Case Law[2022] ZASCA 6South Africa
LD v Central Authority (RSA) and Another (803/2020: 812/2020) [2022] ZASCA 6; [2022] 1 All SA 658 (SCA); 2022 (3) SA 96 (SCA) (18 January 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
18 January 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction, 1980 – whether a defence to the return of a child to Luxembourg, in terms of art 13(b), was established – return of the child would have the effect of breaking up her family in South Africa – the evidence established that there was a grave risk that the child would, as a result, be exposed to psychological hardship or otherwise be placed in an intolerable situation – the art 13(b) defence established.
Judgment
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## LD v Central Authority (RSA) and Another (803/2020: 812/2020) [2022] ZASCA 6; [2022] 1 All SA 658 (SCA); 2022 (3) SA 96 (SCA) (18 January 2022)
LD v Central Authority (RSA) and Another (803/2020: 812/2020) [2022] ZASCA 6; [2022] 1 All SA 658 (SCA); 2022 (3) SA 96 (SCA) (18 January 2022)
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sino date 18 January 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 803/2020 and 812/2020
In
the matter between:
LD
APPELLANT
and
CENTRAL
AUTHORITY (REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA) FIRST
RESPONDENT
PH
SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral citation:
LD v Central Authority (RSA) and Another
(Case no 803/2020
and 812/2020)
[2022] ZASCA 6
(18 January 2022)
Coram:
SALDULKER ADP, MOCUMIE, PLASKET, GORVEN and HUGHES JJA
Heard:
10 November 2021
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties’ representative via email, publication on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website and release to SAFLII. The date and time of
hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on 18 January 2022.
Summary:
Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child
Abduction,
1980 – whether
a defence to the return of a child to Luxembourg, in terms of art
13
(b)
, was established – return of the child would have the
effect of breaking up her family in South Africa – the evidence
established
that there was a grave risk that the child would, as a
result, be exposed to psychological hardship or otherwise be placed
in an
intolerable situation – the art 13
(b)
defence
established.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria
(Tuchten, Davis and Mokose JJ sitting as court of appeal):
The
appeal is dismissed.
JUDGMENT
Plasket
and Gorven JJA (Saldulker ADP and Hughes JA concurring)
[1]
The material facts in this appeal are all either common cause or have
not been placed
in dispute. The only issue for determination is
whether, on those facts, the second respondent, PH, who we shall
refer to as ‘the
mother’, has successfully raised a defence in
terms of article 13
(b)
of the Hague Convention on the Civil
Aspects of International Child Abduction, 1980 (the Hague Convention)
to the unlawful abduction
by her of her daughter E from Luxembourg to
South Africa.
[2]
The appellant, LD, is E’s father. We shall refer to him as ‘the
father’. He, with
the assistance of the first respondent, the
Central Authority (Republic of South Africa) (the Central Authority),
instituted proceedings
in the Gauteng Division of the High Court,
Pretoria, in terms of the Hague Convention, for an order directing
the mother to return
E to Luxembourg. Collis J ordered the return of
E to Luxembourg subject to various conditions. The mother appealed
against this order
to a full court. Tuchten J, with the concurrence
of Davis and Mokose JJ, upheld the appeal, set aside Collis J’s
order and replaced
it with an order dismissing the application. Leave
to appeal was then granted to the father by this court.
The
Hague Convention
[3]
Article 3 of the Hague Convention renders the removal of a child
wrongful where:
‘
(a)
it is in breach of rights of custody attributed to a person . . .
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.’
[4]
It is not disputed that the removal of E from Luxembourg was unlawful
and triggered
the operation of article 12 of the Hague Convention.
This article provides:
‘
Where
a child has been wrongfully removed or retained in terms of art 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.’
[5]
It is clear that, absent a valid defence under the Hague Convention,
the high court
was obliged to order the return of E. The only
substantive issue raised by the mother was under article 13
(b)
of the Convention. Article 13 provides in its material parts:
‘
Notwithstanding
the provisions of the preceding Article, the judicial or
administrative authority of the requesting State is not bound
to
order the return of the child if the person . . . [who] opposes its
return establishes that –
(a)
the person . . . having the care
of the person of the child was not actually exercising the custody
rights at the time of the 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
hardship or otherwise place the child
in an intolerable situation.’
It
is the second of these two provisions on which the mother relied.
The
material facts
[6]
E was born on 25 August 2014. On 5 October 2018, in contravention of
two orders by the
courts of Luxembourg, the mother abducted E from
Luxembourg, which was her habitual residence, and settled in South
Africa. E’s
half-brother, S, born from the mother’s previous
marriage, accompanied them to South Africa with the consent of S’s
father.
[7]
The mother is a French citizen and the father a citizen of Belgium.
They never married.
At the time of E’s birth, they lived in
Belgium, together with S. During or about July 2015, the mother and
children moved to Luxembourg
and the father followed some seven
months later. The parties subsequently separated, although there is
disagreement as to when that
took place. Nothing turns on this.
[8]
The Juvenile and Guardianship Court of Luxembourg (the Juvenile
Court) granted an order
on 21 December 2016 awarding joint parental
authority of E to the mother and the father. It is common cause that
this includes rights
of custody which, under the Hague Convention,
includes rights related to the care of the person of E and, in
particular, the right
to determine E’s place of residence. At all
relevant times, the primary residence of E was with the mother, while
the father had
rights of visitation and accommodation. The rights of
the father were increased steadily over time in terms of further
orders of
the Juvenile Court granted on 14 June 2017 and 7 March
2018.
[9]
The order of 7 March 2018 included one calling for a social enquiry
and appointing Ms
Natalie Barthelemy as E’s guardian ad litem. The
order provided for weekly contact between E and the father and
postponed the proceedings
to 20 June 2018. Prior to that date,
however, two important events occurred. In May 2018, the mother
married a South African man,
NC (the husband), in France. Secondly,
she applied for leave to relocate E to South Africa with her, as she
had been offered employment
there. The father filed a conditional
counter-application for E’s habitual residence to vest with him if
the mother wished to relocate
without E.
[10]
On 20 June 2018, the mother’s application for leave to relocate E
was joined with the existing proceedings
and full argument was
presented. Judgment was reserved. On 7 August 2018, the Juvenile
Court refused the mother’s application for
leave to relocate to
South Africa and ordered that the father’s rights of visitation and
accommodation would increase so that by
16 December 2018, they would
include having E spend alternative weekends with him from Saturdays
at 10h00 until Sundays at 18h00.
