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Eastman v Jones [2024] NZHC 2724 (20 September 2024)
Last Updated: 17 October 2024
NOTE: PURSUANT TO S 139 OF THE CARE OF CHILDREN ACT 2004, ANY REPORT OF
THIS PROCEEDING MUST COMPLY WITH SS 11B, 11C AND 11D OF THE
FAMILY COURT ACT
1980. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION,
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND AUCKLAND REGISTRY
I TE KŌTI MATUA O AOTEAROA TĀMAKI MAKAURAU ROHE
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CIV-2024-404-296 [2024] NZHC 2724
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UNDER
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the Care of Children Act 2004
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IN THE MATTER
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of an application for leave to appeal under s 143(2) of the Care of
Children Act 2004
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BETWEEN
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EASTMAN
Appellant
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AND
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JONES
Respondent
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Hearing:
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5 September 2024
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Appearances:
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P Cobcroft for Appellant W Mihitea for Respondent
E Stenhouse-White as Lawyer for Child
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Judgment:
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20 September 2024
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JUDGMENT OF BLANCHARD J
This judgment was delivered by me on Friday, 20
September 2024 at 11:00 am pursuant to r 11.5 of the High Court Rules
2016.
Registrar/Deputy Registrar
Solicitors: Sutcliffe Matson Law, Auckland Counsel: W Mihitea, Manukau City,
Auckland
E Stenhouse-White, Auckland
P Cobcroft, Auckland
EASTMAN v JONES [2024] NZHC 2724 [20 September 2024]
- [1] Mr Eastman
appeals against a decision of Judge P S Ginnen dated 7 January 2024 in the
Family Court.1 The decision relates to his and Ms Jones’s
seven-year-old daughter, Amelia. Specifically, it concerns what parenting orders
should be made in relation to Amelia and what school she should
attend.
Amelia’s situation at the time of the Family Court
hearing
- [2] Amelia
is the parties’ only child. The parties separated in 2018 when she was not
quite two years old. Following the separation,
it was agreed that her care
should be shared between them on a week about basis. This arrangement was
formalised in parenting orders
made by the Family Court by consent in June
2021.
- [3] From the
beginning of 2022 Amelia attended EA School in an East Beach Suburb. Her parents
both lived close to the school.
- [4] Both parties
entered new relationships. Mr Eastman continued to live near the school, but at
the beginning of 2023, Ms Jones moved
to a Northern Beach suburb to live with
her new partner.
- [5] During 2023,
Amelia continued to attend EA School. This meant that, in the weeks she was in
Ms Jones’s care, each school
day she had a roughly two-hour drive to and
from school.
- [6] As
Amelia’s commute was unsustainable, and the parties could not agree on
what to do about it, Mr Eastman applied to the
Family Court. He applied for
directions to resolve a dispute between guardians pursuant to s 46R of the Care
of Children Act 2004
(the Act). He also applied under s 56 of the Act to vary
the June 2021 orders. Mr Eastman sought an order that Amelia continue to
attend
EA School and new parenting orders that would see Amelia living significantly
more time in the East Beach Suburb and significantly
less time in the Northern
Beach suburb. Specifically, the orders sought were that during the school
term:
1 [Eastman] v [Jones] [2024] NZFC 6.
(a) Amelia would be in Mr Eastman’s day-to-day care from Sunday to Friday
each week;
(b) she would be in Ms Jones’s care from Friday to Sunday three out of
four weekends; and
(c) she would be in Mr Eastman’s care one weekend per month.
- [7] Ms Jones
opposed the applications. She sought an order that Amelia attend HC School and
new parenting orders that were the mirror
opposite of those sought by Mr
Eastman.
- [8] The courts
are required to have regard to Amelia’s views.2
Ms Stenhouse-White was appointed as lawyer for the child. She filed
memoranda indicating that Amelia did not wish to reduce the amount
of time she
had in each parent’s care. She wanted to continue to spend an equal amount
of time with each of her parents. She
liked attending EA School and had no basis
to have a view about HC School as she had never attended the school.
The Family Court hearing
- [9] As
Amelia’s situation was unsustainable, the hearing in the Family Court
needed to take place as soon as possible. This
had two consequences. First, the
hearing went ahead without the benefit of a report under s 133 of the Act.
Normally in a case like
this a report would be obtained from a psychologist, but
at the time there was a delay of around 18 months for a report of this kind.
