Absent by Law
by Mark Stephenson
|
Abstract:
|
Family Court bias against men
|
| Keywords: |
father,child,family court,legal system
|
For
years, groups of separated fathers have been claiming that the Family
Court’s bias against men leaves children without a father that need not
be. In
2000 parliament voted down a proposal to put Shared Parenting after
separation
as an aim into the law, saying this would violate the law’s focus on
the “best
interest of the child”. But this year,
the Law Commission put out a report recommending sweeping changes in
the Court
system to ensure that both, men’s and women’s voices are equally heard.
Mark
Stephenson
talked to
critics and supporters of the present system within and without the
legal
system.
Jamie, a quiet three year old, climbs up on John's knee and curls up in
his arms. It is clear that John Mason is a loving father, committed and
involved. John lives with Bridget, Jamie's mother, and has done so for
the last seven years.
But John also has a daughter, Joanne. He hasn't seen her since 1995,
though not for want of trying. She is alive and growing up without him,
something that John can never forget. This is his story (all names have
been changed).
Back in 1991 John married Penelope. They went overseas to work. There
were difficulties in the relationship soon after they married .
Penelope wanted to leave but John wanted them to go to counselling
together. Joanne was born in 1992.
They separated later that year and Penelope returned to NZ, taking
Joanne who was just a few months old. In 1993, Penelope contacted John
overseas asking him to return to re-unite the family. He was still in
love with her and continued to want and expect to be an active parent
to his daughter. However, after a couple of days back in New
Zealand, things broke down again.
The relationship continued in a fragmentary way - sometimes separated,
sometimes living together, even after their divorce in 1994. A
pattern emerged. When Penelope felt friendly towards John, he was able
to see his daughter, unrestricted. When she was displeased John saw his
daughter only for a couple of hours three times a week.
In 1994 she prevented contact altogether. John then employed a lawyer
to take his case to the family court. At this stage John felt
confidence in the legal system and assumed the court would work towards
a fair parenting arrangement without bias.
Before going to a full access hearing, John and Penelope agreed to see
a child psychologist to work out a shared parenting plan. Joanne, now
two, had been in full-time day-care five days a week since she was 11
months of age. Penelope was teaching full-time. John made a commitment
to care for Joanne every day during the week till she went to school.
The child psychologist, however, recommended that Joanne stay in
day-care - she claimed Joanne had not bonded with her father, even
though she had spent hundreds of happy hours in his sole care since he
had returned to NZ. John rejected the psychologist’s report. It
seemed she valued day-care more than parenting, by a father at least.
John and Penelope's on again - off again relationship continued, but in
mid-1995, John decided ‘enough was enough’. He left her and never went
back – except to maintain contact with his daughter. He had no other
partner but felt he had tried his best to make the relationship work.
A short while later, John met Bridget and formed a relationship which
has lasted to this day. Two months later, Penelope prevented John
seeing Joanne, who was then three. He went to the Family Court again,
this time representing himself. The judge issued an access order but
Penelope obstructed this order. John went back to court. Another
access order was given.
On the appointed day John went to pick up Joanne. He was met by
Penelope, Joanne and a friend of Penelope's. Joanne became upset and
would not go with John. He left and returned to the court to request a
warrant to enforce the access order – as the judge had agreed to do.
However, Penelope's friend, a lawyer, had ‘witnessed’ Joanne's distress
and detailed this in an affidavit to the court. The judge now decided
he would not compel the access order. He insisted the same psychologist
be employed to re-assess the situation. John objected but this was
over-ruled.
John decided not to subject his daughter to the confusion or
manipulation that might result from a protracted court battle. He sadly
withdrew his application for access. Though he hasn’t seen his daughter
for the past seven years, she remains in his thoughts and rests in a
place in his heart that still wants to care for her.
John's loss is not unusual. Look at any class of boys in school now.
Most will father children when they grow up—and many of them will
suffer the pain of losing them and be prevented from caring for them.
Are we creating a generation of people un-fathered? How will the boys
learn to be fathers themselves? How will the girls learn to recognise
unconditional love from a man? Some feel that fathers, and men in
general, have been devalued.