The matter was postponed to 30
January 2019 for further argument and the court granted provisional
enforcement of the judgment notwithstanding
any appeal. The father’s
conditional application was not pronounced upon since that of the
mother was refused. The mother appealed
against that refusal but the
appeal was dismissed by an order granted on 3 October 2018.
She noted a further appeal to
the Court of Cassation in Luxembourg.
This was heard on 17 October 2019 and dismissed by an order of five
judges on 21 November 2019.
[11]
In the interim, on or about 4 October 2018, the mother removed E from
Luxembourg and moved to South Africa.
The father and the Central
Authority contended that the mother’s actions were premeditated and
malicious because she knew that
the father was to have contact with E
on 5 October 2018 but told him that he may not have contact as E had
chickenpox, which was
not truthful.
[12]
The father lodged a further application with the Juvenile Court,
which granted an order on 19 December
2018 to the following effect.
First, the competent South African authorities were requested to
order a social enquiry with the objective
of gathering all
information regarding the personal situation of the mother and E
(including aspects such as housing, schooling,
activities, daily
care, medical and psychological follow-up, and others), E’s
relationship with the mother, the mother’s capacity
to take care of
E, and any other information to enable the Juvenile Court to consider
the request for habitual residence and rights
of access and
accommodation to the other parent. The social enquiry report had to
be filed by 15 April 2019. Secondly, pending receipt
of the report,
the father was granted rights of access and accommodation, from 22
January to 10 February 2019 in South Africa, save
that during the
first three days he would exercise his right of access from 10h00 to
18h00 from 2 to 16 March 2019 in Luxembourg,
with the mother to
bring, or have E brought to Luxembourg and to collect her from the
father’s home with the mother paying the
travelling costs. Thirdly,
the matter was postponed to 29 April 2019 and the order was made
immediately enforceable notwithstanding
the lodging of any appeal. In
the meantime, in South Africa, the Hague Convention application was
launched on 7 January 2019 in the
Gauteng Division of the High Court,
Johannesburg.
[13]
The mother failed to adhere to the provisions of the order of the
Juvenile Court. In anticipation of
the father’s arrival in South
Africa, the mother insisted that Professor G M Spies, a social
worker, be appointed to assess E with
a view to preparing a report on
whether or not E’s best interests would be served by the father
having sleepover contact. The father
agreed to meet with Professor
Spies for an hour on 22 January 2019, for the sole purpose of
facilitating and assisting with contact
between E and him. After this
meeting, the father was ‘allowed’ contact with E for 30 minutes
supervised by Prof Spies. The latter
wrote a letter dated 4 February
2019 saying that the quality of the short contact session between E
and the father on that date ‘was
so meaningful that it had all the
potential to form a strong basis to plan subsequent visits’ which
could include ‘possible sleepover
visits of which [E] first must be
informed in advance’.
[14]
On 23 January 2019, the father met with the mother and E, at a mall
in Pretoria after which E and the
father spent the day together at
his hotel in Johannesburg. She was returned to the mother at 18h30.
On 24 January 2019, E and the
father spent the day at Sun City. As
the father was no longer prepared to accede to the mother’s demands
that E should not have
overnight contact with him, in terms of the
order of 19 December 2018, there was no further contact with E
between 25 January and
10 February 2019. The mother ignored the
order requiring her to take E to Luxembourg for the contact in March
2019.
[15]
Affidavits having been exchanged by the parties, the Hague Convention
application came before the high
court for the first time on 7
February 2019. In this hearing Ms Lia van der Westhuizen was
appointed curator ad litem to E. She reported
to the court on 13
February 2019. In her report, she stated that if the court regarded
the information before it as sufficient, in
the absence of a
consultation with E, she was of the view that E ought to be returned
to Luxembourg subject to mitigating factors
such as those adopted in
the well-known judgment of the Constitutional Court
Sonderup
v Tondelli
.
[1]
If the court required further information and the participation of E,
Ms van der Westhuizen requested an extension of her powers
to allow
for the appointment of a psychologist, Ms Mariaan de Vos, to conduct
an emotional assessment of E. The court granted the
further
authorisation.
[16]
Ms De Vos interviewed E twice, conducted an emotional assessment, and
supplied her report to the curator
on 26 February 2019. Her findings
were, inter alia, that E was ‘a happy young girl’ who regarded
her mother, grandmother, her
mother’s husband and her half-brother,
S, to be her support structure; that she felt emotionally safe and
secure; that she avoided
discussing her father because she was angry
with him; that she had largely been sheltered from any adult
conflicts; and that she
had adapted to school and made a close
friend. She concluded that E did not have the capacity to fully
comprehend the implication
of her objecting to a return to Luxembourg
and that if E were to be returned to Luxembourg, this ‘could
potentially lead to an
intolerable situation’.
[17]
The potential intolerable situation referred to by Ms De Vos could be
caused by having E uprooted again
after she had settled at school and
socially, together with the potential threat that her mother could be
arrested and criminally
prosecuted upon returning to Luxembourg. As
E’s mother was her primary attachment figure, Ms De Vos, said, this
state of affairs
could cause psychological harm to E, as well as
being a possible intolerable situation on its own. Ms De Vos said too
that E was
very close to her half-brother, S, and the possibility of
her being returned with him remaining in South Africa could also
possibly
be an intolerable situation. In the light of the fact that
the father only sought visitation rights to E, Ms De Vos questioned
whether
returning E to her habitual residence in order to see her
father every second weekend was enough reason to uproot E again.
[18]
The application was argued before Collis J on 1 March 2019. Her
judgment was delivered on 15 March 2019.
As stated above, she ordered
the return of E to Luxembourg, subject to certain conditions.
[19]
Further proceedings took place in the Juvenile Court in Luxembourg on
29 April 2019 with both parties
legally represented. E’s guardian
also presented argument. On 13 May 2019, the Juvenile Court granted
an order that: E’s habitual
residence vested with the father; the
mother was fined an amount of €100 per day until she returns E to
the father’s care, subject
to a maximum of €5000; unless
otherwise agreed between the father and the mother, the mother was
granted rights of visitation during
the entirety of all school
holidays except during the father’s annual leave, during each trip
the mother may make to Luxembourg
and by video communication on three
days per week.
[20]
Pursuant to the order of Collis J, the Central Authority consulted
with its counterpart in Luxembourg
which advised that there was no
national or international arrest warrant issued for the mother’s
arrest and, as such, she would
not face arrest upon her entering
Luxembourg. In addition, although no investigation was being
conducted into the criminal aspects
of child abduction, if the mother
returned to Luxembourg, whether voluntarily or by court order, a
decision would have to be taken
in this regard. Finally, the
Luxembourg Authority advised that the mother would not be deported to
France as she claimed.
