United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 00-2041
RICHARD CHARLES WHALLON, JR.,
Petitioner, Appellee
v.
DIANA LYNN,
Respondent, Appellant.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
[Hon. Rya W. Zobel, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Lynch, Circuit Judge,
Coffin, Senior Circuit Judge,
and Lipez, Circuit Judge.
Barry S. Pollack, with whom Dechert Price & Rhoads, Todd
& Weld, Elaine M. Epstein, Gary O. Todd, and Charlene A.
Caldeira were on brief for appellant.
Mary A. Azzarito, with whom Tucker and Cinquegrana,
Stephen J. Cullen, and Miles & Stockbridge were on brief for
appellee.
October 27, 2000
2
LYNCH, Circuit Judge. In May 2000, Richard Charles
Whallon, Jr. petitioned for the return of his five-year-old daughter,
Micheli Lynn Whallon King, to Mexico pursuant to the Hague Convention
on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction. See Hague
Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction,
T.I.A.S. No. 11,670, 19 I.L.M. 1501 (1980).1 Micheli had been taken
by her mother, Diana Lynn, from Mexico, where all three had lived, to
Massachusetts. Lynn says that she was entitled to do so, inter alia,
because Whallon never had the type of "rights of custody" as to
Micheli that are protected by the Convention. The parties agree that
this in turn requires an inquiry into what rights under Mexican law
an unmarried parent (here Whallon) has under the doctrine "patria
potestas," a doctrine with ancient roots in Roman law.
We conclude that Whallon has established that he has
protectable rights of custody under the Convention, that he did not
acquiesce in Micheli's removal, and that Micheli does not fall within
the exception to the Convention for situations where there is a grave
risk that the child's return would expose the child to physical or
psychological harm or otherwise place the child in an intolerable
situation. We affirm the district court's order that Micheli must be
returned to Mexico, her country of habitual residence. If Whallon
1 The Hague Convention is implemented by the International
Child Abduction Remedies Act ("ICARA"). See 42 U.S.C. § 11601 et
seq.
and Lynn then wish to dispute who has what custody over Micheli or
where Micheli should live, those disputes may be heard in the Mexican
courts.
I.
Micheli was born in Mexico on July 4, 1995. Micheli's
parents, Diana Lynn and Richard Charles Whallon, Jr., both American
citizens, never married, and they separated towards the end of 1995.
Micheli lived with her mother and her half-sister Leah in Cabo San
Lucas, Baja California Sur, Mexico. Following the separation,
Whallon continued to spend time with Micheli. At no time did Whallon
and Lynn enter into a formal custody agreement; neither has sought a
custody determination as to his or her own status.
Lynn alleged that Whallon performed only a limited
parental role and provided only sporadic child support during the
last two years all three of them were in Mexico. Additionally, Lynn
accused Whallon of subjecting her and Leah to significant verbal
abuse and of allowing matters to escalate to physical violence
against Lynn herself. Lynn made no such claim that Whallon acted
that way towards Micheli.
In fact, the record reflects that Whallon was
significantly involved in his daughter Micheli's life. From the time
of Micheli's birth, Whallon saw her on an almost daily basis. And
from the time Micheli was three years old, she spent every other
4
weekend, overnights, with Whallon. Indeed, in August 1997, Whallon
moved to within one hundred yards of where Lynn and Micheli lived to
be closer to Micheli. Whallon also paid Lynn at least $500 of child
support for Micheli each month, money that was used to pay for dental
and medical work for Micheli. Whallon did the types of things that
one generally expects an attentive and mindful parent to do: driving
Micheli to and from nursery school every day for almost two years;
buying Micheli clothes; helping her with homework and art projects;
attending various school activities; and taking Micheli to the doctor
when she was sick. Additionally, Whallon took Micheli -- with Lynn's
approval -- to San Diego for medical and dental appointments and to
Arizona in 1998 to meet Micheli's paternal grandfather.
In late September 1999, Whallon learned that Lynn was
planning to take Micheli with her to Texas to visit Lynn's parents.
