This case presents the question whether the courts of this Commonwealth should defer to a determination of a court in Australia concerning the custody of a minor child, an Australian citizen, now in the Commonwealth with his mother, but purportedly subject to custody orders of the Family Court of Australia. This issue concerns G. L. c. 209B, the Massachusetts Child Custody Jurisdiction Act, enacted in 1983
The husband and wife, Australian citizens, were married in Australia in 1968. A daughter was bom in 1970, and a son in 1972. The husband and wife were divorced in Sydney, Australia, in 1977. In 1979, the wife was awarded sole custody of the children, and the husband was given reasonable visitation rights. The wife remarried in 1980. The husband has also remarried. In 1982, the employer of the wife’s husband offered him a three-year assignment in Massachusetts. Thereupon the wife sought court permission to remove the children from Australia. The parties consented to an order of December 22,1982, under which the daughter was to return to Australia for two weeks in December, 1983, or January, 1984, and was to return permanently not later than July 31,1984, to be in the day-to-day care of her father until her mother’s return to Australia. The order provided as to the son that he should return to Australia “not later than the 14th day of January, 1984” to commence his secondary education and that, until his mother’s return, he should be in the day-to-day care of his father. The wife, her husband, and the two children came to Massachusetts in February, 1983, where the children attend public school in the town in which they live. Although the wife initially made appropriate arrangements to return the children to Australia at the end of 1983, she changed her mind on the asserted ground that her husband had taken a permanent position in this country with his employer. Early in December, 1983, her husband advised the father by telephone that the children would not be returning to Australia because they were to remain in this country permanently.
Several days later the husband was in Massachusetts and filed a petition in the Probate and Family Court for Middlesex County, pursuant to G. L. c. 248, § 35, seeking enforcement of the January 13, 1984, order and custody of his son. 1 On January 17, the wife filed a complaint for custody of both children and on January 20 a complaint seeking modification of the December 22, 1982, order of the Australian court. The husband moved to dismiss the wife’s complaints for lack of jurisdiction. The judge considered, first and separately, the matter of his jurisdiction to consider the custody dispute. In his February 15, 1984, memorandum of decision the judge ruled that, when the January 13, 1984, order was entered, the Australian court had no jurisdiction under the standards of G. L. c. 209B. He also ruled that, under G. L. c. 209B, the Massachusetts court had jurisdiction of all three proceedings. The judge dismissed the husband’s action seeking enforcement of the Australian custody order. A single justice of the Appeals Court granted the husband leave to appeal from the determination that the Probate and Family Court “has jurisdiction over this matter.” We transferred the appeal to this court on our own motion, and heard argument on August 8, 1984.
The mother concedes that the Australian court had jurisdiction over the question of her son’s custody when that court issued its various orders. 4 She further concedes that “the procedural and substantive custody law of Australia appears reasonably comparable to that of the Commonwealth.”
The husband, of course, does not claim that the lower court lacked jurisdiction to enforce the custody order of the Australian court pursuant to his petition, under G. L. c. 209B, § 12, for custody of his son. He does argue that the judge may not act favorably on the wife’s complaints for custody and for modification of the Australian orders so as to grant her permanent custody of her son. The issue is not whether the judge had juris
The husband also relies of § 2 (<?), to which the trial judge did not refer in his findings. Section 2
(e)
provides that a Massachusetts court shall not modify a custody determination of another State made “in substantial conformity with [G. L. c. 209B]” unless the foreign court “does not now have jurisdiction under jurisdictional prerequisites substantially in accordance with this chapter” (or unless the foreign court has declined jurisdiction to modify its determination). We see no basis on this record for concluding that the Australian custody determination was not made in substantial conformity with G. L. c. 209B or for concluding that the Australian court does
We decline the wife’s invitation to consider whether the Australian judge properly applied the substantive law of Australia in issuing the order of January 13, 1984, whose enforcement is sought here. That is a matter rightly presented in the
We add a comment about the enforcement of custody determinations of foreign countries. Under G. L. c. 209B, § 14, the courts of this Commonwealth must “grant due recognition” to such determinations if those determinations have been rendered in substantial conformity with G. L. c. 209B. One can imagine a case in which recognition of a foreign country’s custody determination would not be due. In
Schiereck
v.
Schiereck,
The wife argues that we should not enforce the January 13, 1984, custody order because it is punitive — designed to enforce the terms of the December 22, 1982, order under which the son was to return permanently to Australia by the middle of January, 1984. It is true that the wife has violated the court’s order to return her son to Australia in January, 1984. By her unilateral action, which is analogous to taking her son from Australia contrary to court order, the wife failed to comply with the December 22, 1982, order of the Australian court. That fact is not irrelevant in deciding whether independent custody proceedings should be permitted in this State. See
Murphy
v.
Murphy,
So ordered.
Notes
The father asserts before us that he did not seek relief in Australia or here as to the daughter because under the December 22, 1982, order she was not to return to Australia permanently until July, 1984.
Chapter 209B was approved on December 21, 1983 (St. 1983, c. 680), and became effective thirty days later (see art. 48 of the Amendments to the Constitution of the Commonwealth, The Referendum, I and III, § 2; G. L. c. 4, § 1), before the hearing and decision of the trial judge on the question of jurisdiction.
The Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act has a similar but not identical provision. Section 23 of the Uniform Act (9 U.L.A. 167 [1979]) provides: “The general policies of this Act extend to the international area. The provisions of this Act relating to the recognition and enforcement of custody decrees of other states apply to custody decrees and decrees involving legal institutions similar in nature to custody institutions rendered by appropriate authorities of other nations if reasonable notice and opportunity to be heard were given to all affected persons.”
The trial judge concluded that “[a]t the time the Australian Order was entered in December 1983 [íz'c] [January 13, 1984], that Court under the standards of M.G.L. c. 209B had no jurisdiction.” The Australian court had jurisdiction under its own law over the matter of the custody of the son. See Family Law Act 1975, § 4 (1) and § 39 (4) (a) and (b). Under the standards of G. L. c. 209B, the Australian court had jurisdiction at the time of the commencement of the proceedings in which the custody orders were entered and continues to have jurisdiction.
Section 2 (d) states in full: “A court of the commonwealth shall not exercise jurisdiction in any custody proceeding commenced during the pend-ency of a proceeding in a court of another state where such court of that state is exercising jurisdiction consistently with the provisions of this section for the purpose of making a custody determination, except in accordance with paragraph (3) of subsection (a), unless the court of the other state shall decline jurisdiction pursuant to paragraph (4) of subsection (a) or shall stay its proceedings or otherwise defer to the jurisdiction of a court of the commonwealth. ”
If jurisdiction A has issued a custody order and jurisdiction B subsequently issues an inconsistent custody order without proper recognition of jurisdiction A’s order, it has been held under the Uniform Act that jurisdiction A need not defer to jurisdiction B’s order.
See Allison
v.
Superior Court,
In
Murphy
v.
Murphy,
