Case No. ZC21P00327
Family Court

Case No. ZC21P00327

Fecha: 24-Jun-2022

manage

a move to the USA and that as confident children they would thrive in any educational setting. He did not consider that there was any issue about the quality of available schools in either the USA or in England.43.He recognised that that the mother’s application for relocation would have an impact upon the children, and in particular the separation from their father that it would bring about. He described the father as being very much part of the fabric of the children’s lives and continued: “I am confident that both VB and LB’s wishes and feelings in this regard can be understood as a wish to remain near their father, in regular contact and with the potential to increase this at short notice if they wanted or needed.VB and LB will experience a level of loss from any relocation (should [the father] not also relocate to the USA with the children). Whilst VB and LB are both of a developmental age where they can understand they will see [the father] again and have some concept of time between arrangements, he will not be able to engage in the homework, school pickups, extra-curricular activities and the actual time spent with the children will reduce.”44.Mr Mamattah identified though that there were several features of the mother’s proposals which would help soften the blow of separation from the father. These included the strong bond that the children have with their mother, the fact that there were extended family members in the USA who they would be able to see more often and the fact that their existing nanny had offered to travel to the USA to assist with the transition.45.In his first report Mr Mamattah took the view that the father had taken a “somewhat dismissive” attitude towards the mother’s reported psychiatric presentation; he considered that the father’s comment that the mother was too good a mother to allow any disturbance to impact upon the children lacked insight. In his second report (which was ordered after the father was permitted to introduce evidence of his own mental health) Mr Mamattah developed this concern commenting that he was “confused” as to how the father imagined that the mother could cope (if her application was refused) in the light of his own description of how he would be affected if the application were to succeed.46.Mr Mamattah recognised that either outcome had the potential to adversely affect the children. In his first report he stated (in the context of the relocation application failing): “I sympathise with [the mother’s] position as that of the children’s primary carer who is fearful that her mental wellbeing will suffer if the relocation is refused. The effect of this on VB and LB potentially being far reaching and impacting on her ability to maintain her current job role (and then the level of earnings she currently provides), and the quality of her parenting as she may be less emotionally available or emotionally attuned to the children.”47.In his second report Mr Mamattah recognised the potential harmful impact of relocation on the children through its effect on the father’ condition. Mr Mamattah states: “[The father] was clear with me that moving to the USA himself (if relocation is granted) is no longer something he can contemplate. If relocation is granted, there is then the risk that [the father] will struggle to manage, and his wellbeing will deteriorate further. VB and EB may experience less of an impact if they are not in contact with him daily, however, when he does spend time with them (directly or indirectly) his general presentation and parenting capacity may be adversely affected, and he will not be as emotionally present for VB and LB.” (emphasis added) 48.These two passages contain two points of factual contention. The father challenges Mr Mamattah’s description of the mother as the children’s primary carer, arguing that the mother’s work commitments meant that the father was often taking charge of the children’s evening routine. I also heard disputed evidence as to which parent took charge of making day to day social arrangements and the like for the children and allegations about whether the mother had been seeking to exclude the father from school and friendship WhatsApp groups. In my view none of this evidence (which largely betrayed a lack of flexibility on the part of both parents and an inability to see the impact of their behaviour on the other parent and the children) detracts from the substance of the point that Mr Mamattah was seeking to make in this paragraph; that under both proposals that are before the court, the children would be living with the mother much of the time (either as the main carer if relocation is permitted; or at the very least for 50% of the time under a shared care arrangement if relocation is refused), and that a refusal to permit relocation would have a serious and adverse effect on both her mental wellbeing and her capacity to maintain employment and to provide the parental support that the children require.49.The other point of contention relates to what the father said to Mr Mamattah about his own position should relocation be permitted. Although in the passage I have set out above from his second report, Mr Mamattah records that he could “no longer” contemplate moving to the USA himself, his earlier report records that the father in his first interview had told him that he would consider such a move if relocation was permitted. Although the father, in his oral evidence, denied saying this, Mr Mamattah was not challenged on this point in cross-examination and I am satisfied that Mr Mamattah’s report accurately summarises what the father said to him. In any event, such a comment is consistent with the father’s own evidence to the court that if relocation is permitted there was at least a “possibility” that he would himself move to the USA too.50.Mr Mamattah’s exemplary reports set out the risks to the children inherent in both proposals. Whilst the reports do not come to a firm conclusion as to whether or not the children’s best interests would be best served by relocation (Mr Mamattah fully recognising the difficulty of the dilemma posed by the application), my sense of the tenor of his reports was that on balance he leant in favour of permitting relocation and Mr Mamattah confirmed that to me in the course of his oral evidence.51.Mr Mamattah also set out recommendations for the children’s living arrangements and contact under both proposals. If relocation is permitted he proposed that the only limitation to the father’s time with the children “should be the logistics and ability to travel and see VB and LB”. He felt that the suggestions made by the mother provided a sensible starting point with holidays being shared equally or with a slight prejudice in favour of the father. 