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

[2025] EWHC 1344 (Fam)

Fecha: 02-Jun-2025

Peter Jackson LJ at [34] then cited from S v B (Abduction: Human Rights) [2005] 2 FLR 878 per Sir Mark Potter P

74)

Peter Jackson LJ at [34] then cited from S v B (Abduction: Human Rights) [2005] 2 FLR 878 per Sir Mark Potter P:

[48] … In that passage, Butler-Sloss LJ was drawing attention in forcible terms to the undesirability of permitting a situation where the mother, as Thorpe LJ put it:

'is in reality relying upon her own wrongdoing in order to build up the statutory defence.'

However, I am satisfied she did not intend that, in relation to the risk of psychological harm or an intolerable situation arising in respect of the child, the court must ignore the effect on the mother's psychological health in a case where it is clear that her health might become such that the mother as primary carer would face real and severe difficulty in providing for the child's needs on return: cf. TB v JB (Abduction, Grave Risk of Harm) [2001] 2 FLR 515 at [44] and [95] per Hale LJ. So to hold would be to place a gloss on the words of the Art 13(b) defence which they do not bear.

[49] The principle that it would be wrong to allow the abducting parent to rely upon adverse conditions brought about by a situation which she has herself created by her own conduct is born of the proposition that it would drive a coach and horses through the 1985 Act if that were not accepted as the broad and instinctive approach to a defence raised under Art 13(b) of the Convention. However, it is not a principle articulated in the Convention or the Act and should not be applied to the effective exclusion of the very defence itself, which is in terms directed to the question of risk of harm to the child and not the wrongful conduct of the abducting parent. By reason of the provisions of Arts 3 and 12, such wrongful conduct is a 'given', in the context of which the defence is nonetheless made available if its constituents can be established.