Whallon filed a petition in the court of the State of Baja California
Sur in Mexico to permanently deprive Lynn of all custody rights over
Micheli and to grant him all such rights. The Mexican court
eventually denied the petition in April 2000, concluding that Whallon
had failed to establish the imminent danger, absolute abandonment, or
sort of corruption or mistreatment required to terminate a mother's
custody of a child under seven years of age. In the interim,
Whallon's attorney attempted to block the departure of Lynn, Micheli,
and Leah. As a result, there was an ugly incident in which Lynn and
5
the two children were held at gunpoint at the airport until a high-
level official enabled Lynn and her daughters to leave. Whallon,
however, denies ever having instructed his attorney to order gunmen
to prevent their departure or having any prior knowledge that the
gunmen had been hired. On October 1, 1999, Lynn took Micheli and
Leah with her to the United States. Whallon then petitioned the
district court in Massachusetts for Micheli's return to Mexico.
II.
Following a two-day evidentiary hearing, the district
court granted the petition and then denied respondent Diana Lynn's
motion for a stay pending appeal. The district court reasoned that
under the Hague Convention Lynn had physical custody over Micheli but
that Whallon also exercised "rights of custody" over Micheli within
the meaning of the Convention. Specifically, the court found that
Whallon exercised patria potestas rights, a concept of parental
custody rights distinct from physical custody rights on the one hand
and mere visitation rights on the other. Accordingly, it concluded
that Lynn's removal of Micheli violated Whallon's actual exercise of
rights of custody under Mexican law, and was thus wrongful under the
Convention.
The district court also determined that Lynn did not
qualify for the exception to the Convention's return requirement that
6
applies where there is a grave risk that the child's return would
expose her to physical or psychological harm or otherwise place her
in an intolerable situation. The district court considered the
alleged pattern of verbal abuse against Lynn and Leah. It also took
account of the alleged pattern of physical abuse against Lynn
herself, including an altercation in January 1999 in which Whallon
allegedly pushed Lynn as she was departing with Micheli and then
threw a rock in the direction of Lynn's car. Additionally, the court
considered the substantially more serious and violent incident in
which armed gunmen waylaid Lynn and her two daughters while they were
en route to the airport. Although the district court found these
incidents regrettable, it noted that none was directed at Micheli and
concluded that they did not amount to the kind of grave risk of
physical or psychological harm required to trigger the exception.
The court also found no risk that Whallon would disregard the order
of a court, whether Mexican or American.
On September 15, 2000, this court granted a stay of the
district court's order, required that Whallon have reasonable access
rights to Micheli, and ordered an expedited appeal.
III.
Lynn makes a number of arguments, and we outline the
essence of them. First, she argues that her removal of Micheli was
not wrongful under the Convention because Whallon did not establish
7
that he possessed any rights of custody under Mexican law, and the
district court wrongly placed the burden on her to disprove he had
any such rights. Second, Lynn contends that the district court
failed to make the necessary factual findings in considering the
exception to the return provisions of the Convention where such
return would subject a child to a grave risk of physical or
psychological harm, or otherwise place the child in an intolerable
situation. Finally, Lynn maintains that the district court erred in
failing to recognize the existence of an affirmative defense under
the Convention where the party seeking return (Whallon) had
previously acquiesced in the removal.
We review the district court's factual findings for clear
error and its interpretation of the Convention de novo. See Walsh v.
Walsh, 221 F.3d 204, 218 (1st Cir. 2000); Friedrich v. Friedrich, 78
F.3d 1060, 1064 (6th Cir. 1996).
A. Wrongful Removal
The Hague Convention seeks "to protect children
internationally from the harmful effects of their wrongful removal or
retention and to establish procedures to ensure their prompt return
to the State of their habitual residence, as well as to secure
protection for rights of access." Hague Convention, preamble, 19
I.L.M. at 1501. Under Article 3 of the Convention, the removal or
8
retention of a child is wrongful if:
(a) it is in breach of rights of custody attributed to a
person, an institution or any other body, either jointly
or alone, under the law of the State in which the child
was habitually resident immediately before the removal or
retention; and
(b) at the time of removal or retention those rights were
actually exercised, either jointly or alone, or would have
been so exercised but for the removal or retention.
Id. art. 3, 19 I.L.M. at 1501.2 The petitioner bears the burden of
proving "wrongful removal" by a preponderance of the evidence. 42
U.S.C. § 11603(e)(1). If the petitioner demonstrates that the child
was wrongfully removed, the court must order the child's return to
the country of habitual residence unless the respondent demonstrates
that one of four narrow exceptions applies. Id. § 11601(a)(4).