The
parties agreed that it was not in Amelia’s interests to delay the hearing
and went ahead without obtaining a s 133 report.
- [10] The second
consequence of the urgency was that the hearing was a short cause fixture of
half a day. A half day hearing is considered
a short hearing for applications of
this kind. The parties were cross-examined, but notes of evidence are not
recorded
2 Care of Children Act 2004, ss 5(g) and 6.
for short cause hearings. Accordingly, the notes of evidence were not available
at the hearing before me.
- [11] At the
hearing in the Family Court Ms Stenhouse-White proposed alternative parenting
orders to the ones sought by the parties.
She proposed what is referred to as a
3:4:4:3 arrangement. Under this arrangement Amelia’s care would have been
provided on
an alternating fortnight basis with her being in the care of one
parent from Wednesday to Sunday in week one and Wednesday to Saturday
in week
two, and in the care of her other parent from Sunday to Wednesday in week one
and Saturday to Wednesday in week two.
- [12] Once this
arrangement had been suggested, Mr Eastman changed his position so that he too
was proposing a 3:4:4:3 arrangement.
- [13] The
advantage of the 3:4:4:3 arrangement was that it would see Amelia spending an
equal amount of time with each parent. However,
the disadvantage was that it
would not reduce Amelia’s travel time getting to and from school. It would
also mean that her
weekends would be split between her parents.
The Family Court decision
- [14] The
Judge’s starting point was to ask herself which school Amelia should
attend. Having decided that question, she then
asked herself what parenting
orders should be made.3
- [15] The Judge
made several uncontentious, but important factual findings. First, the existing
arrangement was unsustainable. The
long commute from the Northern Beach suburb
to school was taking its toll on Amelia.4 Second, both parents
provided excellent care of Amelia.5 Third, both schools were good.
Amelia would get a quality education at either school. This was a neutral
factor.6
3 [Eastman] v [Jones], above n 1, at [5].
4 At [4].
5 At [8].
6 At [10].
- [16] The Judge
went on to consider three other factors that she appeared to view as neutral.
First, staying at EA School would mean
that Amelia would have continuity in her
education. The Judge noted that Amelia had friendships and relationships with
teachers and
the school environment and routines were familiar. The Judge said
this was important as children do not do well when they change
schools
frequently. However, what was proposed was one change of school, not frequent
changes of schools. The Judge considered that
Amelia was resilient and
well-supported and would likely settle well enough into a new
school.7
- [17] The second
factor was Amelia’s relationships with her stepsiblings. The Judge noted
Amelia’s close relationship with
her stepbrother Enzo, who is the same age
as her and also attended EA School. The Judge noted that one of Amelia’s
teachers
had thought they were twins. However, she also mentioned Amelia’s
stepsiblings in the Northern Beach suburb and noted that
Amelia seems to get on
well with all her large family.8
- [18] The third
factor the Judge discussed was which parent was better able to support Amelia in
extra-curricular activities. Both
parents thought they were better able to do
so. But the Judge did not seem to prefer one party’s position over the
other.9
- [19] The Judge
then turned to what she referred to as the main difference between
Amelia’s parents’ households. This was
that, when Amelia lived with
her father, she attended after school care, and when she lived with her mother,
she did not.10
- [20] Mr Eastman
said in his affidavit evidence that he and his partner worked fulltime and would
usually collect Amelia and her stepbrother
from after school care by 5.30 pm. In
contrast, Ms Jones was not working at the time because she had sprained her
shoulder and she
envisaged that, when she returned to work, she would be working
part time from 10 am to 2 pm, so she would be able to collect Amelia
from school
at 3 pm. The Judge considered that attending after school care regularly made
for a long school day, and said that, if
Amelia spent all her school weeks
living with
7 At [11].
8 At [12].
9 At [14].
10 At [15].
her father, she may attend after school care twice as much as she was under the
existing arrangement.11
- [21] Mr Eastman
modified his position in his affidavit evidence when he gave evidence orally. He
said that he and his partner could
adjust their working hours so that they could
collect Amelia earlier from after school care and some days directly from
school. His
lawyer attached letters from Mr Eastman’s and his
partner’s employers to further submissions filed after the hearing.
