A MOTHER’S CARE OR LAND, BUT NOT BOTH
–TEPULOLO V. POU
SUE
FARRAN[*]
The Tuvalu case
of
Tepulolo v. Pou,
[1] provides
some harsh illumination of the problems individuals face when Pacific Island
countries sign up to international conventions and do nothing to implement them
in their domestic laws. The case is a hard one and sad.
The plaintiff
was an unmarried mother. We do not know how old she was or whether this was her
only child. The first defendant was the father of the baby. He too was not
married he seemingly did not propose to marry the mother of his baby although
paternity was not in dispute. Instead, three years after the baby was born he
sought to take the baby away from the mother to live with him and his parents.
The child’s mother opposed this believing that he also intended to take
the child out of Tuvalu to New Zealand and give it to his sister there. She did
not want to give up her child.
Counsel for the plaintiff argued hard for
the mother to keep the child, but custom, poorly drafted laws, the inertia of
the Tuvalu Parliament, and the reluctance of the court to take a pro-active
human rights approach, conspired against him. The mother lost the case and the
child. How did this come about?
It emerges from this case that the laws
of Tuvalu are full of inconsistencies. First, the Constitution of Tuvalu
declares that everyone in Tuvalu is entitled to the fundamental rights and
freedoms set out in the Constitution without distinction based – among
other things – on sex.
[2] The
rights and freedoms to which everyone is entitled are then set out in Part II.
One of the freedoms is freedom from
discrimination,
[3] but this section
only refers to difference of treatment on the grounds of race, origin, political
opinion, colour, or religious (or lack of) beliefs. Sex or gender is not
mentioned. Therefore, the court held, laws which discriminate of the grounds of
sex or gender are not unconstitutional. Secondly, the rights of every person to
such rights and freedom are cut down by provisions which do not apply
non-discrimination provisions to laws in relation to
land.
[4] Land law and land rights can
therefore be discriminatory – without restriction as to grounds. Thirdly,
under the
Custody of Children Ordinance a court in making custody order
must have ‘regard to the welfare of the child’ and ‘to the
conduct and wishes of the mother and
father’.
[5] This suggests that
the welfare principles prevail over the wishes of either parent in the
court’s deliberations. Indeed section 3(3) states this principle to be
‘the first and paramount consideration’. Yet the
Native Lands
Ordinance, which confers on the court the power to adjudicate on paternity
issues,
[6] allows a court to make an
order that a child for whom paternity is acknowledged, must, after reaching the
age of two years, reside with its father and /or his
relations,
[7] unless this would be
contrary to customary law. There is no reference to the welfare of the child,
although the welfare or best interests of the child has been held to apply as a
guiding principle by the Tuvalu High Court in custody cases concerning children
in Tuvalu.
[8] The
Custody of
Children Ordinance was passed in 1974 whereas the
Native Lands
Ordinance was passed in 1957. Chronologically then it might be thought that
the later act should be given priority over the earlier. However the court in
this case could see no conflict between the two, despite the fact that not only
is the
Custody of Children Ordinance later, but also it applies to all
courts whereas the
Native Lands Ordinance only applies to a lands court
established under the Act.
[9]
Indeed, the fact that the Island Court had made such an order without having the
jurisdiction to do so seems hardly to have troubled the High Court – which
could have ruled that the Island Court had acted
ultra vires.A
final inconsistency lies in the fact that whereas the
Custody of Children
Ordinance puts the welfare of the child first, the
Matrimonial
Proceedings Act (which was not applicable here but was referred to in the
case) despite stating that the welfare of the children is of paramount
importance, ranks it as equal to that of the parties of the marriage.
The attention of the court was drawn to the fact that Tuvalu is a
signatory to both the
Convention on the Rights of the Child (ratified on
14 July 1995) and the
Convention to Eliminate Discrimination against
Women (acceded to on 4 October
1999).
[10] Although neither has been
given effect in domestic law – as the Court was quick to point out; there
is scope within Tuvalu law to adopt a pro-active approach. The Interpretation
Act allows the courts to arrive at a construction of a written law which is
consistent with the international obligations of Tuvalu rather than one which is
not.
