Reportable
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CRIMINAL ORIGINAL JURISDICTION
WRIT PETITION (CRL.) NO.112/2007
Dr. V. Ravi Chandran ..Petitioner
Versus
Union of India & Ors. ..Respondents
JUDGMENT
R.M. LODHA, J.
Adithya is a boy of seven, born on July 1, 2002, in the
United States of America. He is a foreign national. The petition before
us is by the father - Dr. V . Ravi Chandran--praying for a writ of
habeas corpus for the production of his minor son Adithya and for
handing over the custody and his passport to him.
2. On August 28, 2009, this Court passed an order
requesting Director, Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) to trace
minor Adithya and produce him before this Court. The necessity of
such order arose as despite efforts made by the police officers and
officials of different states, Adithya and his mother - respondent
no. 6--Vijayasree Voora--could not be traced and their whereabouts
could not be found for more than two years since the notice was
issued by this Court. In pursuance of the order dated August 28,
2009, CBI issued look out notices on all India basis through heads of
police of States, Union Territories and Metropolitan Cities and also
alert notices through Deputy Director, Bureau of Immigration
(Immigration), Ministry of Home Affairs, New Delhi and flashed
photographs of the child Adithya and his mother Vijayasree Voora.
Ultimately with its earnest efforts, CBI traced Adithya and his mother
Vijayashree Voora in Chennai on October 24, 2009 and brought them
to Delhi and produced the child along with his mother at the
residential office of one of us (Tarun Chatterjee, J.) on October 25,
2009. On that day, the CBI authorities were directed to keep the child
under their custody and produce him before the Court on October 27,
2009. Respondent no. 6 was also directed to be produced on that
date. On October 27, 2009, the matter was adjourned for November
4, 2009 since respondent no.6 wanted to engage a lawyer and file a
counter affidavit. On November 4, 2009, matter was adjourned to
November 10, 2009 and then to November 12, 2009. The petitioner
2
was permitted to meet the child for one hour on November 10, 2009
and November 12, 2009. In the meanwhile, respondent no. 6 has
filed counter affidavit in opposition to the habeas corpus petition and
petitioner has filed rejoinder affidavit to the counter affidavit filed by
respondent no.6.
3. We heard Ms. Pinky Anand, learned senior counsel for
the petitioner and Mr. T.L.V. Iyer, learned senior counsel for
respondent no. 6. Now since minor Adithya has been produced, the
only question that remains to be considered is with regard to the
prayer made by the petitioner for handing over the custody of minor
Adithya to him with his passport.
4. But before we do that, it is necessary to notice few
material facts. Dr. V. Ravi Chandran - petitioner - is an American
citizen. He and respondent no. 6 got married on December 14, 2000
at Tirupathi, Andhra Pradesh according to Hindu rites. On July 1,
2002, Adithya was born in United States of America. In the month of
July 2003, respondent no. 6 approached the New York State
Supreme Court for divorce and dissolution of marriage. A consent
order governing the issues of custody and guardianship of minor
3
Adithya was passed by the New York State Supreme Court on April
18, 2005. The Court granted joint custody of the child to the
petitioner and respondent no. 6 and it was stipulated in the order to
keep the other party informed about the whereabouts of the child.
On July 28, 2005, a Separation Agreement was entered between the
petitioner and respondent no.6 for distribution of marital property,
spouse maintenance and child support. As regards custody of the
minor son Adithya and parenting time, the petitioner and respondent
no. 6 consented to the order dated April 18, 2005. On September 8,
2005, the marriage between the petitioner and respondent no.6 was
dissolved by the New York State Supreme Court. Child custody order
dated April 18, 2005 was incorporated in that order.
5. Upon the petition for modification of custody filed by the
petitioner and the petition for enforcement filed by him and upon the
petition for enforcement filed by respondent no.6 before the Family
Court of the State of New York, on June 18, 2007, upon the consent
of both parties, inter - alia, the following order came to be passed:
"ORDERED, the parties shall share joint legal and
physical custody of the minor child; and it is further
4
ORDERED, that commencing during August 2007,
Adithya shall reside in Allen, Texas; and it is further
ORDERED, that the parties acknowledge that it is
the intention of the parties to reside within the same
community. As such, it is the mother's current intention to
relocate to Texas, within a forty (40) mile radius of the
father's residence. If the mother does relocate to a forty (40)
mile radius of the father's residence (which shall be within
a twenty (20) mile radius from the child's school),, the parties
shall equally share physical custody of Adithya. The parties
shall alternate physical custody on a weekly basis, with the
exchange being on Friday, at the end of the School day, or
at the time when school would ordinarily let out in the event
that there is no school on Friday; ................
.....................................................................
.....................................................................
ORDERED, that in the event that the mother does
not relocate within forty (40) miles from the father's
residence located in Allen, Texas (and within twenty (20)
miles of Adithya's school), the mother shall have custodial
time with the minor child, as follows:
A. On Alternating weekends from Friday, at the end of the
school day until Monday, prior to the beginning of
school, commencing during the first week of
September, 2007. Such periods of custodial time shall
take place within forty (40) miles from the father's
residence located in Allen, Texas. In the event that
there is no school on the Friday of the mother's
weekend, she shall have custodial time with the child
beginning at 7.00 a.m. on Friday morning, and, in the
event that there is no school on Monday of the mother's
custodial weekend, she shall have custodial time until
5.00 p.m. on Monday, and
B. For ten (10) consecutive days during Spring vacation
from school; and
C. For the entirety of the Christmas recess from School,
except for Christmas Eve and Christmas day, which
shall be with the father. In the event that the school
recess is prior to Christmas Eve, the mother shall have
the right to have custodial time during those recessed
5
days to long as she produces the child at the father's
residence for Christmas Eve and Christmas day ; and
D. During the following holidays:
i) Mother's birthday, which is on April 25;
ii) Mother's Day;
iii) Hindu Festival of Diwali and Deepavali;
iv) Adithya's birthday (July 1) in alternating years;
v) Thanks giving in alternating years (so that the
mother has custodial time during even -
numbered years and the father has custodial
time during odd - numbered years);
vi) New Year's Day in alternating years (so that
the mother has custodial time during even -
numbered years and the father has custodial
time during odd -numbered years) ;............
