Shared Parenting Information Group (SPIG) UK

- promoting responsible shared parenting after separation and divorce -

Removal from jurisdiction - seeking leave to remove a child permanently abroad

(Notes by kind permission of 'Senior Counsel 1999')

Pre-Children Act precedents

By and large it can be said that the fundamental reasoning behind the decision in Poel v Poel [1970] 1 WLR 1469 CA has held sway unmodified since it was decided. The principle deriving from Poel has been variously stated, but is perhaps well summarised in the head-note in Chamberlain v de la Mare (1983) 4 FLR 434 CA:

The welfare of the children is the first and paramount consideration; but leave should not be withheld unless the interests of the children and those of the custodial parent are clearly shown to be incompatible, because interference by the court with the way of life reasonably chosen by the custodial parent was likely to end in frustration and bitterness which would adversely affect the children and their family background.

Post-Children Act precedents

The above approach was confirmed again recently in Re H (Application to remove from Jurisdiction) [1998] 1 FLR 848 (CA) when Thorpe LJ stated as follows:

Omissions

It is to be noted that, unaugmented, the statement of the law as set out in Poel v Poel / Chamberlain v de la Mare makes no express reference to the desirability of substantial contact between a child and both his parents and involves the apparent assumption that, if an applicant can assert prospective distress/bitterness if the application is rejected, they can choose any geographical relocation provided that their decision is not demonstrated to be unreasonable.

Summaries of cases

Addressed in this document are all the known judicial decisions reported in the Family Law Reports, one decision reported in the Family Court Reporter, and some unreported cases.

The categories of cases

The cases can be grouped, broadly, into four categories, viz:
  1. cases where the applicant has remarried and the new spouse either lives abroad or has had their job or business relocated abroad
  2. cases where the applicant has been offered employment abroad
  3. cases where the applicant wishes to return to their native country or to emigrate to a country where their family has settled
  4. cases where the applicant wishes to emigrate to a foreign jurisdiction on the ground that the foreign jurisdiction offers a better way of life than England and Wales
Set out below are brief summaries of the facts of each case together, sometimes, with comment.

Category 1.

(cases where the applicant has remarried and the new spouse either lives abroad or has had their job or business relocated abroad)

In the following cases leave was granted:

Leave was refused in the following cases:

Category 2.

(cases where the applicant has been offered employment abroad)

In the following cases leave was granted:

Category 3.

(cases where the applicant wishes to return to their native country or to emigrate to a country where their family has settled)

Leave was granted in the following cases:

Leave was refused in the following cases:

Category 4.

(cases where the applicant wishes to emigrate to a foreign jurisdiction on the ground that the foreign jurisdiction offers a better way of life than England and Wales)

There are only two cases falling into this category: in both cases, leave was refused.

Last updated - 26 November 1999


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