United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 07-1523
DOMINIK KUFNER,
Petitioner, Appellee,
v.
TINA KUFNER,
Respondent, Appellant.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND
[Hon. William E. Smith, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Lipez, Circuit Judge,
Selya, Senior Circuit Judge,
and Siler,* Senior Circuit Judge.
Thomas M. Dickinson for appellant.
Bradford N. Martin, with whom Gerald Nissenbaum was on brief,
for appellee.
March 7, 2008
*
Of the Sixth Circuit, sitting by designation.
SILER, Senior Circuit Judge. In 2007, Dominik Kufner filed a
petition in the United States District Court for the District of
Rhode Island alleging that his wife, Tina Kufner, wrongfully
removed the couple’s two minor sons, J.K. and M.K., from Germany to
Rhode Island. He sought an order returning them to Germany in his
custody, pursuant to the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of
International Child Abduction, Oct. 25, 1980, 19 I.L.M. 1501
[hereinafter Hague Convention], as implemented by the International
Child Abduction Remedies Act, 42 U.S.C. § 11601 et seq. Tina
argued that returning their sons to Germany would create a “grave
risk of harm,” a defense to a petition under Article 13(b) of the
Hague Convention. The district court granted Dominik’s petition
and ordered that the sons be returned to Germany.
Tina Kufner appeals, arguing, inter alia, that the district
court erred by concluding that she had “wrongfully removed” the
sons and that the Hague Convention violates the equal protection
component of the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
Because none of her arguments has any merit, we AFFIRM.
I.
Tina is a United States citizen and native of Rhode Island.
Dominik is a German citizen who owns a business in Munich, Germany.
They married in 1996 and settled in Munich. In 1998, they had
their first son, J.K., and in 1999 they had a second son, M.K.
Tina and Dominik began having marital problems and they separated
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in 2005. During the separation period, they informally agreed to
share time with their sons. At first, this arrangement worked well
because Dominik traveled often, but in early 2006 their
relationship began to deteriorate after Tina discovered graphic
photographs of the sons taken by Dominik.
Dominik took 49 photographs of the sons at his house in 2005.
Tina submitted 43 of them to the court in support of her Article
13(b) defense that her sons would face a grave risk of harm if
returned to Germany. The district court described 39 of the
photographs as relatively innocuous pictures of the children
playing and laughing, naked, in the living room of Dominik’s house.
The other four photographs were more graphic in nature. Dominik
stored the photographs on his computer.
Tina learned of the photographs in January 2006. In early
February 2006, Dominik spent ten days alone with the sons during
ski week, a German school holiday. After returning from the ski
week holiday, the sons began to display disturbing physical
symptoms, including bed-wetting, nervous eye twitching,
sleeplessness, and nighttime crying and screaming. The parents
blamed each other for the problems.
Tina’s German lawyer sent a letter to Dominik demanding an
explanation for the photographs. When she did not receive an
adequate response, she petitioned for sole custody in the German
court. Dominik feared that she would leave the country with the
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sons, so he obtained an order requiring her to deposit their
passports with the court. The German court ordered a home study
for both parents’ homes and talked with the sons in camera. It
then issued a written opinion, holding that the parents must
exercise joint parental custody, specifying the dates on which the
parents can have access to the sons and where they can travel with
them, and ordering that their passports be returned to Tina.
The next few months were comparatively peaceful, but in summer
2006, Dominik petitioned the German court for sole custody. The
court requested a social worker with the Department of Youth and
Families to conduct an evaluation of the parents and the sons. The
social worker recommended that the court deny his petition for sole
custody and expressed concern about the acrimony between the
parents. Also in summer 2006, the parents feuded over M.K.’s
medical care. M.K. had developed problems with his ear, nose, and
throat. Tina believed that he needed an operation on his adenoids,
but Dominik asserted that an operation was not medically necessary.
This dispute further increased the tension between the parents.
Tina petitioned the German court to suspend Dominik’s
visitation rights or, in the alternative, to permit only supervised
visitation. Four days later, she petitioned for permission to
relocate the sons to the United States. Without ruling on either
petition, the German court ordered an investigation of the
photographs. A “court-appointed company” was supposed to conduct
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this investigation, but, because of a file mixup, it never received
the photographs and it never conducted the investigation. Instead,
the GWG1 performed a custody evaluation, including an evaluation of
the photographs.