52.If the children remained in the UK, with the parents separating, Mr Mamattah recommended that the children should start by spending the majority of their time living with their mother, but with a minimum of three consecutive nights per fortnight with the father. This would be with a view to increasing the time with the father so that ultimately a shared care arrangement was in place. In his oral evidence Mr Mamattah indicated that this was something that could be built up over a relatively short period of time. He recommended that there should be a shared lives with order to assist the parents in understanding that they are both equally important in making decisions for the children.LEGAL PRINCIPLES53.The parties are broadly agreed as to the law applicable to cases such as this and both have referred me to the decisions of the Court of Appeal in K v K (Children: Permanent Removal from the Jurisdiction) [2011] EWCA Civ 793; Re F (A Child) [2012] EWCA 1364; Re C (Internal Relocation) [2015] EWCA Civ 1305 and Re F (A Child) (International Relocation Case) [2015] EWCA Civ 882.54.Additionally, the mother, through her counsel, has referred me to the earlier decision of the Court of Appeal in Payne v Payne [2001] EWCA Civ 166, and in particular the well-known passage of the judgment of Thorpe LJ at [40] to [41] identifying certain factors which may be helpful for consideration in a relocation case. In that regard I have carefully borne in mind the warning expressed by Ryder LJ in Re F (A Child) (International Relocation Case) [2015] EWCA Civ 882 at [27] namely that: “[27] Selective or partial legal citation from Payne without any wider legal analysis is likely to be regarded as an error of law. In particular, a judgment that not only focuses solely on Payne, but also compounds that error by only referring to the four point ‘discipline’ set out by Thorpe LJ at paragraph [40] of his judgment in Payne is likely to be wholly wrong. There are no quick fixes to be had in these important and complicated cases; the paragraph [40] ‘discipline’ in Payne may, or may not, be of assistance to a judge on the facts of any particular case (whether there is a ‘primary carer’ or not) in marshalling his or her analysis of the evidence prior to the all important analysis of the child's welfare.”55.I have also found useful the summary of these cases and the legal framework that applies to international relocation set out by Williams J in Re C (A Child) [2019] EWHC 131 (Fam); [2019] 2FLR 137 at paras [15] and [16].“[15] The most recent and authoritative appellate decision on the approach to permanent overseas relocation cases is Re F (A Child) (International Relocation Case) [2015] EWCA Civ 882 [2017] 1 FLR 979 . The material paragraphs of the judgment are 3, 4, 30-35 (Ryder LJ) and 45-52 (McFarlane LJ). Re F together with the earlier authorities of Payne, Re F, K-v-K and Re C (Internal Relocation) makes clear that whether the applications are configured under s.8 or s.13 Children Act 1989 the following framework applies. (a) The only authentic principle is the paramount welfare of the child(b) The implementation of section 1(2A) Children Act 1989 makes clear the heightened scrutiny required of proposals which interfere with the relationship between child and parent(c) The welfare checklist is relevant whether the case is brought under s.8 or s.13 Children Act 1989(d) The effect of previous guidance in cases such as 'Payne' may be misleading unless viewed in its proper context which is no more than that it may assist the judge to identify potentially relevant issues.(e) In assessing paramount welfare in international relocation cases the court must carry out a holistic and non-linear comparative evaluation of the plans proposed by each parent. In complex international relocation cases this may need to be of some sophistication and complexity.(f) In addition to Article 8 rights – indeed probably as a component of the Art 8 ECHR rights and s.1(2A) one must factor in the rights of the child to maintain personal relations and direct contact with both parents on a regular basis (unless that is contrary to her interests) in accordance with Article 9 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child ("UNCRC").(g) Furthermore, the court must also take into account the Article 8 rights of the parents. In the usual case the child's Art 8 right will take priority over the parents but that should not cause the court to overlook the Art 8 rights of others affected and the court should balance the competing Article 8 rights.