Micheli's place of habitual residence at the time of her
removal was Cabo San Lucas, Mexico and she was indeed removed by
Lynn, facts agreed on by all. The central issues are whether Whallon
has "rights of custody" over Micheli under the Convention and, if so,
whether he was actually exercising those rights prior to her removal.
The parties agree that our determination of Whallon's rights of
custody rests, as it must, on our understanding of relevant Mexican
law, the principles underlying the Hague Convention, and the record
in this case. Whether Whallon has the requisite custodial rights is
2 Whallon alleged only wrongful removal, and not wrongful
retention.
9
an issue of law.
1. Whether Whallon has Rights of Custody under the Convention
The Hague Convention states that rights of custody "shall
include rights relating to the care of the person of the child and,
in particular, the right to determine the child's place of residence
. . . ." Hague Convention, art. 5(a), 19 I.L.M. at 1501. The
Convention then contrasts "rights of custody" with the far more
limited "rights of access," which include "the right to take a child
for a limited period of time to a place other than the child's
habitual residence." Id. art. 5(b), 19 I.L.M. at 1501. It reserves
the remedy of return solely for violations of rights of custody.3
While the Hague Convention itself provides no further
definition of the term "rights of custody," and deliberately so,4
3 While the Hague Convention provides remedies for a
violation of access rights, see id., art. 21, 19 I.L.M. at 1503, such
remedies do not include an order of return to the place of habitual
residence. Rather, such remedies include, inter alia, ordering that
the custodial parent who removed the child from the child's habitual
residence reimburse the other parent for expenses incurred in
exercising his or her rights of access. Id. art. 26, 19 I.L.M. at
1503-04.
4 This provision was deliberately left vague due to the
drafters' failure to agree on a more precise definition. See Elisa
Perez-Vera, Explanatory Report: Hague Conference on Private
International Law ¶ 84, in 3 Acts and Documents of the Fourteenth
Session 426, 451-52 ("Explanatory Report") ("[S]ince all efforts to
define custody rights in regard to [particular situations] failed,
one has to rest content with the general description given [in the
text]."). States, however, might wish to take the principles of the
10
courts have commonly looked to the background report of the
Convention for further guidance. See, e.g., Walsh, 221 F.3d at 217.
That report states that "the law of the child's habitual residence is
invoked in the widest possible sense," and that the sources from
which custody rights derive are "all those upon which a claim can be
based within the context of the legal system concerned." Explanatory
Report, ¶ 67, at 446.5 The Report also states that the Convention
favors "a flexible interpretation of the terms used, which allows the
greatest possible number of cases to be brought into consideration."
Id.
Two important and closely related principles underlying
the Hague Convention also inform our approach here. First, a court
deciding a petition for return of a child plainly has jurisdiction to
Convention into account when redrafting national legislation on
custody matters. See Paul R. Beaumont & Peter E. McEleavy, The Hague
Convention on International Child Abduction 49 (1999).
5 Elisa Perez-Vera served as "the official Hague Conference
reporter for the Convention," and her explanatory report "is
recognized by the Conference as the official history of and
commentary on the Convention and is a source of background on the
meaning of the provisions of the Convention." See Hague
International Child Abduction Convention; Text and Legal Analysis, 51
Fed. Reg. 10494, 10503 (1986); accord Shalit v. Coppe, 182 F.3d 1124,
1127-28 (9th Cir. 1999). "Because a treaty ratified by the United
States is not only the law of this land. . . . but also an agreement
among sovereign powers, we have traditionally considered as aids to
its interpretation the negotiating and drafting history (travaux
preparatoires) and the postratification understanding of the
contracting parties." Zicherman v. Korean Air Lines Co., 516 U.S.
217, 226 (1996).