The GWG appointed a certified psychologist to interview each
member of the family. After conducting the interviews, she advised
the court by letter that both parents should retain contact with
the sons. The GWG later produced a “Psychological Expert Opinion”
that concluded that Dominik’s personality was within “the normal
range,” that the interactions between him and the sons were
positive and loving, and that they were happy, healthy, and
displayed age-appropriate development. The report concluded that
the photographs had not negatively affected the sons. It further
warned that the continuing deterioration of the parents’
relationship was harming them, and it noted that Tina was unable to
appreciate his role in raising them.
On October 18, 2006, without a prior hearing, the German court
issued a temporary “Ruling on Access and Contact,” which was to be
followed until the court determined the final merits of the custody
case. In this ruling, the court ordered that Dominik be given
rights of access to the sons and that the parents must refrain from
1
The GWG is the German Society for Scientifically-Based
Forensic and Legal Psychology-Work Group Law of Domestic Relations.
It is the psychological wing of the German Department of Youth and
Families.
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having disputes in their presence. The court concluded that the
photographs did not indicate that he was a pedophile and that he
did not inappropriately encourage sexualized behavior of the sons.
On November 12, 2006, the German court issued an injunction
structuring Dominik’s visitation rights over the Christmas
holidays. The injunction forbade Tina from traveling to the United
States with the sons. The court ordered her to deposit their
American passports with the Department of Youth and Families. On
December 20, 2006, the court conducted a hearing and met with the
sons in the absence of their parents. Later, at the same hearing,
the parents agreed to a settlement on visitation rights during the
holidays that conformed with the November 12 injunction. The
agreement required Tina to deposit the sons’ American passports
with the United States consulate and to refrain from traveling to
the United States over the Christmas holidays.
In January 2007, in direct violation of the German court
orders, Tina obtained the sons’ American passports from the
consulate and fled to the United States without notifying Dominik
or the German court. On January 31, 2007, Dominik filed a petition
in the district court seeking return of the sons to Germany in his
custody. While this case was pending, on February 16, 2007, he
obtained a temporary order from a German court awarding him full
custody.
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Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 17(c) and with the
consent of the parties, the district court appointed Sharon O’Keefe
as guardian ad litem and attorney for the sons. O’Keefe
recommended that the district court (1) view all of the
photographs, (2) appoint an independent expert with clinical
training and expertise to determine whether the photographs were
pornographic, (3) consider the German child welfare agency’s view
on the photographs and its evaluation of the parents, and (4)
analyze the effectiveness of the German investigations. After
interviewing the sons, O’Keefe determined that they “had taken an
unhealthy view of their power and responsibility in the custody
determination, and that any more involvement of the children in the
proceeding would be significantly harmful.” O’Keefe reported that
the sons stated they were attached to their mother and, if asked,
they would want to live with her.
Upon O’Keefe’s recommendation, the district court ordered the
parents to take M.K. to a physician to address his medical issues.
After a sleep test, the physician diagnosed M.K. with mild to
moderate sleep apnea and recommended surgery to remove his tonsils
and adenoids, but he stated that this surgery was not urgently
needed.
The district court heard evidence from the parties. The heart
of Tina’s argument was the Article 13(b) grave risk of harm defense
based on the photographs of the sons and the alleged failure of
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German officials to take the photographs seriously. The district
court relied heavily on its court-appointed independent expert in
pediatrics, child abuse, child sexual abuse, and child pornography,
Dr. Carole Jenny. Specifically, the district court asked Dr. Jenny
whether (1) the photographs of the sons constituted child
pornography and (2) whether the behavior problems suffered by the
children were indications of sexual abuse.
Dr. Jenny reported that there was no evidence to suggest that
Dominik was a pedophile, that he was sexually aroused by children,
or that the pictures were pornographic. She approved of the German
investigations and stated that they were accurate assessments and
that their conclusions were consistent with their reported
observations. She determined that the symptoms that the sons
displayed were consistent with the stress in their lives caused by
the acrimonious custody dispute. She recommended that the sons not
undergo further sexual abuse evaluation because it would increase
their already-dangerous stress levels. Finally, she noted that
they may have been psychologically abused by both parents because
the parents’ acrimonious relationship played out in front of them.
O’Keefe agreed with Dr. Jenny’s report.
The district court granted Dominik’s petition for return of
the sons to Germany. Kufner v. Kufner, 480 F. Supp. 2d 491 (D.R.I.
2007). It held that the sons were wrongfully removed from Germany
in violation of the Hague Convention. It concluded that Tina
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failed to prove her Article 13(b) defense because she could not
show by clear and convincing evidence that the sons would face a
grave risk of harm if returned to Germany with their father. She
does not challenge this finding on appeal. The district court
conditioned the order of return on certain undertakings.