(h) The effect of an international relocation is such that the Article 8 rights of a child are likely to be infringed and the court must consider the issue of proportionality of the interference. There remains some degree of uncertainty as to how the proportionality evaluation is to be applied in relocation cases. In Re F it was said one should be undertaken, In Re Y [2015] 1 FLR 1350 it was said in private law cases it doesn't need to be, The Court of Appeal in Re C (Internal Relocation) expressed doubts about how it was to be undertaken. I consider that in most cases in practice the proportionality issue will be subsumed within the overall holistic evaluation in particular when considering effect of change and risk of harm. In reality in the judicial consideration of the welfare checklist it simply is likely to mean the judge will be that much more alert to the importance and thus weight to be afforded to the child's right to maintain contact with the left behind parent and their rights to a stable and secure family life with their primary carer, if there is one.[16] Insofar as it may assist in identifying the relevant issues a court may (but is not obliged to) deploy what may be described as the 'F, K, C, Payne' composite. This is no more than an integrated approach to the welfare checklist and the 'Payne' guidance/discipline incorporating within the welfare checklist relevant Payne56.The difficult question as to how, if at all, an Art 8 proportionality evaluation is to be undertaken was considered further by Knowles J in WS v KL [2020] EWHC 2548 (Fam) at [21] to [22] where, having cited the concluding part of paragraph [15] of judgment of Williams J in Re C (A Child) [2019] EWHC 131 (Fam) (set out above) she held:“[21]. It seems to me that, in accordance with the analysis of Ryder LJ in paragraph 32 of Re F, what is required by a proportionality assessment is "a welfare analysis of each of the realistic options" and that such an assessment "may amount to no more than an acknowledgement that one option is better than the other and that the preferred option represents a proportionate interference in the Art 8 European Convention rights of those involved" . If, having carefully examined the parents' wishes and their interests within the welfare analysis, a proportionality assessment is undertaken having regard to the best interests of the child concerned, that approach avoids the danger identified by Black LJ in Re C of inconsistency between the welfare analysis and the proportionality assessment (see paragraph 61).[22]. The careful examination of parental wishes and interests which Black LJ considered important in Re C is not easily accommodated within the confines of the welfare checklist. Neither the likely effect on the child of any change in circumstances nor the capability of the parents really captures what is required in that particular regard. McFarlane LJ recognised this implicitly when he stated in paragraph 50 of Re F that the court's task was to weigh up all the relevant factors, look at the case as a whole, and determine the course that best met the need to afford paramount consideration to the child's welfare. One of the relevant factors would be the wishes and interests of each parent. That global holistic evaluation – undertaken within the ambit of all the relevant provisions of s 1 of the Children Act 1989 – has, in my view, proper regard for the Convention rights of both parents and child.”57.I have adopted the approach outlined by Knowles J above in this judgment.58.Ultimately, the guiding principle that I must apply is that the welfare of the children is the court’s paramount consideration. Section 1 CA 1989 requires that I must have regard to the following matters in relation to each of the children:(1) Any delay in determining the questions raised by these proceedings is likely to prejudice their welfare;(2) I should assume (unless the contrary is shown) that the involvement of both their parents in their life will further their welfare;(3) Their ascertainable wishes and feelings (considered in the light of their respective ages and understanding);(4) Their physical, emotional and educational needs;(5) The likely effect on them of any change in their circumstances;(6) Their age, sex, background and any characteristics of either of them which I consider relevant;(7) Any harm which they have suffered or is at risk of suffering;(8) How capable each of their parents (and any other person in relation to whom I consider the question to be relevant) is capable of meeting their needs;(9) The range of powers available to me within these proceedings.ANALYSIS59.I therefore begin my analysis by identifying the proposals put forward by each parent.The Mother’s proposal60.The Mother’s proposal is that she should move with the children to a town just outside Boston, Massachusetts. She has not settled upon a specific locale but is proposing to look at properties for purchase in one of three towns that she has identified close to Boston. She proposes searching for a house in a safe, quiet neighbourhood with easy access to a town centre and amenities. The property that she would like to purchase would have a minimum of 3 bedrooms (if possible more to enable the father and other family members to visit) and have outside space for the children to play in. The mother has provided details of a number of houses which were on the market at the time that she made her statement and which are priced at between $675,100 and $1.35M. She has also provided details of similar properties which are available for rent and which could be leased if she moved with the children before the purchase had taken place.61.If I permit relocation the mother proposes that the children should attend schools within the US public school system. The choice of school will depend upon precisely where they live; the mother’s evidence is that if they live within the catchment area of a particular school they will be entitled to a place there. The mother thus proposes that the available school or schools will play a part in the selection of an appropriate property. The mother has provided details of the elementary, middle and high schools in the areas in which she proposes to search for a property and I note that that the majority of these are highly ranked in various school league tables.62.As I have mentioned the children have a heart condition which requires monitoring and treatment. Their existing consultant has offered to make a referral to