[11] In this case the court
held that the court could only do so where the law was ambiguous. The court was
reluctant to be seen to be correcting or amending the laws of Tuvalu to bring
them in line with the country’s international obligations. What the court
failed to appreciate is that the judiciary is an arm of the state, and the
courts – especially where governments are slow to act – have a role
to play in interpreting legislation so as to endeavour to give effect to that
country’s obligations not only as a signatory to international conventions
but as a member of the United Nations, subscribing to a common agenda. There
was scope to argue that the inconsistencies referred to above at the very least
made the intent and purpose of the law unclear. In any case, the court seemed
considerably less reluctant to interpret the preamble to the Constitution as
giving support to gender discriminatory provisions when it came to land issues
and custody of children. Reference was made to the Preamble which refers to the
‘maintenance of Tuvaluan values, culture and traditions’. There is
no reference in the preamble to customary law. Yet the court was prepared to
find that the court’s power to make a compulsory residence order that a
child reside with his father ‘in accordance with customary law’ had
constitutional support.
Could the court have interpreted the section on
discrimination so as to give effect to the broader principle that all persons -
whatever his ...sex – are entitled to the rights and freedoms set out in
the Constitution, and not to interpret the provision on discrimination
restrictively? Arguably this could have been done, especially as this
provision states that discrimination should not be ‘wholly or
mainly’ because of the various criteria listed in the section (27) (1).
It does not state that the discrimination must be ‘solely’ on these
grounds.
It was also open to the court to rule that an order which gave
effect to Tuvalu’s obligations under CRC and CEDAW and was in line with
the welfare principle should have been considered. The court accepted that
there was scope for a court exercising its powers under the
Native Lands
Ordinance not to make an order that the child go and reside with his father.
The making of such an order is discretionary and is made so as to provide
support for the child. This support being the securing of inheritance to land
rights through residence. In making an order, the Lands Court – like any
other court – is bound to take into account the best interests or welfare
of the child. Clearly in providing for the child’s future land rights the
court might have though it was doing this. It was however open to the court
either to make no order at all, or to postpone the coming into effect of the
order,
[12] or to make ‘such
order as custom allows’. Whether custom allowed a young child to remain
with his mother does not appear to have been considered. Nor was there any
consideration of the relationship between custom and the welfare principle.
Indeed there seems to have been little if any consideration by the court either
at the Island Court level or the in the High Court, of what course of action was
in the best interests of a three year old child. Nor, might it be added, was
there any consideration of what, if any fundamental rights of the child, might
be infringed by this
action.
[13]While the
application of the welfare principles may not always appear to take into account
the social and cultural context of the Pacific and may be viewed by some as an
alien and introduced concept,
[14]
the decision in this case may be thought to represent the opposite extreme and
is contrary to general trends throughout the
region.
[15] In order to meet the
evidential requirements for establishing a customary claim to land the High
Court of a country which is a signatory to both the CRC and CEDAW, and has a
constitution incorporating a bill of rights, ordered a small boy to be taken
from his natural mother to live with his biological father and his relatives, in
the knowledge that a) the mother may have problems with access as she has no
matrimonial link with the man or his family and b) the man may remove the child
from Tuvalu altogether. A hard case indeed it was, but it was also a sad
one.
[*] Senior Lecturer
University of Dundee, Scotland; Visiting Lecturer University of the South
Pacific.
[1] [2005] TVHC 1 (Tuvalu
High Court).
[2] Section
11(1).
[3] Section
271).
[4] Section 27(2)
(1)(c).
[5] Section
3.
[6] Section 20(1) and
(2).
[7] Section
20(2)(i).
[8] See Martin v.
Martin [2003] TVHC 15, Case No. 2 of
2003.
[9] Section
6.
[10] Hereafter the CRC and
CEDAW.
[11] Section 17
Interpretation Act [Cap
1A].
[12] The wording of the
provision under section 20(2)(i) is that ‘If the father being a native
accepts the child as being his, such child shall after reaching the age of 2
reside with the father....’ It is therefore arguably that any age after
two could be set by the court for the taking up of such
residence.
[13] It is
questionably, for example, whether a female child would be similarly
treated.
[14] See for example,
Ken Brown, ‘Customary rules and the welfare principle: Post-independence
custody cases in Solomon Islands and Vanuatu’ (1997) 21 The Journal of
Pacific Studies 83.
[15] See
Sue Farran, ‘Approaches to Child Custody in the Pacific Region’
(Occasional Paper No. 3, University of the South Pacific School of Law
Occasional Paper Series, 2003).