.................
............................................................
ORDERED, that the parties shall share the
summer recess from school so that the mother has
custodial time for a total of up to fifty (50) days on a
schedule so that each party has custodial time for 4
consecutive weeks, with the mother's custodial time
commencing on the Monday following the final day of
school..........
ORDERED, for the summer of 2007, the
mother shall have custodial time from June 18 until
June 20; the father shall have custodial time from
June 20 until June 24; the mother shall have custodial
time from June 25 until July 1; the father shall have
custodial time from July 1 until July 6; and the mother
shall then have custodial time from July 6 until
August 3 and she shall be solely responsible for
transporting the child to the father's residence in
Allen, Texas on August 3. The father shall have
custodial time until the commencement of school.
Thereafter the father shall continue to have custodial
time until such time as the mother either a) returns
from India and/or begins her alternating weekly
6
schedule as set froth herein, or b) moves within 40
miles of the father's residence in Allen, Texas and
commences her custodial time during alternating
weeks;....................................
.............................................................
.............................................................
ORDERED, that each party agrees that they
shall provide the other parent with a phone number
and address where the child will be located at all time,
and that the other parent shall have reasonable and
regular telephone communication with the minor child;
and it is further
ORDERED, that each party agrees to provide
the other party with the child's passport during each
custodial exchange of the minor child, and that each
party shall sign and deliver to the other, whatever
written authorization may be necessary for travel with
the child within the Continental United States or
abroad;"..............................................
6. On June 28, 2007 respondent no.6 brought minor Adithya
to India informing the petitioner that she would be residing with her
parents in Chennai. On August 08, 2007, the petitioner filed the
petition for modification (Custody) and Violation Petition (Custody)
before the Family Court of the State of New York on which a show
cause notice came to be issued to respondent no.6. On that very
day, the petitioner was granted temporary sole legal and physical
custody of Adithya and respondent no. 6 was directed to immediately
turn over the minor child and his passport to the petitioner and further
her custodial time with the minor child was suspended and it was
7
ordered that the issue of custody of Adithya shall be heard in the
jurisdiction of the United States Courts, specifically, the Albany
County Family Court.
7. It transpires that the Family Court of the State of New
York has issued child abuse non-bailable warrants against
respondent no.6.
8. In the backdrop of the aforenoticed facts, we have to
consider--now since the child has been produced--what should be
the appropriate order in the facts and circumstances keeping in mind
the interest of the child and the orders of the courts of the country of
which the child is a national.
9. In re B--'s Settlement,1 Chancery Division was concerned
with an application for custody by the father of an infant who had
been made a ward of court. The father was a Belgian national and
the mother a British national who took Belgian nationality on marriage
to him. The infant was born in Belgium. The mother was granted a
divorce by a judgment of the Court in Belgium, but the judgment was
reversed and the father became entitled to custody by the common
1
{1940} Ch. 54
8
law of Belgium. The mother, who had gone to live in England, visited
Belgium and was by arrangement given the custody of the infant for
some days. She took him to England and did not return him. The
infant had been living with mother in England for nearly two years.
The father began divorce proceedings in Belgium, and the Court
appointed him guardian. Pending the proceedings, the Court gave
him the custody and ordered the mother to return the infant within
twenty-four hours of service of the order on her. She did not return
the infant. The Correctional Court in Brussels fined her for
disobedience and sentenced her to imprisonment should the fine be
not paid. The Correctional Court also confirmed the custody order.
In the backdrop of these facts, the summons taken out by the father
that custody of the infant be given to him came up before Morton, J.
who after hearing the parties and in view of the provisions of the
Guardianship of Infants Act, 1925 observed thus:
"...At the moment my feeling is very strong that, even
assuming in the father's favour that there is nothing in his
character or habits which would render him unfitted to have
the custody of the child, the welfare of the child requires, in
all the circumstances as they exist, that he should remain in
England for the time being..............................
9
In the present case the position is that nearly two years ago,
when the child was already in England, an interlocutory
order was made by the Divorce Court in Belgium giving the
custody of the child to the father I do not know how far, if at
all, the matter was considered on the footing of what was
best for the child at that time, or whether it was regarded as
a matter of course that the father, being the guardian by the
common law of Belgium and the applicant in the divorce
proceedings and the only parent in Belgium, should be
given the custody. I cannot regard that order as rendering
it in any way improper or contrary to the comity of nations if I
now consider, when the boy has been in this country for
nearly two years, what is in the best interests of the boy. I
do not think it would be right for the Court, exercising its
jurisdiction over a ward who is in this country, although he is
a Belgian national, blindly to follow the order made in
Belgium on October 5, 1937. I think the present case differs
from Nugent v. Vetzera {FN10}, the case that was before
Page Wood V.-C., and it is to be observed that even in that
case, and in the special circumstances of that case, the
Vice-Chancellor guarded himself against anything like
abdication of the control of this Court over its wards. It does
not appear what the Vice-Chancellor's view would have
been if there had been evidence, for example, that it would
be most detrimental to the health and well-being of the
children if they were removed from England and sent to
Austria..................................................
........I ought to give due weight to any views formed by the
Courts of the country whereof the infant is a national. But I
desire to say quite plainly that in my view this Court is
bound in every case, without exception, to treat the
welfare of its ward as being the first and paramount
consideration, whatever orders may have been made by
the Courts of any other country.".................. ..................
.............
10. In Mark T. Mc.Kee vs. Eyelyn McKee2, the Privy Council
was concerned with an appeal from the Supreme Court of Canada.
