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(HELENA
FRIESEN |
APPELLANT |
BETWEEN |
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(AND
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(HENRICH
FRIESEN |
RESPONDENT |
Court
of Appeal
No. 4 of 2002
A.O. Conteh, C.J.
Mrs. Marilyn
Williams for the Appellant.
Mr. Cecil Ramirez for the Respondent.
Inferior
Court Appeal - Custody of nine minors - Inferior Court ordering
custody of four male minors to be given to the Respondent
(Father) and five female minors to be given to the Appellant
(Mother) - Inferior Court making its order on the basis
of section 10 of the Married Persons (Protection) Act, Chapter
175 of the Substantive Laws of Belize, Revised Edition 2000,
regulating the variation and discharge of custody orders
- Whether Inferior Court misdirected itself at law in making
its decision since application before it was for custody
of children nor variation or discharge of custody order
- A married man or woman entitled to an order for legal
custody of children of a marriage under section 2(b) and
4(b) of the Married Persons (Protection) Act, Chapter 175
upon application made under section 5 of that Act - Correct
law for making applications for custody - Section 3 and
First Schedule to the Families and Children Act, Chapter
173 of the Substantive Laws of Belize, Revised Edition 2000
- Principles to be taken into account in determining applications
for custody of minors - The welfare of the child to be the
first and paramount consideration - Sections 3 and 30, as
read with Paragraphs 1 and 3 of the first Schedule to the
Families and Children's Act - Magistrate failing to interview
minors to ascertain their wishes and feelings as to the
parent they wished to stay with, considered in the light
of their ages - Whether failure by Magistrate a fatal error
rendering his decision wrong in law.
J
U D G M E N T
This is
an appeal from a decision of the Magistrate in Belmopan sitting
as the Family Court given on 30th May, 2002. By the decision,
the Magistrate ordered that the custody of four children be
given to the Respondent.
2. Against
this decision the Appellant has now appealed to this Court
on the following grounds:
1) The
decision of the Magistrate on 31st May 2002 was unreasonable.
2)
The decision of the Magistrate could not be supported having
regard to the evidence.
3)
The decision of the Magistrate was based on a wrong principle.
3. The
Appellant is the wife of the Respondent and they have nine
surviving children of their marriage, a tenth having died
sometime ago. The children's ages range from ten months to
thirteen years, and six of them are boys and three are girls.
Both the Appellant and the Respondent are members of the Mennonite
community in Belize. The members of this community are generally
known to be distinct in Belize, often living in settled communities
of their own with distinct life styles, religion and economic
pursuits. From the evidence in this case, it would appear
that although generally separated from the rest of the Belizean
society by their distinct mode of dress, life style, religion
and settlement, the Mennonite community itself is not one
homogenous entity. Within the community there are what the
learned attorneys for the parties, Mrs. Marilyn Williams for
the Appellant, and Mr. Cecil Ramirez for the Respondent, described
as the conservative and traditional elements and the liberal
elements. The former abjures anything modern such as electricity,
modern household conveniences and transportation, preferring
instead the horse drawn buggy and teaching their children
in a German dialect spoken within the community. The other
element is not so inhibited, it avails itself to modern and
other conveniences including affording its children instructions
in the English language.
4. Somehow,
things did not work out between the Appellant and the Respondent
due largely to the differences between their religious outlook
and disposition and the branch of the Mennonite community,
either the more traditional and conservative element or the
more liberal, to which they should belong. The Appellant is
of the traditional and more orthodox persuasion and it was
agreed between the parties before their marriage that they
would belong to this branch and live in the community of Barton
Creek in the Cayo District. These differences and the inability
or unwillingness of the Respondent to be a more thorough going
adherent to the orthodox beliefs and practices of the community
in Barton Creek or to be more compliant to the desires and
practices of the elders and the Church in that community caused
the Appellant to move out of the matrimonial home sometime
in 2000. The Appellant took with her seven of the children,
the younger ones of the marriage, and the Respondent was left
with the two oldest boys. The community itself especially
its elders and the Church were vital to the parties: they
provided a network of mutual support and assistance and affords
its members a sense of belonging to a close-knit society.