And yet, when fathers are seen taking an active role with their
children, women particularly are unreservedly supportive. They say,
'it's great to see fathers involved in school events', or 'lovely to
see him taking time off work to be there for them', and frequently, 'I
wish my Dad had was around for me as much when I was a little girl -
what a lucky daughter he has'. Fathers are valued greatly. By their
children in particular. By society in general, for the child's sake.
There is a very special relationship that children need and want. Only
an active father can provide that. It is not better than a mother, only
different.
Fathers Activist Robert Murray, of Child Advocacy Services, Wellington,
says the Family Court 'doesn't believe in shared parenting'. He
believes parents have responsibilities, not rights. Their duty is to
give the best care they can for their children, within a relationship
or separated. He advocates the right of children to be cared for by
both their parents. He provides support and advice for parents, mostly
fathers, about custody issues, access, the court process, Child Support
and the legislation.
The Family Court, he says, was influenced by flawed research in the
80's which claimed that sole parenting was better than divided shared
parenting. This is widely discredited now (readers can check out
www.spig.clara.net) but the court is slow to change. Robert Murray
admits that the legislation makes 'the welfare of the child' paramount
but this is undefined. In practice, he says, 'whatever the mother
wants, she gets'.
He is outraged by the Domestic Violence Act and the use of protection
orders, as he sees it, to prevent fathers from being with their
children. These are 'ex-parte' orders. They can be served and acted on
without anything being proven. They can be put in force immediately. A
policeman would come to the door and order a father not to approach his
ex-partner or his own children.
The law says that the recipient of the order then has three months to
defend himself, but until the order is pulled the accuser determines
whether and how the defendant has any access to his children. Once a
final order is given, it usually includes the children and lasts for
life. A person has to prove, in effect, their innocence to avoid losing
their children.
Things have changed slightly, though: a parent can defend themselves
before the order takes effect. However, this will cost thousands of
dollars, legal aid is far from automatic for men, and there is a
perception that fathers can't win in the courts; even lawyers advise
against fighting cases, Robert Murray says. Maybe this is why so few
cases get to a defended hearing in the Family Court. It becomes a
self-fulfilling prophecy.
Some, like Bruce Tichbon, of FARE (Fathers Apart Require Equality) even
believe social attitudes have shifted so much that now we live in a
matriarchal society . The police and the courts are agents of social
control, with women in power. The Family Court receives a lot of anger
from men, and rightly so he says, but it is just one minor area of
concern - the tip of the iceberg.
The 'welfare of the child is paramount' is written in law but it is a
smokescreen. Bruce says, 'It is the unwritten laws that are important,
and they can only be detected by the outcome.' This is where the
discrimination is, he feels. The Family Court is used by women to
punish men who break the rules. The family, and the court, is used as
leverage to extract money, property and power. 'When I was divorced, I
realised that the mother owned the family', says Bruce. He is very
pessimistic about the viability of the family unit, in New Zealand
particularly.
The judges of the Family Court and others who work for the system
disagree. They see it as a much maligned institution and say that the
court works very hard to put the interests of children first. They have
counselling, mediation and psychology services all working to that very
end. There is an impressive list of services, time and money spent on
finding a solution before a court hearing becomes necessary.
Both sides would agree on one point, however. About 50% of
marriages/partnerships eventually end in separation but only 10% of the
10-15,000 yearly custody and access applications go to a full defended
hearing in the Family Court. Many people work out parenting
arrangements without any legal input.
A child psychologist with the Family Court I spoke to felt that we have
the best, most child-centred system in the world. If the court had
separated men from their children, there was always a good reason for
that. However, she mentioned that if access arrangements weren't
complied with, that was regrettable but the enforcing power of the
court was limited.
She said, 'Children of course benefit from having two parents who love
them, role models of both sex with whom they can experience a
relationship, providing the pattern for later relationships with peers,
partners and their children.' She was not able to quote from current
research on shared or sole parenting.