[21]
In the meantime, the mother pursued her appeal remedies in
Luxembourg. She was uniformly unsuccessful
in this regard. She also
applied unsuccessfully for leave to appeal against Collis J’s
order. In August 2019, she was, however,
granted leave to appeal to
the full court. She enjoyed success in that court, hence this appeal
with special leave from this court.
The
issue
[22]
As stated above, the sole issue for decision in this appeal is
whether the mother has established a defence
in terms of article
13
(b)
of the Hague Convention to the effect that ‘there is a
grave risk that [E’s] return would expose [her] to physical or
psychological
harm or otherwise place [her] in an intolerable
situation’. Prior to addressing that issue on a factual basis, it
is first necessary
to sketch the legal framework within which that
exercise must be undertaken.
The
law
[23]
The preamble to the Hague Convention states that it was promulgated
in a desire ‘to protect children
internationally from the harmful
effects of the wrongful removal or retention and to establish
procedures to ensure their prompt
return to the State of their
habitual residence, as well as to secure protection for rights of
access.’ South Africa and Luxembourg
are both signatories to the
Hague Convention. They are therefore known as Contracting States.
[24]
It is clear that the onus is on the person resisting return to
establish the defence relied upon and
that it is a full onus.
[2]
In
Pennello v Pennello
(Chief Family Advocate as Amicus Curiae)
[3]
Van Heerden AJA described it as follows:
‘
There
is nothing in the wording of art 13 of the Convention or in the
analysis of this wording by either the Constitutional Court
in
Sonderup
or this Court in
Smith
to suggest that the person resisting an order for the return of a
child under the Convention by relying on the art 13
(b)
defence does not bear the usual civil
onus
of proof, as it is understood in our law, in that regard, viz that he
or she is required to prove the various elements of the particular
art 13
(b)
defence on a preponderance of probabilities.’
[25]
She proceeded to explain the underlying reasoning for this
position:
[4]
‘
The
Convention is predicated on the assumption that the abduction of a
child will generally be prejudicial to his or her welfare and
that,
in the vast majority of cases, it will be in the best interests of
the child to return him or her to the state of habitual
residence.
The underlying premise is thus that the authorities best placed to
resolve the merits of a custody dispute are the courts
of the state
of the child’s habitual residence and not the courts of the state
to which the child has been removed or in which
the child is being
retained.’
[26]
In
Sonderup
,
[5]
Goldstone J made the point that 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’. Article 19 of the Hague
Convention makes that clear in express terms. It provides that a
‘decision under this Convention concerning the return of a child
shall not be taken to be a determination on the merits of any custody
issue’. He then proceeded to consider the question of the
harm that
an abducted child may suffer as a result of an order that they be
returned to the jurisdiction of their habitual residence.
He held:
[6]
‘
A
matrimonial dispute almost always has an adverse effect on children
of the marriage. Where a dispute includes a contest over custody,
that harm is likely to be aggravated. 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. It makes provision, however,
in art 13 for
exceptional cases where this will not be the case.
An
art 13 enquiry is directed to the risk that the child may be harmed
by a Court-ordered return. The risk must be a grave one. It
must
expose the child to “physical or psychological harm or otherwise
place the child in an intolerable situation”. The words
“otherwise
place the child in an intolerable situation” indicate that the harm
that is contemplated by the section is harm of
a serious nature. I do
not consider it appropriate in the present case to attempt any
further definition of the harm, nor to consider
whether in the light
of the provisions of our Constitution, our Courts should follow the
stringent tests set by Courts in other countries.’
[27]
Also in the context of the question of harm, in
Pennello
,
[7]
this court cited with apparent approval a dictum of Ward LJ in
Re
C (Abduction: Grave Risk of Psychological Harm)
:
[8]
‘
There
is, therefore, 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.’
[28]
It also commented on the approach adopted by the Constitutional Court
to the question of harm in
Sonderup
,
stating:
[9]
‘
Despite
the litany of alleged incidents of physical and mental abuse of the
mother by the ‘left-behind’ father on which counsel
for the
former relied in argument before the Constitutional Court in the
Sonderup
case,
as well as the report of a South African clinical psychologist to the
effect (
inter alia
)
that the continuation of the
status
quo
in Canada would
have a “severely compromising effect on the healthy psychological
development” of the child in question, the
Court held that the harm
to which the child would allegedly be subjected by a court-ordered
return was not harm of the serious nature
contemplated by art 13, but
rather –
“
.
. . in the main harm which is the natural consequence of her 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.
That
is harm which all children who are subject to abduction and
Court-ordered return are likely to suffer, and which the Convention
contemplates and takes into account in the remedy that it provides”.’
[29]
From the cases cited above, the position, when an art 13
(b)
defence is raised to an application for the return of a child to
their habitual residence, may be summarised thus: (a) the party
who
raises the defence bears the onus to prove it because the Hague
Convention’s default position is the return of abducted children
to
their habitual residences; (b) 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 art 13
(b)
;
(c) that harm or intolerability extends beyond the inherent harm
referred to above and is required to be both substantial and severe.
The
application of these principles to the facts
[30]
It is necessary at the outset to say something of the conduct of the
mother. Her behaviour has been deplorable.
She engaged with the legal
process in Luxembourg to the extent that it suited her. When it did
not suit her any longer, she simply
took the law into her own hands
and abducted E. In considering the facts relevant to the art 13
(b)
defence, the focus is on the best interests of E. If giving effect to
the paramountcy of her best interests has the effect of ‘rewarding’
the mother for her bad behaviour, that is an unfortunate but
unavoidable result.
[31]
When E was abducted in early October 2018, she was four years and two
months old. Some five months earlier,
the mother married her new
husband. The mother, E and her half-brother, S, have, since coming to
South Africa, lived with the husband
as a family. They have done so
now for more than three years.
[32]
The mother has always been E’s primary caregiver. As a result, not
surprisingly, there is a strong
bond between them. There is also a
strong bond between E and S; between E and the husband, who she
referred to when interviewed by
Ms De Vos as her father; and, it
would appear, between E and the husband’s daughter, R.
[33]
Given E’s close bonds with the mother, as primary caregiver, it
would, according to Professor Spies,
cause E ‘extreme trauma’ if
E was returned to Luxembourg without her mother. Professor Spies was
also of the view that if E had
to return to Luxembourg, the family
unit would disintegrate, with traumatising consequences for E.
