European Court of Human Rights
FIRST SECTION
CASE OF X v. POLAND
(Application no. 20741/10)
JUDGMENT
Art 14 (+ Art 8) • Discrimination
• Family life • Refusal to grant
applicant full parental rights
and custody over her youngest child based solely or decisively on considerations regarding her sexual
orientation • Decisive and discriminatory
reliance on importance of
male role model
STRASBOURG
16 September 2021
This judgment will become final
in the circumstances set out in Article
44 § 2 of the Convention. It may
be subject to editorial revision.
In the case of X v. Poland,
The European
Court of Human Rights (First Section),
sitting as a Chamber composed of:
Ksenija Turković, President,
Krzysztof Wojtyczek,
Gilberto Felici,
Erik Wennerström,
Raffaele Sabato,
Lorraine Schembri Orland,
Ioannis Ktistakis, judges,
and Renata Degener, Section
Registrar,
Having regard to:
the application
(no. 20741/10) against the Republic of
Poland lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the Convention for the Protection
of Human Rights and Fundamental
Freedoms (“the Convention”) by a Polish
national, Ms X (“the applicant”),
on 18 March 2010;
the decision
to give notice to the Polish Government (“the Government”) of the complaints concerning Article 6 and Article 14 taken in conjunction with Article 8 of the Convention;
the decision not to have the applicant’s name disclosed;
the observations
submitted by the respondent
Government and the observations in reply submitted by the applicant;
the comments submitted by the Polish National Chamber of Legal Advisers (Krajowa Izba Radców Prawnych), the Institute of Psychology
of the Polish Academy of Sciences, the Ordo Iuris
Institute for Legal Culture, and ILGA-Europe (the European
Region of the International Lesbian,
Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association) on behalf of ILGA and four other organisations: the FIDH
(International Federation for Human Rights), KPH (the
Campaign Against Homophobia), NELFA (the Network of European
LGBTIQ* Families Associations) and the ICJ
(International Commission of Jurists), organisations that the President of the Section had authorised to intervene in the written
procedure (Article 36 § 2 of the Convention and Rule 44 § 3 of the
Rules of Court);
Having deliberated in private on
6 July 2021,
Delivers the following judgment, which was adopted
on that date:
INTRODUCTION
1. The applicant
alleged that she had been
discriminated against on
the basis of her sexual orientation in proceedings for full parental rights
and custody rights over her youngest child.
THE FACTS
2. The applicant
was born in 1970 and lives in L. The applicant was represented by Ms K. Kędziora, a lawyer practising in Warsaw.
3. The Polish
Government (“the Government”) were represented by their Agent, Ms J. Chrzanowska and, subsequently, by Mr J. Sobczak, of the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs.
4. The facts
of the case, as submitted
by the parties, may be summarised
as follows.
5. In 1993 the applicant married Mr Y. Their first two children, A and B, girls, were born in 1993 and 1996 respectively. Afterwards, two boys were born,
C in 1998 and D on 24 December 2001.
- DIVORCE
6. A conflict
between the applicant and her husband over custody of their children apparently started in 2005. At that time the
applicant became involved in a relationship
with another woman, Z.
7. In April 2005 the applicant applied for a divorce.
8. A serious
disagreement between the applicant and her parents developed, as they did
not accept her decisions about
her personal life. They instituted proceedings in which they sought
custody of her children. On 28 April 2005 the R District
Court, sitting as a single judge, Judge D.T., granted them temporary
custody of A, B, C and D. The applicant
and her husband appealed against the decision. On 16 June 2005 the S Regional Court allowed their appeal and quashed the impugned decision. The court noted that although
the family had been going through a difficult period due to the impending divorce, both parents had
been caring for their children properly. There had been no justification
for such a profound interference by the authorities
and the children’s removal
and placement in the custody of their
grandparents. The appellate court also
considered that the first‑instance court had incorrectly and to the largest extent based itself
on statements of the grandparents,
ignoring other evidence.
9. On 6 June
2005 the S Regional Court granted
a divorce in the proceedings
initiated by the applicant.
The court pronounced a no-fault divorce
and granted the applicant
full parental rights and custody
of the parties’ four children.
The applicant’s former husband’s parental rights were restricted. Neither the applicant nor Y appealed against the judgment; no written grounds for it were prepared.
The divorce judgment became final on 28 June 2005.
- FIRST SET OF
CUSTODY PROCEEDINGS
10. On 2 October
2006 the applicant’s former
husband applied to change the custody arrangement ordered in the divorce judgment.
11. On 16 May
2007 an expert opinion was obtained from the Głogów
Family Consultation Centre (Rodzinny
Ośrodek Diagnostyczno Konsultacyjny, “RODK”). The experts were firstly
asked to give an opinion on
the existence of family bonds between
all four children, the applicant, and Y. Secondly, they examined what parenting
abilities (predyspozycje wychowawcze) both parents had, and which parent should
be given full parental rights.
Lastly, they were asked to consider
whether the children’s interests justified them being separated,
so that some children would live with one parent and
some would live with the other.
The experts drew the
following conclusions:
“On the basis
of the assessments, it is established that the children, who are minors, are emotionally attached to both parents, however
currently the father is of paramount importance (pierwszoplanowy)
to them, [and] their relationship with the mother has been disrupted
(ulegly zaburzeniu).
The minors A,
B and C have better contact
with their father, [and] in
[their] relations with him they are open, show their
feelings and expectations, [and] feel
secure, accepted and important.
In [their]
relations with their mother,
A and B have feelings of regret,
rejection, [and a] lack of interest and understanding. The
girls expect the mother to change her attitude
towards them, withdraw from her relationship with Z, concentrate on matters
relating to them, [and]
take into account their expectations and feelings.
The minor D is
disoriented in the family situation. In comparison with [his] older siblings, he demonstrates his frustration to a lesser degree, [since] he holds a privileged position in the family and receives
more attention from the mother
and her girlfriend. However,
the results of the assessments
show the child’s serious emotional instability, which disrupts his social and cognitive development.
C still wishes to stay in his father’s care, [and] rejects the possibility of returning to live
with the mother because of
strong traumatic experiences
linked with her violent behaviour towards him. The boy has emotional bonds with his siblings, is
in permanent contact with them,
and wishes to be raised
with them, in his father’s care.
The assessments
show that Y currently has better parenting
abilities than [the applicant], more meaningful
contact with the children, [and a] better understanding of their needs, and [he] meets their expectations
to a larger extent.
The minors receive interest [from their father], trust him, [and] feel [that they are] important to him. He is stable in [his]
relations with the children, [and] gives them a sense
of stability. However, [the
applicant] is at times excessively tense, irritated and erratic, which does not
help their emotional stability and distances them from her emotionally.
The applicant’s excessive concentration on herself and on her relations with Z means that she is
not involved in matters relating to the children to a sufficient degree, does not take into
account their feelings and expectations,
[and] requests acceptance
of her behaviour in spite of the resistance and opposition from the children.
In difficult
situations relating to parenting,
[the applicant] cannot cope with her emotions
and can be too radical in her
actions.
It would be possible for [the applicant] to
continue to have care of the children,
provided that she decisively corrects her attitude,
excludes Z from family life, and continues
psychological therapy aimed
at improving her relations with the children.
Owing to [her] symptoms of excessive tension and impulsivity, the applicant should consult a psychiatrist.
It is proposed
that A, B and D, who are relying on a positive change in
the mother’s attitudes and have ties to their
current place of residence, conditionally
remain in the care of [the applicant],
with supervision from the court guardian.
The psychological
situation of C indicates that
he should stay in the care of his
father and have relations
with his siblings. [The applicant] should take actions to
re-establish his trust and rebuild their relations.
In the event of a lack
of positive change in [the applicant’s]
behaviour as a mother, it will
be necessary to give direct care to the father, for
the best interests of the children
and for their further correct social and emotional development.”
12. On 9 October
2007 another expert issued an opinion in which she answered a question from Judge D.T. as to what the children’s preferences were. When questioned
by the expert, the applicant
had been directly asked whether she had
had sexual intercourse with Z and whether she was a homosexual. The expert concluded that the children would prefer to live with their father. The opinion stated:
“[the applicant]
was not and is not in a homosexual
relationship with Z, who has sometimes stayed
overnight owing to lengthy conversations, but they have not
had sexual intercourse.”
13. On
16 October 2007 the R District
Court, sitting in a composition of one professional judge, Judge D.T., and two lay judges,
granted the application by
the applicant’s former husband and restricted the applicant’s
parental rights in respect
of her four children. The court granted full
parental rights to Y and issued
a custody order in his favour. It considered
that the applicant’s marriage had broken
down because in 2004 she had started a relationship with another woman,
Z.
14. The court took into account the wishes of the applicant’s three older children
– aged thirteen, eleven and eight at the time – to live with their father. The court noted that the applicant’s former husband had started a new relationship and considered that the children had accepted his
new partner. The court stated “[the applicant] doesn’t want to abandon [her] excessive intimacy with Z in order to improve
[her] relations with [her] children”.
15. The court held:
“It is clear from the expert opinions
that [the applicant], although declaring [that she has
a] strong emotional bond with the children,
does not notice their needs
and problems and does not meet their
expectations. She expects them to accept and submit to the current situation. She does not want
to abandon her excessive proximity to Z for the sake of her relations with [the children].
When having contact with the children, [the applicant] is tense, irritated, erratic and aggressive. Her
relations with the children are superficial
...
Her current parental behaviour is incorrect,
owing to her personal problems and emotional involvement in a relationship with another woman,
[a woman] who interferes
with family life, evokes strong and negative feelings
in the children, and destabilises
the parenting atmosphere.
It would have
been possible for the applicant to continue to exercise
[her] parental rights, if she had
decisively corrected her attitude, excluded
Z from family life, and continued psychological
therapy aimed at improving her relations with the children.
However, [the applicant] has not been
able to correct her behaviour, in spite of the signals coming from
the children and the clearly
destructive influence which her serious
involvement in the relationship
with her girlfriend has on
family life.
In comparison
with [the applicant], Y is totally different. He has a mature approach to [his] parental duties. His attitude
towards the children does not raise
any concerns. In [his] relations with the children,
he is warm, cordial [and] communicative, and able to have close
contact [with them], ease tension, [and] encourage the open
expression of feelings ...
The children, who are minors, are emotionally attached to both parents, however
currently the father is of paramount importance to them, [and] their relationship with the mother has been
disrupted ...
