Re v RL [2025] EWHC 1176 (Fam): Hague Convention “Summary Return” – Case Analysis

In Re v RL [2025] EWHC 1176 (Fam) (15 May 2025), the High Court in England and Wales considered a summary return application under the 1980 Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction. The applicant, a father based in Italy, sought the immediate return of his child (identified as R) from England.
🔍 Case Summary
- The father applied for the child’s prompt return under Article 12 of the Hague Convention, relying on a summary procedure intended to determine jurisdiction quickly.
- The mother defended the application by invoking a
grave risk objection under Article 13(b), asserting that returning R to Italy would place the child in psychological or physical danger.
Legal Tests & Court’s Framework
- Summary Nature:
The court reviewed only whether jurisdiction existed, leaving ultimate welfare considerations for later proceedings unless a grave risk had already been demonstrated. - Burden and Threshold:
Under Article 13(b), the respondent must establish that return "would expose the child to physical or psychological harm or otherwise place the child in an intolerable situation."
Key Findings
- The judge found the mother's evidence — concerning a risk to her emotional wellbeing — did not meet the required grave risk threshold.
- Reports indicated that the mother’s health and mental state, while fragile, did not confirm a risk substantial enough to refuse return under the Convention.
- No evidence suggested that Polish social services would act detrimentally once R returned, nullifying concerns of immediate administrative interference or domestic harm.
Outcome
The court granted summary return:
- R was ordered to be returned to Italy, enabling the father to initiate further legal proceedings in the child’s habitual residence.
- The decision underscores the High Court's rigorous standard for rejecting Hague return requests, emphasising that emotional or mental health concerns must be supported by compelling evidence.
⚖️ Implications for Hague Return Applications
1. High Bar for Grave Risk
Article 13(b) objections require more than general anxiety or distress. Courts will only refuse a summary return where there is substantial risk to a child’s safety or well‑being.
2. Importance of Habitual Residence
Article 12’s criteria are strict: once a child is habitually resident in one jurisdiction, the court must order return unless a grave risk is clearly demonstrated.
3. Limited Scope of Summary Proceedings
These hear early jurisdictional disputes. Welfare issues are reserved for full hearings unless immediate harm is proven.
4. Need for Solid Evidence
Cases referencing previous mental health issues or speculative harm are unlikely to succeed. Robust factual evidence—medical, psychological, or social protection—is essential.
✅ Practical Advice for Parents
- If seeking return, apply promptly under Article 12.
- If opposing return on grave risk grounds, present strong evidence: independent medical reports, expert testimony, or documented past incidents.
- Understand summary return is just the start—welfare hearings can follow in the child's habitual residence.
Final Thoughts
Re v RL [2025] EWHC 1176 (Fam) highlights the strict application of the Hague Convention’s summary return process in proceedings in England and Wales. It clarifies that to prevent a child’s return, objections must rise above general emotional difficulties and meet the high legal threshold of “grave risk.” Without this threshold being met, courts are likely to order return, after which detailed welfare proceedings may proceed abroad.
For parents involved in cross-border disputes, this decision emphasises the urgency of seeking prompt legal advice and securing persuasive, evidence-based arguments—particularly when the child’s safety or emotional welfare is at stake.
For family law advice and family court representation, please contact Stephanie Heijdra family law barrister via sheijdra@winvolvedlegal.co.uk and 02071014682