[34]
These views were confirmed by Ms De Vos. From her report, it was
clear that E regarded her mother, the
husband and S to form a family
unit within which she felt safe and secure. Ms De Vos confirmed that
E was ‘securely attached to
her mother’, that she saw the husband
as ‘an integral part of her home structure’ and that it was
evident that they, along
with S were the most important figures in
E’s life. She commented specifically on the ‘close bond’
between E and S.
[35]
Ms De Vos was of the view that in the light of these circumstances,
if E was to be returned to Luxembourg,
this ‘
could
potentially lead to an intolerable situation
’; and that
would have been caused by ‘
having [E] uprooted again after she
has now been settled at school and socially
’. In respect of E’s
relationship with S, Ms De Vos was of the opinion that ‘the
possibility of her being returned with him
staying behind in South
Africa could also possibly become an intolerable situation’.
[36]
The views of both Professor Spies and Ms De Vos were endorsed by Ms
Van der Westhuizen, the curator ad
litem for E. In her supplementary
report, she stated:
‘
In
the event that [E’s] return to Luxembourg might result at all in a
separation from her mother or her brother [S], then [E] should
not be
ordered to return to Luxembourg. As detailed in the report of Ms De
Vos, this might result in possible trauma to be experienced
by [E]
considering her attachment to her biological mother and her brother.’
[37]
It appears to us that there is merit in the views expressed by
Professor Spies, Ms De Vos and Ms Van
der Westhuizen. The
consequences were, in our view, correctly described by Tuchten J in
the court below when he said of the effect
of the order of the court
of first instance:
‘
The
order contemplates that a functioning family unit must be disrupted
and its members dispersed. Relationships which [E] values
must be
severed or, at the very least, placed under grave strain. [E] must be
deprived of the company and comfort of her brother
[S], with whom she
shares a bedroom. This would be in conflict with [E’s] right under
s 28(1)(b) of the Constitution, which I take
to include the nurturing
and support a child receives from its immediate family group.’
[38]
Tuchten J continued to point out that the order of the court below
presented the mother with ‘agonising
choices’: she had to oversee
the ‘dismemberment of her family’ because its effect was that she
either had to leave her husband
and her son, or her daughter. There
was, he held, a grave risk that ‘the emotional stress under which
the mother will inevitably
be placed by the terms of the order of the
court below will have a harsh and negative impact on [E’s] sense of
security and well-being’.
[39]
The impact on E of her being returned to Luxembourg goes far beyond
the normal hardship and dislocation
that is associated with cases of
this sort. In all likelihood, it cannot but have a profound, adverse
effect on E for the reasons
cited above. In our view, the mother has
established that there is a grave risk that E’s return to
Luxembourg would expose her
to psychological harm or otherwise place
her in an intolerable situation.
Conclusion
[40]
In the result, the appeal cannot succeed. For the same reason given
by Tuchten J in the court below,
we make no costs order: the
mother’s unlawful conduct was the cause of the litigation, which
the father was entitled to take part
in. We accordingly make the
following order:
The
appeal is dismissed.
C
PLASKET
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
T
R GORVEN
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Mocumie
JA (dissenting)
[41]
I have had the benefit of reading the judgment of my colleagues
Plasket and Gorven JJA with which other
colleagues agree. They found
in favour of the first respondent in respect of the main issue on
appeal ie, whether the first respondent
had discharged the onus
resting on her under article 13
(b)
of The Hague Convention on
the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction, 1980 (the
Convention). I hold a different view.
[42]
There are essentially two issues raised by this appeal: First, the
interpretation of the provisions of
article 13
(b)
of the
Convention as incorporated into South Africa’s national
legislation, the Children’s Act of 2008 (the Children’s Act).
Second, whether the first respondent discharged the onus resting on
her in terms of article 13
(b)
.
[43]
I endorse the findings of the court of first instance that the
provisions of the Convention’s main
purpose is for the prompt
return of the ‘abducted’ child to their habitual place of
residence without any enquiry into issues
of custody (parental
responsibilities), access (contact) including guardianship, which are
better left in the domain of the domestic
courts of the State of
habitual residence of the abducted child. Also, that article 13
(b)
is triggered by the unlawful removal of the minor child out of their
State of habitual residence without the consent of the other
parent
who has parental authority over the abducted child. I also endorse
the finding of the court of first instance that the first
respondent
unlawfully relocated to South Africa despite her application for
relocation being refused by the Court of Cassation, and
on appeal. By
so doing, she resorted to self-help against two court orders ordering
her not to remove E from the jurisdiction of
Luxembourg, Europe. And
lastly that the finding that the first respondent ‘has failed [on a
balance of probability
[10]
]
to allege facts sufficient to either point to potential harm or grave
risk referred to in article 13’. For the reasons that follow
I
would uphold the appeal.
[44]
South Africa is a signatory to the Convention and thus a Contracting
State as defined in the Convention.
[11]
As such it has an international and legal duty to ensure that the
applications under the Convention are dealt with expeditiously,
[12]
a task also entrusted to South African courts.
[13]
[45]
The first respondent raised the defence of article 13
(b)
. The
article provides:
‘
(1)
Notwithstanding the provisions of the preceding Article 12, 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 –
…
(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
.’
(Emphasis added.)
[46]
In
Pennello v
Pennello
,
[14]
this Court left open the level of ‘grave risk’ which an applicant
who raises the exception under article 13
(b)
must show or what qualifies as ‘grave risk’ or ‘intolerable
situation’. Years later, in
KG
v CB
[15]
it stated:
‘
In
both Sonderup v Tondelli
[16]
and Pennello v Pennello
[17]
the question whether South African courts should follow the stringent
test set by courts in other countries was left open. I am of
the view
that the correct approach is that adopted by the United Kingdom
Supreme Court in Re E (Children) (Wrongful Removal: Exceptions
to
Return). In that case the court held
[18]
that:
“
[T]here
is no need for the article [art 13(b)] to be ‘narrowly construed’.
By its very terms, it is of restricted application.
The words of art
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 really 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. As was said in
Re
D
[2007] 1 All ER 783
at [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 had 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 . . .
[10]
I agree that by its very terms article 13(b) is of restricted
application. What is abundantly clear
is that the ‘grave risk’ is
with reference to the child; not the abducting or the left behind
parent. That without being restrictive
or prescriptive on what grave
risk should mean and slavishly following how other jurisdiction
interpret ‘grave risk’, each case
must obviously be determined on
its own peculiar facts”.’
[47]
Section 39 of the Constitution of South Africa empowers courts in
South Africa to interpret the law in
line with international and
foreign law where there is no definite answer or where solutions can
be imported, which are not readily
available in their jurisdiction,
from other jurisdictions, to dispense with Hague Convention
applications in a justiciable manner.