Taking into account those circumstances, the court considers that there has now
been a change in circumstances, which justifies changing the ruling on
the parties’ parental rights over the children.
The court considers
that there is no guarantee that the applicant will provide her
children with the correct
care, owing to her serious involvement in her relationship with Z.
Although the children did not accept
the mother’s relationship
or her girlfriend, the applicant
forced them to be nice to Z and show her respect.
The court considers
that the applicant, despite declaring [that she has]
a strong relationship with the children,
is unable and actually unwilling to revise her behaviour,
[and this] undoubtedly has a negative influence on the children’s emotional and psychological development.
The court considers
that, for the well-being of
the children, at present it is
necessary to grant Y
parental rights and limit
the applicant’s parental rights.”
16. The applicant
appealed. In her appeal, she contested the court’s conclusions that her children
would prefer to live with their father and had not accepted
Z. She complained that the experts had distorted their
words, and that they were too young
to be given responsibility
for decisions about which parent they
wanted to live with. The applicant
emphasised that she had been
the main carer for the children
during the marriage and
after its dissolution; her former husband
had not spent
time with all four children, and had either not used
his contact rights or left the children with their maternal grandparents.
17. On 10 January
2008 the S Regional Court held
a hearing at which the applicant’s former husband proposed that the applicant retain custody of D. He acknowledged that his youngest child
had a stronger bond with his mother and that taking custody
of him, although possible, would be difficult. At the same hearing,
the court dismissed the applicant’s
appeal.
- PROCEEDINGS TO
CHALLENGE THE JUDGE
18. On 26 May
2008 the applicant lodged
an application whereby she challenged the impartiality of Judge D.T. She submitted that
the judge had known her parents
from the time when they had been lay
judges, from 2000 until
2003. Her mother had worked at
that court as a guardian since the 1980s. Moreover, the judge had clearly shown
bias against the applicant in the past in granting her parents
temporary custody of her four children.
There had been no justification for such a decision, as had been
noted by the appellate court in 2005. In the applicant’s opinion, there was no doubt that
the judge had sympathised with her parents and former husband.
19. On 2 June
2008 the R District Court dismissed
the challenge. The court, which was
the same court where the challenged judge sat, considered that there was
no objective justification
for challenging Judge D.T.’s impartiality.
20. The applicant
appealed against the decision.
21. On 16 September
2008 the S Regional Court dismissed
her appeal. The court considered
that the applicant had failed to justify
the allegation that Judge D.T. had the type of personal relationship
with her parents which could raise
doubts as to the judge’s lack of impartiality.
- SECOND SET OF
CUSTODY PROCEEDINGS
22. Subsequently,
the applicant’s three older children moved to live with their father, as ordered
by the courts. The applicant
refused to return her youngest child,
D, to her former husband.
23. On 15 April 2008 the applicant had requested
that the custody order be revised in respect of D and that she be granted
parental rights. She had submitted that
the child had always lived with her, even after the order of
16 October 2007. The child
had strong emotional ties to her and refused to move to live with his father.
24. On 21 April 2008 the applicant obtained a private
opinion from a psychologist, L.W.-M., concerning D, which confirmed that the child had a very
strong bond with her, as he
had lived with her all his
life. He was less attached to his father. This opinion was not taken
into account by the R District
Court; however, it was referred to by the S Regional Court in the final
ruling of 17 September 2009 (see
paragraph 34 below).
25. On 25 April 2008 a “local
assessment” (wywiad środowiskowy) report was
drawn up by a court guardian.
In the interview conducted, the child
recounted a violent incident in which his father had
attacked Z in his presence, which had had a negative impact on him. The child manifested his attachment to his mother throughout
the interview and also expressed
some fear of his father. The court guardian also commented positively on the mother as a carer for her child. The domestic courts referred to the report in all subsequent rulings.
26. On 8 May 2008
the R District Court, sitting
as a single judge, Judge D.T., dismissed the applicant’s application for an
interim measure by allowing
her to retain custody of D for the duration of the proceedings.
The judge relied on the expert opinion by the RODK of 16 May
2007 and the second opinion of 9 October 2007 (see paragraphs 11 and 12 above), considering them recent and relevant, although they had been
issued in the previous set
of proceedings. The court held
that the father had showed that
he was more able to care
for D. He was emotionally stable and had a strong bond with
the child. As regards the applicant, the court held that she
“had concentrated excessively on herself and her relationship with her girlfriend (przyjaciółka)”.
An appeal by the applicant
against that interim ruling
was dismissed by the S Regional Court on 16 September
2008.
27. On 27 May
2008 the R District Court, sitting
as a single judge, Judge D.T., ordered the court guardian to forcefully remove D from the applicant’s
care. On 3 June 2008 the court guardian
took the child from his kindergarten and handed him over to the applicant’s former husband. D was six years
old at that
time.
28. In the course of the proceedings, the R District Court ordered the same Głogów RODK to prepare a fresh expert opinion. The opinion, submitted
to the court in March 2009, concluded that both the applicant
and her former husband had similar
parenting abilities. The experts considered that D should continue living
with his siblings in a stable environment
and be in permanent contact with his
mother. In view of his age, the experts considered that the father’s role was
more important for the child’s
building of his “male role
model” (“męski wzorzec
osobowy”).
29. The court held a hearing on 8 June 2009 at which it
heard evidence from the applicant and her former husband, Y. The latter explained that the maternal grandparents and D’s older siblings helped with everyday life and the raising of
D. They would take D to
school and pick him up on most days, and when Y had night shifts at work D would sleep at
his maternal grandparents’ home. Before the
court, Y stated:
“I did not contribute to the breakdown
of the family. [The applicant] wanted
such a solution, she took [Z] under her roof. I am
against such an
arrangement. They should not be raising D together. A child should be raised by a man and a
woman, not by two women or two men. It is
for natural reasons; we were created
that way.”
30. On 8 June
2009 the R District Court, sitting
in a composition of one professional judge, Judge D.T., and two lay judges, dismissed
the applicant’s application
for amendment of the custody
order of 16 October 2007 and for parental rights and custody rights over D. The court repeated
the facts of the case which
it had established
on 16 October 2007 and re‑examined
the course of the proceedings
since the divorce judgment in 2005. In respect of the period of
time between 2005 and 16 October 2007,
the date on which the same
court had changed the custody arrangement with respect
to the four children, the
court stated:
“[the applicant]
remained in a relationship with Z, whom she would meet
in her flat and go for walks with, or to the cinema. The friend would also stay the night in [the
applicant’s] flat.”
31. The court noted
the conclusions of the experts
who had held
that both the applicant and her former husband had a similar parenting
approach and abilities as regards caring
for D. They both aimed to secure the child’s best development and accepted that the presence of both parents in his life was a necessity. The experts recognised that both parents had
made attempts to cooperate with each
other for the best interests
of their youngest child. With respect to the father, Y, the court noted that in November 2008 he had had a child in
a new relationship, but
the relations between all siblings were good. Y did not live with his girlfriend and their child. The court noted that the arrival of a new brother had been
difficult for D, but it had not
led to his being neglected by his father.
32. The court decided that D should continue living with his siblings and father so that his correct
emotional and social developmental
needs could be met. The court stated:
“Leaving [D]
to live with his father is also justified
by the current stage of the child’s
development and the father’s
larger role in creating [the child’s] male role model.”
The court also
noted that since the child had been living with his father, the applicant had secured
contact rights. She spent every weekend
with D, more time than was provided for in the officially established arrangements, in
agreement with her former husband. The court emphasised that it had
been necessary for D’s well-being for him to have regular contact with his mother.
33. The applicant
appealed, claiming that D’s best interests
required that he return to live with her. She submitted that
in his father’s home, D’s sisters and grandparents took care of him. The applicant relied on other private opinions submitted
in the proceedings which emphasised that she had been
the child’s primary carer
and had the strongest bond
with him. Moreover, the child had clearly
expressed his wish to live with the applicant,
and the court had acknowledged
that this did not necessitate further evidence. The applicant dismissed the court’s arguments about the importance of the “male
role model” as arbitrary. She noted that the R District Court had failed to provide any jurisprudence of the national
courts, including the
Supreme Court, to support the argument that the gender of the parent
with custody should be
decisive in adjudicating on a parental dispute. She considered that the court had failed to examine many important elements and recognise that the interests of the child were of paramount
importance. She also noted that
her former husband had always
been openly hostile to Z, had never accepted the applicant’s choices, and had presented his
homophobic opinions to the court and the experts. He had repeated them to all the children and forbidden them to play with Z or even greet her.
The court, however, when assessing D’s best interests, had failed to take into consideration the father’s approach to the applicant and her partner, and the negative influence
which his behaviour must have had on the children.
Lastly, the applicant also raised the argument that the court’s decision had been discriminatory
on the basis of her sexual preferences. The applicant argued that the main grounds for the court’s decisions had been her
relationship with another
woman.
34. On 17 September
2009 the S Regional Court dismissed
the appeal. The court reiterated that
both the applicant and Y had similar parenting
abilities and attitudes.
The court stated:
“It should be stressed that the opinion of the RODK has
the advantage of being based on access to the files and the examination
of all the persons concerned, which was not the case for the private psychological opinion, therefore it cannot be regarded
as fully authoritative and decisive. There
are and were no grounds for ordering
another opinion from another
RODK and an additional psychologist,
because the existing expert opinion does not contain any
deficiencies, contradictions
or ambiguities and does not differ from the other evidence. There is no contradiction
with the opinion of the psychologist L.W.-M., which, owing to the lack of aforementioned qualities, cannot constitute evidence in this case ...
The appellate court finds
that the dismissal of her application was not on the grounds of the applicant’s sexual orientation, even if she perceives
it that way. The issue of raising a child in a same-sex
relationship is very controversial, but there was
no need to examine it. However, the applicant’s relationship is a fact, therefore
one of the circumstances of the case, and one which caused a particular reaction from the three
older children that in turn led to consequences
for the whole family, [something]
which could not be ignored during the examination of [the applicant’s application to amend the custody order].