an identified consultant at Boston Children’s Hospital and has confirmed that he would have no concerns with the care provided there, confirming that the relevant unit in Boston “is one of the leading centres worldwide” for this condition. The mother has confirmed that her employer will provide private medical insurance which will cover the children.63.In terms of other arrangements, the mother has proposed that the children’s existing nanny should accompany them to assist with the transition, and her evidence is that this would be permissible for a three month period without a need for a special visa.64.The mother points to a number of friends who live in the Boston area whom she says would provide friendship and support to her and the children. One of her brothers already lives close to the area to which the mother wishes to move and her parents, although presently living in South Carolina, may move back to the Boston area and would commit to spending a significant period of time with the mother and children in any event.65.In terms of contact with the father, the mother’s preferred position is that the father moves with them. Although she recognises that once there they may decide to divorce or live separately, she would like the father to live nearby so that the children could spend time with him regularly. In her evidence she states:“whatever the outcome of these proceedings and [the father’s] decision, my priority will always be the physical and emotional wellbeing of the girls, of which their relationship with [the father] is a primary factor.”In their final submissions on behalf of the Mother Ms Eaton and Mr Barwell O’Connor emphasised that the mother cares deeply about ensuring the children’s paternal bond remains strong quoting from her oral evidence:“I will do my damndest to make sure they see him and love him and play with him and visit him and he is welcome for every school play […] I want him to see them as much as possible to see plays and recitals and [everything]”.66.Assuming that the father does not relocate with the mother and children, the mother proposes that the children should spend time (between 4-6 weeks per year is suggested) with the father in the USA when they are in school, for Thanksgiving and during the shorter school holidays in the winter and spring breaks and that the children should spend time with the father in the UK during the summer break (about 5 weeks in total). The mother proposes alternating Christmas so that one year is spent with the mother and her family in the USA (although the mother has indicated that the father would be welcome to come too) and the next is spent with the father and his family in the UK.67.In the event that a relocation is permitted the father’s position in relation to the mother’s proposals is that where possible he would travel to the USA to spend long weekends with the children during term time. He would agree to the children spending alternate Christmases in the UK and USA and would consider spending time in America in those years when the children were staying there. He seeks that the children spend a minimum of 6 weeks of their summer vacation in the UK with him. He would wish to spend one half of the Thanksgiving holiday in the USA with the children and asks that the children spend the entirety of alternate Mid-Winter and Spring break holidays in London. 68.The father, however, has a number of criticisms of the mother’s proposals. Given that both parents would need to rehouse themselves in suitable properties in which the children can live whilst they are with them, he considers that the budget that will be available to do so means that the properties whose details have been provided by the mother are not realistically attainable. He also disputes whether the mother would wish to live in the Boston suburbs as she now proposes. He alleges that the mother has downplayed the demands of her job which, he says, will require her to put in much longer hours and travel more often that she has indicated would be the case. Ultimately though he is concerned that:“The effect of a move to the USA, a change in schools, a fundamental change to their day to day arrangements, a severance of their day to day relationship with their father at the same time as understanding that their parents’ relationship has come to an end would have an enormous effect upon the girls’ welfare and risk the possibility of harm to the girls.”The father’s proposal69.The father proposes that the mother and children remain in London. His position is that they have a happy and stable life in London and that the UK is their home, not the USA. He proposes that the parties should separate and in accordance with the CAFCASS recommendations there should be a joint lives with order and a shared care arrangement. Although the father accepts that initially the children should spend the greater part of their time with the mother, it became clear from his oral evidence that he was seeking to move to a position whereby the children were spending equal amounts of time with each parent within a relatively short period of time.70.His statement does not provide much detail on the type of accommodation that he and the mother will need in the future, although it is implicit in his evidence that he accepts two separate households will be required and that each parent will require (at least) a three bedroom property.71.If the mother’s relocation application is refused, then the father envisages that many aspects of the children’s lives will remain the same. They can continue to have the same nanny. The father hopes that VB can continue at her existing school and that her younger sister can join her this autumn. If this is not possible the father confirms that there are a number of excellent rated State primary and secondary schools within their local area. The children will continue to receive medical treatment for their heart condition either privately through the mother’s