The
letters said that they could each have some flexibility to attend to family
duties. However, the Judge did not put any weight
on this as she regarded the
suggested flexibility as untested.12
- [22] Ultimately,
the Judge concluded in a “finally balanced decision” that moving
Amelia to HC School and her being in
the care of her mother for most of the
school week was the best option for her.13
- [23] As the
Judge had already decided that the parenting orders would follow the decision
regarding which school Amelia should attend,
the discussion regarding what
parenting orders should be made was brief.14
- [24] The Judge
said that she was not drawn to an arrangement that saw Amelia’s weekends
split between her parents.15 Although the Judge did not directly
refer to the 3:4:4:3 arrangement here, it seems that this is what she had in
mind.
- [25] The result
was that the Judge made the parenting orders sought by Ms
Jones.16
Events since the Family Court hearing
- [26] The
hearing in the Family Court took place on 5 October 2023. The Judge’s
decision was released on 7 January 2024. Amelia
has attended the whole of the
2024 school year so far at HC School.
11 At [17].
12 At [17].
13 At [18]–[19].
14 At [20]–[22].
15 At [21].
16 At [23(d)].
- [27] Ms
Stenhouse-White’s submissions for the hearing before me provided an update
on Amelia’s views. In short, Amelia’s
“clear view” is
that she would like the current arrangement to remain in place.
Appeal legal principles
- [28] This
is a general appeal. The appellant bears the onus of satisfying the appellate
court that it should differ from the decision
under appeal. It is only if the
appellate court considers that the appealed decision is wrong that it is
justified in interfering
with it. The lower court may have had a particular
advantage (such as technical expertise or the opportunity to assess the
credibility
of witnesses, where such assessment is important). The appellate
court may take the view that it has no basis for rejecting the reasoning
of the
court appealed from and that its decision should stand. But it has the
responsibility of considering the merits of the case
afresh, and the weight it
gives to the reasoning of the court below is a matter for the appellate
court’s assessment. The appellant
is entitled to a judgment in accordance
with the opinion of the appellate court, even where that opinion involves an
assessment of
fact and degree and entails a value
judgement.17
- [29] An appeal
against a decision of the Family Court under s 56 of the Act varying parenting
orders is available as of right. Leave
is required to appeal against a decision
of the Court under s 46R.18 However, where a decision of the Family
Court has long-term implications for the welfare of a child, leave may readily
be granted.19
Sections 4 and 5 of the Act
- [30] Under
s 4, the welfare and best interests of the child in his or her particular
circumstances must be “the first and paramount
consideration”. To
that end, the Court must take into account the principles in s 5.
- Austin,
Nichols & Co Inc v Stichting Lodestar [2007] NZSC 103, [2008] 2 NZLR 141
at [4], [5] and [16]; Kacem v Bashir [2010] NZSC 112, [2011] 2 NZLR 1 at
[31] and [32].
18 Care of Children Act, s 143(2).
- SFB
v JEBH [2015] NZHC 2897 at [8(c)]; BFW v MPG [2012] NZHC 1188 at
[23]; and Drake v Drake [2023] NZHC 2390 at [66].
- [31] Of
particular relevance in this case are the principles in s 5(d) that the child
“should have continuity in his or her
care, development, and
upbringing” and in s 5(e) that the child “should continue to have a
relationship with both of
his or her parents, and that a child’s
relationship with both his or her family group, whānau, hapū, or iwi
should
be preserved and strengthened”.
Leave to appeal
- [32] Ms
Mihitea, for Ms Jones, opposed leave. However, in my view, leave clearly should
be granted. The decision regarding what school
Amelia attends will have long-
term implications for her welfare. Further, the decisions regarding what
parenting orders should be
made and what school she should attend are
interlinked. It would not be sensible to consider one and not the
other.
Abandonment of support for the 3:4:4:3 arrangement
- [33] The
problem with the 3:4:4:3 arrangement is that it would result in Amelia being
subjected to just as much driving time as the
original week about arrangement
that everyone agreed was unsustainable. For this reason, Ms Stenhouse-White is
no longer in favour
of this arrangement, and, at the hearing, Ms Cobcroft, for
Mr Eastman, advised me that Mr Eastman no longer supports it. He instead
seeks
the orders that he originally sought in the Family Court, that is, orders that
are the mirror opposite of those made by the
Family Court.
Alleged errors in the Family Court decision
- [34] Ms
Cobcroft argued that the decision of the Family Court was not in Amelia’s
welfare and best interests. She submitted
that the Judge erred because she did
not give proper consideration to the principles in s 5(d) and (e) of the Act. In
particular,
the Judge put too much weight on the issue of after school care and
too little weight on:
(a) The disruption to Amelia’s relationships and routines that would
result from changing school.