11
decide the merits of a wrongful removal claim, but it may not decide
the merits of the underlying custody dispute. See Hague Convention,
art. 19, 19 I.L.M. at 1503 ("A decision under this Convention
concerning the return of the child shall not be taken to be a
determination on the merits of any custody issue."); 42 U.S.C. §
11601(b)(4). Second, the Convention is generally intended to restore
the pre-removal status quo and discourage a parent from crossing
international borders in search of a more sympathetic forum. See
Walsh, 221 F.3d at 218-19; Blondin v. Dubois, 189 F.3d 240, 246 (2d
Cir. 1999); Friedrich, 78 F.3d at 1064. As the Explanatory Report
instructs:
[F]rom the Convention's standpoint, the removal of a child
by one of the joint holders without the consent of the
other, is . . . wrongful, and this wrongfulness derives in
this particular case, not from some action in breach of a
particular law, but from the fact that such action has
disregarded the rights of the other parent which are also
protected by law, and has interfered with their normal
exercise. The Convention's true nature is revealed most
clearly in these situations: it is not concerned with
establishing the person to whom custody of the child will
belong at some point in the future, nor with the
situations in which it may prove necessary to modify a
decision awarding joint custody on the basis of facts
which have subsequently changed. It seeks, more simply,
to prevent a later decision on the matter being influenced
by a change of circumstances brought about through
unilateral action by one of the parties.
Explanatory Report ¶ 71, at 447-48.
Thus, to assess whether Whallon possesses "rights of
custody" under Article 5 of the Convention, the court must not simply
12
look to the relevant provisions of Mexican law but also must
interpret those provisions in light of the Convention's basic
principle that a child's country of habitual residence is best placed
to decide upon questions of custody and access, unless an exception
applies. Id. ¶ 34, at 434-35.
The law of the State of Baja California Sur, the place of
Micheli's habitual residence, is the relevant source of law here.
See Hague Convention, art. 3, 19 I.L.M. at 1501.6 That poses its own
difficulties for a court of the United States, a court which comes
from a different legal tradition. Care must be taken to avoid
imposing American legal concepts onto another legal culture.
Differently from many laws in this country, Mexican law appears to
embody two concepts of importance here. The first is a preference in
divorce cases toward placing what is called "custody" of a child
under age seven with the mother. That preference is negated in
"exceptional cases" such as those involving "serious and contagious
illness, vice, mistreatment or desertion." Codigo Civil del Estado
6 The parties agree that Mexican choice of law rules require
that Mexico apply the law of the State in which the child was
habitually resident immediately prior to the child's removal, i.e.,
the law of Baja California Sur. Cf. Shalit, 182 F.3d at 1128-29
(stating that Hague Convention's references to the "'law of the State
in which the child was habitually resident'" includes "the conflict
of law rules of [that State]"). While the parties hotly contest the
nature of rights of custody under the law of Baja California Sur,
they do not dispute that law's applicability to this case under
Mexico's choice of law rules.
13
de Baja California Sur ("Civil Code"), art. 322. The preference is
embodied in the Civil Code, and while it applies specifically to
divorces (and there has been no divorce here since there was never a
marriage), the Mexican court looked to this provision in informing
its decision about whether to terminate Lynn's custodial rights. And
so we find that maternal preference, as well as the Code's use of the
term "custody," relevant to our determination of whether Whallon has
rights of custody under the Convention.
The second concept is embodied in the doctrine of patria
potestas,7 and represents a more generalized concept of parental
7 Patria potestas is a concept derived from Roman law and
originally meant paternal power. It referred to a father's "near
absolute right to his children, whom he viewed as chattel," a right
with which courts were powerless to interfere. Kathryn L. Mercer, A
Content Analysis of Judicial Decision-Making: How Judges Use the
Primary Caretaker Standard to Make a Custody Determination, 5 Wm. &
Mary J. Women & L. 1, 14 (1998); see also Black's Law Dictionary 1188
(7th ed. 1999) (defining patria potestas as "[t]he authority held by
the male head of a family over his children and further descendants
in the male line, unless emancipated," initially including "the power
of life and death"). In contrast, the Roman legal tradition did not
provide wives with rights of parental authority. See Sibylla Flugge,
The History of Fathers' Rights and Mothers' Duty of Care, 3 Cardozo
Women's L.J. 377, 383 (1996).
In the Anglo-American legal tradition, the doctrine of patria
potestas was eroded by the emergence in the seventeenth century of
the conflicting doctrine of parens patriae, which recognized the
state's interest in and responsibility for children. See Mercer, A
Content Analysis of Judicial Decision-Making, supra, at 14-15.