The applicant’s
older children had difficulties in accepting their mother’s relationship, which is and should
be understandable, as it is not
a common situation with which children
are familiarised from a very
young age. On the contrary,
very young people are confronted with a different
family model every day, one which
they perceive as natural, as
they see this around, in their home or in the homes of their peers [or of] distant family members, on the
street, at school. The minor D, unlike
his older siblings, does not refer to his
mother’s situation, [and] this
is justified by his age, but as
stated above, any declarations made by D should be seen through the prism of his extensive psychological
and pedagogical knowledge, because
without that it is impossible
to properly balance the welfare of a growing child who
has found himself in a situation which is emotionally
very difficult.
The experts
from the RODK took this
situation into account and formulated
certain conclusions with which it is
impossible not to agree – the arguments of the experts regarding the role of the father and the need to grow up with siblings are most convincing and relevant. For any boy from a broken family, a
male role model is important, and its importance increases as the child grows
older. It is undoubtedly most desirable that this role
model be the boy’s father, whose parenting abilities are subject to examination in the course of the taking of evidence. However, in the case of [the applicant’s
former husband], there are no such
objections, as he has the appropriate parental attitude,
and it is also thanks to him that D’s siblings have settled down, he himself also finds
his place there, and it is important
for the children to grow up
together. Using other
family members in exercising
parental authority is not a
sign of irregularity, and
in the case of numerous offspring
there is even a necessity, therefore such a ground of appeal
does not automatically result in it being accepted.
When examining the appeal, one
has to remember the circumstances in which the original decision on parental rights – contained in the divorce judgment and granting the applicant custody of her children – was changed. The change took place in 2007, and this was a period during
which the applicant had been stabilising
her personal life, something
that had influenced her parental behaviour in such a way that important corrective measures had been necessary.
The positive improvement in this
field was confirmed by the most recent opinion by the RODK, which, in contrast to the previous [opinion], did not indicate that there were irregularities
in the applicant’s parental attitude.
Her behaviour has improved over the years and can no longer raise objections. However, in the meantime, D has grown older.
He is no longer a little child, and undoubtedly the role of [his] father,
with whom he has been living for one year, has increased. Here again is the important
element of being raised with siblings, and this has been
categorically emphasised by
the experts and is obvious from life. [There is a] need for stability, which in D’s case means the necessity to spare him new changes,
since those which he has already
experienced have exceeded the adaptation
capabilities of a small child ...
The [impugned]
ruling is not discriminatory on the grounds of sexual
preference, which is what the applicant
relied on. It has to be noted that not all
differences in how a person is approached
amount to discrimination; it is important
if the grounds for such an approach were rationally
justified. In the circumstances of the case, the rational
justification was that the siblings should stay [together] with one parent, since the parents didn’t want to be together. For the reasons indicated above, [the applicant] cannot be that parent, ... because the other children are not with her.”
35. The applicant
was notified of that decision on 6 October 2009.
- FURTHER
DEVELOPMENTS
36. The applicant
continued to build and maintain
relations with her children
while they were living with their father.
37. C and D moved to live with the applicant
and her partner Z in January
2013 and October 2017 respectively.
Both children chose to live with them while attending high school, and their father accepted
their move.
RELEVANT LEGAL FRAMEWORK AND PRACTICE
- DOMESTIC LAW
- The Constitution
38. The relevant
provisions of the Constitution
of the Republic of Poland read as
follows.
Article 47
“Everyone shall have the right to legal protection of his private and
family life, of his honour
and good reputation, and to make decisions
about his personal life.”
Article 32
“1. All
persons shall be equal before the law. All persons
shall have the right to equal treatment by
public authorities.
2. No one shall
be discriminated against in
political, social or economic
life for any reason whatsoever.”
- Family law
39. Article
106 of the Family and Custody Code of 1964 (Kodeks Rodzinny i Opiekuńczy), as in force
at the material time, read:
“If circumstances change and the best
interests of a child so require, a court dealing with custody may amend
orders included in a decision on divorce concerning the manner in which the parties’ minor children
should be cared for.”
40. Article
107 § 1 of the Family and Custody Code, as in force until 13 June 2009, read:
“If parents, both of whom exercise parental authority,
are not married, the court dealing with custody may grant custody
rights to one parent and restrict the custody rights of the other.”
41. On 13 June
2009 Article 107 of the Family and Custody Code was amended and now reads as follows:
“1. If parents, both
of whom exercise parental
authority, do not form one household, the court dealing with
custody, having regard to the best interests of a
child, may issue orders concerning
the manner in which the
parties’ minor children should
be cared for.
2. The court may grant custody rights to one parent and restrict the custody rights of the other ...”
- The Code of Civil Procedure
42. Article
557 of the Code of Civil Procedure of 1964 (Kodeks Postępowania
Cywilnego) provides:
“The court dealing
with custody can alter its decision if the best interests of the person whom [the decision] concerns so require.”
43. The Recommendation
adopted by the Committee of Ministers
on 31 March 2010 (CM/Rec(2010)5) on “measures to combat discrimination on grounds
of sexual orientation or
gender identity” gave the
following recommendations to Member
States, in so far as relevant:
“2. ensure
that legislative and other measures are adopted and effectively implemented to combat discrimination on grounds
of sexual orientation or
gender identity, to ensure respect for the human rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and
transgender persons and to promote
tolerance towards them; ...
5. ensure
by appropriate means and action that
this recommendation, including its appendix,
is translated and disseminated as widely as possible.”
The appendix
to the above Recommendation
states, in so far as relevant, as follows:
“IV. Right
to respect for private and family life
...
26. Taking
into account that the child’s best interests should be the primary consideration in decisions regarding the parental responsibility
for, or guardianship of a child,
member states should ensure that
such decisions are taken without discrimination
based on sexual orientation or gender identity.
27. Taking
into account that the child’s best interests should be the primary consideration in decisions regarding adoption of a child, member states whose
national legislation permits
single individuals to adopt
children should ensure that the law is applied
without discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity.
....”
44. The Parliamentary
Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) issued Resolution 2239 (2018)
Private and family life: achieving equality regardless of sexual orientation. The relevant part reads as follows:
“4. ... the Assembly calls on Council of Europe member States
to:
4.1 ensure
that their constitutional, legislative and regulatory
provisions and policies governing
the rights of partners, parents
and children are applied without discrimination on grounds
of sexual orientation or
gender identity, eliminating
all unjustified differences in treatment based on
these grounds ...”
Its Explanatory Memorandum by
Mr Jonas Gunnarsson, rapporteur, states, in so far as relevant:
“Summary
The right to respect for private and family life is
a fundamental right, enshrined in Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights.
This right is of equal importance
in everyone’s lives, yet progress towards achieving equality in this field regardless of sexual orientation is uneven. This poses
real and serious problems in ordinary people’s everyday lives. Discrimination unfortunately remains a reality
for many rainbow families.
Since the Parliamentary
Assembly last examined this
issue in 2010, there have been significant
developments in European
case law, and important advances towards greater equality for rainbow
families have been achieved in member States. These developments show that more efforts are however still required
from member States in order to achieve
equality in the field of private and family life regardless
of sexual orientation.
4.3 Well-being
of children in rainbow
families
47. One of the arguments
most frequently raised against granting legal recognition to same-sex
partnerships is that doing so will “open the door” to same-sex couples raising children, and that this will
harm children. Such arguments are however fallacious, on at least two
very basic grounds. First, same-sex couples are already raising children, and second, research has consistently shown that children
raised in rainbow families have the same levels
of well-being as other children....
49. At the hearing held by our committee in Paris on
5 June 2018 we examined the situation of children
in rainbow families through
a scientific lens, thanks
to the presentation by Ms Kia Aarnio of a recent research project on the well-being and experiences of children in rainbow families financed by the Finnish Ministry of Education and Culture.
This study, which involved 129 children aged 7 to 18 growing up in rainbow families and their parents, showed that it was
not parental gender or sexual
orientation that affected children’s well-being but the functioning of the family. Children in rainbow
families had similar numbers of friends, similarly
positive school experiences, similar
family lifestyles and similar symptoms
of anxiety or depression to
their peers. LGBT parents were found
to be very committed to parenthood, and supported and encouraged their children a lot. The same vulnerabilities affected children in rainbow families as other children, for example if their
parents had divorced.
50. The negative aspects of living in rainbow
families related to other people’s attitudes – annoying questions from peers, offensive comments from other family members or other adults. Ten-
to twelve-year-olds in rainbow
families were bullied more than their peers,
but they nonetheless had the same levels of psychological well‑being as their peers,
possibly due to more motivated
parenting and good friendships.
One in seven children had a grandparent who had ceased
contact with the child’s family because
of the parent’s sexual orientation or gender; however,
in many cases, other family members or close friends of the child’s
family replaced this
negative relationship, and the child
expressed no negative consequences as a result. When asked
what they would like to change in the world
to make life even better
for them in a rainbow family, children wished that other
people would know more about
sexual minorities and rainbow families and would accept diversity. ...
52. To put it
another way, research consistently shows that it is not
same-sex parents but societies that are not accepting of diversity that harm children in these families. We must base our public policy decisions as regards rainbow
families, not on misconceived
notions of “traditional”
families as the only, irreplaceable, family format that
can provide a healthy upbringing for a child – a notion that can also be harmful to children in single-parent
families and in blended (step-)families – but on the need both to ensure
acceptance of the diverse families, whether “traditional” or “non-traditional”, that exist in all our
societies, and to promote a discrimination-free
environment for all parents and children. Indeed, as the Inter-American
Court of Human Rights has
made clear, and as was already implicit in the reasoning applied by the European Court of Human Rights nearly 20 years ago, a parent’s sexual orientation has no bearing on their capacity to raise and provide for a child.”
- The
Inter-American Court of Human Rights
45. In the case of Atala
Riffo and daughters v.
Chile ((Merits, Reparations
and Costs), judgment of 24 February
2012, Series C No. 239), the Inter‑American Court of Human Rights considered that the decision of the Chilean courts to remove three children
from the custody of their homosexual mother constituted discriminatory
treatment against her on
the basis of her sexual orientation, in breach of her right
to equality (Article 24, in conjunction
with Article 1 § 1 of the American Convention on
Human Rights) and her right to private and family life (Article
11 § 2 and 17 § 1 of the American Convention).
The court noted, inter
alia, that the abstract reference
to “‘the child’s best interest’
... without specific proof of the risks or damage” to children that could
result from the mother’s sexual orientation could not serve as a suitable measure to restrict a protected right (paragraph 110 of the judgment). As regards the expectation that Ms Atala Riffo ended her relationship,
an argument used by the Chilean courts, the court observed as follows (footnotes omitted):
“139. In this regard, the Court considers that the prohibition of discrimination due to sexual orientation should include, as protected rights,
the conduct associated with
the expression of homosexuality.