II.
Children who are wrongfully removed or retained within the
meaning of the Hague Convention are to be returned promptly unless
one of the narrow exceptions applies. 42 U.S.C. § 11601(a)(4).
The Hague Convention promotes two important principles. First, a
district court deciding a petition for return of a child has
jurisdiction to decide the merits of the wrongful removal claim,
but it may not decide the merits of the underlying custody dispute.
Whallon v. Lynn, 230 F.3d 450, 455 (1st Cir. 2000). Second, the
Hague Convention is generally intended to restore the pre-removal
status quo and to discourage a parent from engaging in
international forum shopping. Id. The vast majority of Hague
Convention petitions brought in the United States result in the
return of the children to their country of habitual residence.
Walsh v. Walsh, 221 F.3d 204, 222 (1st Cir. 2000).
Mootness
Dominik moved to dismiss Tina’s appeal as moot. He contends
that resolving this appeal on the merits could result in
conflicting custody orders and that the “ongoing exercise of
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continuing jurisdiction” over the custody dispute by the German
court renders this appeal moot. We deny this motion and resolve
the appeal on the merits because the appeal presents a live
controversy. Dominik’s argument confuses the dispute over the
petition to return under the Hague Convention with the underlying
custody dispute. We may decide the former but not the latter. See
Whallon, 230 F.3d at 455(holding that a court in the United States
faced with a petition for return of a child has jurisdiction to
decide the merits of the wrongful removal claim under the Hague
Convention, but it may not decide the merits of the underlying
custody dispute). We are not confronted with dueling custody
orders issued by courts in different countries because the district
court ruled on the merits of the petition for return only, not the
underlying custody dispute.
Wrongful Removal
Tina argues that the district court erred by concluding that
she had wrongfully removed her sons from Germany. In support of
this argument, she asserts that the removal of the sons was not
“wrongful” because she brought M.K. to Rhode Island for medical
treatment. However, she confuses “wrongful” removal under the
Hague Convention with her own legally-unsupported notion of
“justified” removal. Therefore, her argument fails.
To petition for the return of a child under the Hague
Convention, the petitioner must establish by a preponderance of the
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evidence that the child was “wrongfully removed or retained” within
the meaning of the convention. 42 U.S.C. § 11603(e)(1). A removal
or retention is wrongful when
(a) it is in breach of rights of custody attributed to a
person . . . 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 the removal or retention those rights
were actually exercised, either jointly or alone, or
would have been so exercised but for the removal or
retention.
Hague Convention, art. III. Tina concedes that the sons’ regular
place of residence was Germany. Therefore, the only issues are (1)
whether Dominik had “rights of custody” over the sons under German
law and (2) whether he was exercising or would have exercised those
rights but for the removal. The district court correctly decided
both issues in favor of Dominik.
First, under the Hague Convention, rights of custody include
rights relating to the care of the child and the right to determine
the child’s place of residence. Hague Convention, art. V. Rights
of custody are distinguished from “rights of access,” with the
Hague Convention defining the latter as “the right to take a child
for a limited period of time to a place other than the child’s
habitual residence.” Id. Having rights of custody is necessary to
petition for return of a child, while having only rights of access
does not entitle a party to petition for the return of a child to
the place of habitual residence. Hague Convention arts. VIII &
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XXVI; Whallon, 230 F.3d at 454-55 (discussing remedies for
violation of custody rights and access rights).
Here, Dominik had rights of custody over the sons at the time
Tina removed them from Germany. He had rights relating to their
care and he had at least a shared right to determine their place of
residence. Under German law, where parents are married at the
birth of the child, they have joint custody over the child until
the operation of law (e.g., death of a parent) or a court order
terminates joint custody. At the time she removed the sons, she
and Dominik were undergoing divorce proceedings, but the
proceedings were not final and joint custody remained in effect.
The German court stated in its written opinion that it awarded the
parents joint custody pending the investigation and final
determination of the merits. This order was not suspended or
superseded before she removed the sons to Rhode Island. The German
court modified and updated its order to provide specific directions
to the parents for the custody of the sons over the holidays, but
it never awarded Tina full custody or eliminated Dominik’s joint
custody rights. These facts show that Dominik had rights of
custody within the meaning of the Hague Convention.