The Respondent himself originally was a founder of the Barton
Creek Community.
5. In
January 2002, the Appellant caused an application seeking
custody of all nine children of the marriage to come before
the Magistrate in Belmopan. At the time the oldest boys were
living with the Respondent. The Magistrate by his order of
25 January, 2002, granted custody of the two eldest boys already
staying with the Respondent to him. The Magistrate however
ordered that the Appellant should have custody of the other
seven children. The Magistrate also ordered mutual access
in favour of the non-custodial parent. That is to say, he
ordered that the Respondent in this Appeal, Mr. Friesen, the
father of the children, should have access to the seven children
starting from Saturday 26 January and Sunday from 9 a.m. to
4 p.m., and access in favour of the Appellant to the other
two children, starting from the following weekend after his
order of 25 January, 2002.
6. From
the evidence, there were some difficulties relating to this
access in favour of both parties stemming principally from
their separate residences and the fact that the Appellant
had to travel by horse and buggy to and from her own place.
7. However,
the Respondent on 4th April, 2002, went back to the Magistrates
Court, this time as the complainant with an application pursuant
to section 4 (b) read together with section 5 (b)
and (d) of the Married Persons (Protection) Act - Chapter
175 of the Laws of Belize, Revised Edition 2000, seeking
custody of all the children, including the two oldest boys
whose custody had already been granted earlier in January
to him. The Magistrate then ordered that the four other boys
whose custody he had awarded the Appellant be now given to
the Respondent the father, and custody of the female children
should remain with the mother.
8. The
Magistrate said in his reasons for his decision that he applied
section 10(a) of Chapter 175 of the Laws of Belize
in arriving at it.
9. This
raised a troubling issue which I put to the learned attorney
Mr. Cecil Ramirez, for the Respondent. It is clear that section
10 of Chapter 175 of the Laws of Belize was inapplicable
to the Respondent's application before the Magistrate. The
Respondent's application was for custody of all the
nine children and not a variation or discharge
of the order of custody that the Magistrate had made earlier
in January. Section 10(a) of Chapter 175 deals with
the variation or discharge of an order already made under
the Act upon fresh evidence to the satisfaction of the Court.
This section is different in operation from both section
2(b) and section 4 (b), which entitle either a
married woman or a married man to an order for legal custody
of the children of the marriage, on the grounds stated in
sections 3 and 5 respectively.
10. The
Magistrate therefore erred when he treated the Respondent's
application as one for variation, when in point of fact it
was expressly pursuant to section 4(b) read along with
section 5(d). Different considerations apply in the
case of an application under these sections from those under
section 10: variation or discharge of an already subsisting
custody order is for cause being shown upon fresh evidence
to the satisfaction of the Court.
11. I
must agree therefore with the learned attorney, Mrs. Marilyn
Williams, for the Appellant, that in any event, section
10 of Chapter 175 was the wrong principle to apply to
the circumstances of this case, in as much as it provides
for variation or discharge of custody orders, she submitted,
it provides no assistance for making custody orders. She submitted
rightly, in my view, that the proper law and applicable principles
are to be found in section 3 of the Families and
Children Act and the First Schedule thereto - Chapter
173 of the Laws of Belize, Revised Edition 2000. This
was more so as the Respondent was making an application for
custody and not a variation of custody.
12. Section
3 of Chapter 173 provides:
"The
principles in regard to children's rights set out in the
First Schedule to this Act shall be the guiding principles
in the making of any decisions affecting a child."
13. The
First Schedule to the Act provides "Guiding Principles
in the implementation of the Act." Central to these is
the welfare principles. Paragraph 1 of this Schedule
provides, as far as is material for this Appeal, as follows:
"1
Whether the State, a Court, a Government agency or any person
determines any question with respect to -
(a) the upbringing of a child
(b) . . .
the
child's welfare shall be the paramount consideration."
14. Paragraph
3 of the First Schedule lists several criteria and provides
as follows:
"3.