Furthermore, if sexual orientation is an essential component of a person’s identity, it was not
reasonable to require Ms.
Atala to put her life and family project on hold. Under no circumstance can it be considered “legally reprehensible” that Ms. Atala made the decision
to restart her life. Furthermore, it was not proven
that the three girls suffered any harm.
140. Therefore,
the Court considers that to
require the mother to limit her lifestyle options implies using a “traditional” concept of women’s
social role as mothers, according to which it is
socially expected that women bear the main responsibility for their children’s upbringing and that in pursuit of this she should
have given precedence to raising her children, renouncing
an essential aspect of her identity. Therefore,
the Court considers that using the argument of Ms. Atala’s alleged preference of her personal interests, does not fulfill the purpose of protecting the best interest of the three girls.”
THE LAW
- PRELIMINARY
REMARKS – SCOPE OF THE CASE
46. The Court notes that
in her observations the applicant limited her complaints to the dispute concerning
parental rights over her youngest child D, which ended on 17 September 2009. The applicant lodged her application
with the Court on 18 March 2010. The Court thus concludes that the case at hand concerns solely the proceedings regarding D, and that it is
not called upon to deal with the complaints about the proceedings concerning the applicant’s other children A, B and C, which were concluded by way of a final decision on 10 January 2008.
- ALLEGED VIOLATION
OF ARTICLE 14 OF THE CONVENTION TAKEN IN CONJUNCTION WITH ARTICLE 8
47. The applicant
complained that the domestic courts had refused to grant her custody
of her child D on the
grounds of her sexual orientation, which amounted to discrimination in the
enjoyment of her Convention
rights, in breach of Article 14 taken in conjunction with Article 8 of the
Convention. These provisions
read as follows:
Article 8
“1. Everyone
has the right to respect for his private and
family life, his home and his
correspondence.
2. There
shall be no interference by
a public authority with the exercise of this right except
such as is
in accordance with the law
and is necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety
or the economic well-being
of the country, for the prevention of disorder or
crime, for the protection of health or morals, or for
the protection of the rights
and freedoms of others.”
Article 14
“The enjoyment
of the rights and freedoms
set forth in [the] Convention shall
be secured without discrimination on any ground such as sex, race, colour, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin,
association with a national minority,
property, birth or other status.”
- Admissibility
48. The Government raised a preliminary objection that the applicant had failed
to comply with the six-month
time-limit in respect of
the set of proceedings which
had ended on 10 January 2008. The applicant repeated that the final decision regarding parental rights and custody rights over D had been given
on 17 September 2009, and she
had been notified of it on 6 October 2009.
49. In the light of the
parties’ submissions and the Court’s
conclusions concerning the
scope of the case (see paragraph
46 above), the Court considers
that the applicant lodged her application
with the Court on 18 March 2010, within six months of the final decision concerning D issued on 17 September 2009. The Government’s preliminary objection should therefore be dismissed.
50. The Court notes that this part of the application is neither manifestly ill-founded nor inadmissible on any other grounds listed in Article 35 of the Convention. It
must therefore be declared admissible.
- Merits
- The parties’ submissions
(a) The applicant
51. The applicant
submitted that her sexual orientation
had consistently been at the centre of the domestic courts’ deliberations and had been omnipresent at every stage of the proceedings. The courts had been biased
against her, which was shown,
for instance, by the arbitrary
finding that she “[had] not
want[ed] to abandon her excessive proximity
to Z for the sake of her
relations with her children”.
This showed that she had
been deprived of custody of her child on a discriminatory basis related to her sexual orientation
and her relationship with another woman.
52. The applicant
drew attention to the arguments of the Government emphasising
the alleged importance of a
male role model in the children’s
upbringing. Those arguments had been
raised in the domestic proceedings. According to the applicant, such arguments would never be raised in a case concerning heterosexual parents, and they showed bias
against same-sex couples. They also
showed bias on the part of
the Government and the domestic courts
against same-sex families,
in particular lesbian ones.
(b) The Government
53. The Government acknowledged
that restricting the applicant’s parental rights over her children had
constituted an interference
with her rights under Article 8 of the Convention. However,
the domestic courts’ decisions regarding custody of A, B, C and D had been given in accordance
with the law and had been guided by their best interests. The
Government emphasised that
the child’s interests should always be of primary importance and had to prevail over both the interests of the parent and administrative and logistical reasons. The domestic courts had taken into
account the preferences of the older
children which had been stated
during the proceedings. In
sum, the courts had held that it
had been in the children’s best interests to be raised together in their permanent place of
residence by a parent who had been considered
to provide the best guarantees
as regards their care. The decisions of the courts had been
justified in a fair and neutral manner, and they had been
taken in a way that had minimised the damage to the children resulting from the crisis within the biological family.
54. The Government considered that the applicant had not
been discriminated against on the grounds of her sexual orientation. No statement proving such allegations could be found in the wording of the domestic decisions. The Government referred
in particular to the District
Court’s decision of 16 October 2007 which had concluded that
there had been a deterioration in the applicant’s relations with her children, as had
been established by the experts (see paragraph
13 above). The Government also
emphasised that in the final ruling of 17 September 2009
the S Regional Court had clearly dismissed the allegation that the applicant’s homosexuality had been the grounds for the interference (see paragraph 30 above). According to the Government, the clear statements
contained in that ruling “should be taken into account as the final position of the Polish courts”. As it
contained relevant and sufficient grounds for the decision
to maintain the father’s custody of D, it “would not be appropriate to attribute to the Polish courts any ulterior
and discriminatory motives”.
55. The Government emphasised that the domestic courts had referred to the applicant’s relationship with Z, but only as
part of the factual circumstances
of the case, as it had affected her
relations with the children. Moreover,
the domestic courts had not made any
value judgments about the applicant’s behaviour.
- Third parties
(a) National Chamber of Legal Advisers
56. The Committee of Human Rights of the National Chamber of Legal Advisers (Krajowa Izba Radców Prawnych) submitted its comments on the case. The intervener considered that in the light of the principles
recognised by Polish and
international law, the sexual
orientation of a parent should not play any role in assessing
his or her parental rights. They emphasised
that contemporary scientific research proved that there
were no negative consequences of parents’ homosexuality as regards the raising of children.
57. The intervener
considered that Polish society was undergoing rapid changes; according to a recent poll from 2019, the majority
of respondents accepted civil partnerships between same-sex persons, and 41% accepted same-sex marriages. Also, acceptance of homosexual families
had been rising in that society. In
Europe, many countries accepted
same-sex marriages and allowed adoption by homosexuals.
The Convention, as a living instrument,
should evolve alongside such developments.
(b) ILGA-Europe
58. ILGA-Europe (the European Region of the
International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual,
Trans and Intersex Association), the FIDH (International Federation for Human Rights), KPH (the Campaign Against Homophobia), NELFA (the
Network of European LGBTIQ* Families Associations) and the ICJ (International Commission of Jurists) submitted a joint intervention to the Court. They maintained that in spite of the progress being made,
the LGBT community in Europe faced discrimination both in law and in practice. The interveners reiterated the most relevant case-law of the Court, stating that differences based on sexual orientation required particularly serious reasons by way of justification,
and a State’s margin of appreciation was narrow.
59. ILGA-Europe, on behalf of the other interveners, emphasised that numerous studies had shown that
the children of lesbian and
gay parents were not disadvantaged in comparison to the children of heterosexual parents. In respect of studies of “rainbow
families” and children, the interveners
also pointed to Resolution 2239 by PACE (see paragraph 44 above) and its Explanatory Memorandum.
60. Furthermore,
the interveners referred to
a judgment of the Inter‑American Court of Human
Rights in the case of Atala Riffo y Ninas v. Chile which prohibited discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. Moreover, a number of European and North American jurisdictions
had affirmed the right to equal access to children without discrimination based on sexual orientation.
(c) Institute of Psychology of the Polish Academy of Sciences
61. The intervener
concentrated on analysing
the available statistical material regarding the situation
of homosexual families and their
children in Poland. They emphasised that Poland did not allow
for civil partnerships between
same-sex couples, and marriage was reserved
for the union of a man and a woman. In consequence,
there were many inequalities in legal and practical matters, which directly affected same-sex families raising children. The intervener considered that the public attitude in Poland towards the
LGBT+ community was negative and homophobic,
and this had been exacerbated by the position
of the current Government. In reality, LGBT+ couples raising children in Poland were most often
formed by so‑called
“patchwork families” with children from previous heterosexual unions; however, younger generations of LGBT+ persons
were expressing a wish to have children,
which might lead to an increase in non-heterosexual
families with children in Poland.
62. The intervener
emphasised that in Poland, children statistically had contact with a role model whose gender was opposite to that of their same‑sex
parents. Non-heterosexual
families with children had
strong and significant relations with their families of origin. However, they were
not necessarily perceived as families, and thus couples spent
Christmas or Easter separately,
returning to their families
of origin. Non-heterosexual
families with children tended
to have little support from
each other, as the vast majority
of couples did not know any other
non-heterosexual families with children.
63. The intervener
emphasised that members of the public and professionals
who were in contact with
LGBT+ families often held stereotypes and showed prejudice concerning LGBT+ parenthood. However, studies showed that there
were no differences between the well‑being of children raised by gay and lesbian parents and that of children raised by heterosexual parents, as regards
a range of matters, including:
gender and sexual identity,
general health, emotional and behavioural
difficulties, success in school, social and cognitive
development. Furthermore,
studies showed that children raised by lesbian mothers had better contact with their biological fathers than the children of heterosexual women,
after a break-up.
(d) Ordo Iuris
64. In its
intervention, the Ordo Iuris Institute for Legal
Culture emphasised that in accordance with Polish law, parental authority should be
exercised in such a way as to ensure a child’s best interests, as well as
the best interests of society as
a whole. It stated “the existence of a harmonious family in which parents care for the development
of their children, guard their property
and interest and prepare them for future independent life is in the best interest of the whole society”.