"Courts, as a second stakeholder, began to intervene in custody
matters to protect the welfare of the child," and became the "final
arbiter of familial disputes" in the American colonies. Id. at 15.
In the early nineteenth century, American courts began to award
custody in accordance with the judicially determined best interests
14
authority. Although historically the doctrine protected the father's
rights as to the child, originally absolute rights under Roman law,
the Baja California Sur Civil Code refers to it as encompassing the
rights of both parents. Article 474 provides generally that patria
potestas, or parental authority, "is understood to mean the
relationship of rights and obligations that are held reciprocally, on
the one hand, by the father and the mother or in some cases the
of the child. In practice, however, this rejection of the paternal
preference embodied in the patria potestas doctrine merely paved the
way for the emergence of the maternal preference embodied in the
tender years doctrine, which provided that a mother, unless shown to
be unfit, deserved custody of young children in light of her unique
maternal bond to her children. See Amy D. Ronner, Women who Dance on
the Professional Track: Custody and the Red Shoes, 23 Harv. Women's
L.J. 173 (2000).
However, patria potestas appears to have followed a somewhat
different path of development in legal traditions based on civil
codes. Cf., e.g., Flugge, The History of Fathers' Rights, supra, at
383 (discussing influence of patria potestas on Germany's code
established in the nineteenth century). Other Latin American
countries with civil code traditions appear to recognize some form of
patria potestas rights. See Pesin v. Rodriguez, 77 F. Supp. 2d 1277,
1286 (S.D. Fla. 1999) (noting, in Hague Convention case, that under
Venezuela's code father and mother "'are vested with the parental
authority until a judicial decision establishes otherwise'" and that
"father and mother who exercise parental authority have custody of
their children . . . shall elect by mutual consent their place of
domicile, residence or domicile [sic]"; finding that mother's removal
of child breached father's rights of custody under the Convention).
This case highlights the difficulties in imposing Anglo-American
definitions of custody on legal systems, like Mexico's, that have
different origins and traditions. Baja California Sur's code
suggests the continuing resilience of patria potestas rights (albeit
in a diluted form) under Mexican law, despite the presumption that
physical custody of children under age seven be awarded to the
mother, at least in cases of divorce.
15
grandparents and, on the other hand, the minor children who are not
emancipated." Civil Code, art. 474. The concept of patria potestas
is defined broadly:
Paternal authority is exercised over the person and the
property of the children subject to it. The purpose of
its exercise is the comprehensive physical, mental, moral
and social protection of the minor child, and it includes
the obligation for [the child's] guardianship and
education.
Id. art. 479. Additionally, those exercising patria potestas "have
the obligation to comport themselves in a manner that sets a good
example for the children and shall teach them appropriate standards
of social interaction." Id. art. 486.
The Civil Code explicitly discusses patria potestas rights
in situations where, as here, the parents of a child born outside of
wedlock separate. It provides that in such situations, "both
[parents] shall continue to exercise paternal authority." See id.
art. 478 (emphasis added). The Code then distinguishes patria
potestas from "custody," which may be decided by agreement or,
failing such agreement, by a judge. Id. Indeed, the existence of
divisible custody rights under Mexican law -- i.e., of physical
custody and patria potestas – is entirely consistent with the Hague
Convention's statement that custody may be held "jointly or alone."
Hague Convention, art. 3, 19 I.L.M. at 1501; Explanatory Report ¶ 71,
at 447-48 (characterizing joint custody as "dividing the
16
responsibilities inherent in custody rights between both parents");
see also Croll v. Croll, No. 99-9341, 2000 WL 1357742, at *6 (2d Cir.