That was a case where the parents of the infant were American
2
{1951} A.C. 352
10
citizens. They were married in America and to whom a son was born
in California in July 1940. They separated in December 1940 and on
September 4, 1941, executed an agreement which provided,
inter- alia, that neither of them should remove the child out of the
United States without the written permission of the other. By a
judgment of December 17, 1942, in divorce proceedings before the
Superior Court of the State of California, the custody of the child was
awarded to the father. On August 1, 1945, following applications by
the father and the mother, the previous order as to custody was
modified to provide full custody of the child to the mother with right of
reasonable visitation to the father. Thereafter, and without the
consent or knowledge of the mother, the father went from the
United States of America with the child into the Province of Ontario.
The mother thereupon instituted habeas corpus proceedings in the
Supreme Court of Ontario seeking to have the child delivered to her.
Wells, J., before whom the matter came held that infant's best
interests would be served in the custody of his father. The Court of
Appeal for Ontario dismissed the appeal preferred by the mother.
However, the Supreme Court of Canada by majority judgment
allowed the appeal of the mother and set aside the order of custody
11
of child to the father. On appeal from the Supreme Court of Canada
at the instance of the father, the Privy Council held as follows:
"..........For, after reaffirming "the well established general
rule that in all questions relating to the custody of an infant
the paramount consideration is the welfare of the infant",
he observed that no case had been referred to which
established the proposition that, where the facts were
such as he found them to exist in the case, the salient
features of which have been stated, a parent by the simple
expedient of taking the child with him across the border into
Ontario for the sole purpose of avoiding obedience to the
judgment of the court, whose jurisdiction he himself invoked,
becomes "entitled as of right to have the whole question
retried in our courts and to have them reach a anew and
independent judgment as to what is best for the infant". and
it is, in effect, because he held that the father had no such
right that the judge allowed the appeal of the mother, and
that the Supreme Court made the order already referred to.
But with great respect to the judge, this was not the
question which had to be determined. It is possible that a
case might arise in which it appeared to a court, before
which the question of custody of an infant came, that it was
in the best interests of that infant that it should not look
beyond the circumstances in which its jurisdiction was
invoked and for that reason give effect to the foreign
judgment without further inquiry. But it is the negation of
the proposition, from which every judgment in this case has
proceeded, namely, that the infant's welfare is the
paramount consideration, to say that where the trial judge
has in his discretion thought fit not to take the drastic
course above indicated, but to examine all the
circumstances and form an independent judgment, his
decision ought for that reason to be overruled. Once it is
conceded that the court of Ontario had jurisdiction to
entertain the question of custody and that it need not blindly
follow an order made by a foreign court, the consequence
cannot be escaped that it must form an independent
judgment on the question, though in doing so it will give
proper weight to the foreign judgment. What is the proper
weight will depend on the circumstances of each case. It
may be that, if the matter comes before the court of Ontario
within a very short time of the foreign judgment and there is
no new circumstance to be considered, the weight may be
12
so great that such an order as the Supreme Court made in
this case could be justified. But if so, it would be not
because the court of Ontario, having assumed jurisdiction,
then abdicated it, but because in the exercise of its
jurisdiction it determined what was for the benefit of the
infant.
It cannot be ignored that such consequences might follow as
are suggested by Cartwright, J. The disappointed parent
might meet stratagem by stratagem and, taking the child
into the Province of Manitoba, invoke the protection of its
courts, whose duty it would then be to determine the
question of custody. That is a consideration which, with
others, must be weighed by the trial judge. It is not,
perhaps, a consideration which in the present case should
have weighed heavily.
It has been said that the weight or persuasive effect of a
foreign judgment must depend on the circumstances of
each case. In the present case there was ample reason for
the trial judge, in the first place, forming the opinion that he
should not take the drastic course of following it without
independent inquiry and, in the second place, coming to a
different conclusion as to what was for the infant's
benefit."...................................
11. The aforesaid two cases came up for consideration in
Harben vs. Harben3, wherein Sachs J. observed as follows:
"It has always been the practice of this court to
ensure that a parent should not gain advantage by the use
of fraud or force in relation to the kidnapping of children
from the care of the other spouse, save perhaps where
there is some quite overwhelming reason in the children's
interest why the status quo should not be restored by the
court before deciding further issues. In the present case I
am concerned with three young children, two of whom are
girls and the youngest is aged only three. It is a
particularly wicked thing to snatch such children from the
care of a mother, and, in saying that, I have in mind not
merely the mother's position but the harm that can be done
3
{1957} 1. W.L.R. 261
13
to the children. No affidavit of the husband tendering
either his regrets or any vestige of excuse for his action has
been proffered. Further, as I have already mentioned, when
first I asked Mr. Syms what was the nature of the case
which he might wish to make, if so minded, for depriving
these children of a mother's care, he only spoke of her
association with a certain man and never suggested that
she had in any way whatsoever failed to look after the
children properly."
12. In Kernot vs. Kernot4 , the facts were thus: In May 1961,
the plaintiff mother, an Italian lady, married an English man in Italy
where both were residents. A boy was born there on March 29, 1962.
On October 19, 1963, they obtained in Italian Court a separation
order by consent providing therein that custody of the child would
remain with father, with rights of access to the mother . On October
29, 1963, the father brought the infant to England with intention to
make England his home. The mother commenced wardship
proceedings in which she brought a motion for an order that the
father return the infant to her in Italy. She also prayed for restraint
order against him from taking the infant out of her care. Buckley, J. in
these facts held thus:
"So that even where a foreign court has made an order on
the merits - which is not the present case, because the only
order which has been made was a consent order without
any investigation of the merits by the Italian court - that
domestic court before whom the matter comes (the Ontario
4
{1965} Ch.217
14
court in the case to which I have just referred, or this court
in the case before me) is bound to consider what is in the
best interests of the infant; and although the order of the
foreign court will be attended to as one of the
circumstances to be taken into account it is not conclusive
one way or the other. How much stronger must the duty of
this court be to entertain the case where the foreign court
has not made any order based on any investigation of the
case on its merits."