It is apposite therefore to
look at a few relevant cases of foreign jurisdictions.
[48]
In
Re C (a minor)
(abduction)
[1989]
FCR;
sub nom C v C
[19]
a mother refused to accompany a young child back to Australia and
asserted that the child would suffer harm if he returned without
her.
Butler-Sloss LJ, stated as follows in this respect:
‘
The
grave risk of harm arises not from the return of the child, but the
refusal of the mother to accompany him . . . Is a parent to
create a
psychological situation and then rely upon it? If the grave risk of
psychological harm to the 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
his 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.’
[49]
In
TB v JB
[20]
(
abduction: grave risk
of harm
) (2001) the
court held:
‘
Hence
the courts in this country have always adopted a strict view of art
13(b). The risk must be grave and the harm must be serious.
As Lord
Donaldson of Lymington MR said in Re C (a minor) (abduction)
[1989]
FCR 197
at 208,
[1989] 2 All ER 465
at 473: “the words ‘or
otherwise place the child in an intolerable situation’ . . . cast
considerable light on the severe degree
of psychological harm which
the Convention has in mind.” The courts are also anxious that the
wrongdoer should not benefit from
the wrong: that is, that the person
removing the children should not be able to rely on the consequences
of that removal to create
a risk of harm or an intolerable situation
on return. This is summed up, after a review of the authorities, in
the words of Ward
LJ in
Re
C (abduction) (grave risk of psychological harm)
[1999] 2 FCR 507
at 517, quoted by the judge in the present case:
“
There
is, therefore, 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.”
Thorpe
LJ has taken matters a step further in the now oft-cited passage from
another
Re C(B) (child abduction: risk of harm)
[1999] 3 FCR
510
at 520, also quoted by the judge:
“
In
testing the validity of an art 13(b) defence trial judges should
usefully ask themselves what were the intolerable features of
the
child's family life immediately prior to the wrongful abduction? If
the answer be scant or non-existent then the circumstances
in which
an art 13(b) defence would be upheld are difficult to hypothesise. In
my opinion art 13(b) is given its proper construction
if ordinarily
confined to meet the case where the mother's motivation for flight is
to remove the child from a family situation that
is damaging the
child's development.”
.
. . on the basis that the abducting parent will take all reasonable
steps to protect herself and her children and that she cannot
rely on
her unwillingness to do so as a factor relevant to risk.’
[50]
In
Sabogal v
Velarde
[21]
the United States District Court of Maryland concluded that it would
order the return of the children to the left behind father if
he were
to arrange for the criminal charges or investigation against the
mother to be dismissed or closed, and to have the temporary
custody
order in his favour vacated (in order for the underlying temporary
custody order in favour of the mother to effectively be
reinstated).
Under such conditions, the court would be prepared to order the
children's return to Peru. If the father could not meet
these
‘pre-conditions’ (ie undertakings), however, the children's
return would be refused in accordance with article 13
(b)
of the Convention. However, as the Constitutional Court held in
Pennello
,
[22]
‘[t]he absence of a provision such as s 28(2) of the Constitution
in other jurisdictions might well require special care to be
taken in
applying
dicta
of
foreign courts where the provisions of the Convention might have been
applied in a narrow and mechanical fashion’. I consider
the facts
of this matter hereafter conscious of this warning by the
Constitutional Court.
[51]
In her pleaded case, the first respondent conceded that she left
Luxembourg against two orders and that
she did not have the consent
of the second respondent to emigrate permanently to South Africa to
get married and start a new life
with E in South Africa; and that she
chose to marry in South Africa far from everyone else including her
own mother in France. She
undertook to return to Luxembourg without
any fear of facing prosecution. She accepted the offer that the
second respondent had made,
undertaking to pay for all her expenses
including accommodation for as long as the dispute remained
unresolved in Luxembourg. A tender
that was repeated before this
Court. To this the first respondent had even made a counter proposal
for the second respondent to increase
her living expenses during her
stay in Luxembourg. The full court noted that the second respondent’s
conduct during the dispute
was impeccable.
[52]
What assertions did the first respondent make in order to prove on a
balance of probabilities that ‘grave
risk’ to E would result? In
her answering affidavit, supplemented later in a supplementary
affidavit, the first respondent alleged
that she feared being
arrested upon her return to Luxembourg, hence she could not return
thereto. She would further be at risk of
being deported to France
once her visa expired before the custody dispute could be resolved.
E’s separation from the first respondent
as her primary care giver
and from her sibling brother would expose her to psychological harm.
A proper bond between E and the second
respondent was lacking since
they have never lived together and have been apart since she
relocated to South Africa. The second respondent’s
habitual
residence was Belgium and not Luxembourg. E’s return to Luxembourg
would also separate her from her step-father and step-sister.
Lastly,
E had fully integrated into her new environment and settled in South
Africa.
[53]
In my view the first respondent’s assertions are general, and they
relate to her risk and not the risk
of the minor child. In the light
thereof these assertions should not be considered as ‘grave risk’.
What puts this case out of
the ‘grave risk’ category of other
cases where the defence was upheld is the following. The first
respondent removed E from Luxembourg
when she was younger than she is
currently (four years and two months old). The appellant initiated a
voluntary return engagement
with the first respondent hardly four
months after E’s unlawful removal from Luxembourg as reported by
the second respondent to
the CA for Luxembourg. During these
interactions, the first respondent confirmed during the interview
with the appellant on 31 October
2018, that she would return to
Luxembourg with both E and S which she confirmed in her answering
affidavit of on 22 January 2019.
She only made a volte face in
February 2019 after the court appointed
Re
E (Children)
(Wrongful Removal: Exceptions to Return)
curator ad litem
,
where she asserted that a return order should not separate E from her
siblings namely, S and her step-sister born of the husband
and
someone else in his previous relationship. The first respondent in a
veiled threat then stated that she would leave S behind
in South
Africa. This meant a separation of the siblings.
[54]
It is indisputable that during all the court applications in
Luxembourg the first respondent did not
raise the fact that E and the
second respondent were not staying together. During the intervention
by the appellant less than three
months after she had arrived in
South Africa and a case had been opened against her, the first
respondent made no such allegation
nor did she raise any concern.
Instead, she admitted that she removed E unlawfully from her the
State of habitual residence. Thereafter
all that was discussed was
when could E be returned to the State of habitual residence. As part
of the intervention by the appellant
in co-operation with her
counterpart, the CA for Luxembourg, upon the directive of the court
of first instance, E and the second
respondent met several times on
their own and also as the court of instance directed under the
supervision of a social worker to
observe how the two interacted.
They fared well under the circumstances as reported by Prof Spies
although the second respondent
did not feel comfortable with her.
