaal v Theletsane
[1990] ZASCA 156
;
1991
(2) SA 192
(A) at 197A-C.
[66]
Ngqumba
v Staatspresident; Damons NO v Staatspresident
1988
(4) SA 224
(A) at 261C-D. See also
Tamarillo v
BN Aitken
1982 (4) SA 398
(A) at 430G and
Room
Hire Co (Pty) Ltd v Jeppe Street Mansions (Pty)
Ltd
1949 (3) SA 1155
(T) at 1168.
[67]
Z
v Z
above
n 34 at para 5.
[68]
Re CC
(A Child: Article 13(b), Hague Convention 1908)
[2022] EWHC 743
(Fam) at para 79.
[69]
Smith v
Smith
[2001]
ZASCA 19
;
[2001] 3 All SA 146
(A);
2001 (3) SA 845
(SCA) at 853B.
[70]
Id.
[71]
Re
M (Children) (Abduction: Rights of Custody)
[2007]
UKHL 55
(
Re
M
)
at para 43.
[72]
See
[33] of first judgment.
[73]
Gentiruco
AG v Firestone SA (Pty) Ltd
1972
(1) SA 589
(A) at 616H.
[74]
Coopers
(SA) (Pty) Ltd v Deutsche Gesellschaft Für Schädlingsbekämpfung
mbH
1976
(3) SA 362
(A) (
Coopers
)
at 371G-H and
Griffiths
v Tiu
(UK)
Ltd
[2021] EWCA Civ 1442
(
Griffiths
)
at paras 42 and 83.
[75]
Griffiths
id
at para 50.
[76]
Id
at para 88.
[77]
G
v G
[2020]
EWCA Civ 1185
at para 61. See also
Re
E
above
n 41
at
para 34 and
Re
S (A Child) (Abduction: Rights of Custody)
[2012]
UKSC 10
;
[2012] 2 FLR 442
at para 34.
[78]
Re A
(Children) (Abduction: Article 13(b))
[2021]
EWCA Civ 939
at para 88. See also
Re
IG
above
n 34 at para 47 and
Re
W (Children)
[2018] EWCA Civ 664
at para 57.
[79]
See [102]to [103] above.
[80]
Z
v Z
above
n 34 at para 32.
[81]
Re
M
above
n 70 at para 48.
[82]
See
the Preamble and Article 1(a) of the Convention.
[83]
Pérez-Vera “
Explanatory
Report on the 1980 Hague Child Abduction Convention
”
(1982)
at paras 63 and 104.
[84]
Quoted
in
Central
Authority v H
above n 8 at para 29.
[85]
Hague Conference on Private International Law – Special
Commission “Conclusions and Recommendations of the fifth
meeting of the Special Commission to review the operation of the
Hague Convention of 25 October 1980 on the Civil Aspects of
International Child Abduction and the Practical Implementation of
the Hague Convention of 19 October 1996 on Jurisdiction, Applicable
law, Recognition, Enforcement and Co-operation in Respect of
Parental Responsibility and Measures for the Protection of Children
(30 October – 9 November 2006)” at para 1.4.1.
See also
Chapter
1.5 of the Guide to Good Practice on Implementing Measures;
Central
Authority v H
above
n 8 at para 29.
[86]
Central
Authority v H
above
n 8 at para 40.
[87]
See
Taglieri
v Monsky
589 US (2020) and
Chafin
v Chafin
568 US 165
(2013) (
Chafin)
.
[88]
Chafin
id
at
179.
[89]
International Child Abduction Regulations above n 7.
[90]
Sonderup
above
n 16 at para 55.
[91]
Sonderup
above n 16.
[92]
I adopt the language of the first judgment, which simply refers to
the respondent as “the aunt”.
[93]
This acronym is used in the first judgment and for ease of reference
I do the same.
[94]
A
defence in terms of Article 20 was not pursued at the hearing
there. That Article provides:
“The
return of the child under the provisions of Article 12 may be
refused if this would not be permitted by the fundamental
principles
of the requested State relating to the protection of human rights
and fundamental freedoms.”
[95]
38 of 2005.
[96]
S v
Lawrence; S v Negal; S v Solberg
[1997] ZACC 11
;
1997 (4) SA 1176
(CC);
1997 (10) BCLR 1348
(CC) at
para 24.
[97]
Rail
Commuters Action Group v Transnet Ltd t/a Metrorail
[2004]
ZACC 20
;
2005 (2) SA 359
(CC); 2005 (4) BCLR 301 (CC) at
paras 40-3.
[98]
Pennello
above
n 8
at para 38.
[99]
G
v D (Article 13b: Absence of Protective
Measures)
[2020]
EWHC 1476
(Fam)
at para
35.
[100]
Re
E
above
n 41. That approach was endorsed by the
Supreme Court of Appeal in
KG
v CB
above n 40
at para 50.
[101]
Sonderup
above
n 16
at
para
46. See also:
LD
v Central Authority (RSA) and Another
[2022] ZASCA 6
; [2022] 1 All SA 658 at para 29:
“
[A]
certain degree of harm is inherent in the court-ordered return of a
child to their habitual residence, but that is not harm
or
intolerability envisaged by Article 13(b); . . . that harm or
intolerability extends beyond the inherent harm referred to
above
and is required to be both substantial and severe”.
[102]
Sonderup
above
n 16
at
para 43.
[103]
W(V)
v S(D)
134 DLR (4th
Cir
1996) 481 at 496.
[104]
Sonderup
above
n 16
at
para 11.
[105]
Re C
(Abduction:
Grave Risk of Psychological Harm)
[1999]
1 FLR 1145
at 1154A-B.
[106]
Sonderup
above
n 16
at
para 44.