13. In re H. (Infants)5, the Court of Appeal was concerned
with two American boys whose divorced parents were both citizens
of United States of America. On December 11, 1964, the Supreme
Court of New York State made a consent order directing that the
two boys whose custody had been given to the mother should be
maintained in her apartment in New York and not be removed from
a 50 miles' radius of Peekskill without the prior written consent of
the father. However, the mother in March 1965 brought these boys
to England and bought a house for herself and children in June
1965. On June 15, 1965, the New York Court ordered the children
to be returned to New York. The mother started wardship
proceedings in the English court. The father took out motion asking
the mother that the two children should be delivered into his care,
that he should be at liberty to convey them to New York and that the
wardship of the children should be discharged. The Trial Judge held
5
(1966) 1 W.L.R. 381 = (1966) 1 All.E.R. 886
15
that the justice of the case required the children to be returned
without delay to the jurisdiction of the New York court, so that the
question of where and with whom they should live might be decided
as soon as possible by that court. The mother appealed to the Court
of Appeal. Willmer L.J. and Harman L.J. by their separate judgments
affirmed the view of the Trial Judge and held that the proper order
was to send these two boys back to their State of New York, where
they belong (and where the Supreme Court is already seized of their
case), and more especially so having regard to the fact that they
have been kept in flagrant contempt of New York Court's order.
Willmer L.J. agreed with the remark of Cross J. where he said:
"The sudden and unauthorized removal of children from
one country to another is far too frequent nowadays, and as
it seems to me it is the duty of all courts in all countries to
do all they can to ensure that the wrongdoer does not gain
an advantage by his wrongdoing."
Willmer L.J. went on to hold:
"The judge took the view (and I think it was the right view)
that in a case such as the present it was not necessary to
go into all the disputed questions between the parents, but
that he ought to send these boys back to their own country
to be dealt with by the court of their own country, provided
that he was satisfied (as he was satisfied, having seen the
father himself, and having had the benefit of the view
expressed on behalf of the Official Solicitor) that they would
come to no harm if the father took them back to the United
States; and that this was so, even though it might
16
subsequently turn out, after all the merits of the case had
been thoroughly thrashed out in the court in New York, that
it would perhaps be better after all for the boys to reside in
England and see little or nothing of their father."
Harman L.J. in his separate judgment held thus:
".......But if he chose to take the course which the judge
here took in the interests of the children , as he thought, of
sending them back to the United States with no more inquiry
into the matter than to ensure, so far as he could, that there
was no danger to their moral or physical health in taking that
course, I am of opinion that he was amply justified, and that
that was the right way in which to approach the issue.
These children had been the subject of an order (it
is true made by consent) made in the courts of their own
country in December, 1964. It was only three months later
that the mother flouted that order, deceived her own
advisers and deceived the court , and brought the children
here with the object of taking them right out of their father's
life and depriving him altogether of their society. The interval
is so short that it seems to me that the court inevitably was
bound to view the matter through those spectacles; that is to
say, that the order having been made so shortly before, and
there being no difference in the circumstances in the three
months which had elapsed , there was no justification for
the course which the mother had taken, and that she was
not entitled to seek to bolster her own wrong by seeking
the assistance of this court in perpetuating that position, and
seeking to change the situation to the father's disadvantage."
14. In re. L (minors)6, the Court of Appeal was
concerned with the custody of the foreign children who were
removed from foreign jurisdiction by one parent. That was a
case where a German national domiciled and resident in
Germany married an English woman. Their matrimonial home
6
(1974) 1 All ER 913
17
was Germany and the two children were born out of the
wedlock and brought up in Germany. The lady became
unhappy in her married life and in August, 1972, she brought
her children to England with an intention of permanently
establishing herself and the children in England. She obtained
residential employment in the school in England and the
children were accommodated at the school. The children not
having returned to Germany, the father came to England to find
them. On October 25, 1972, the mother issued an originating
summons making them wards of court. The trial judge found
that the children should be brought up by their mother and
treating the case as a `kidnapping' class of case, approached
the matter by observing that in such a case where the children
were foreign children, who had moved in a foreign home, their
life should continue in what were their natural surroundings,
unless it appeared to the court that it would be harmful to the
children if they were returned. He concluded that in view of the
arrangements which their father could make for them, the
children would not be harmed by being returned. He,
accordingly, ordered that they be returned to Germany and that
18
they remain in their father's custody until further order. The
mother appealed, contending that in every case the welfare of
the child was the first and paramount consideration and that the
welfare of the children would be best served by staying with
their mother in England. Buckley, LJ in his detailed
consideration of the matter, wherein he referred to the
aforenoticed decisions and few other decisions as well, held as
follows :
".......Where the court has embarked on a full-scale
investigation of that facts, the applicable principles, in my view, do
not differ from those which apply to any other wardship case. The
action of one party in kidnapping the child is doubtless one of the
circumstances to be taken into account, any may be a
circumstance of great weight; the weight to be attributed to it must
depend on the circumstances of the particular case. The court may
conclude that notwithstanding the conduct of the `kidnapper' the
child should remain in his or her care (McKee v. McKee, Re E (an
infant) and Re. T.A. (infants), where the order was merely interim);
or it may conclude that the child should be returned to his or her
native country or the jurisdiction from which he or she has been
removed. Where a court makes a summary order for the return of a
child to a foreign country without investigating the merits, the same
principles, in my judgment apply, but the decision must be justified
on somewhat different grounds.
..............................................................................
...........The judge may well be persuaded that it would be better for
the child that those merits should be investigated in a court in his
native country than that he should spend in this country the period
which must necessarily elapse before all the evidence can be
assembled for adjudication here. Anyone who has had experience
of the exercise of this delicate jurisdiction knows what
complications can result from a child developing roots in new soil,
and what conflicts this can occasion in the child's own life. Such
roots can grow rapidly. An order that the child should be returned
forthwith to the country from which he has been removed in the
expectation that any dispute about his custody will be satisfactorily
19
resolved in the courts of that country may well be regarded as
being in the best interests of the child......"