[55]
Furthermore, the second respondent initiated proceeding under the
Convention for E’s prompt return
hardly three months upon the
discovery of the abduction through E’s school in Luxembourg. E, was
at that stage, not yet integrated
into her new environment at all.
The first respondent married her husband some five months before the
abduction, it seems that the
first respondent married a South African
to secure her roots in South Africa and then chose to rely on this as
a factor that will
cause psychological harm to E who was uprooted
from her own family, the second respondent, her school and her
friends. It is ironic
that the first respondent should call E’s
return to her State of habitual residence as uprooting her from her
established environment
which would cause psychological harm. A
thorough and careful reading of her affidavits does not deal with nor
point out any psychological
difficulties that E suffered as a result
of being uprooted from a familiar environment when the first
respondent abducted her. Thereafter
she cut off any communication
between E and the second respondent including the video calls that
she had initially agreed to. The
first respondent makes no mention of
the fact that E had a good relationship not only with the second
respondent but her paternal
aunt, the second respondent’s sister
too. The two are E’s only blood relatives. That relationship is
certainly stronger than
that of step-parents or step-siblings. More
significantly E is the only child of the second respondent. This
definitely had a psychological
impact on E.
[56]
The wording of article 13
(b)
makes it clear that the issue is
whether there is a grave risk that the return would expose the
child
to physical or psychological harm or otherwise place the
child
in
an intolerable situation. The word ‘
child’
is mentioned
twice in the aforementioned article, which clearly indicates that it
does not refer to a parent. More glaringly, the
abducting parent is
not mentioned at all. However, I am alive to the fact that there may
be instances where there is sufficient evidence
that because of a
risk of harm directed at a removing parent there may be a grave risk
to the child. The question that arises is,
what evidence has the
first respondent produced which falls within this category? The first
respondent did not and could not make
any allegations of direct grave
risk on E as she and the second respondent were not staying together
at any point according to their
living arrangement before and after
they moved to Luxembourg which she also stated. Her case is and has
always been that because
of her unlawful removal of E from the State
of habitual residence, a warrant of arrest was issued against her by
the prosecuting
authority in Luxembourg. Thus, if she were arrested,
E would be psychologically harmed by being separated from her. The
court of
first instance, although not sympathetic to the first
respondent and regarding her as the author of her own misfortunate,
nonetheless
in an endeavour to ameliorate any harsh consequences that
might ensue, directed the appellant to contact her counterpart, the
Central
Authority (CA) for Luxembourg, which it did. Apart from the
confirmation that there was a warrant of arrest pending, the CA for
Luxembourg,
in writing, committed her office to ensure that the
prosecuting authority would not pursue the first respondent upon her
return.
The second respondent gave an undertaking not to press
charges (so to speak) which would lead to the arrest of the first
respondent.
[57]
In my view, although it is correct that the undertaking by the second
respondent does not remove the
risk that the first respondent could
be arrested, many member States promote co-operation among them. If
the respectful, cordial
and helpful relationship between the two CAs
can be used as a barometer, which it should, it is highly unlikely
that Luxembourg would
jeopardise its relations with South Africa and
other signatories to the Convention over one dispute between parents
of an abducted
child. The likelihood is greater that the two States
will continue to assist each other without prejudicing E in any way
because
both know that if the abducting parent is arrested the
likelihood of that affecting E would have adverse psychological
effects. As
she grows up and learns about this; she would blame the
second respondent for the first respondent’s incarceration.
[58]
Furthermore, it must be accepted that investigations have commenced
in respect of the criminal aspects
of child abduction. However, that
in itself cannot be used as defence as it occurs by operation of the
law. It must be considered
with other factors including the conduct
of the first respondent who acted in blatant disregard of the two
court orders; leaving
E’s State of habitual residence whilst
proceedings were pending and the alleged acts of grave risk and or
intolerable situation
which E will be placed in if returned. It
cannot be taken as a factor which justifies the first respondent’s
refusal to return
E to Luxembourg. Without the second respondent’s
co-operation and in the light of his undertakings made a number of
times, the
likelihood of the criminal investigation proceedings
translating to the first respondent’s arrest in Luxembourg are
non-existent.
[59]
Having said that, this brings into focus the voice of the child in
these proceedings. The Convention
and the Children’s Act provide
for the child’s voice to be heard. They provide in broad that every
child who may be affected
by any decision must be legally represented
by a professional, distinct from the parents, who in the warring
fight over the child
will may be biased and even influence the child
against each other. The appointment of a curator ad litem to
represent the child
to ensure the child’s voice is heard is an
important part of the Convention. As was stated in
Central
Authority of the Republic of South Africa v B
:
[23]
‘
The
provisions of the Hague Convention are, in terms of s 275 of the
Children's Act, subject to those of the Children's Act.
A
legal representative must, in terms of s 279 of the Children's Act,
represent the child involved in all applications in terms of
the
Hague Convention. I have in the as yet unreported judgment of B
and Others v G
2012
(2) SA 329 (GSJ)
accepted
the correctness of the submission by CJ Davel & AM
Skelton Commentary on the Children's Act at 17 – 21 that
—
“
in
cases where very young children are involved, the role of the legal
representative would be more akin to that of a curator
ad litem,
while with older children, the legal representative would take
instructions from the child, act in accordance with those
instructions and represent the views of the child.
”
(In
para [12]).’ (Emphasis added.)
In
line with this prerequisite, the court of first instance appointed a
curator ad litem
who interviewed E and all who lived with her
including her step-father and filed a report. The same
curator
ad litem
recommended the appointment of an education
psychologist who also submitted a report. Both reports were taken
into account by the
court of instance.
[60]
It is evident in the report by the
curator
ad litem
that E could not voice an opinion on her own due to her age at that
stage. Nonetheless, no adverse remarks were made except (beyond
the
scope of her mandate by the court of first instance) that the
separation of the siblings. ie separating E from S and the first
respondent’s husband and his daughter to whom she had grown close
to in less than a year, would cause her emotional trauma. In
the
context of these facts and as correctly noted by the court of first
instance, the first respondent caused all this to the children
and in
particular E. Whatever estrangement that has been caused between the
second respondent and E is of the first respondent’s
deliberate
wrongdoing as she acted in contempt of the orders of the courts of
Luxembourg, irrespective that she was legally represented.
She
terminated the mandate of her legal representatives and has not
provided any reasons for doing so. The courts should draw an
inference from such conduct that she did not want to abide by the
terms of the court order. It must be accepted that she deliberately
disobeyed the court processes and now expects protection from the
courts. This is a classic case of abduction which cannot be
countenanced
by any Contracting State.