In determining any question relating to circumstances set
out in subparagraph (a) . . . of paragraph 1 above, the
Court or any other person shall have regard in particular
to:
(a) the ascertainable wishes and feelings of the child concerned
in the light of his or her age and understanding;
(b) the child's physical, emotional and educational needs;
(c) the likely effect of any changes in the child's circumstances;
(d) the child's age, sex, background and any other circumstances
relevant in the matter;
(e) any harm that the child has suffered or is at risk of
suffering;
(f) where relevant, the capacity of the child's parents,
guardians or others involved in the care of the child in
meeting his or her needs."
15. Section
30 of Chapter 173 of the Laws of Belize expressly provides
for the principles on which questions relating to the custody
or upbringing or the administration of a child's property
or income therefrom, are to be decided. This section also
emphasizes the welfare of the child which it regards
as the first and paramount consideration. It provides
as follows:
"30.
Where in any proceeding before any court
(a) the custody or upbringing of a child
(b)
. . .
is
in question, the Court shall in deciding the question, regard
the welfare of the child as the first and paramount consideration,
and shall not take into consideration whether the claim
of the father in respect of such custody, upbringing . .
. is superior to that of the mother, or vice versa."
(emphasis added)
16. I
had set out earlier the criteria of this welfare of the
child principle as set out in the First Schedule: it is,
in law, the first and paramount consideration.
17. In
this Appeal, I find that although the Magistrate made some
advertence to section 30 of Chapter 173 of the Laws of
Belize, Revised Edition 2000, and correctly diagnosed
the situation as arising out of the differences of the religious
beliefs of the Appellant and Respondent, and that the children
should not be made to pay the consequences of their parents'
fault or delinquency, he however, failed to bear in mind the
criteria that should inform a decision in a custody case.
18. Somewhat
confusingly also, the Magistrate stated in his reasons for
decision that the Respondent's application for custody was
made pursuant to sections 4(b) and 5(d) of the Married
Persons (Protection) Act -Chapter 175 of the Laws of Belize,
Revised Edition 2000 where the Court applies section
10(a) in reaching its decision. This was no doubt, an
error, as I have pointed out, these sections govern different
situations. Section 4 speaks to orders to which a husband
is entitled (which may include legal custody of the children
of the marriage) and section 5 addresses the grounds
upon which a husband may make an application under the Act.
Section 10, on the other hand, empowers the Family
Court to vary or discharge any order previously made under
the Act.
19. This
error on the part of the Magistrate and his failure to appreciate
the import of section 30 of the Families and Children
Act, and in particular, the provisions of the First Schedule
to this Act, resulted, I find, in his making an order regarding
the custody of the four younger male children which is, on
the facts of this case and on the evidence, difficult to justify
or uphold.
20. The
Magistrate in effect, by his order under challenge, separated
the children by gender, and awarded custody accordingly. The
result of the Magistrate's order was to grant custody of all
the six boys to the father, the Respondent in this Appeal,
and to leave the mother, the Appellant, with custody of the
girls. He granted of course, mutual access to both parties
as non-custodial parents.
21. In
particular, I find and hold that the Magistrate failed to
appreciate or apply criterion (a) of paragraph 3 of
the First Schedule to the Families and Children Act. This
provides that in determining any question relating to the
upbringing of a child, a Court shall have regard in particular
to:
"(a)
the ascertainable wishes and feelings of the child concerned
considered in the light of his or her age and understanding."
22. The
Magistrate failed in this instance to have regard to the wishes
of the children, whom I find, apart from the nine month old
girl and the two year old boy, were all capable of expressing
their wishes as to which of the parents they would like to
stay with. There is no evidence that the Magistrate saw or
interviewed the children to ascertain their wishes on the
Respondent's application.
23. Having
regard to the powers of this Court generally in proceedings
on appeal as provided for in section 121 of The Supreme
Court Act - Chapter 91 of the Laws of Belize, and guided
by the provisions of section 30 of the Families and Children
Act, in particular the provisions of the First Schedule
to this Act, I decided to see and talk to the children in
my chambers. This I did on Monday, 15 July 2002 in the presence
of both the Appellant and the Respondent with their respective
attorneys and interpreters.