15. In re. L. (minors)6, the Court of Appeal has made a
distinction between cases, where the court considers the facts and
fully investigates the merits of a dispute, in a wardship matter in
which the welfare of the child concerned is not the only consideration
but is the first and paramount consideration, and cases where the
court do not embark on a full-scale investigation of the facts and
make a summary order for the return of a child to a foreign country
without investigating the merits. In this regard, Buckley, L.J. noticed
what was indicated by the Privy Council in McKee v. McKee2 that
there may be cases in which it is proper for a court in one jurisdiction
to make an order directing that a child be returned to a foreign
jurisdiction without investigating the merits of the dispute relating to
the care of the child on the ground that such an order is in the best
interest of the child.
16. This Court in Smt. Surinder Kaur Sandhu v. Harbax Singh
Sandhu and Another7 was concerned with the custody of a child--
British citizen by birth--to the parents of Indian citizens, who after
7
(1984) 3 SCC 698
20
their marriage settled in England. The child was removed by the
husband from the house when the wife was in the factory where she
was working and brought him to India. The wife obtained an order
under Section 41(English) Supreme Court Act, 1981 whereby the
husband was directed to handover the custody of the boy to her. The
said order was later on confirmed by the High Court in England. The
wife then came to India and filed a writ petition under Article 226 in
the High Court praying for production and custody of the child. The
High Court dismissed her writ petition against which the wife
appealed before this Court. Y.V. Chandrachud, C.J. (as he then was)
speaking for the Court held thus :
"The modern theory of Conflict of Laws recognises and, in
any event, prefers the jurisdiction of the State which has the most
intimate contact with the issues arising in the case. Jurisdiction is
not attracted by the operation or creation of fortuitous
circumstances such as the circumstance as to where the child,
whose custody is in issue, is brought or for the time being lodged.
To allow the assumption of jurisdiction by another State in such
circumstances will only result in encouraging forum-shopping.
Ordinarily, jurisdiction must follow upon functional lines. That is to
say, for example, that in matters relating to matrimony and custody,
the law of that place must govern which has the closest concern
with the well-being of the spouses and the welfare of the offsprings
of marriage. The spouses in this case had made England their
home where this boy was born to them. The father cannot deprive
the English Court of its jurisdiction to decide upon his custody by
removing him to India, not in the normal movement of the
matrimonial home but, by an act which was gravely detrimental to
the peace of that home. The fact that the matrimonial home of the
spouses was in England, establishes sufficient contacts or ties with
that State in order to make it reasonable and just for the courts of
that State to assume jurisdiction to enforce obligations which were
21
incurred therein by the spouses. (See International Shoe Company
v. State of Washington which was not a matrimonial case but which
is regarded as the fountainhead of the subsequent developments of
jurisdictional issues like the one involved in the instant case.) It is
our duty and function to protect the wife against the burden of
litigating in an inconvenient forum which she and her husband had
left voluntarily in order to make their living in England, where they
gave birth to this unfortunate boy."
17. In Mrs. Elizabeth Dinshaw v. Arvand M. Dinshaw and
Another8, this Court held that it was the duty of courts in all countries
to see that a parent doing wrong by removing children out of the
country does not gain any advantage by his or her wrongdoing. In
para 9 of the report, this Court considered the decision of the Court of
Appeal in re H.5 and approved the same in the following words:
"9. In Re H. (infants) [(1966) 1 All ER 886] the Court of
Appeal in England had occasion to consider a somewhat similar
question. That case concerned the abduction to England of two
minor boys who were American citizens. The father was a natural-
born American citizen and the mother, though of Scottish origin,
had been resident for 20 years in the United States of America.
They were divorced in 1953 by a decree in Mexico, which
embodied provisions entrusting the custody of the two boys to the
mother with liberal access to the father. By an amendment made in
that order in December 1964, a provision was incorporated that the
boys should reside at all times in the State of New York and should
at all times be under the control and jurisdiction of the State of New
York. In March 1965, the mother removed the boys to England,
without having obtained the approval of the New York court, and
without having consulted the father; she purchased a house in
England with the intention of remaining there permanently and of
cutting off all contacts with the father. She ignored an order made in
June 1965, by the Supreme Court of New York State to return the
boys there. On a motion on notice given by the father in the
Chancery Division of the Court in England, the trial Judge Cross, J.
directed that since the children were American children and the
8
(1987) 1 SCC 42
22
American court was the proper court to decide the issue of custody,
and as it was the duty of courts in all countries to see that a parent
doing wrong by removing children out of their country did not gain
any advantage by his or her wrongdoing, the court without going
into the merits of the question as to where and with whom the
children should live, would order that the children should go back to
America. In the appeal filed against the said judgment in the Court
of Appeal, Willmer, L.J. while dismissing the appeal extracted with
approval the following passage from the judgment of Cross, J.
[(1965) 3 All ER at p. 912. (Ed. : Source of the second quoted para
could not be traced.)]:
"The sudden and unauthorised removal of children from one
country to another is far too frequent nowadays, and as it
seems to me, it is the duty of all courts in all countries to do
all they can to ensure that the wrongdoer does not gain an
advantage by his wrongdoing.
The courts in all countries ought, as I see it, to be careful not
to do anything to encourage this tendency. This substitution
of self-help for due process of law in this field can only harm
the interests of wards generally, and a Judge should, as I
see it, pay regard to the orders of the proper foreign court
unless he is satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that to do so
would inflict serious harm on the child."
10. With respect we are in complete agreement with the aforesaid
enunciation of the principles of law to be applied by the courts in
situations such as this."