For John Brickell, of the Wellington Father and Child Trust, the Family
Court does not deal with the child's issues; it focuses on the parents'
needs. Its adversarial nature creates a winner/loser situation in which
the child is treated as property. John has solo-parented his own son,
now fifteen, since he was a baby. He now runs courses for new fathers
in Wellington. John thinks he 'won' his custody battle because, though
both parents were considered 'fit', he had been sole parent for the
previous two years. The court tends to default to the existing
situation.
He also feels that ex-parte protection orders are unjust, particularly
when the proceedings of the court are not transparent. In terms of the
law itself, he says the Guardianship Act regards men as income
providers rather than caregivers, and it excludes the extended family.
What would be better than the family court as it is? John Brickell
immediately says, 'take the lawyers out'. A court dedicated to the
child's issues only, with a legal advocate, as opposed to two lawyers
fighting for the parents' interests. Other issues such as property
should be dealt with elsewhere. At present children's welfare is mixed
up with the splitting of the parents' resources.
Mark Heneghan is Professor of Law at the University of Otago, and a
family law expert. He believes that when there are disputes, it is
essential that both parents are able to obtain expert counsel to
represent their rights. This assumes affordable, fair and equal access
to legal services. He makes the point that a child advocate will still
act on whatever they feel is 'best for the child', there is no such
thing as a neutral opinion.
The Guardianship Act, he says, has no bias in theory. It used to rely
on 'the mother principle', which is the assumption that when parents
part children are better off with the mother. This is no longer part of
the Act but 'the assumptions may remain' though he believes that the
Family Court makes great effort not to be influenced by them. As an
example - a custodial parent can't just remove children from a
non-custodial parent who is entitled to access. So there is some
recognition of a child's right to both parents.
The judges follow the direction of parliament through the Guardianship
Act. They must err on the side of protection of the child, Professor
Heneghan says. The Act allows a protection order to be taken out if the
victim 'perceives danger' to themselves or the children. The standard
of proof required is on 'the balance of probabilities', which is much
softer than required in the criminal court. Once a protection order is
taken, the person is assumed to be harmful to any children and this
will be taken into account at any custody hearing. Essentially, a small
risk of physical harm to a child outweighs the value of parenting by
the accused, usually a father.
There has been a
clamouring for change in family law in this country.
The present legislation dates back to 1968. A lot has changed since
then. In 2001 the Ministry of Justice released an analysis of
submissions to their discussion document: Responsibilities for
Children: Especially When Parents Part. The most common responses were
pleas to 'focus on the best interests of the child', and 'both parents
to take an active role'. Asked about underlying principles, most cited
parental responsibilities, children's rights to welfare and safety,
access to both parents and wider family.
I spoke to Paul James, policy manager at the Ministry of Justice. What
changes to the law were proposed? And which rights of the child,
exactly, would the new Care of Children Bill aim to protect? In a
written reply, I was informed the Bill would draw on 'rights that have
been recognised internationally', ie UNCROC (United Nations Convention
on the Rights of Children).
UNCROC prioritises protection from physical harm. Article 9 says
'sometimes the best interests of a child will be separation from a
parent, … where there has been abuse or neglect, or where parents are
living separately'. But, New Zealand should 'respect the right of a
child … to maintain personal relations and direct contact with both
parents … except if contrary to the child's best interests'. Some might
say that leaves plenty of scope for simply maintaining the
unsatisfactory status quo.
The Care of Children Bill will, however, support the child's right to
both parents, as well as ensuring 'both parents retain an ongoing
guardian role' whichever parent the child lives with. It intends to
change the Family Court to make it less adversarial, more child
focused, and increase its power to enforce orders. It will be
interesting to see what practical changes result.
The law is just one aspect of society. The Family Court is just one
organ of the law. It is, however, a public arena where the rules of
society are played out. Many say it is not public enough - its findings
and how they were arrived at should be held up for public scrutiny.
Everyone claims to be acting in the best interest of the child but
there is no gold standard. As Mark Heneghan would say, there is no
'standard of rightness' to replace 'the mother principle'. Better,
perhaps, for the law to declare an aim, e.g., shared parenting. Not
everyone would agree but the court's decisions could then be judged
against a standard.