[61]
The allegations by the first respondent, which became even stronger
during the argument before this Court
as a last resort when all
others clearly failed, that E will be separated from her new family,
her step-father, Mr Carelsen, and
his daughter, R, are ironic and
opportunistic to say the least. It is even more difficult to explain
how E’s return to her habitual
residence with the first respondent
and the second respondent as her biological parents (all three
European Union citizens) can equate
to ‘grave risk of harm’ to E.
This is so in the light of the first respondent’s initial
willingness to go back with E which
only changed much later after the
possibility was raised by the educational psychologist in her
supplementary affidavit.
[62]
From the discussion in the preceding paragraphs, it is clear that the
approach the full court adopted
goes against the precedents of this
Court
[24]
and the Constitutional Court.
[25]
This approach is also erroneous as by so doing the full court stepped
into the arena of the merits of the rights of custody of the
parents,
comparing the favourability of the different jurisdictions of
Luxembourg and South Africa. The full court also erred in
dealing
with ‘what harms might flow’ from an order refusing the return.
This question was irrelevant for the test to be applied.
The finding
that ‘despite the language of the Convention, the question is
whether the return of E to Luxembourg is in E’s best
interests. .
.’, should not have been posed by the full court at all. As the
Constitutional Court stated in
Sonderup
,
[26]
‘. . . [t]he paramountcy of the best interests of the child must
inform our understanding of the exemptions without undermining
the integrity of the Convention. . .’.
[63]
It is pivotal to reiterate what the Constitutional Court stated in
Sonderup
[27]
,
to underscore the import of the Convention where a court is faced
with a balancing exercise between the best interests of the child
and
the exemption in [a]rticle 13. It states:
‘
There
is also a close relationship between the purpose of the Convention
and the means sought to achieve that purpose. The Convention
is
carefully tailored, and the extent of the assumed limitation is
substantially mitigated by the exemptions provided by arts 13
and 20.
They cater for those cases where the specific circumstances might
dictate that a child should not be returned to the State
of the
child's habitual residence. They are intended to provide
exceptions, in extreme circumstances, to protect the welfare
of
children. Any person or body with an interest may oppose the return
of the child on the specified grounds.
[33]
The nature and extent of the limitation are also mitigated by taking
into account s 28(2) of our Constitution when applying art
13. The
paramountcy of the best interests of the child must inform
our understanding of the exemptions without undermining the
integrity of the Convention. The absence of a provision such as s
28(2) of the Constitution in other jurisdictions might well require
special care to be taken in applying
dicta
of
foreign courts where the provisions of the Convention might have been
applied in a narrow and mechanical fashion.’
Furthermore,
at para 35, 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. 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 art 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.’
[28]
[64]
In my view, there is no likelihood of undermining the best interests
of E by ordering her return to Luxembourg.
This is not a case where
extreme circumstances exist in which E’s welfare is truly
endangered. This Court has recently in
L
v Ad Hoc Central
Authority for the Republic of South Africa and Others
[29]
ordered the return of abducted children on the simple basis that the
Convention applied and the prompt return was the correct approach
the
high court adopted.
[65]
In conclusion, the court of first instance was correct to order that
E be returned promptly to Luxembourg.
All that the full court ought
to have done, was to correct the protective measures which the court
of first instance did not put
in place to ameliorate any harm the
first respondent might suffer which could translate into grave risk
to E. Added to the protective
measurements, particularly in respect
of the possibility of an arrest upon her return to Luxembourg (not
that there should be any
doubt in the undertakings made by the second
respondent and the commitment of the CA for Luxembourg in ensuring
that the criminal
processes should not cause more delay in the
finalisation of the matter between the first and second respondent);
precedents are
replete of mirror orders which the second respondent
can pursue in Luxembourg on the basis of the order granted in this
Court, before
E can finally be returned to Luxembourg. That way, the
first respondent’s only fear will be addressed. This was done in
Pennello v Pennello
,
KC v CB
and so too in
Sonderup
.
This in my view would be in compliance with the Convention, taking
into account E’s interim best interests until the courts of
the
State of habitual residence have finally decided the custody issues,
having given the first respondent the right to present her
side of
the story through that State’s system of appeals and reviews
without any interference by the courts of South Africa.
[66]
For the conclusion I have reached, it is unnecessary to consider a
peripheral issue which the appellant
raised; the applicability of s
275 of the Children’s Act in the context of the application of the
best interests of the child under
s 28 of the Constitution which both
counsel addressed in the Heads of Argument and before this Court.
[67]
For the reasons set out in the preceding
paragraphs, I would have granted the following order:
A
The appeal is upheld, with no order as to costs.
B
The order of the full court is set aside and substituted with the
following order:
‘
1
It is ordered and directed that the minor child, E, is to be returned
forthwith,
but subject to the terms of this order, to the
jurisdiction of the Central Authority for Luxembourg.
2
In the event of the first respondent (the mother) notifying the
Office of the Central
Authority, Pretoria within one week of the date
of issue of this order that she intends to accompany E on her return
to Luxembourg,
the provisions of para 3 shall apply.
3
The second appellant (the father) shall within one month of the date
of issue of
this order, institute proceedings and pursue them with
due diligence to obtain an order of the appropriate judicial
authority in
Luxembourg in the following terms:
3.1
Any warrant for the arrest of the first
respondent (the mother) will be withdrawn and will not be reinstated
and the mother will not be subject to arrest or prosecution by reason
of her removal of E from Luxembourg on 14 October 2018 or for
any
past conduct relating to E. The father will not institute or cause to
be instituted or support any legal proceedings or proceedings
of any
other nature in Luxembourg for the arrest, prosecution or punishment
of the mother, for any past conduct by the mother relating
to E.
3.2
Unless otherwise ordered by the appropriate
court in Luxembourg:
3.2.1
The second respondent (the father) is ordered to arrange, and pay
for, suitable accommodation for the mother and
E in Luxembourg. The
father shall provide proof to the satisfaction of the Central
Authority, prior to the departure of the mother
and E from South
Africa, of the nature and location of such accommodation and that
such accommodation is available for the mother
and E immediately upon
their arrival in Luxembourg. The Central Authority for Luxembourg
shall decide whether the accommodation thus
arranged by the father is
suitable for the needs of the mother and E, should there be any
dispute between the parties in this regard,
and the decision of the
Central Authority for Luxembourg shall be binding on the parties.