18. In the case of Dhanwanti Joshi v. Madhav Unde9, this
Court was again concerned with the matter relating to removal of a
child from one country to another contrary to custody order of the
court from where the child was removed. This court considered
English decisions, inter alia, McKee v. McKee2 and H. (infants), re.5
and also noticed the decision of this Court in Mrs. Elizabeth Dinshaw8
and observed as follows :
9
(1998) 1 SCC 112
23
"28. The leading case in this behalf is the one rendered by
the Privy Council in 1951, in McKee v. McKee [(1951) AC 352]. In
that case, the parties, who were American citizens, were married in
USA in 1933 and lived there till December 1946. But they had
separated in December 1940. On 17-12-1941, a decree of divorce
was passed in USA and custody of the child was given to the father
and later varied in favour of the mother. At that stage, the father
took away the child to Canada. In habeas corpus proceedings by
the mother, though initially the decisions of lower courts went
against her, the Supreme Court of Canada gave her custody but
the said Court held that the father could not have the question of
custody retried in Canada once the question was adjudicated in
favour of the mother in the USA earlier. On appeal to the Privy
Council, Lord Simonds held that in proceedings relating to custody
before the Canadian Court, the welfare and happiness of the infant
was of paramount consideration and the order of a foreign court in
USA as to his custody can be given due weight in the
circumstances of the case, but such an order of a foreign court was
only one of the facts which must be taken into consideration. It was
further held that it was the duty of the Canadian Court to form an
independent judgment on the merits of the matter in regard to the
welfare of the child. The order of the foreign court in US would yield
to the welfare of the child. "Comity of courts demanded not its
enforcement, but its grave consideration". This case arising from
Canada which lays down the law for Canada and U.K. has been
consistently followed in latter cases. This view was reiterated by the
House of Lords in J v. C (1970 AC 668). This is the law also in USA
(see 24 American Jurisprudence, para 1001) and Australia. (See
Khamis v. Khamis [(1978) 4 Fam LR 410 (Full Court) (Aus)].
29. However, there is an apparent contradiction between the above
view and the one expressed in H. (infants), Re[(1966) 1 All ER 886]
and in E. (an infant), Re [(1967) 1 All ER 881] to the effect that the
court in the country to which the child is removed will send back the
child to the country from which the child has been removed. This
apparent conflict was explained and resolved by the Court of
Appeal in 1974 in L. (minors) (wardship : jurisdiction), Re [(1974) 1
All ER 913, CA] and in R. (minors) (wardship : jurisdiction), Re
[(1981) 2 FLR 416 (CA)]. It was held by the Court of Appeal in L.,
Re [(1974) 1 All ER 913, CA] that the view in McKee v. McKee
[1951 A.C. 352 : (1951) All ER 942] is still the correct view and that
the limited question which arose in the latter decisions was whether
the court in the country to which the child was removed could
conduct (a) a summary inquiry or (b) an elaborate inquiry on the
question of custody. In the case of (a) a summary inquiry, the court
would return custody to the country from which the child was
24
removed unless such return could be shown to be harmful to the
child. In the case of (b) an elaborate inquiry, the court could go into
the merits as to where the permanent welfare lay and ignore the
order of the foreign court or treat the fact of removal of the child
from another country as only one of the circumstances. The crucial
question as to whether the Court (in the country to which the child
is removed) would exercise the summary or elaborate procedure is
to be determined according to the child's welfare. The summary
jurisdiction to return the child is invoked, for example, if the child
had been removed from its native land and removed to another
country where, maybe, his native language is not spoken, or the
child gets divorced from the social customs and contacts to which
he has been accustomed, or if its education in his native land is
interrupted and the child is being subjected to a foreign system of
education, -- for these are all acts which could psychologically
disturb the child. Again the summary jurisdiction is exercised only if
the court to which the child has been removed is moved promptly
and quickly, for in that event, the Judge may well be persuaded that
it would be better for the child that those merits should be
investigated in a court in his native country on the expectation that
an early decision in the native country could be in the interests of
the child before the child could develop roots in the country to
which he had been removed. Alternatively, the said court might
think of conducting an elaborate inquiry on merits and have regard
to the other facts of the case and the time that has lapsed after the
removal of the child and consider if it would be in the interests of
the child not to have it returned to the country from which it had
been removed. In that event, the unauthorised removal of the child
from the native country would not come in the way of the court in
the country to which the child has been removed, to ignore the
removal and independently consider whether the sending back of
the child to its native country would be in the paramount interests of
the child. (See Rayden & Jackson, 15th Edn., 1988, pp. 1477-79;
Bromley, Family law, 7th Edn., 1987.) In R. (minors) (wardship :
jurisdiction), Re [(1981) 2 FLR 416 (CA)] it has been firmly held
that the concept of forum conveniens has no place in wardship
jurisdiction.
30. We may here state that this Court in Elizabeth Dinshaw v.
Arvand M. Dinshaw [(1987) 1 SCC 42 : 1987 SCC (Crl.) 13] while
dealing with a child removed by the father from USA contrary to the
custody orders of the US Court directed that the child be sent back
to USA to the mother not only because of the principle of comity but
also because, on facts, -- which were independently considered --
it was in the interests of the child to be sent back to the native
State. There the removal of the child by the father and the mother's
25
application in India were within six months. In that context, this
Court referred to H. (infants), Re which case, as pointed out by us
above has been explained in L. Re as a case where the Court
thought it fit to exercise its summary jurisdiction in the interests of
the child. Be that as it may, the general principles laid down in
McKee v. McKee and J v. C and the distinction between summary
and elaborate inquiries as stated in L. (infants), Re are today well
settled in UK, Canada, Australia and the USA. The same principles
apply in our country. Therefore nothing precludes the Indian courts
from considering the question on merits, having regard to the delay
from 1984 -- even assuming that the earlier orders passed in India
do not operate as constructive res judicata."
However, in view of the fact that the child had lived with his
mother in India for nearly twelve years, this Court held that it would
not exercise a summary jurisdiction to return the child to United
States of America on the ground that its removal from USA in 1984
was contrary to orders of U.S. Courts. It was also held that whenever
a question arises before a court pertaining to the custody of a minor
child, matter is to be decided not on considerations of the legal rights
of the parties but on the sole and predominant criterion of what would
best serve the interest of the minor.