65. The intervener
stated that Polish law had
allowed the courts to employ measures considered to be the most adequate where there had been
irregularities in the manner
in which parental authority had
been exercised in a given situation. Therefore, this had granted the courts a significant degree of freedom when making such decisions. In reaching decisions that could interfere
with the manner in which
parental authority was exercised,
the courts were obliged to seek assistance from specialist experts (especially experts working as part of specialist family consultation
centres).
- The Court’s assessment
(a) General principles
66. The Court reiterates that Article 14 of the Convention complements
the other substantive provisions of the Convention and its
Protocols. It has no independent existence since it has effect
solely in relation to “the enjoyment
of the rights and freedoms”
safeguarded by those provisions. Although the application of Article 14 does not presuppose a breach of those provisions, and to this extent it is
autonomous, there can be no
room for its application unless the facts in issue fall within
the ambit of one or more of the latter
(see, for instance, E.B.
v. France [GC], no. 43546/02, § 47, 22 January
2008, and Vallianatos and Others v. Greece [GC], nos. 29381/09 and 32684/09, § 72, ECHR 2013).
67. In order for an issue to arise under Article 14, there must be a difference in the treatment of persons
in analogous or relevantly similar situations. In other
words, the requirement to demonstrate
an analogous position does not require that
the comparator groups be identical
(see, with further references, Molla Sali v. Greece [GC],
no. 20452/14, § 133, 19 December
2018).
68. However, not every difference
in treatment will amount to
a violation of Article
14. Only differences in
treatment based on an identifiable
characteristic, or “status”, are capable
of amounting to discrimination
within the meaning of Article 14 (see Fábián v. Hungary [GC],
no. 78117/13, § 113, 5 September
2017, with further references
to the Court’s case-law).
In this context, the Court reiterates that the words “other status” have generally been given a wide meaning in its case-law (see Carson
and Others v. the United Kingdom [GC], no. 42184/05, § 70, ECHR 2010), and their
interpretation has not been limited to characteristics which are
personal in the sense that they are innate or inherent (see Clift v. the United Kingdom, no. 7205/07, §§ 56-59, 13 July
2010). For example, a discrimination
issue arose in a case where the applicant’s status, the alleged basis for the discriminatory
treatment in question, had been determined in relation to his family situation, namely his children’s place of residence
(see Efe v.
Austria, no. 9134/06, § 48, 8 January 2013). It thus follows, in the light of its objective and the nature of
the rights which it seeks to safeguard,
that Article 14 of the
Convention also covers instances
in which an individual is treated less
favourably on the basis of another person’s status or protected characteristics (see Guberina v. Croatia, no. 23682/13, § 78, ECHR 2016; Škorjanec
v. Croatia, no. 25536/14, § 55, 28 March 2017; and Weller v. Hungary,
no. 44399/05, § 37, 31 March 2009).
69. The Court also
reiterates that in the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms guaranteed by the
Convention, Article 14 affords
protection against different treatment, without an objective and reasonable justification, of persons in similar situations. For the purposes
of Article 14, a difference
of treatment is discriminatory
if it “has
no objective and reasonable
justification”, that is, if it
does not pursue a “legitimate aim” or if there
is not a “reasonable relationship of proportionality” between the means employed and the aim sought to be realised (see Molla Sali,
cited above, § 135,
and Fabris v. France [GC], no. 16574/08, §§ 56, ECHR 2013 (extracts)).
70. The prohibition
of discrimination under Article
14 of the Convention duly covers questions
related to sexual orientation and gender identity (see Salgueiro da
Silva Mouta v. Portugal, no. 33290/96, § 28, ECHR 1999‑IX; Alekseyev v. Russia, nos. 4916/07 and 2 others, § 108,
21 October 2010; and P.V. v. Spain, no. 35159/09, § 30, 30 November 2010). The Court has also repeatedly
held that, just like differences based on sex, differences based on sexual orientation require “particularly convincing and weighty reasons” by way of justification.
Where a difference in treatment
is based on sex or sexual orientation, the State’s margin of appreciation is narrow. The scope of the margin
of appreciation will vary according to the circumstances, the subject matter and its background; in this regard, one of the relevant factors may be the existence or non-existence of common ground between
the laws of the Contracting
States. Differences based solely or decisively on considerations of sexual orientation are unacceptable
under the Convention (see Pajić
v. Croatia, no. 68453/13, § 84, 23 February
2016; Ratzenböck and Seydl v. Austria, no. 28475/12, § 32, 26 October
2017; Beizaras and Levickas
v. Lithuania, no. 41288/15, §§ 106-116, 14 January
2020, with further references
to the Court’s case-law; Salgueiro da Silva Mouta,
cited above, § 36;
and E.B. v. France, cited above, §§ 93-96).
71. The first paragraph
of Article 8 of the Convention guarantees
to everyone the right to respect for his or her family life. As is well established
in the Court’s case-law,
the mutual enjoyment by parent and child of each other’s company constitutes a fundamental element of family life, and domestic
measures hindering such enjoyment amount to an interference with
the right protected by this provision. Any such interference
constitutes a violation of this Article unless
it is “in accordance with the law”, pursues an aim or aims that is
or are legitimate under its
second paragraph and can be regarded
as “necessary in a democratic society” (see, among other authorities, K.
and T. v. Finland [GC], no. 25702/94, § 151, ECHR 2001‑VII, and Strand Lobben and Others v. Norway,
no. 37283/13, §§ 202‑213, 30 November 2017).
(b) Application of the above principles to the present case
72. It
is undisputed by the parties
that the facts of the case,
namely the refusal to award
the applicant full parental rights
and custody rights over her youngest child
D, fall within the ambit of Article 8 of the
Convention (see paragraph
71 above). Consequently, Article 14 taken in conjunction with Article 8 applies to the facts of the case.
(i) Whether there was a difference
in treatment
73. The Court notes that the final domestic decision in the case was given on 17 September 2009, when the S Regional Court refused to overturn the ruling of 16 October
2007 and award full parental rights over D to the applicant instead of her former husband.
In that most recent set of proceedings, the S Regional Court and the R District
Court took into account the
course of the entire legal dispute between the parents which had
started in October 2006 (see paragraphs 26 and 30 above). Accordingly, and with regard to the decision on the
scope of the case (see paragraph 46
above), the Court will consider the elements of
the first set of proceedings to the extent they were
taken into account, directly or indirectly, in the
second set of proceedings.
74. In
particular, the Court
takes note of two expert
opinions obtained in 2007 in the first set of proceedings concerning the change in the parental rights
arrangement in respect of A, B, C, and D (see paragraph 11 and 12 above). Without quoting those opinions again, the Court notes that the
RODK experts concluded that it would
be possible for the applicant
to keep her children if she
decisively corrected her attitude and excluded her girlfriend from
family life. The second expert openly
questioned the applicant about her intimate relations with
Z, in order to establish whether
she actually was or had been
a homosexual. Her suspected homosexuality and sex life
featured in the second opinion which
concluded that the children would prefer to live with their father.
75. It has to be emphasised that these two opinions were the basis of the ruling of
16 October 2007 which placed all four
children in their father’s care and limited the applicant’s
parental rights. The R District
Court unconditionally accepted
the experts’ assessment, quoting them extensively
(see paragraph 15 above). In particular, it resulted from these opinions that:
- there was no guarantee that the applicant would provide her
children with the correct
care, owing to her excessive involvement in her relationship with Z;
- the applicant
did not want
to abandon her excessive proximity to Z for the sake of her relations with the children;
- the applicant’s
parental behaviour at that time was incorrect,
owing to her personal problems and emotional involvement in a relationship with another woman;
- it would have been
possible for the applicant
to continue to exercise her
parental rights, if she had decisively
corrected her attitude and excluded Z from
family life;
- despite signals coming from the children
and the clearly destructive
influence which her serious involvement
in the relationship with her
girlfriend had on family life, the applicant had not
been able to correct her behaviour.
76. In view
of the foregoing, the Court finds
that the references to the applicant’s homosexuality and relationship with Z were predominant in the first set of proceedings
concerning D and his siblings.
77. Moreover,
the Court considers that
the above-described expert
opinions, and the ruling of 16 October 2007, had a decisive bearing on the final set of domestic proceedings concerning D. In that set of proceedings, the applicant sought to change the custody arrangement in
respect of D. When refusing the interim measure, the
R District Court relied directly on both expert opinions from 2007. On 8 May
2008 the court, sitting in the same
composition, as a single judge, Judge D.T., repeated its conclusions
from 16 October 2007 that
the applicant “had concentrated excessively on herself and her relationship with her girlfriend”
(see paragraph 26 above).
78. The Government emphasised that the final ruling in the case, the ruling of 17 September 2009, had clearly dismissed the applicant’s allegations that her homosexuality
had been the grounds for
the domestic decisions. However, the Court notes that in that ruling, the S Regional Court
also considered that “the issue of raising a child in a same-sex relationship [was] very controversial”,
and that the older children’s difficulties in accepting the applicant’s new
partner were “understandable”
(see paragraph 34 above).
79. Thus,
notwithstanding the precautions
taken by the S Regional
Court to justify the extent
to which the references to
the applicant’s relationship
with Z featured in all sets
of the proceedings, the inescapable
conclusion is that her sexual
orientation and relationship
with another woman was consistently at the centre of deliberations in her regard and omnipresent at every stage of the judicial proceedings (see E.B. v France, cited
above, § 88).
80. The
Court concludes that there was therefore
a difference in treatment between
the applicant and any other parent wishing
to have full custody of his or her child. This difference was based on her
sexual orientation, a
ground which is covered by “other status” (see paragraphs 68
and 70 above).
(ii) Whether
the difference in treatment was
justified
81. Not every
difference in treatment will
amount to a violation of Article 14. The Court has consistently held that a difference in treatment is discriminatory if it has
no objective and reasonable
justification – in other
words, if it does not pursue
a legitimate aim or if there is
not a reasonable relationship of proportionality between the means employed and the aim sought to be realised (see paragraph 69 above).
82. The Court accepts that the domestic decisions concerning parental rights and custody pursued a legitimate aim, namely the protection of the rights of others (see paragraph 53 above).
83. Consequently,
it remains to be established whether the difference in treatment was justified.
84. The Court notes that both the applicant
and her former husband were considered
to have similar parenting abilities and qualities. As repeated by the
Government, Polish law
makes it clear that in cases of this nature, the interests of the child are of primary importance.
85. The Court notes that in the most recent set of proceedings the courts refused to alter the
status quo as regards custody of D, on the basis of two main arguments:
the advantages of all the siblings living together, and the
importance of a “male role
model” in the boy’s upbringing.