Sept. 20, 2000) ("rights of custody" under Convention "references a
bundle of rights exercised by one or more persons having custody").8
Lynn says that Whallon's patria potestas rights are closer
to what the Convention means by "rights of access" than to what it
means by "rights of custody." We disagree. Article 329 of the Civil
Code states that "[i]ndependently of who exercises patria potestas or
custody, the relatives obliged by law to provide support have the
right to visit their descendants or collateral relatives, and to have
an adequate communication with them." Civil Code, art. 329. Thus,
patria potestas, like physical custody, plainly means something
"independent" from mere visitation rights. Importantly, the Code
describes these visitation rights in terms of "adequate
communication," id., but describes patria potestas rights through the
8 The Convention allows the party seeking the return of the
child to request that the central authority of a contracting State
provide an explanation of its law. See Hague Convention, art. 15, 19
I.L.M. at 1503. Here, Whallon put into evidence a letter from the
Mexican Central Authority for Child Abduction to the National Center
for Missing and Exploited Children. Although the letter contains
significant factual mistakes -- for example, it incorrectly refers to
Lynn, an American citizen, as a German citizen -- it nevertheless
states that "patria potestas (custody) will be exercised by both
parents" under Baja California Sur's Civil Code. The letter,
however, takes no position as to whether patria potestas rights
amount to custody rights under the Convention, nor does it reveal
what question had been put to the Mexican Central Authority. We give
it little weight as a result.
17
stronger language of "adequate connection," id. art. 323, which
implies a meaningful, decisionmaking role in the life and care of the
child, and not the mere access to the child associated with
visitation rights.9
Additionally, Whallon submitted into evidence the
affidavit of Mexican attorney Omar Quijano Martinez further
corroborating that both parents exercise patria potestas rights over
a child under Mexican law and stating that both parents must consent
to the removal of such child under Mexican law. Such affidavits are
an acceptable form of proof in determining issues of foreign law, see
Rule 44.1, Fed. R. Civ. P., and are likewise permitted under the
Hague Convention, see Explanatory Report ¶ 101, at 456-57 ("proof of
the substantive law of the State of the child's habitual residence
may be established by either certificates or affidavits").
Lynn also relies heavily on the decision of the Mexican
9 Lynn also relies on the Second Circuit's recent decision
in Croll, supra, where the court held that the mother was not
required to return the child to Hong Kong because she did not violate
the father's rights of custody under the Convention. In contrast to
the situation here, in Croll there had been a clear determination of
custody rights by a court of the country of habitual residence
awarding sole custody to the mother and granting only rights of
access to the father. Id. at *1. Moreover, while the custody order
in Croll contained a ne exeat clause prohibiting the child's removal
from Hong Kong until she attained the age of eighteen years without
leave of court or consent of the other parent, such clause
represented only a negative right or veto, see id. *7, as opposed to
the affirmative grant of custody rights to Whallon under Mexican law
and the ample evidence of Whallon's actual exercise of those rights.
18
court rejecting Whallon's petition to terminate her parental rights.
That decision, however, has limited relevance to this action. At
issue in the Mexican court action was whether Whallon had
demonstrated the necessary exceptional circumstances to terminate
Lynn's custodial rights. Although the Mexican court concluded that
Whallon had not met his heavy burden, it never stated or even
suggested that Whallon lacked custody rights or otherwise determined
what those custody rights were. Whether or not a Mexican court
ultimately decides the matter of custody differently following
Micheli's return to Mexico, Whallon did possess rights of custody
under the law of Micheli's habitual residence at the time of her
removal.10
Finally, Lynn contends that the district court, though
acknowledging at trial that Whallon had the burden of proof to
establish a wrongful removal, failed to acknowledge that burden in
its written opinion and failed to impose that burden on Whallon in
10 Lynn's reliance on Shalit v. Coppe, supra, is misplaced.
In Shalit, a wrongful retention case, the mother kept the child in
Alaska after the child had come to visit her on a two-week vacation,
despite an oral agreement -- never approved by any court -- that the
child would live temporarily with the father in Israel. Shalit, 182
F.3d at 1126. The Ninth Circuit affirmed the district court's
decision denying the father's return petition. The court relied on
the determination of an Alaska state court that predated the oral
agreement and that granted the mother sole legal and physical
custody. Id. at 1130-31. Here, by contrast, there has been no such
judicial determination of custody. Moreover, the law of Baja
California Sur demonstrates the existence of rights of custody in
Whallon.
19
its analysis. This argument fails. The district court approached
the issue of wrongful removal by first considering Whallon's
arguments regarding patria potestas rights under Mexican law. After
closely analyzing the relevant provision of Baja California Sur's
Civil Code and Lynn's counter-arguments, the court concluded that
there had been a wrongful removal. It acknowledged that Whallon had
the burden of proof on this issue, weighed the burden in light of the
law and evidence presented, and found that the burden had been
satisfied.