health insurance or through the NHS. He refers to the children having a wide circle of friends and identifies that the current arrangements will afford the children the familiarity and stability which, the father considers, will be crucial to minimising the impact of the breakdown of the parents’ relationship upon them.72.For her part the mother does not consider that it is likely to be affordable for the parents to purchase two suitable properties in the local area and continue to privately educate the children. She expresses some reservations about whether it would be possible for the children to obtain places at the best-rated State schools and also raises an issue as to whether the children would receive the same level of checks for their heart condition if they were solely reliant on NHS treatment. She also states that she has serious doubts as to whether she would be able to continue working in her current role if permission to relocate were to be refused.The father’s position if relocation is permitted73.As I have already set out above, the father has expressed different views at different times as to whether, in the event that relocation is permitted, he would consider moving to the USA himself. His case is put on the basis that he will not, although his oral evidence was slightly less unequivocal and he acknowledged that he would have to consider the position if the mother and children move to the USA. That he has decided that he will not move, but that should the case go against him, he would reflect again in the light of the changed factual matrix is, in my view, an entirely understandable position for the father to adopt. However, having heard his evidence and the submissions of his counsel I will conduct my analysis on the basis that, on the balance of probabilities, the father will not move to the USA whatever the outcome of this application.Discussion74.I now turn to consider the welfare of the children in the light of the competing proposals that are before the court. This is an extremely difficult case. Having had the opportunity to hear the evidence of both parents I have been left in no doubt that the mother has a genuine and long-held desire to return to live in the USA, and to do so with the two children. I accept and agree with the conclusion of Mr Mamattah that this is not a case where the mother is seeking to remove the father from the children’s lives. The duration and consistency of her desire to return to the USA and her obvious wish for the father to continue to play an important role in the children’s lives make this clear.75.I am also in no doubt that the father’s opposition to the move is born of an equally sincere and genuinely held wish on his part to remain in the UK and for the children and the mother to remain here too. He has clearly engaged with, and struggled with, the prospect of a relocation to the USA over the years, but ultimately has concluded that he does not wish to go and that it is not in the best interests of the children for them to move to a new country with only one parent.76.To be clear, I do not criticise either parent for their position. I do not consider that either has deliberately set out to frustrate or thwart the other. Sadly though, they have reached the point where their conflicting wishes and objectives for their and the children’s future have become mutually irreconcilable, are having a damaging effect on their own and each other’s mental health and risk placing in jeopardy the welfare of the children.77.It is of course impossible to accommodate both of these outcomes and having heard evidence from both treating psychiatrists I recognise that my decision, whatever it may be, is likely to have a profound effect on both the parents and, through them, upon the children.78.It is clear that whatever my decision the lives of both children are about to change significantly. Whether or not I give the mother permission to relocate with the children to the USA, I am satisfied that there is every likelihood that the parents will now separate and that divorce proceedings will follow. 79.I consider that there is little to choose between the two proposals in terms of the material facilities that will be available for the children (by which I mean accommodation, education facilities, healthcare and the like). In my judgment this case turns upon the impact that the proposals will have on the children’s relationships with each of their parents,80.The parents’ current and likely future financial resources are such that I consider that they will be able to set up and maintain two separate households in the future. Between them they have capital of £1.3M and a combined annual income in excess of £400,000. I have no doubt that there will be compromises to be made. If relocation is permitted, the mother may well have to look for properties at the lower end of the range she has identified. If the children stay in England then there may need to be an adjustment in the parties’ expectations as to the area in which new properties are to be purchased. However, given the combined resources available, I have no doubt that it will be possible for both parents to rehouse themselves in such a way that they can each comfortably to accommodate the children whilst they are with them. I am also satisfied that, if relocation is permitted, the parents will be able to bear the costs of the international travel involved.81.Equally, I have no doubt that the children will receive a good education in whichever country they are living. There is uncertainty as to which school the children will attend whether or not I permit relocation. It is possible that if I refuse the mother’s application, then VB may be able to remain at her present school, although the uncertainty surrounding the parents’ financial position following separation makes this impossible to predict with any confidence. LB will be moving to a new school in any event, whatever the outcome of this