(b) The fact that Amelia currently attended school with Enzo and would continue
to do so for the remainder of their education. However,
with
the change of school, Amelia would not have any members of her family attend
school with her until her final year of high school.
(c) The impact that the new arrangement would have on her relationship with her
father, stepbrother and stepmother.
Status of Amelia’s views
- [35] Before
I go any further, I need to consider a preliminary point. The section of Ms
Stenhouse-White’s submissions that discusses
Amelia’s current views
includes the following statement:
Amelia said that “I barely get time with mum” and said she
only sees her mother on Wednesdays and for one weekend per month, due to her
mother’s work commitments.
From Amelia’s perspective she is
transported to and from school, and cared for before and after school, by her
step-grandmother,
other than on Wednesdays when her mother has the day off
work.
- [36] Ms Cobcroft
submitted that this is evidence showing that there has been a material change of
circumstances since the Family
Court hearing. At that time, Ms Jones was
not working at all and she envisaged that, when she recovered from injury, she
would
only be working part time and would be able to be with Amelia after
school. Now she appears to be working full time and spending
little time with
Amelia.
- [37] Although
the statements are hearsay, the admissibility of evidence in proceedings under
the Act is not subject to the admissibility
requirements of the Evidence Act
2006.20 I have had regard to these statements insofar as they express
Amelia’s views but I do not consider them beyond that. There may
be issues
as to their factual accuracy because of Amelia’s age and there was no
opportunity for Ms Jones to file evidence
in response. I therefore do not
consider the statements to be of assistance in determining the appeal.
- [38] If Mr
Eastman considers there has been a material change of circumstances, he can seek
leave under s 139A of the Act to make
a further application to the
Family
20 Family Court Act 1980, s 12A(3)(e) and (4) which provide that
“the court hearing the proceeding may receive any evidence, whether
or not
admissible under the Evidence Act 2006, that the court considers may assist it
to determine the proceeding”. See also
Roberts v Cresswell [2023]
NZCA 36, [2023] NZFLR 364 at [143].
Court for variation of the parenting orders. If he has evidence that Ms Jones is
now working long hours, he can support his application
with that evidence.
However, because of the lack of reliable evidence demonstrating otherwise, I
proceed to determine this appeal
on the same basis as the Judge — that is,
Ms Jones will collect Amelia and care for her after school.
Decision
- [39] The
Judge did not specifically mention s 5(d) and (e) of the Act. However, she did
expressly say that in reaching her decisions,
both in relation to what school
Amelia should attend and what parenting orders should be made, she had
considered the principles
in s 5. My clear impression from the discussion in the
decision is that the Judge did have regard to the principles in both s 5(d)
and
(e). Accordingly, this is not a case where the Court failed to have any regard
to relevant principles. Rather the issues are
whether she had sufficient regard
to them and whether her overall conclusions were in Amelia’s welfare and
best interests.
- [40] For the
reasons below, I have concluded that the Judge did have sufficient regard to the
relevant principles and her overall
conclusions were in Amelia’s welfare
and best interests.
- [41] The Judge
had a difficult decision to make. There were two main reasons for this. First,
because there was no s 133 report, the
Judge had less information available to
her than would normally be the case.
- [42] It was
suggested to me during the hearing that, if I reach the point where I have
concluded that the Judge made errors and I
am deciding whether I should allow
the appeal and, if so, whether I should make new orders or send the matter back
to the Family
Court, I can direct that a s 133 report is prepared and consider
that report before making my decision. I am not sure this is correct.
But, as I
have concluded that the Judge did not make any errors, this is not something I
need to decide.
- [43] The second
reason the Judge had a difficult decision to make was that it was agreed that it
was unsustainable for Amelia to continue
to spend equal time with each parent,
that both parents provided excellent care, and that both schools were
equally
good. This meant that the Judge was going to need to make a decision that would
favour one parent over the other on a reasonably
narrow basis.
- [44] Whatever
decision the Judge made, Amelia was going to end up spending significantly more
time with one parent and significantly
less with the other. The new arrangement
was therefore necessarily going to have an impact on Amelia’s relationship
with one
of her parents and that parent’s side of the family. As it turned
out, the Judge decided that Amelia should spend more time
with her mother and so
the impact of the new arrangement was on her relationship with her father and
his side of the family. However,
had she decided that Amelia should spend more
time with her father, there would have been an equivalent impact on her mother
and
her mother’s side of the family.