As stated in the ruling of
17 September 2009, the applicant
could not be the parent with full parental rights
and custody rights over D because the other children were not
with her. The Court will consider whether these arguments were appropriate to fulfil the purpose declared in these proceedings, namely to protect the best interests of the child. In so doing, the Court must necessarily
evaluate whether either or both reasons given by the Court were based on discriminatory
considerations.
86. In this
connection, the Court reiterates, in so far as the family life of a child is concerned, that there is
a broad consensus, including
in international law, in support of the idea that in all decisions
concerning children, their best interests are of paramount importance (see, among other
authorities, Neulinger
and Shuruk v. Switzerland [GC],
no. 41615/07, § 135, ECHR 2010). Indeed,
the Court has emphasised that in cases involving
the care of children and contact restrictions,
the child’s interests must
come before all other considerations (see Jovanovic v. Sweden,
no. 10592/12, § 77, 22 October
2015, and Gnahoré v. France,
no. 40031/98, § 59, ECHR 2000‑IX).
87. In the instant case, the domestic courts appear to have made reference to the purpose of protecting the best interests of
D. Such a reference may not be abstract, and it is for the Court to determine whether, as the applicant maintained, her sexual orientation did in fact have
a decisive influence on the domestic
decisions. The Court points out that
in Fretté v. France (no. 36515/97, § 26, ECHR 2002‑I) the applicant
complained that the rejection of his application for authorisation to adopt had implicitly
been based on his sexual orientation
alone. In that case, the Court conceded
that the reason given by the French administrative
and judicial authorities
for their decision had been the applicant’s
“choice of lifestyle”, and that
they had never made any express reference to his homosexuality. The Court nevertheless
concluded that this criterion implicitly yet undeniably made the applicant’s homosexuality the decisive factor
(ibid., § 32).
In the case at
hand, the Court is not persuaded that the grounds relied on by the domestic courts were appropriate to achieve the declared purpose of protecting
D’s best interests. In particular,
although the authorities noted the benefits of the stability
resulting from the siblings
living together, they discarded the strong bond which D
was clearly shown to have with his mother, the applicant, as opposed
to his father. Furthermore, the reference to the
“male role model” was repeated at every
stage of the final set of proceedings
as an essential consideration in the assessment
of the child’s best interests.
In its decision of 17 September 2009, the S Regional
Court stated (see paragraph 33 above): “for any boy from a broken family, a
male role model is important, and its importance increases as the child grows
older.” This stereotypical view was not supported
by the first-hand report of the court guardian, which showed D to be well-adjusted when living with his mother and considered his home to be with her (see paragraph 24
above). It is further noted
that the expert RODK report
did not find
anything of concern about D’s actual
stage of development, well-being
or any real and proven damage or risk to the child. Moreover, the final judgment failed to take due account the uncontested
fact that the applicant was D’s primary carer before the latter’s forced removal on 3 June 2008. The Court
notes that D was six years old
on that date, and three years old at
the time of the applicant’s divorce.
The strong bond between the child
and the applicant was acknowledged by all the experts and even by the applicant’s former husband, who, in the first set of
proceedings, proposed that the applicant retain custody of D because of their strong relationship (see paragraph 17 above). Moreover, granting custody to the applicant would not have
deprived D of contact with his
father. There is no indication that the authorities were concerned about the possibility of the applicant hindering the father’s contact with the child
and the experts recognised that the applicant understood the need for the presence of both parents in D’s life (see paragraph 31 above). Their reliance on the
male role model was thus discriminatory.
88. The Government submitted that the applicant’s relationship with Z had been taken
into consideration only as part of the factual circumstances of the
case. The Court agrees that
the questions related to
the applicant’s partner, with whom
she had been
in a stable relationship, were not without interest
or relevance in assessing
the case (see E.B. v France, cited above, § 76). The
Court has held that where a male or female applicant has already set up home with a
partner, that partner’s attitude and the role he or she will necessarily
play on a daily basis in
the life of the child joining
the home set‑up require a full examination in the child’s best interests (ibid.). However, the
Court cannot but note that in the present case the domestic authorities never examined the applicant’s partner’s attitudes and the role she played. It
was the impact of the applicant’s
relationship with Z on the former’s
parenting abilities that was negatively
assessed.
89. Although
the final ruling of 17 September
2009 concerned only D, the
S Regional Court repeated earlier findings about the allegedly negative
impact of the applicant’s relationship
with Z on the older children.
At the same time, the relationship
between D and Z had not been separately
assessed. No suggestion had been made that
D had been adversely affected by the presence of Z in his mother’s life. It is apparent from the earlier expert opinions that D had been
in a privileged position, as he had received
more attention from the applicant
and Z than his siblings, and had developed a relationship with Z (see paragraph 11 above).
90. Regard
being had to the above, the Court considers that the discriminatory reference to the importance of a
male role model for the boy’s
upbringing, the need for which would apparently
increase as the child grew older,
was a decisive factor in
the dismissal of the applicant’s
requests for custody of D. This consideration outweighed the other arguments: D’s young age, strong
bond with the applicant and well-being
while living with his mother (see paragraphs
24 and 25 above); the father’s
acknowledgment that D should remain with his mother (see
paragraph 17 above); and
the courts’ acceptance that the applicant’s behaviour as a parent could no longer raise any
objections (see paragraph 34 above).
91. Lastly,
the Court cannot ignore that the domestic courts considered that a positive assessment of the
applicant’s competencies as a primary carer for her children depended
on her stopping her relationship with Z. The courts referred to her relationship as “excessive involvement”
and an “attitude” which needed to be “corrected” and expected the relationship to be “abandoned” and Z to be “excluded
from family life”. Although this
argumentation, omnipresent
in the first set of proceedings, was
not directly referred to in the final ruling
of 17 September 2019, that judgment did not
address D’s relationship with Z and her role in the applicant’s household. In any case, there is no evidence
whatsoever of any negative
impact that Z might have had on D’s development and well-being. On
the other hand, the new relationship
of the applicant’s former husband, as a result
of which he had another child, and the fact that D was
being raised with the daily help of his grandparents and other siblings were fully
accepted.
92. Having
regard to the foregoing,
the Court concludes that,
in refusing to grant the applicant full parental rights
and custody rights in respect of D, the domestic authorities made a distinction based solely or decisively on considerations regarding her sexual
orientation, a distinction which is not
acceptable under the Convention (see Salgueiro da Silva Mouta,
cited above, § 36,
and E.B. v France, cited above § 96).
93. There
has accordingly been a breach of Article 14 of the Convention taken
in conjunction with Article
8.
- ALLEGED VIOLATION
OF ARTICLE 6 § 1 OF THE CONVENTION
94. The applicant
complained that Judge D.T. had not been impartial
and alleged a breach of Article 6 § 1 of the Convention which,
in so far as relevant, reads as follows:
“In the determination
of his civil rights and obligations ... everyone is entitled
to a fair ... hearing ... by an ... impartial tribunal established by law.”
95. The Government raised a preliminary objection that the applicant had failed
to comply with the six-month
time-limit, as the proceedings in which she had attempted
to challenge the judge had ended on 16 September 2008.
96. The Court notes that on 15 April 2008 the applicant
requested that the custody order be revised in respect of D. On 8 May 2008 Judge D.T. dismissed her application for an interim measure in that set of proceedings. On 26 May 2008
the applicant challenged
the judge, alleging that she lacked
impartiality and that this was demonstrated
in all the decisions given by her in the proceedings concerning the applicant and her children. The applicant submitted that Judge D.T. was biased against her because of the amicable relations she had had with her
parents. The applicant’s
challenge was dismissed by
way of a final decision by
the S Regional Court on 16 September
2008 (see paragraph 21 above).
The Court notes that
after that date the applicant
raised no further complaints or challenges against Judge D.T. In particular, in her appeal against the decision of 8 June 2009, the applicant did not
submit any argument to the effect that the R District Court, whose composition had included Judge
D.T., had not been impartial (see paragraph 33 above).
97. The Court thus considers that the final decisions concerning this part of the application was given on 16 September 2008. The applicant lodged her application
with the Court on 18 March 2010, which was more than six
months afterwards.
98. Accordingly,
the remainder of the application has
been lodged out of time and
must be rejected in accordance
with Article 35 §§ 1 and 4 of the Convention. The Government’s preliminary objection must be thus allowed.
- APPLICATION OF
ARTICLE 41 OF THE CONVENTION
99. Article
41 of the Convention provides:
“If the Court finds that there
has been a violation of the Convention or the Protocols
thereto, and if the internal law of the High Contracting Party concerned allows only partial
reparation to be made, the Court shall,
if necessary, afford just satisfaction to the injured party.”
- Damage
100. The applicant
claimed 3,430 euros (EUR)
in respect of pecuniary damage, and EUR 50,000 for non-pecuniary
damage.
101. The Government contested the claims.
102. The Court does not discern
any causal link between the violation found and the pecuniary damage alleged; it therefore rejects
this claim. On the other
hand, it awards the applicant
EUR 10,000 in respect of non‑pecuniary damage, plus any tax that may
be chargeable.
- Costs and expenses
103. The applicant,
who was represented
by a lawyer of her choice, did not
make any claim in respect
of the costs and expenses incurred
before the domestic courts or the Court.
- Default interest
104. The Court considers it appropriate that the default interest rate should be based on the marginal lending rate of the European
Central Bank, to which should
be added three percentage points.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT
- Dismisses, unanimously, the Government’s
preliminary objection
on compliance with the six-month rule in respect of the complaint
under Article 14 of the Convention in conjunction with Article 8;
- Declares, unanimously, the complaint concerning Article 14 of the
Convention in conjunction with Article 8 admissible, and
the remainder of the application inadmissible;
- Holds, by 6 votes to 1, that there has been a violation of Article 14 of the Convention in conjunction
with Article 8;
- Holds, by 6 votes to
1,
(a) that
the respondent State is to pay the applicant,
within three months from the date on which the
judgment becomes final in accordance with Article 44 § 2 of the Convention,
EUR 10,000 (ten thousand
euros), plus any tax that may be chargeable,
in respect of non‑pecuniary
damage, to be converted into the currency of the respondent State at the rate applicable at the date of settlement;
(b) that
from the expiry of the above-mentioned
three months until settlement simple interest shall be payable on the above amount at
a rate equal to the marginal
lending rate of the European Central Bank during the default period plus three percentage points;
- Dismisses, unanimously, the remainder of the applicant’s
claim for just satisfaction.