Society has changed much in the last thirty years: it is no longer
assumed that women should look after children or that men should be
providers. Yet these assumptions still hover in the background. Men
feel pressure (and want) to be active, hands-on fathers as well as to
provide income. This starts long before they consider having children.
These conflicting messages are highlighted when parents part. Suddenly
a father is reduced once more to the role of income provider
only, through Child Support payments or directly.
Perhaps we should look to a part of history of our closest neighbour,
Australia. a 'Stolen Generation' was created when a bigoted society
felt that children of mixed race would be better off without their
aboriginal mothers. They forcibly removed them. These, also, were
well meaning citizens who had 'the children's best interests at heart'.
They valued social place over a human emotional bond. In retrospect we
see it as cruelty through ignorance. When the blade of our own history
falls, will we look back on our family law with similar
regret?
Things have changed
slightly, though: a
parent can defend themselves before the order takes effect. However,
this will
cost thousands of dollars, legal aid is far from automatic for men, and
there
is a perception that fathers can't win in the courts; even lawyers
advise
against fighting cases, Robert Murray says. Maybe this is why so few
cases get
to a defended hearing in the Family Court. It becomes a self-fulfilling
prophecy.
Some,
like Bruce Tichbon, of FARE (Fathers
Apart Require Equality) even believe social attitudes have shifted
so much that now we
live in a matriarchal society . The police
and the courts are agents of social control, with women in power. The Family Court receives a lot of
anger from men,
and rightly so he says, but it is just one minor area of concern - the
tip of
the iceberg.
The
'welfare of the child is
paramount' is written in law but it is a smokescreen. Bruce says, 'It
is the unwritten laws that are important, and they can only be detected by the
outcome.'
This is where the discrimination is, he feels. The Family Court is used
by
women to punish men who break the rules. The family, and the court, is
used as
leverage to extract money, property and power. 'When I was divorced, I
realised
that the mother owned the family', says Bruce. He is very
pessimistic about the viability of the family unit, in New Zealand
particularly.
The
judges of the Family Court and
others who work for the system disagree.
They see it as a much maligned
institution and say that
the court works very hard to put the interests of
children first. They have counselling,
mediation and psychology services all working to that very end. There
is an
impressive list of services, time and money spent on finding a solution
before a court hearing becomes necessary.
Both
sides would agree on one point, however.
About 50% of marriages/partnerships eventually end in separation but only 10% of the 10-15,000 yearly
custody and access applications go to a full defended hearing in the
Family
Court. Many people work out parenting arrangements without any legal
input.
A child
psychologist with the
Family Court I spoke to felt that we have the best, most child-centred
system
in the world. If the court had separated men from their children, there
was
always a good reason for that. However, she mentioned that if access
arrangements
weren't complied with, that was regrettable but the enforcing power of
the
court was limited.
She
said, 'Children of course
benefit from having two parents who love them, role models of both sex
with
whom they can experience a relationship, providing the pattern for
later
relationships with peers, partners and their children.' She was not
able to
quote from current research on shared or sole parenting.
For John
Brickell, of the Wellington Father and Child Trust, the Family
Court does not deal with the child's issues; it focuses on the parents'
needs.
Its adversarial nature creates a winner/loser situation in which the
child is
treated as property. John has solo-parented his own son, now fifteen,
since he
was a baby. He now runs courses for new fathers in Wellington. John thinks he 'won' his custody battle
because,
though both parents were considered 'fit', he had been sole parent for
the
previous two years. The court tends to default to the existing situation.
He also
feels that ex-parte
protection orders are unjust, particularly when the proceedings of the
court
are not transparent. In terms of the law itself, he says the
Guardianship Act
regards men as income providers rather than caregivers, and it excludes
the
extended family.
What
would be better than the
family court as it is? John Brickell immediately says, 'take the
lawyers out'.
A court dedicated to the child's issues only, with a legal advocate, as
opposed
to two lawyers fighting for the parents' interests. Other issues such
as
property should be dealt with elsewhere. At present children's welfare
is mixed
up with the splitting of the parents' resources.