In sum, the evidence of patria potestas rights under
Mexican law leads us to conclude that Whallon's rights were "rights
of custody" under the Convention. While Lynn had actual custody of
Micheli, both parents exercised patria potestas rights over Micheli.
Indeed, to date no Mexican court has given Lynn exclusive custody or
denied Whallon patria potestas rights over Micheli. The pending
Massachusetts custody proceedings commenced by Lynn after her removal
of Micheli are inapplicable to this action because the Convention
refers specifically to (Whallon's) rights of custody at "the time of
removal." Hague Convention, art. 3(b), 19 I.L.M. at 1501; see also
Beaumont & McEleavy, Hague Convention, at 53 (subsequently rendered
custody orders inapplicable to return proceedings).
2. Whether Whallon Actually Exercised Rights of Custody
20
Lynn argues that Whallon was not "actually exercising" his
rights of custody over Micheli at the time of her removal by Lynn, as
required by the Convention. See Hague Convention, art. 3(b). Here,
there is no question that Whallon was actually exercising his rights
of custody prior to Micheli's removal, as the description of the
facts of this case makes amply clear. Accordingly, Lynn's removal of
custody violated Whallon's rights of custody under the Convention.
B. Exception for Grave Risk of Physical or Psychological Harm
Lynn argues that Micheli should still not be returned to
Mexico because she falls within the exception to return contained in
article 13(b) of the Convention.
The wrongful taking of a child from his or her country of
habitual residence normally requires the child's return. See Hague
Convention, art. 12, 19 I.L.M. at 1502. Courts, however, are "not
bound to order the return of the child if the person, institution or
other body which opposes its return establishes that . . . there is a
grave risk that his or her return would expose the child to physical
or psychological harm or otherwise place the child in an intolerable
situation." Id. art. 13(b), 19 I.L.M. at 1502. A respondent who
opposes the return of the child by asserting the article 13(b)
exception has the burden of proving this exception by clear and
convincing evidence. See 42 U.S.C. § 11603(e)(2)(A); Walsh, 221 F.3d
21
at 217. The article 13(b) exception is a narrow one. See 42 U.S.C.
§ 11603(a)(4); Walsh, 221 F.3d at 217.
To meet her burden under the article 13(b) exception, the
respondent must establish that the alleged physical or psychological
harm is "a great deal more than minimal." Walsh, 221 F.3d at 218.
Indeed, the harm must be "something greater than would normally be
expected on taking a child away from one parent and passing him [or
her] to another." Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). Courts
are not to engage in a custody determination or to address such
questions as who would be the better parent in the long run. Id.
We previously addressed this exception to the Convention
in Walsh, supra. In Walsh, we reversed the decision of the district
court and held that the respondent wife had demonstrated by clear and
convincing evidence that the return of her children to Ireland posed
a grave risk of physical and psychological harm. See id. at 219-21.
In Walsh, the husband had severely beaten his wife over the years,
including when she was pregnant. Many of the beatings took place in
front of her two small children, as did a beating of his older son by
another marriage. The husband fled this country when charged with
threatening to kill another (a neighbor), refused to return when a
fugitive warrant was entered, and violated Irish court orders that he
stay away from the marital residence. Id. at 209-12. We found that
the district court "inappropriately discounted the grave risk of
22
physical and psychological harm to children in cases of spousal
abuse; . . . failed to credit [the petitioner father's] more
generalized pattern of violence, including violence directed at his
own children; and . . . gave insufficient weight to [the petitioner
father's] chronic disobedience of court orders." Id. at 219. Such a
high quantum of risked harm barred the child's return under article
13(b). Id.
Here, by contrast, the district court found that the
alleged instances of verbal abuse of Lynn and her older daughter
Leah, and of physical abuse of Lynn, while regrettable, neither were
directed at Micheli nor rose to the level of the conduct of the
petitioner father in Walsh. We agree. Lynn's allegations of
verbal abuse and an incident of physical shoving are distinct from
the "clear and long history of spousal abuse" presented in Walsh.