19. In the case of Sarita Sharma v. Sushil Sharma10, this
Court was seized with a matter where the mother had removed the
children from U.S.A. despite the order of the American Court. It was
held :
10
(2000) 3 SCC 14
26
"6. Therefore, it will not be proper to be guided entirely by
the fact that the appellant Sarita had removed the children from
U.S.A. despite the order of the Court of that country. So also, in
view of the facts and circumstances of the case, the decree passed
by the American Court though a relevant factor, cannot override the
consideration of welfare of the minor children. We have already
stated earlier that in U.S.A. respondent Sushil is staying along with
his mother aged about 80 years. There is no one else in the family.
The respondent appears to be in the habit of taking excessive
alcohol. Though it is true that both the children have American
citizenship and there is a possibility that in U.S.A they may be able
to get better education, it is doubtful if the respondent will be in a
position to take proper care of the children when they are so young.
Out of them, one is a female child. She is aged about 5 years.
Ordinarily, a female child should be allowed to remain with the
mother so that she can be properly looked after. It is also not
desirable that two children are separated from each other. If a
female child has to stay with the mother, it will be in the interest of
both the children that they both stay with the mother. Here in India
also proper care of the children is taken and they are at present
studying in good schools. We have not found the appellant wanting
in taking proper care of the children. Both the children have a
desire to stay with the mother. At the same time it must be said that
the son, who is elder then the daughter, has good feelings for his
father also. Considering all the aspects relating to the welfare of the
children, we are of the opinion that in spite of the order passed by
the Court in U.S.A. it was not proper for the High Court to have
allowed the habeas corpus writ petition and directed the appellant
to hand over custody of the children to the respondent and permit
him to take them away to U.S.A. What would be in the interest of
the children requires a full and thorough inquiry and, therefore, the
High Court should have directed the respondent to initiate
appropriate proceedings in which such an inquiry can be held. Still
there is some possibility of the mother returning to U.S.A. in the
interest of the children. Therefore, we do not desire to say anything
more regarding entitlement of the custody of the children. The
chances of the appellant returning to U.S.A. with the children would
depend upon the joint efforts of the appellant and the respondent to
get the arrest warrant cancelled by explaining to the Court in U.S.A.
the circumstances under which she had left U.S.A. with the children
without taking permission of the Court. There is a possibility that
both of them may thereafter be able to approach the Court which
passed the decree to suitably modify the order with respect to the
custody of the children and visitation rights."
27
20. While dealing with a case of custody of a child removed
by a parent from one country to another in contravention to the orders
of the court where the parties had set up their matrimonial home, the
court in the country to which child has been removed must first
consider the question whether the court could conduct an elaborate
enquiry on the question of custody or by dealing with the matter
summarily order a parent to return custody of the child to the country
from which the child was removed and all aspects relating to child's
welfare be investigated in a court in his own country. Should the court
take a view that an elaborate enquiry is necessary, obviously the
court is bound to consider the welfare and happiness of the child as
the paramount consideration and go into all relevant aspects of
welfare of child including stability and security, loving and
understanding care and guidance and full development of the child's
character, personality and talents. While doing so, the order of a
foreign court as to his custody may be given due weight; the weight
and persuasive effect of a foreign judgment must depend on the
circumstances of each case. However, in a case where the court
decides to exercise its jurisdiction summarily to return the child to his
own country, keeping in view the jurisdiction of the Court in the native
28
country which has the closest concern and the most intimate contact
with the issues arising in the case, the court may leave the aspects
relating to the welfare of the child to be investigated by the court in
his own native country as that could be in the best interest of the
child. The indication given in McKee v. McKee2 that there may be
cases in which it is proper for a court in one jurisdiction to make an
order directing that a child be returned to a foreign jurisdiction without
investigating the merits of the dispute relating to the care of the child
on the ground that such an order is in the best interest of the child
has been explained in re. L (minors)6 and the said view has been
approved by this Court in Dhanwanti Joshi9. Similar view taken by the
Court of Appeal in re. H5 has been approved by this Court in
Elizabeth Dinshaw8.
21. Do the facts and circumstances of the present case
warrant an elaborate enquiry into the question of custody of minor
Adithya and should the parties be relegated to the said procedure
before appropriate forum in this country in this regard? In our
judgment, this is not required. Admittedly, Adithya is an American
citizen, born and brought up in United States of America. He has
spent his initial years there. The natural habitat of Adithya is in United
29
States of America. As a matter of fact, keeping in view the welfare
and happiness of the child and in his best interest, the parties have
obtained series of consent orders concerning his custody/parenting
rights, maintenance etc. from the competent courts of jurisdiction in
America. Initially, on April 18, 2005, a consent order governing the
issues of custody and guardianship of minor Adithya was passed by
the New York State Supreme Court whereunder the court granted
joint custody of the child to the petitioner and respondent no. 6 and it
was stipulated in the order to keep the other party informed about the
whereabouts of the child. In a separation agreement entered into
between the parties on July 28, 2005, the consent order dated April
18, 2005 regarding custody of minor son Adithya continued. In
September 8, 2005 order whereby the marriage between the
petitioner and respondent no. 6 was dissolved by the New York State
Supreme Court, again the child custody order dated April 18, 2005
was incorporated. Then the petitioner and respondent no. 6 agreed
for modification of the custody order and, accordingly, the Family
Court of the State of New York on June 18, 2007 ordered that the
parties shall share joint legal and physical custody of the minor
Adithya and, in this regard, a comprehensive arrangement in respect
30
of the custody of the child has been made. The fact that all orders
concerning the custody of the minor child Adithya have been passed
by American courts by consent of the parties shows that the
objections raised by respondent no. 6 in counter affidavit about
deprivation of basic rights of the child by the petitioner in the past;
failure of petitioner to give medication to the child; denial of education
to the minor child; deprivation of stable environment to the minor
child; and child abuse are hollow and without any substance. The
objection raised by the respondent no. 6 in the counter affidavit that
the American courts which passed the order/decree had no
jurisdiction and being inconsistent to Indian laws cannot be executed
in India also prima facie does not seem to have any merit since
despite the fact that the respondent no. 6 has been staying in India
for more than two years, she has not pursued any legal proceeding
for the sole custody of the minor Adithya or for declaration that the
orders passed by the American courts concerning the custody of
minor child Adithya are null and void and without jurisdiction. Rather
it transpires from the counter affidavit that initially respondent no. 6
initiated the proceedings under Guardianship and Wards Act but later
on withdrew the same. The facts and circumstances noticed above
31
leave no manner of doubt that merely because the child has been
brought to India by respondent no. 6, the custody issue concerning
minor child Adithya does not deserve to be gone into by the courts in
India and it would be in accord with principles of comity as well as on
facts to return the child back to the United States of America from
where he has been removed and enable the parties to establish the
case before the courts in the native State of the child, i.e. United
States of America for modification of the existing custody orders.