[107]
See the first judgment at [58]. The first judgment refers to
Friedrich
above
n 38
where
clear and convincing evidence is required to prove an Article 13(b)
defence.
[108]
In the USA, clear and convincing evidence, rather than merely a
preponderance of the evidence, is required; see:
ICARA
,
22 U.S.C.A. § 9003(e)(2)(A) (1994);
Friedrich
id.
Australia:
Director-General,
Department of Families, Youth and Community Care v Bennett
[2000] Fam CA 253
(16 March 2000) (Full Court of the Family Court of
Australia); England:
Re
H (Children)
[2003] EWCA Civ 355
(20 March 2003) (CA). Canada:
Thomson
v Thomson
(1994)
119 DLR (4
th
Cir) 253 at 296. Further examples can be found in footnote 41
of
Sonderup
above
n 16
.
[109]
See the first judgment at [59].
[110]
Re C (A
Minor) Abduction
[1989]
1 FLR 403
, CA.
[111]
Id
at 410. See also:
Re
E (A Minor) (Abduction)
[1989]
1 FLR 135
at 142, per Balcombe LJ:
“
[T]
he
whole purpose of this Convention is . . . to ensure that parties do
not gain adventitious advantage by either removing a child
wrongfully from the country of its usual residence, or having taken
the child, with the agreement of any other party who has
custodial
rights, to another jurisdiction, then wrongfully to retain that
child”.
[112]
Sonderup
above
n 16
above at para 28.
[113]
Id at para 30.
[114]
Re C (A
Minor) Abduction
above n 110 at 413.
[115]
She
stated:
“
The
explanation of death to a child needs to take into account that the
child’s concepts of death are immature. That
is, the
universality, irreversibility and permanence of death is only
gradually acquired by the age of about 10 years . . . For
the
pre-school child death is regarded as concretely having ‘gone
away’ and the fantasy of return of the deceased
or of revival
of the deceased may persist for some time. It would require
repeated, sensitive and simple explanations of
the permanence and
irreversibility of death.”
[116]
She
said:
“
Bereavement
counselling, if undertaken regularly and for an extended period,
would help [E] – it would give her the opportunity
to express,
verbally and in play, what she might be feeling. It could also
offer father guidance on how to respond to [E]’s
questions and
deal with any possible behaviour difficulties.”
[117]
See
the first judgment at [110(d)].
[118]
Re
E
above
n 41
at
para 33.
[119]
Id at para 34.
[120]
Sonderup
above
n 16
at
para 39.
[121]
KG
v CB
above
n 40
at
para 44.
[122]
Sonderup
above
n 16
at
para 35.
[123]
See
the first judgment at [111].
[124]
See
the first judgment at [112]
and
[116].
[125]
See the first judgment at [98].
[126]
See the first judgment at [94].
[127]
TMS v
AMS
[2023] EWFC 1620 (
TMS
v AMS
)
at
para 21.
[128]
See the first judgment at [121].
[129]
See the first judgment at [127]:
“
I
do not believe that an order refusing her return to the UK will send
the wrong message or undermine the integrity of the Convention,
particularly when weighed against the lack of culpability on the
part of the aunt and what are the best interests of E in the
circumstances.”
[130]
TMS
v AMS
above
n 127.
[131]
The father was born in the Russia Federation (Russia) and holds
Russian citizenship. He acquired UK citizenship after working
in London in the early 2000s before he then returned to Russia,
where he was the chief executive of a business dealing with senior
care. The mother also was born in Russia. She holds
Russian and Canadian citizenship, arising from a period when
she and
her parents lived in Canada. She returned to Russia many years
ago and the parties met and married in Russia in
April 2008,
following which they made their lives in Moscow.
[132]
TMS
v AMS
above
n 127
at
para 22.
[133]
The Hague Conference on Private International Law
Part
VI of the Guide to Good Practice under the Convention of 25 October
1980 on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction:
Article
13(1)(b)
(2020).
[134]
Id
at para 30.
[135]
Re M
(Abduction: Zimbabwe)
[2007] UKHL 55.
[136]
Id at para 15:
“
[A]
grave risk of harm for purposes of the Convention can exist only in
two situations. First, there is a grave risk of harm
when
return of the child puts the child in imminent danger prior to the
resolution of the custody dispute– e.g., returning
the child
to a zone of war, famine, or disease. Second, there is a grave
risk of harm in cases of serious abuse or neglect,
or extraordinary
emotional dependence, when the court in the country of habitual
residence, for whatever reason, may be incapable
or unwilling to
give the child adequate protection.”
[137]
See
the first judgment at para [130].
[138]
Id.
[139]
Sonderup
above
n 16
at
para 44.
[140]
Davel “General principles” in
Davel
and Skelton
Commentary
on the Children's Act
(Juta & Co Ltd, 2022) at 9.
[141]
Sonderup
above
n 16
at
para 35.
[142]
In the High Court, the Convention proceedings were instituted on 21
July 2020, the matter was heard on 28 October 2020 and
judgment
was delivered on 11 December 2020. The High Court granted
leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal
on 9
February 2021.
[143]
In the Supreme Court of Appeal, the appeal was
instituted on 4 March 2021, the matter was only heard on 28 February
2022 and judgment was delivered on 26 April 2022.
[144]
As
to the assessment of evidence on the papers in Hague Convention
matters, see:
Re
C (Children) (Abduction Article 13(b))
[2018] EWCA Civ 2834
and
Re
A (Children) (Abduction: Article 13(b) Court of Appeal
[2021]; EWCA Civ 939
[2021] 4 WLR 99.
[145]
Sonderup
above
n 16
at
para 28.
sino noindex
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