- [45] For this
reason, I do not think that it advances matters for Mr Eastman to say in a
general way that the Judge was in error because
she put too little weight on the
impact the new arrangement would have on her relationship with her father,
stepbrother and stepmother.
To make headway, Mr Eastman needed to go further and
identify a particular and disproportionate impact on himself or his side of
the
family. I was not referred to any evidence to suggest that there might be an
impact of that kind.
- [46] Having
reached this point, I am left having to weigh, on the one hand, the disadvantage
of Amelia having to change schools and
the impact of not attending school with
Enzo, with, on the other hand, the advantage of Amelia not having to attend
after school
care. It is not easy to weigh these matters against each other. I
agree with the Judge that this is a finely balanced decision.
- [47] Ms Cobcroft
argued that changing Amelia’s school conflicted with the principle in s
5(d). I agree that a change of school
necessarily involves a break in
continuity. However, plainly it is not the case that all change has to be
avoided. Maintenance of
the status quo is just one factor the court must
consider when assessing Amelia’s welfare and best
interests.21
- Clapham
v Clapham [1993] NZFLR 408 (CA) at 410; and GJD v MTG [Care of Children]
[2008] NZFLR 880 at [15]–[16].
- [48] I agree
with the Judge that, while frequent changes of school may be harmful and should
be avoided, one change of school was
not a significant concern, particularly for
a resilient and well-supported child like Amelia.
- [49] Ms Cobcroft
also argued that Amelia not being able to continue school with Enzo conflicted
with the principle in s 5(e). But,
this principle does not mean that any change
necessarily must be avoided. Again, the impact of any change on Amelia’s
relationship
with either side of her family is just one factor to weigh in the
assessment of her welfare and best interests.
- [50] I certainly
agree that Amelia not being able to attend school with Enzo is a disadvantage of
her changing schools. However, I
think the Judge was right not to see this as
decisive. Many children do not have siblings at school with them and suffer no
ill effects.
Amelia and Enzo will continue to see each other out of school. They
will spend significantly less time together, but I am sure they
will continue to
have a strong relationship.
- [51] I now turn
to the issue of after school care. In my view, it was reasonable for the Judge
to discount the evidence that Mr Eastman
and his partner may have some
flexibility to collect Amelia earlier from after school care and some days
directly from school. The
letters from their employers were provided after
the hearing and Ms Mihitea did not have the opportunity to question Mr
Eastman about them. It was also unclear what this flexibility would look like in
practice. The Judge was right to characterise it
as untested. I will
therefore proceed on the basis set out in Mr Eastman’s affidavit
evidence, that is, that
Amelia would generally remain in after school care until
5.30 pm.
- [52] In
contrast, the evidence from Ms Jones was that she would be able to collect
Amelia and care for her every day after school.
She would not need to spend any
time in after school care.
- [53] Based on
the evidence before the Judge, whether Amelia lived with Mr Eastman and
attended EA School or with Ms Jones
and attended HC School, would make a
significant difference. In the first situation, she would spend up to 10 hours
a
week in after school care, whereas in the second situation, she would spend all
that time in the care of one of her parents (Ms Jones).
- [54] As the
Judge said, there is nothing wrong with attending after school care, and many
children of working parents do. The after
school programme in question was
provided by a reputable and professional operator and offered a variety of
interesting things for
children to do.22
- [55] However, as
the Judge said, attending after school care would make for a long school
day.23 If Amelia had to attend after school care most days, the
result would be a very long school week, particularly for a seven-year-old.
As
she would be in her father’s care throughout every school week, she would
need to attend after school care every week (not
just every second week, as she
did before the Family Court’s decision). In view of this, on balance, I
consider that the Judge
was right to see the after school care issue as
decisive.
- [56] For these
reasons, the parenting orders made by the Judge were appropriate. It follows
that the Judge was also right to decide
that Amelia should attend HC
School.
Result
- [57] The
appeal is dismissed.
- [58] Ms Jones is
entitled to costs in relation to the appeal. To that end, I categorise the
appeal as a category 2 proceeding. Time
allocation B is appropriate in relation
to each step taken in the appeal. Reasonable disbursements are also
payable.
Blanchard J
22 [Eastman] v [Jones], above n 1, at
[16].
23 At [17].
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