Mark
Heneghan is Professor of Law
at the University of Otago, and a family law expert. He believes that
when
there are disputes, it is essential that both parents are able to
obtain expert
counsel to represent their rights. This assumes affordable, fair and
equal
access to legal services. He makes the point that a child advocate will
still
act on whatever they feel is 'best for the child', there is no such
thing as a
neutral opinion.
The
Guardianship Act, he says,
has no bias in theory. It used to rely on 'the mother principle', which
is the assumption that when parents part
children are better off with the mother. This is no longer part of the
Act but
'the assumptions may remain' though he believes that the Family Court
makes
great effort not to be influenced by them. As an example - a custodial
parent
can't just remove children from a non-custodial parent who is entitled
to
access. So there is some recognition of a child's right to both parents.
The
judges follow the direction of
parliament through the Guardianship Act. They must err on the side of
protection of the child, Professor Heneghan says. The Act allows a
protection
order to be taken out if the victim 'perceives danger' to themselves or
the
children. The standard of proof required is on 'the balance of
probabilities',
which is much softer than required in the criminal court. Once a
protection
order is taken, the person is assumed to be harmful to any children and
this
will be taken into account at any custody hearing. Essentially, a small
risk of
physical harm to a child outweighs the value of parenting by the
accused,
usually a father.
There
has been a clamouring for
change in family law in this country. The present legislation dates
back to
1968. A lot has changed since then. In 2001 the Ministry of Justice
released an
analysis of submissions to their discussion document: Responsibilities
for Children: Especially When Parents
Part. The most common
responses were pleas to 'focus on the best interests of the child', and
'both
parents to take an active role'. Asked about underlying principles,
most cited parental
responsibilities, children's rights
to welfare and safety, access to both parents and wider family.
I spoke
to Paul James, policy
manager at the Ministry of Justice. What changes to the law were
proposed? And which rights of the child, exactly, would the new Care of Children
Bill aim to
protect? In a written reply, I was informed the Bill would draw on
'rights that
have been recognised internationally', ie UNCROC (United Nations
Convention on
the Rights of Children).
UNCROC
prioritises protection from
physical harm. Article 9 says 'sometimes the best interests of a child
will be
separation from a parent, …
where there
has been abuse or neglect, or where parents are living separately'.
But, New
Zealand should 'respect the right of a child … to maintain personal relations and direct contact with both
parents … except if
contrary to the child's best interests'.
Some might say that leaves plenty of scope for simply maintaining the unsatisfactory status quo.
The Care
of Children Bill will,
however, support the child's right to both parents, as well as ensuring
'both
parents retain an ongoing guardian role' whichever parent the child
lives with.
It intends to change the Family Court to make it less adversarial, more
child
focused, and increase its power to enforce orders. It will be
interesting to
see what practical changes result.
The law
is just one aspect of society.
The Family Court is just
one organ of the law. It is, however, a public arena where the rules of
society
are played out. Many say it is not public enough - its findings and how
they
were arrived at should be held up for public scrutiny. Everyone claims
to be
acting in the best interest of the child but there is no gold standard.
As Mark
Heneghan would say, there is no 'standard of rightness' to replace 'the
mother
principle'. Better, perhaps, for the law to declare an aim, e.g., shared
parenting. Not everyone would agree but the court's decisions could
then be
judged against a standard.
Society
has changed much in the
last thirty years: it is no longer assumed that women should look after
children or that men should be providers. Yet these assumptions still
hover in
the background. Men feel pressure (and want) to be active, hands-on
fathers as
well as to provide income. This starts long before they consider having
children. These conflicting messages are highlighted when parents part.
Suddenly a father is
reduced once more to the role of income provider only,
through Child Support payments or
directly.
Perhaps
we should look to a part
of history of our closest neighbour, Australia. a 'Stolen
Generation' was created when a bigoted society felt that children of
mixed race
would be better off without their aboriginal mothers.
They forcibly removed them. These, also, were well meaning citizens who had
'the children's best interests at heart'. They valued social place over
a human
emotional bond. In retrospect we see it as cruelty through ignorance.
When the
blade of our own history falls, will we look back on
our family law with similar regret?