application. It is clearly not appropriate for me to undertake a comparative evaluation of the respective school systems in England and Massachusetts and I do not have any material which would permit me to do so. I do however accept Mr Mamattah’s evidence that VB and LB are:“very confident children who … would soon settle, make friends and thrive in any education setting. It is likely that the children will experience a change of school regardless of the court outcome and I view both VB and LB as having the necessary attributes and personalities to navigate these changes well.” (Emphasis in original).82.There is also no doubt in my mind that there will be very good healthcare available to the children whether they are in the UK and the USA.83.Mr Mamattah also states (and again I accept his evidence on this point) that: “The children have several areas of resilience that would enable them to manage a move to the USA. Namely, their excellent social skills, experience of good quality parenting, their close relationship with both parents and support of significant others such as … their nanny.” (Emphasis in original).I accept that as matters stand, the children have an established network of friends in London. However, I consider that they would be likely to build a similar network were I to permit their relocation to the USA.84.A move will allow the children to see more of their maternal grandparents and other members of the mother’s family, in particular, her brother who lives nearby. Relocation will, however, impact upon the children’s ability to spend more time with the paternal family, in particular with their grandmother. In my view these points effectively balance each other out. Whichever proposal I accede to will see the children living in one country with a grandparent or grandparents in another. The important point is that both parents accept that the children should be encouraged to maintain close bonds with all their grandparents and that each parent envisages that the children will visit with some regularity the country in which they are not living and that this will afford them with an opportunity to maintain links with their grandparents and other relations.85.I should add for completeness that the father sought to suggest that the mother’s brother was a heavy drinker and could not be safely relied upon to provide assistance at certain times of the day. I do not accept that father’s evidence on this point; there is evidence that the brother in question has taken steps to improve his health in order to be able to donate a kidney for a family member. In any event, even if the allegations were to be true, I am entirely satisfied that the mother would never permit the children to be placed in a position where they were at risk from his actions.86.I have reached the conclusion that the key factor in the present case is the likely effect that each proposal will have on the parents’ mental health, and the extent to which this impacts upon the welfare of the children and upon each parents’ ability to provide the love and support that these children require. In my view this is the issue which reveals the crucial differences between the parties’ proposals.87.I have formed the view that if the mother’s application is refused and I require her to remain here with the children, her mental well-being and her ability to parent the children will be greatly impaired. It is clear from the evidence that I heard and the presentation that I saw in court that the mother demonstrably is no longer coping with the situation in which she finds herself. Her evidence set out the difficulties that she now encounters with performing basic acts of day to day life such as getting out of bed or washing. Her view of the future was bleak: “I cannot see a way forward if my application is refused.”“I feel trapped in a recurring nightmare as though I am a windowless room with the walls closing in and no one to hear me scream.”That the children, despite their ages, have noticed the mother’s distress is plain. I was particularly struck by an incident identified by the mother in her oral evidence. She recounted LB telling her a joke and that when she failed to laugh at it, VB, (who is only 6 years old) told her younger sister “Don’t worry, Mum’s just sad all the time.”88.I accept what Dr Braithwaite has said about the mother’s health and her extreme concerns for her health and safety if any further deterioration in her condition occurred. Whilst I recognise (as Ms Guha submitted) that there are a number of factors all of which may be contributing to the mother’s current severe depression, including the breakdown of her marriage and the existence of these proceedings, I accept Dr Braithwaite’s evidence that the relocation issue is the longest-standing of these and I consider that it is material to her current condition. Having heard the mother give evidence I have been left in no doubt that she has been overwhelmed by her desire to go “home”. Whilst a decision by me to refuse the mother’s relocation application would bring the current proceedings to an end for the time being, I do not think it would in any way blunt her desire to relocate to the USA or alleviate her current feelings of being trapped. I consider it likely that unless she is permitted to relocate, this desire will continue to eat away at her and to corrode her ability to provide the parenting that the two children require.89.In my judgment there is every prospect that, should I refuse the relocation application, the mother’s condition will remain as it is or even deteriorate further. In such circumstances the mother may not be able to return to work (which would have a very significant effect on the financial assumptions that underlie both parties’ proposals for the future). Of even greater concern is the impact that a continuation of or a deterioration in the mother’s current condition would have upon the two children. The mother is clearly already finding