CASE

Download full text EN

Case Name

Wallace v. Williamson 2020 ONSC 1376

INCADAT reference

HC/E/CA 1496

Court

Country

CANADA - ONTARIO

Name

Ontario Superior Court of Justice

Level

First Instance

Judge(s)

Shore J

States involved

Requesting State

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

Requested State

CANADA - ONTARIO

Decision

Date

3 March 2020

Status

Final

Grounds

Habitual Residence - Art. 3 | Settlement of the Child - Art. 12(2)

Order

Return ordered

HC article(s) Considered

3 12

HC article(s) Relied Upon

3 12

Other provisions

-

Authorities | Cases referred to

-

Published in

-

SUMMARY

Summary available in EN

Facts

The parents married in 2014 in Canada. Later in the year they moved to the USA for the father’s work. In 2015 they had a child who has American citizenship.

The parents separated in January 2019 and, with the father’s consent, the mother went to Canada with the child. The mother and child never returned to the USA. 

In February 2019 the father commenced proceedings in the USA for divorce and seeking the return of the child. In September 2019 the father made an application under the 1980 Hague Convention for the immediate return of the child.

Ruling

The court ordered the return of the child to the USA.

Grounds

Habitual Residence - Art. 3

The judge found  the child to have been habitually resident in the USA before the wrongful retention. 

Settlement of the Child - Art. 12(2)

The judge found that the proceedings were commenced less than one year after the wrongful removal and the child was not sufficiently settled in her new environment to warrant an order dismissing the Hague Application.

In this case, the hearing of the application took place just over one year after the wrongful retention. The judge found that the consideration favouring the return was only marginally weakened, if at all. 

Furthermore, in cases involving young children, the judge held it was difficult to show that a child is settled in its environment, based solely on the fact that they are physically there. The emotional element of settlement was found to be more significant.