24. Apart
from the two older boys already living with the Respondent,
all the other children, that is, those who could understand
my questions, clearly expressed a wish and desire to stay
with the Appellant. I got the distinct feeling that all the
children would rather stay together as siblings. In particular
the ten year old, eight year old, six year old and three year
old boys whose custody had been granted by the Magistrate
in May 2002 and the subject of this Appeal, all clearly expressed
the desire to stay with the Appellant.
25. The provisions of section 30 of the Families and Chi1dren
Act are, I believe, inspired by, and follow closely, the
wording of the United Kingdom Guardianship of Infants Act
1925, which in its section 1 introduced the expression
"regard the welfare of the child as the first and paramount
consideration". Lord MacDermott in J v C (1970) A.C.
668 at p.710 gave a construction to this phrase which
is not easy to improve upon and which, with respect, I adopt
for the purposes of this decision. The Learned Lord stated:
"Reading
these words in their ordinary significance. . . it seems
to me that they must mean more than the child's welfare
is to be treated as the top item in a list of items relevant
to the matter in question . . . they connote a process whereby
when all the relevant facts, relationships, claims and wishes
of parents, risks, choices and other circumstances are taken
into account and weighed, the course to be followed will
be that which is most in the interests of the child's welfare
as that term has now to be understood. That is the first
consideration because it is of first importance and the
paramount consideration because it rules upon or determines
the course to be followed."
26. I
think in the circumstances of this case, the Magistrate erred
and did not give sufficient consideration or weight to the
fact that it would be more in the interest and welfare of
the majority of the children to grow up together as siblings
with their mother rather than separating and apportioning
them by gender - six boys to the father and the three girls
to the mother on a "boys to boys, girls to girls"
basis reminiscent of the infant playground.
27. I
think it is self-evident that where there are siblings of
both genders, it would be in their best interest and welfare
if they were reared together, rather than being separated
by gender, the females to the mother and the males to the
father, because of differences between their parents; such
division along gender lines, does not strengthen family ties
or conduce to the children's welfare.
28. I
think the welfare of the children, the first and paramount
consideration, would best be served by returning the custody
of the four boys back to the mother, the Appellant, so they
can grow up with their other siblings, the three girls with
their mother. The four boys themselves expressly stated this
wish when I interviewed them. This way, it would be less harmful
and disruptive and minimize the upset in the children's lives,
caused principally by their parent's seemingly irreconcilable
differences and outlook on life. It would of course be infinitely
more preferable if all nine children could stay and grow up
together as this would nurture and strengthen their blood
relationship as siblings, but unfortunately their parents'
differences stand in the way of this.
29. The
Magistrate also seemed to have paid scant, if any, regard
to the Case Report presented by Mr. Nestor Novelo, the Community
Development Officer in Belmopan. He recommended in his Report
after interviews with the Respondent in Spanish Lookout and
with the Appellant in Barton Creek, recommended in fact that
physical custody of all the children, including the two older
boys, be given to the mother.
30. Also,
Ms. Margaret Webb, the Social Worker in Belmopan, after visits
to the communities in Barton Creek and Pine Hill to which
the Appellant is more associated and to Spanish Lookout where
the Respondent now resides, and observation of conditions
in these places, and after interviews with the children and
the Appellant and Respondent, recommended that custody of
the two older boys be granted to the Respondent and custody
of the rest of the children should be granted to the Appellant.
31. In
the light of all the above, I uphold the Appellant's Appeal
for the reasons that the Magistrate's decision/order of 30
May, 2002 was not reasonable, could not be supported having
regard to the evidence and that he came to the conclusion
he did because he did not apply the correct principles.
32. Accordingly,
I set the Magistrate's order aside and order that custody
for the four boys, which gave rise to this Appeal, be granted
to the Appellant. The parties shall have access to the children
not in their custody on alternate weekends starting on Saturday
27 July 2002 at 9 a.m. until Sunday at 4 p.m.
33. The
Respondent shall pay the costs of this appeal, to be taxed
if not agreed.
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