Done in English, and notified
in writing on 16 September 2021, pursuant
to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Renata Degener Ksenija Turković
Registrar President
In accordance
with Article 45 § 2 of the Convention and
Rule 74 § 2 of the Rules of Court, the separate opinion of Judge Wojtyczek is annexed to this
judgment.
K.T.U.
R.D.
DISSSENTING OPINION OF JUDGE WOJTYCZEK
I respectfully
disagree with the majority’s
view that there has been
a violation of Article 14
of the Convention in conjunction with Article 8. In my view, the judgment triggers three types of objection: (i) the proceedings raise serious reservations
from the viewpoint of procedural
justice; (ii) the factual findings made by the Court are not
fully accurate; and (iii) the legal
assessment of the merits of
the case appears incorrect.
1. Procedural
justice
1.1. Procedural
justice requires that all persons
whose rights and interests may be affected by the outcome of the proceedings should be heard before a decision is taken
(see, in particular: the powerful joint concurring opinion
of Judges Ravarani and Elósegui, appended to the judgment A.M. and Others v. Russia, no. 47220/19, 6 July 2021; P. Pastor
Vilanova, “Third Parties Involved in International Litigation Proceedings. What Are the Challenges for the ECHR?” in Judicial Power in a Globalized World. Liber Amicorum
Vincent De Gaetano, P. Pinto de Albuquerque, K. Wojtyczek
(eds.), Springer 2019; I refer
also to my separate
opinions, appended to the judgments
in the cases of Bochan
v. Ukraine (no. 2) [GC], no. 22251/08, ECHR 2015; Kosmas
and Others v. Greece, no. 20086/13, 29 June
2017; A and B v. Croatia, no. 7144/15, 20 June 2019; and Smiljanić v. Croatia,
no. 35983/14, 25 March 2021; also to
K. Wojtyczek, “Procedural justice and the proceedings before the European Court of
Human Rights: who should have the right to be heard?” in: Fair
trial: regional and international perspectives:
Liber Amicorum Linos-Alexandre
Sicilianos./
Procès équitable : perspectives regionales et internationales : Liber Amicorum Linos-Alexandre Sicilianos,
R. Spano et al. (eds.), Limal,
Anthemis 2020). Moreover, it is never
possible to predict whether and how the Court’s findings and statements may be used by the parties in possible
future domestic proceedings.
1.2. The instant case was brought in connection with a
dispute, at the national level,
between two private
parties, affecting also the
rights and interests of several other persons.
In particular, the proceedings
before the Court touch upon
the rights and interests of
the father, four children, the mother’s partner
and the father’s partner. The violation
of the applicant’s rights found in the present judgment stems from judicial decisions in the domestic proceedings granting rights (namely, certain parental rights on an exclusive basis) to the applicant’s opponent. In the majority’s view, the rights granted to the applicant’s opponent were granted
in violation of the Convention. Moreover,
the reasoning of the Court’s
judgment contains findings and statements which may have
an impact upon the rights
and interests of the persons
listed above. However, none of them has been heard
by the Court, or even invited
to present observations. Even the child most directly concerned
(D) was not invited to present his view.
The fact that the Government pleaded in favour of declaring the application inadmissible or of finding a non-violation does not address
this problem. The role of a respondent Government is to defend the State’s interests while treating all of the domestic parties in an
equal and impartial manner. Pleading by the
Government in favour of a non-violation
is a very different task from defending the
interests of the private party which
won the case at the domestic level.
In the instant case, the file includes the applicant’s and the Government’s submissions to the
Court, numerous official documents, the applicant’s submissions in the domestic proceedings and private documents
commissioned by the applicant.
The positions and submissions of the applicant’s opponent are available only from second-hand
sources, in the form of short summaries
in the judicial decisions
and other official documents. As a result, there is
a fundamental asymmetry in
the pleadings which favours one party to the domestic
proceedings at the expense of the other party. One litigant was able
to put forward and highlight all
of the important points for the defence
of her rights and interests, the other was not. The injustice
is even more visible because the reasoning in the present judgment is based
mainly on a certain number of points raised by one of
the litigants and accepted
by the majority.
2. Factual
basis
2.1. The instant case shows
the difficulty of establishing
facts in international human-rights
proceedings. The factual
part of a judgment has to present, in a concise manner and in English, all the relevant factual elements of the case before the
Court, on the basis of the parties’ submissions and numerous official and private documents written in the official language of the respondent State.
Preparing this part of the judgment is a difficult
task which requires identifying what is relevant and what is not.
The choice may often be open to debate, and the matter is difficult
as the judges in the composition themselves may have divergent
views on these questions.
The present
case is factually complex, and the relevant elements are very numerous. It would
have been useful to have longer excerpts from several documents which bring out further relevant elements in favour of one or the other party to the domestic proceedings. In my view, the factual findings made by the Court omit
some relevant circumstances
and may therefore convey to the readers a picture of the case which is not
fully accurate. Without claiming to provide an exhaustive picture of the complicated
circumstances of the case, I should
like merely to draw attention to a few elements.
2.2. The father,
in his application dated 2 October 2006 (referred to in paragraph 10), formulated, inter alia, the
following compliant:
“The party [i.e. the applicant
mother] has remained for years in a homosexual relationship with Z.
The partner often stays overnight and the children find the two persons in intimate
situations.”
As no copy of the father’s submissions has been provided, the quote is taken from the summary in the expert opinion dated 9 October 2007.
2.3. According
to the opinion of 16 May 2007 (referred
to in paragraph 11), the following problems, inter alia, were
raised by the children:
“A feels emotionally neglected by her mother and feels grievance towards her because
of an excessive concentration
on the relationship with Z, whom
she blames for the crisis in the family. ...
B fears
compulsive and aggressive reactions of her mother ...
C fears the
party to the proceedings [the mother],
her nervousness and aggressiveness, does not want to return
under her care and expects that he and the siblings will be taken care of by the father”.
2.4. In the judgment of 16 October 2007 (mentioned in paragraph 12) the District Court established, inter
alia, the following factual circumstances:
“The mother’s
friend interferes with the family life of the children and their mother. She meddles
with the upbringing of children
and tries to buy D.’s favour with toys.
The minor children
do not accept the mother’s friend, whereas the
party to the proceedings obliges
them to show sympathy
vis-à-vis Z.; when the children
refuse, she reacts with aggression.
The party is not able to handle difficult educational situations and becomes
too radical in her actions,
which is attested by the beating of C. on
the back of his head while doing the homework.”
2.5. The minutes of the
appeal hearing on 10 January 2008 (referred to in paragraph 17) contain, inter alia, the following statement by the father:
“I accept the
situation in which the party to the proceedings [the mother] takes
care over D because he has stronger ties with the mother.”
2.6. On 30 April 2008 the District Court issued a decision (not mentioned
in the reasoning) ordering
the applicant to hand D. over to his
father. The order was based, inter alia, on the following factual findings:
“In connection with this
the applicant [i.e. the father]
contacted the other party
to the proceedings and proposed
that the minor spend half of the month with the mother and half of the month with him. [The mother] did not
accept and the next day took the minor from the nursery school.
...
Since 10 April 2008 D has not been attending
the nursery school. In telephone communications, the mother justified this absence by an illness and refused to speak about this
topic with the father. On
the telephone, the minor started to utter words, addressed to the father, that he had not been
using before.
On 24 April 2008 the applicant
[i.e. the father] travelled
to [the city X.] in order to take the minor [D.] to his
home. He met the [mother’s]
friend, Z. who was leading D along, holding his hand. The applicant run to the son and took him by the hand, but at this moment Z started insulting [the father], beating, kicking and punching him. The
minor fled to the staircase
of the building. The police came
to intervene and the mother,
alerted by Z, arrived and took the son with her.
Since this moment, the applicant [i.e. the father] has had no contact with his child.”
2.7. On 27 May 2008 the District Court issued a decision (not mentioned in the reasoning) ordering that a court guardian should take D from the applicant
and hand the child to the father.
2.8. The District
Court’s judgment of 8 June 2009 (related in paragraph 32-33) took
account, inter alia, of the following elements:
“The arguments
raised by the applicant, to
the effect that a son was born to the [other] party to the proceedings
and that for this reason care for the minor D came
in second place and that the child
does not accept the half-brother, is a not a justification
for changing the judgment
in respect of the parental rights
over the minor D.
There are no doubts
that the birth of a half-brother is a new situation
for the minor D, who may feel “threatened” by the fact that he is
no longer the youngest member of the family, but this is a natural
reaction. One cannot reproach
the party of the proceedings that
because he has had another child
he is neglecting the minor
D and his siblings. [The father] takes care of the children
in the same way as previously and benefits in this respect from the maternal grandparents’ help, in the context
of the three-shift working
system.
It is also
necessary to note that the party’s partner does not live with him, and the party pays a visit to her once a month when his children
are under their mother’s
care. The minor’s father took them to his
partner’s place of residence in order to familiarize them with the new
situation. She herself came with the minor child to the applicant’s place, where she stayed for two weeks. The relationship between her and the children is normal,
especially because their father’s relationship has lasted for three years and the children got to know the father’s partner previously and have accepted her. They
now express joy that they have
a brother.”
2.9. When
information provided in an applicant’s
submissions to the Court is
not supported by any evidence, the Court usually introduces it with the following formulas:
“the applicant alleged that” or – in the case of information that
the Government are in a position to verify – “as alleged
by the applicant and not contested by the Government.”
The factual findings presented in paragraphs 36 and 37 are based solely on the applicant’s submissions. Given the requirement of protection of
privacy, it is difficult to accuse the Government of failing
to verify their accuracy and of having not pronounced on this question. It would have
been preferable to accompany the factual findings in question by the usual disclaimer.
3. The question
of discrimination
3.1. In my
view, the reasoning concerning the substance of the
case is unconvincing. The
Court has developed an elaborated methodology for discrimination cases (see, for instance, Molla
Sali v. Greece [GC], 2018, §§ 133-137,
19 December 2018, and Guberina
v. Croatia, no. 23682/13, §§ 66-74, 22 March 2016). This approach requires
it, in particular, to assess “whether there was a difference
of treatment between persons
in relevantly similar
positions or a failure to treat
differently persons in relevantly different situations”.