it impossible to conceal her own distress from the children and if I refuse her application I consider it highly likely that the children will be exposed to the reality of her condition.90.Moreover, I have no confidence that a refusal of the application will resolve this issue for good. If I refuse the application, I consider it extremely likely that she would renew her application at some point in the future. Whilst this point cannot be determinative of the application, a continuation of the current dispute and the prolongation of uncertainty over the children’s future lives in this country is not in their best interests.91.By contrast, if relocation is permitted, as Dr Braithwaite has indicated, the mother’s depression would be significantly improved. I find on the balance of probabilities that the mother would be able to resume her work and provide the children with the parental support that they need.92.Against this I have to consider the effect on the father of a decision to permit relocation. I have accepted Dr Campbell’s evidence of the father’s condition and the likely impact upon him of a decision to allow the mother’s application. Whilst the father was less visibly emotional in his presentation at the final hearing and in the witness box, I accept the toll that these proceedings and the issue of relocation has taken upon him too and recognise that the impact of my decision upon him may be just as profound as the impact upon the mother. However, given the evidence of the mother as to her determination for the father to maintain a relationship with the children and the contact arrangements that I will in any event include within my order, I do not see that it is likely (and is certainly not “inevitable”) that the father will lose contact with the children. As such I do not consider that the worst-case scenario envisaged in Dr Campbell’s evidence would be likely to arise.93.Whilst it is clear that my judgment is likely to impact upon the health of one or other of the parents, it seems to me that acceding to the application to relocate offers the better prospect of shielding the children (whose welfare lies at the heart of my decision) from the full effects of this. Here I accept and adopt the point made by Mr Mamattah in his second report that although, if relocation is granted, there is a risk that the father will struggle to manage and his mental wellbeing will deteriorate further, the children “may experience less of an impact if they are not in contact with him daily”.94.Both outcomes are far from ideal as, one way or another, a significant and adverse impact on health of one or other of the parents seems unavoidable. However, when looked at through the lens of the children’s welfare, I am satisfied that the mother’s proposal to relocate to the USA offers the better prospect of reducing the impact upon the children (so far as is possible) of their parents’ ill-health.95.In reaching this conclusion I have considered carefully all of the evidence and submissions that have been provided to me. The children (who remain unaware of the proposed relocation) have not been able to express any wishes and feelings about a proposed move. I accept Mr Mamattah’s evidence that the children would wish to spend as much time as possible with both parents. Equally though I note that the children have already expressed concerns about their mother’s evident unhappiness. Whilst I recognise that my decision will interfere with the art 8 rights of the children and of the father I have formed the view that this interference is a proportionate one given the conclusions that I have reached as to which of the two proposals best advances the welfare of the children. In reaching this view I have also taken into account the evidence of Mr Mamattah that: “It is well known that separation is not necessarily what is harmful to children but the manner in which the parents manage this / expose their children to [this].”96.There is one further point that I need to address. Concern has been expressed on the part of the father as to whether the mother will abide by any contact arrangements that are put in place consequent upon my decision. A contentious part of the evidence related to the attitude of the mother towards the paternal grandmother generally and in particular steps that she was said to have taken to have disrupted a planned visit by the children to the paternal grandmother in January this year. That visit was to have taken place immediately after the parents, the children and the paternal grandmother had all returned to the UK following a visit to the maternal grandparents in South Carolina at Christmas 2021. Having heard both parties’ accounts I consider that it is likely that the mother’s actions played a role in the children expressing the wish not to travel on with the father to the paternal grandmother’s house and to instead stay with the mother in London. 97.That said, this issue does not affect my overall conclusions as to where the children’s welfare lies. The events of Christmas and new year 2021/22 took place whilst this highly charged application was ongoing, and not long after two final hearing dates had been lost. I have no doubt that the trip to the USA and the efforts that were required to conceal their differences from the children were hugely challenging for both parents. I do not consider that their conduct during this period can provide a reliable guide to their future willingness to abide by a set of contact arrangements embodied in a court order.98.Having heard the mother’s evidence I am satisfied that if I permit relocation she will fully abide by the contact arrangements that are provided for in my order. The father has indicated that he would wish for a mirror order to be obtained (or for my order to be registered) in Massachusetts, and I accept that steps should be taken by the parties to ensure that the arrangements embodied in my order are enforceable by the father in the USA.