Getting Adoption Ready
What can you do to prepare yourself, your circumstances and your home to be adoption ready? Firstly it is fantastic that you are considering adoption. There...
What can you do to prepare yourself, your circumstances and your home to be adoption ready? Firstly it is fantastic that you are considering adoption. There...
GB Shared are thrilled to announce further growth, launching their first share platform outside the northwest region. GB Shared Founder, Lisa Edge said ‘It see...
For more information and to book your place go to Horse Harmony Workshop | Harness Change (biglandhall.com)
A woman has failed to overturn her mother’s Will, after claiming it left too much to her estranged sister. Peter Stafford, Managing Director and Head of Busin...
The Court of Appeal has ruled that a landlord’s costs of preparing and serving a notice requiring payment of ground rent could not be recovered from the tenant...
If your passport is due for renewal in the next few months, you might want to think about doing it before 2 February when fees will be increasing. ???? ??? ???...
A mother who abducted her daughter has been ordered to return the child to her home country in accordance with the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction 1980.
Joanne Grey Associate Solicitor in our family law team reports on this recent case.
The case involved a Bulgarian couple who had lived in the UK. Their daughter was born in the UK and, following the breakdown of the parents’ marriage, the family went back to Bulgaria in December 2019.
The father remained there, and he removed his consent to the child returning to the UK. His revocation was filed with the Bulgarian border police.
The mother commenced wardship proceedings in the UK, which were stayed pending her application in Bulgaria for the summary return of the child from Bulgaria to the UK.
That application was dismissed on the basis that the child was not wrongfully retained in Bulgaria.
The English court decided that child arrangements decisions should be decided by the Bulgarian courts. The child remained living in Bulgaria until June 2022 when the mother avoided the travel ban by arriving in the UK via Romania.
The father applied to the Family Court in England for the child’s summary return to Bulgaria under the Hague Convention.
The mother submitted that: the father was not exercising his rights of custody at the time of the child’s removal from Bulgaria; she was acting lawfully under Bulgarian law when she took the child out of the country; the child was habitually resident in the UK and never acquired habitual residence in Bulgaria; and, under art.13(b) of the Hague Convention, a return to Bulgaria would place her and the child in an intolerable situation or breach their human rights.
The court granted the father’s application.
It held that the mother was not entitled to take advantage of her own actions in preventing the father from seeing the child as a basis for suggesting his lack of engagement.
The court accepted expert evidence that removing the child from Bulgaria without the father’s consent was a breach of his rights under Bulgarian law. Assuming that the child was habitually resident in Bulgaria, her removal was wrongful under the Convention.
The child was physically present in Bulgaria from December 2019 until June 2022 and had been cared for by the mother and her family. Habitual residence was a matter of fact not law and had to be assessed from the child’s perspective.
The child had lived more than half her life in Bulgaria and was part of an extended family there. She had become habitually resident in Bulgaria.
A return order was granted to allow the Bulgarian court to consider child arrangements.
For more information about the issues raised in this article or any aspect of family law please contact Joanne on 01434 320362.
We’re excited to join voluntary adoption agencies (VAAs) across the UK for Big Adoption Day and, as part of this, will be holding an online event on Wednesday 1...
On Wednesday, 15 January 2025, at 218 Tulketh Road, Ashton, Preston, PR2 1ES from 1pm to 3pm, we’re very excited to open our doors, to join voluntary adoption a...
On Wednesday, 15 January 2025, from 1pm to 3pm, Caritas Care are excited to open their doors to join voluntary adoption agencies (VAAs) across the UK for Big Ad...
On Wednesday, 15 January 2025 we’re excited to open our doors to join voluntary adoption agencies (VAAs) across the UK for Big Adoption Day. If you’re consideri...
Networking, GB Update and New ConnectionsAs our share platforms have continued to grow, so too have our online meet ups! Join us for our next fortnightly meet...
A host of lovely events from Booths at various Booths shops across the North West.