For this purpose, it is necessary
to establish: (i) which
positions are similar and which
ones are different; and
(ii) whether the State in its
legislation or practice treats all the persons concerned in a different or a similar way. This well-established methodology has not been
followed by the Court in the present
case and, as a result, two questions have
been left unanswered.
3.2. The reasoning
triggers further objections
concerning some detailed arguments.
3.2.1. In paragraph
79, the majority relies on
the following argument:
“Thus, notwithstanding the precautions taken by the S Regional Court to justify the extent to which the references to the applicant’s relationship with Z featured in all sets of the proceedings, the inescapable conclusion is that
her sexual orientation and relationship with
another woman was consistently at the centre of deliberations in her regard and omnipresent at every stage of the judicial proceedings (see E.B. v France, cited
above, § 88).”
I note in this context that the applicant’s relationship with Z was placed at
the centre of deliberations by the applicant’s children and also by the applicant’s former husband (see, for instance, points 2.2.
and 2.4 above.). The issue was presented by the children themselves as crucial. The interviews with them showed their
suffering, caused by this relationship and by the fact that they
felt neglected by the mother. The domestic courts and the court-appointed experts had no other option but to respond to the grievances raised by the children and the father.
3.2.2. The majority blames the authorities for references to the
“male role model” (see paragraph 87):
“In its decision of 17 September 2009,
the S Regional Court stated
(see paragraph 33 above): “for any boy from a broken family, a male role model is important, and its importance increases as the child grows older.”
This stereotypical view was not
supported by the first-hand report of the court guardian, which showed D to be well-adjusted when living with his mother and considered his home to be with her (see paragraph 24 above).”
The majority’s
argumentation triggers the following remarks. Firstly, the English translation (“male role model”)
of the Polish term “męski wzorzec osobowości” may
create some confusion. The original
term means “a masculine personality pattern” or
“a masculine pattern for constructing
one’s own personality.”
Secondly, the Court blames the domestic courts for repeating a “stereotypical view”. I note in this context that,
firstly, the domestic courts relied upon
an opinion which was issued by a group of experts and was based on scientific
knowledge. The professional competence of these experts was
not challenged in the domestic proceedings and I see no reason to call it into question.
The criticised statement stems from their professional opinion. It belongs to the domain of psychology
and its assessment requires advanced psychological knowledge. In order to rebut
such a statement, the Court
would have had to rely on alternative expert knowledge. No evidence was provided to demonstrate the veracity of the
opposite view, i.e. that
for a boy from a broken family a masculine
personality pattern is not important and that its importance
does not increase as the child grows older.
Under such circumstances,
the negation of the experts’
view seems itself to be based on a stereotypical view.
I note further that the role of the father for the development of children and their personalities has been the subject of scientific research for decades. Here is a minuscule sample: W. J. Yeung, G.
J. Duncan, M. S. Hill “Putting Fathers
Back in the Picture”, Marriage &
Family Review, vol. 29 (2000), pp. 97-113; Lamb M.E: “Fathers: Forgotten Contributors to Child Development”, Human
Development vol. 18 (1975), pp. 245-266; C. Lewis, M.E. Lamb, “Fathers’ influences on children’s development: The evidence from two-parent
families”, European Journal of Psychology of Education vol.
18 (2003), pp. 211–228. I am not
able here to present a synthesis of the relevant scientific knowledge. I merely note very briefly that there
is ample scientific evidence indicating that the presence of a father is crucial for the construction of a son’s personality and that the father’s absence has far-reaching detrimental effects.
Thirdly, the argument relying upon “the first-hand
report of the court guardian” is
a logical mistake. It does not
support the thesis which is argued. The report by “the
court guardian, which showed D to be well-adjusted when living with his mother and considered [this to be] his home” neither supports nor disproves the impugned statement made by the experts. It is completely
irrelevant for the sake of argument. The purpose of the
court guardian’s report was
not to evaluate any future psychological needs.
Fourthly, I note that the term “męski wzorzec” (masculine pattern) is often used
in Polish case-law concerning compensation for non-pecuniary damage resulting from the death of a person’s father (see, for instance, the judgment of the Regional Court in
Nowy Sącz, 21 November
2013, III Ca 718/13).
3.2.3. In paragraph
87 the majority states as follows: “There is no indication that the authorities were concerned about the possibility of the applicant hindering the father’s contact with the child...”
This not accurate. The authorities established that the applicant refused to comply with the domestic courts’ orders and hindered not only the father’s
contact with his child but also the father’s
exercise of his parental rights (see, for instance, point 2.6. above).
3.2.4. In paragraph
88 the majority states: “However, the Court cannot but note that in the present case the domestic authorities never examined the applicant’s partner’s attitudes and the role she played.”
I note that this
view is contradicted
in paragraph 89 by the following assertion:
“It is apparent
from the earlier expert
opinions that D had been in a privileged position, as he had received
more attention from the applicant
and Z than his siblings, and had developed a relationship with Z (see paragraph 11 above).”
The majority further express the following view
in paragraph 91: “In any
case, there is no evidence whatsoever of any negative impact that Z might have had
on D’s development and well-being.”
I note in this context that the applicant’s partner’s attitudes, and the role played by her, are assessed several times in the official documents (see, for instance, points 2.4.
and 2.6. above). The factual
findings in the domestic judicial decisions show that Z did not
respect the father’s
parental rights and acted
in overt defiance of the domestic courts’ final decisions.
3.2.5. In paragraph
92 the majority states as follows: “On the other hand,
the new relationship of the applicant’s
former husband, as a result of which he had another
child, and the fact that D was being
raised with the daily help
of his grandparents and other siblings were fully accepted.”
They fail to add that the mother’s
relationship with Z was strongly rejected by the children, whereas the father’s relationship with his new partner was assessed by the domestic courts, which established
that it was
accepted by the children.
The domestic courts took account not of the heterosexual or homosexual natures of the respective relationships, but of the children’s attitudes and concerns.
3.2.6. In paragraph
90 the majority refers to
“the father’s acknowledgment that D should remain with his mother (see paragraph 17 above)”. This argument
triggers two objections. Firstly, the father did not acknowledge
that D should remain with his mother, he simply stated at a certain
stage of the proceedings that
he accepted this solution (previously decided by the first-instance
court). Secondly, the father
expressed different views at a later
stage in the proceedings. For instance,
at one stage of the proceedings
he proposed that D spend half of the month with the mother and the other half of the month with him, but this proposal
was rejected by the mother (see point 2.6. above).
3.2.7. The domestic courts invoked, inter alia, the necessity
of keeping the siblings together.
Bringing up siblings together is an entirely legitimate objective. The fact of siblings being able to stay together usually contributes positively to their development. The Court has addressed several times the issue of siblings’ separation in the context of disputes over parental rights. In
its judgment in the case
of Mustafa and Armağan Akın v. Turkey, no. 4694/03, 6 April 2010, the Court expressed the following views:
“21. In the present case the Court considers that the decision of the Ödemiş Court separating the two siblings constituted
an interference with the applicants’
right to respect for their family life. It not only prevented
the two siblings from
seeing each other, but also made it
impossible for the first applicant
to enjoy the company of both
his children at the same time. Having regard to the facts of the present application, and in particular
the fact that the domestic courts have been requested
on a number of occasions by
the applicants to reconsider
their decisions, the Court deems it more appropriate to examine whether the respondent State complied with its positive obligation and whether its authorities acted with a view to maintaining and developing the
family ties.
...
23. The Court notes at the outset that
the custody of the second applicant
and his younger sister was determined
by the Ödemiş Court of its
own motion; neither parent had requested the judge to make such a determination. In fact, the mother had asked
the Ödemiş Court for the custody
of both children (see paragraph 6 above). The Court is thus struck by the absence of reasoning justifying the separation of the children.
24. The Government submitted that the decisions adopted by the domestic courts had not prevented
the two siblings from
seeing each other because the children were living in the same neighbourhood and it was thus possible
for them to keep in contact.
The Court cannot accept that argument and considers that maintaining the ties between the children is too important
to be left to the discretion
and whim of their parents. Indeed, it is not
disputed by the Government that
the children were prevented by their mother from even speaking to each other when they
saw each other in the street.
...
30. In the light of the foregoing, the Court considers that the domestic courts’ handling of the applicants’ case, during which they failed
to have due regard to the
best interests of the family, fell
short of the State’s positive obligation.
There has therefore
been a violation of Article 8 of the Convention.”
I note in this
context that the question of keeping the siblings together was assessed
on an individualised basis
in respect of the child D
(in contrast to the situation in Vujica v. Croatia, 56163/12, § 102, 8 October
2015; compare also Cristescu
v. Romania, 13589/07, 10 January 2012).
3.3. In paragraph
80, the majority formulates
the following conclusion: “The Court concludes that there was therefore
a difference in treatment between
the applicant and any other parent wishing
to have full custody of his or her child.”
This statement gives rise to two remarks. Firstly, the finding that there
is a difference in
treatment amounts to finding
that, under Polish practice or case-law, other persons in
a similar situation are treated
differently. As mentioned above, such a finding would have required
a thorough justification.
To demonstrate this point, it would therefore
have been necessary to analyse the case-law of the domestic courts in similar cases. However, the majority made no effort whatsoever to establish the domestic practice in respect of “other parent[s] wishing to have full custody of his or her child”.
Secondly, in the instant case the domestic
courts have thoroughly assessed the best interest of the children. The available information does not show the existence of a difference in treatment. It would appear that,
had the applicant been involved in
a heterosexual relationship,
the outcome of domestic proceedings would have been precisely
the same. It is instead the approach advocated by the majority which entails a risk that the two litigants might
be treated differently from
any other parents involved in disputes over parental rights before the Polish courts.
3.4. The majority’s
approach thus transforms the Court into an
appeal body which reassesses
the factual findings of the
domestic courts and also the application of the domestic law.
4. Conclusion
4. In conclusion,
the proceedings in the instant case are, in my view, fundamentally
flawed from the standpoint
of procedural justice. Such proceedings, by their nature, cannot provide a comprehensive and
accurate picture of the facts. The majority have established
a difference in treatment without
providing sufficient evidence that the applicant was treated
differently from another
class of parents in a similar situation. In any event,
the contested domestic judgments remain within the scope of the margin of
appreciation of the respondent
State.