There is nothing on record which may even remotely suggest that it
would be harmful for the child to be returned to his native country.
22. It is true that child Adithya has been in India for almost
two years since he was removed by the mother--respondent no. 6
--contrary to the custody orders of the U.S. court passed by consent
of the parties. It is also true that one of the factors to be kept in mind
in exercise of summary jurisdiction in the interest of child is that
application for custody/return of the child is made promptly and
quickly after the child has been removed. This is so because any
delay may result in child developing roots in the country to which he
has been removed. From the counter affidavit that has been filed by
respondent no. 6, it is apparent that in last two years child Adithya did
32
not have education at one place. He has moved from one school to
another. He was admitted in school at Dehradun by respondent no. 6
but then removed within few months. In the month of June, 2009, the
child has been admitted in some school at Chennai. As a matter of
fact, the minor child Adithya and respondent no. 6 could not be traced
and their whereabouts could not be found for more than two years
since the notice was issued by this Court. The respondent no. 6 and
the child has been moving from one State to another. The parents of
respondent no. 6 have filed an affidavit before this Court denying any
knowledge or awareness of the whereabouts of respondent no. 6 and
minor child Adithya ever since they left in September, 2007. In these
circumstances, there has been no occasion for the child developing
roots in this country. Moreover, the present habeas corpus petition
has been filed by the petitioner promptly and without any delay, but
since the respondent no. 6 has been moving from one State to
another and her whereabouts were not known, the notice could not
be served and child could not be produced for more than two years.
23. In a case such as the present one, we are satisfied that
return of minor Adithya to United States of America, for the time
being, from where he has been removed and brought here would be
33
in the best interest of the child and also such order is justified in view
of the assurances given by the petitioner that he would bear all the
traveling expenses and make living arrangements for respondent no.
6 in the United Sates of America till the necessary orders are passed
by the competent court; that the petitioner would comply with the
custody/parenting rights as per consent order dated June 18, 2007 till
such time as the competent court in United States of America takes a
further decision; that the petitioner will request that the warrants
against respondent no. 6 be dropped; that the petitioner will not file or
pursue any criminal charges for violation by respondent no. 6 of the
consent order in the United States of America and that if any
application is filed by respondent no. 6 in the competent court in
United States of America, the petitioner shall cooperate in expeditious
hearing of such application. The petitioner has also stated that he has
obtained confirmation from Martha Hunt Elementary School, Murphy,
Texas, 75094, that minor son Adithya will be admitted to school
forthwith.
24. The learned Senior Counsel for respondent no. 6 sought
to raise an objection regarding the maintainability of habeas corpus
petition under Article 32 of the Constitution before this Court but we
34
are not persuaded to accept the same. Suffice it to say that in the
peculiar facts and circumstances of the case which have already
been noticed above and the order that we intend to pass, invocation
of jurisdiction of this Court under Article 32 cannot be said to be
inappropriate.
25. We record our appreciation for the work done by the
concerned officers/officials of CBI in tracing the minor child Adithya
and producing him in less than two months of the order passed by
this Court, although, the Police Officers and Officials of different
States failed in tracing the child Adithya and respondent no. 6 for
more than two years. But for the earnest efforts on the part of the CBI
authorities, it would not have been possible for this Court to hear and
decide this habeas corpus petition involving the sensitive issue
concerning a child of seven years who is a foreign national.
26. In the result and for the reasons stated, we pass the
following order :
(i) The respondent no. 6 shall act as per the consent
order dated June 18, 2007 passed by the Family Court of the
State of New York till such time any further order is passed on
35
the petition that may be moved by the parties henceforth and,
accordingly, she will take the child Adithya of her own to the
United States of America within fifteen days from today and
report to that court.
(ii) The petitioner shall bear all the traveling expenses
of the respondent no. 6 and minor child Adithya and make
arrangements for the residence of respondent no. 6 in the
United States of America till further orders are passed by the
competent court.
(iii) The petitioner shall request the authorities that the
warrants against respondent no. 6 be dropped. He shall not file
or pursue any criminal charges for violation by respondent no. 6
of the consent order in the United States of America.
(iv) The respondent no. 6 shall furnish her address and
contact number in India to the CBI authorities and also inform
them in advance the date and flight details of her departure
along with child Adithya for United States of America.
(v) In the event of respondent no. 6 not taking the child
Adithya of her own to United States of America within fifteen
days from today, child Adithya with his passport shall be
36
restored to the custody of the petitioner to be taken to United
States of America. The child will be a ward of the concerned
court that passed the consent order dated June 18, 2007. It will
be open to respondent no. 6 to move that court for a review of
the custody of the child, if so advised.
(vi) The parties shall bear their own costs.
..................
......J (Tarun Chatterjee)
...................
.....J
(R. M. Lodha)
........................J
(Dr. B.S. Chauhan)
New Delhi
November 17, 2009.
37