3.2.2
The second respondent (the father) is ordered to pay the
mother maintenance for herself and E from the date of E’s
arrival
in Luxembourg at the rate of 355,44 euros per month. The first pro
rata payment shall be made to the mother on the day upon
which she
and E arrive in Luxembourg and thereafter monthly in advance on the
first day of every month. Should the mother receive
State support,
then the monthly amount thereof shall be deducted from the 355,44
euros per month payable by the father.
3.2.3
The second respondent (the father) is ordered to pay any
medical and dental expenses reasonably incurred by the mother
in
respect of E, such as are not covered by the National Health Service
in Luxembourg.
3.2.4
The second respondent (the father) is ordered to pay for the
reasonable costs of E’s schooling and also the costs of
her other
reasonable educational and extra-mural requirements in Luxembourg,
such as are not provided by the State.
3.2.5
The second respondent (the father) is ordered to purchase and
pay for economy class air tickets, and if necessary, pay
for rail and
other travel, for the mother and E to travel by the most direct route
from Johannesburg, South Africa, to Luxembourg.
3.2.6
The second respondent (the father) and the (first respondent)
the mother are ordered to co-operate fully with the Central
Authority
for Luxembourg, the relevant court or courts in Luxembourg, and any
professionals who are approved by the Central Authority
for
Luxembourg to conduct any assessment to determine what future
residence and contact arrangements will be in the best interests
of
E.
3.2.7
The second respondent (the father) is granted reasonable
supervised contact with E, which contact shall be arranged through
the Central Authority for Luxembourg and South Africa without the
necessity of direct contact between the father and the mother.
4
In the event of the first respondent (the mother) giving notice to
the Central Authority
referred to in para 2 above, the order for the
return of E shall be stayed until the appropriate court in Luxembourg
has made the
order referred to in para 3 and, upon the Central
Authority being satisfied that such an order has been made, they
shall notify the
first respondent (the mother) accordingly and ensure
that the terms of para 1 are complied with.
5
In the event of the first respondent (the mother) failing to notify
the Central
Authority in terms of para 2 above of her willingness to
accompany E on her return to Luxembourg, it is to be accepted that
the first
respondent (the mother) is not prepared to accompany E, in
which event the Central Authority for South Africa is authorised to
make
such arrangements as may be necessary to ensure that E is safely
returned to the custody of the Central Authority for Luxembourg
and
to take such steps as are necessary to ensure that such arrangements
are complied with.
6
Pending the return of E to Luxembourg as provided for in this order,
the first respondent
(the mother) shall not remove E on a permanent
basis from the Province of Gauteng and, until then, she shall keep
the Central Authority
for South Africa informed of her physical
address and contact telephone numbers.
7
Pending the return of E to Luxembourg, the second respondent (the
father) is to
have reasonable telephone contact with E including
Skype and or video calls.
8
There is no order as to costs.’
C
The Central Authority for South Africa is directed to seek the
assistance of the
Central Authority for Luxembourg in order to ensure
that the terms of this order are complied with as soon as possible.
D
In the event of the first respondent (the mother) notifying the
Central Authority
for South Africa, in terms of para B.2 above, that
she is willing to accompany E to Luxembourg, the Central Authority
for South Africa
shall forthwith give notice thereof to the registrar
of the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg to the
Central Authority
for Luxembourg, and to the second respondent (the
father).
E
In the event of the
appropriate court in Luxembourg failing or refusing to make the order
referred to in para B.3 above, the Central Authority and/or the
second respondent (the father) is given leave to approach this Court
for a variation of this order.
F
A copy of this order shall
forthwith be transmitted by the Central Authority for South
Africa to
the Central Authority for Luxembourg.
B
C MOCUMIE
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
appellant:
S Liebenberg
Instructed
by:
Du Toit Attorneys, Randburg
Symington De Kok, Bloemfontein
For
first respondent:
C
Woodrow and N Thokoane
Instructed
by:
The State Attorney, Pretoria
The State Attorney, Bloemfontein
For
second respondent:
M
L Haskins SC
Instructed
by:
Couzyn Hertzog Horak Inc, Pretoria
Honey Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
Sonderup
v Tondelli
and
Another
[2000] ZACC 26; 2001 (1) SA 1171 (CC); 2001 (2) BCLR 152 (CC).
[2]
Smith
v Smith
[2001]
ZASCA 19
;
2001 (3) SA 845
(SCA) para 11.
[3]
Pennello v Pennello
(Chief Family Advocate as Amicus Curiae)
[2003] ZASCA 147
;
2004 (3) SA 117
(SCA) para 38.
[4]
Paragraph
25.
[5]
Footnote
1 para 30.
[6]
Paragraphs
43-44.
[7]
Footnote
3 para 34.
[8]
Re
C (Abduction: Grave Risk of Psychological Harm)
[1999]
1 FLR 1145
(CA) at 1154A-B.
[9]
Footnote
3 para 30.
[10]
It must be kept in mind that in Hague Convention proceedings to
discharge the onus resting on her, the first respondent must
discharge
the onus on a balance of probability.
[11]
Article 2(1)
(f)
of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, 23 May 1969,
defines a Contracting State as follows:
‘“
contracting
State” means a State which has consented to be bound by the
treaty, whether or not the treaty has entered into force.’
[12]
Article 11.
[13]
Articles 2 and 11.
[14]
Pennello
v
Pennello
(Chief
Family Advocate as Amicus Curiae)
2004 (3) SA
117 (SCA).
[15]
KG v CB
and Others
[2012]
ZASCA 17
;
2012 (4) SA 136
(SCA) para 50.
[16]
Sonderup v Tondelli
and Another
2001 (1) SA 1171
(CC) para 44.
[17]
Ibid para 35.
[18]
Ibid paras 31-34.
[19]
Re C (a minor)
(abduction)
[1989] FCR 197
at 205,
[1989] 2 All ER 465
at 471;
reported sub nom C v C.
[20]
T.B. v. J.B.
(Abduction: Grave Risk of Harm)
[2001] 2 FLR 515
paras 40, 41 and
97.
[21]
Sabogal v. Velarde
,
106 F. Supp. 3d 689
(2015) at 711.
[22]
Footnotes 18.
[23]
Central Authority of
the Republic of South Africa and Another v B
2012 (2) SA 296
(GSJ);
[2012] 3 All SA 95
(GSJ) para 2.
[24]
Footnote 18.
[25]
Footnote 20.
[26]
Ibid para 32.
[27]
Ibid para 33.
[28]
Ibid para 35.
## [29]L
v Ad Hoc Central Authority for the Republic of South Africa and
Others[2021] ZASCA 107.
[29]
L
v Ad Hoc Central Authority for the Republic of South Africa and
Others
[2021] ZASCA 107.
sino noindex
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