[2025] EWHC 1344 (Fam)
Family Division of the High Court

[2025] EWHC 1344 (Fam)

Fecha: 02-Jun-2025

I determined that the high threshold for oral evidence was not crossed. I considered it unnecessary for several reasons namely (i) I preferred appellate guidance from the Court of Appeal over (inevita

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I determined that the high threshold for oral evidence was not crossed. I considered it unnecessary for several reasons namely (i) I preferred appellate guidance from the Court of Appeal over (inevitably) fact-specific first instance dicta; (ii) in accordance with Re R(Child Abduction: Parent’s Refusal to Accompany) I had specifically directed that M address the issue of her reasons for non-return in a statement and she had done so; (iii) M’s reasons for not returning were also set out in in Dr. Pickering’s addendum report of 18th March 2025; (iv) M had therefore in any event (in Holman J’s words in NP v DP (Hague Convention; Abducting Parent Refusing to Return)) had the opportunity to explain her intentions and state of mind in her own way and for herself; (v) as Professor George submitted, the purpose of oral evidence in this context was not for M to set out her case in her own words but to allow it to be tested by cross-examination which he did not seek to do on F’s behalf; and (vi) Ms. Renton suggested that hearing oral evidence would (per paragraph 15 of her and Ms. Halliday’s Position Statement) “assist the court with its assessment as to M’s genuineness and vulnerability” as I would be able to assess whether M was (as she said in submissions) “genuine or an actress”. However I considered an assessment of credibility would be very difficult (if not impossible) from hearing only brief targeted oral evidence on one issue and drawing conclusions from a witnesses’ demeanour is something that judges have rightly been warned to be extremely cautious about.