Second, Dominik would have exercised his rights of custody but
for Tina’s removal of their sons from Germany. He persistently
sought custody of the sons and visited them often. After this
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proceeding began, Dominik successfully petitioned the German court
for full custody of his sons on a temporary basis.
Whether M.K. needed medical care was irrelevant for purposes
of the wrongful removal determination because the analysis turns on
whether the removal was consistent with the rights of custody
established in the country of habitual residence. “Wrongful
removal” is a legal term strictly defined by the Hague Convention
and it does not require a balancing of the equities. Friedrich v.
Friedrich, 983 F.2d 1396, 1400 (6th Cir. 1993). Tina should have
litigated any issues relating to M.K’s medical care in Germany, the
country of his habitual residence. Moreover, regardless of the
applicable legal framework, the facts undermine Tina’s claim that
she brought M.K. to Rhode Island for emergency medical treatment.2
Therefore, the district court correctly concluded that the sons
were wrongfully removed from Germany.
Equal Protection
Tina argues that the Hague Convention violates the equal
protection component of the Due Process Clause of the Fifth
Amendment. In support of her argument, she claims that the Hague
Convention’s grave risk of harm standard is unconstitutional
because she is entitled to the less-demanding best interests of the
2
If treatment for M.K. truly motivated the removal, then there
would have been no reason to bring J.K., who did not need medical
attention. However, she brought both sons and she admitted that
she wanted to relocate to the United States with them. She
investigated schools in Rhode Island.
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child standard. She did not raise this argument before the
district court. We decline to address this argument because
arguments not advanced in the district court cannot be raised for
the first time on appeal. Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen &
Helper’s Union, Local No. 59 v. Superline Transp. Inc., 953 F.2d
17, 21 (1st Cir. 1992). In all events, the argument is patently
without merit; the best interests of the child standard applies in
custody matters and, as we previously noted, custody is not the
issue in a Hague Convention case.
J.K.’s Right to Be Heard
Under Article 13 of the Hague Convention, the court may
“refuse to order the return of the child if it finds that the child
objects to being returned and has attained an age and degree of
maturity at which it is appropriate to take account of [the
child’s] views.” Hague Convention art. XIII. No part of the Hague
Convention requires a court to allow the child to testify or to
credit the child’s views, so the decision rests within the sound
discretion of the trial court. The district court did not abuse
its discretion by refusing to allow J.K. to testify.
Dr. Weintrob, a child psychiatrist, testified that further
questioning of J.K. could be harmful because repeatedly confronting
him about the pictures could make him anxious and distort his
ability to distinguish reality from fantasy. Additionally, the
sons had been questioned enough and further questioning would not
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be informative. The district court assumed that the sons, if
asked, would express a desire to remain in the United States with
their mother. It also noted that they expressed a desire to remain
in Germany when asked by the GWG in Germany. The district court
properly gave little weight to their wishes because of their young
ages, lack of maturity, and susceptibility to parental influence.
The district court did not abuse its discretion when it concluded
that it would be harmful and pointless to allow J.K. to testify.
Undertakings
The district court conditioned the order of return on certain
undertakings. Tina claims that the undertakings are insufficient
to protect her and the sons upon their return to Germany. However,
her argument fails because we have reversed a district court’s
imposition of undertakings as insufficient to protect only when
there was a grave risk of harm and we concluded that the district
court’s undertakings were insufficient to mitigate that grave risk
of harm. Danaipour v. McLarey, 286 F.3d 1, 25-26 (1st Cir. 2002)
(holding that undertakings protecting a child from grave risk for
only a very limited time are insufficient to defeat the grave risk
defense); Walsh, 221 F.3d at 220-21 (holding that while
undertakings may sometimes mitigate a grave risk, undertakings were
insufficient where a parent had repeatedly violated court orders in
both countries and there was every reason to believe he would
violate the undertakings). Here, the district court rejected
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Tina’s Article 13(b) defense and found that there was no grave risk
of harm.
While there may be other considerations, such as international
comity, that justify reversing or modifying a district court’s
imposition of undertakings even in the absence of a grave risk of
harm, such circumstances are not present here. See Danaipour, 286
F.3d at 22 (discussing the importance of international comity when
considering undertakings). The district court ordered Dominik to
secure dismissal of German criminal charges against Tina that arose
out of this dispute after he represented that he could do so. It
also ordered Dominik to act quickly to obtain medical care for M.K.
and to allow Tina reasonable access and visitation until a German
court orders otherwise. These undertakings do not prejudice Tina
and they do not offend notions of international comity. The
district court did not err by imposing the undertakings.
AFFIRMED.
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