Id. at 220. Lynn has never alleged that Whallon abused Micheli,
either physically or psychologically. Indeed, while the two experts
who testified disagreed as to whether returning Micheli to Mexico
would expose her to a grave risk of physical or psychological harm or
otherwise place her in an intolerable situation, they both agreed as
to the love that Whallon and Micheli have for each other as father
and daughter. As to the deplorable attempt to keep Lynn and Micheli
in Mexico at gunpoint, the district court found credible Whallon's
denial that he ever instructed his attorney to hire the gunmen or
23
knew that the gunmen had been hired. Furthermore, in contrast to
Walsh, there is no evidence that Whallon would disregard an order of
the court, whether Mexican or American.
Lynn argues that the district court ignored the
psychological harm prong of article 13(b). That is not so. The
court considered the alleged psychological harm to Micheli from the
abuse and correctly found that any such harm did not to rise to the
level required for sustaining an article 13(b) exception. See Walsh,
221 F.3d at 218-19. Lynn also contends that the district court
ignored the harm resulting from the separation of Micheli from her
half-sister Leah. Whether there is a separation is Lynn's choice.
She may return to Mexico with both her daughters. We do not doubt
that a separation, if any, would cause difficulty. The logic,
purpose, and text of the Convention all mean that such harms are not
per se the type of psychological harm contemplated by the narrow
exception under article 13(b). To conclude otherwise would risk
substituting a best interest of the child analysis for the analysis
the Convention requires. This would undercut the Convention's
presumption of return where rights of custody have been violated by
wrongfully removing a child in situations where that child had a
sibling who was not wrongfully removed.11
11 Furthermore, the cases on which Lynn relies for this
argument involved the bonds between a child and her mother, not her
sibling. See, e.g., Steffen F. v. Severina P., 966 F. Supp. 922, 928
24
C. Failure to Recognize "Acquiescence" Defense
Lynn argues that the district court erred in ignoring her
other affirmative defense that Whallon had previously acquiesced in
Micheli's removal to the United States. See Hague Convention, art.
13(a), 19 I.L.M. at 1502 (return not required where person opposing
return establishes that "the person . . . having the care of the
person of the child . . . had consented to or subsequently acquiesced
in the removal").12 While Whallon does not literally come within
these terms as the one "having care of the person or child," we
assume arguendo that Lynn may make an acquiescence argument, at least
in terms of whether the removal was in fact wrongful. Lynn must
prove acquiescence by a preponderance of the evidence. 42 U.S.C. §
11603(e)(2)(B). Lynn argues that she repeatedly told Whallon that
she would eventually be taking Micheli to the United States for her
education but that Whallon failed to institute any formal custody
proceedings in Mexico until after he had learned that Lynn was
planning to remove Micheli. Lynn also points to a note written by
Whallon sometime in 1997 in which Whallon purportedly acknowledged
that Lynn could relocate with Micheli to the United States as along
as Micheli flew back to Mexico during a few holidays each year.
(D. Ariz. 1997).
12 The district court's opinion did not explicitly address
this issue.
25
We find no acquiescence by Whallon in Micheli's removal
here. Whallon's failure to institute formal custody proceedings does
not itself constitute acquiescence. Indeed, a similar argument may
be turned against Lynn: that her failure to seek a formal custody
declaration from the Mexican courts indicates her own acceptance of
Whallon's custody rights, including, but not limited to, the right to
determine Micheli's place of residence. The 1997 handwritten note on
its face does not constitute a waiver by Whallon of his custody
rights. The argument also fails to take account of the subsequent
period during which time Whallon played an increasingly important
role in Micheli's life, and is countered by Whallon's prompt and
persistent actions seeking Micheli's return to Mexico following her
removal.13
IV.
The decision of the district court is affirmed and the
stay entered by this court on September 15, 2000 is lifted. So
ordered.
13 In contrast, cases where courts have granted this
affirmative defense have all involved clear instances of wavier by
the party seeking the child's return. Cf. Journe v. Journe, 911 F.
Supp. 43, 47-48 (D.P.R. 1995) (voluntary dismissal of underlying
action for divorce and custody of children); In re Ponath, 829 F.
Supp. 363, 368 (D. Utah 1993) (petitioner failed, for almost six
months, to make any meaningful effort to obtain return of the minor
child).
26