Bina Shahani appeals the district court’s order granting John Navani’s petition that their son be returned to England, the child’s country of habitual residence, pursuant to the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction and its implementing legislation, the International Child Abduction Remedies Act. The district court concluded that Sha-hani wrongfully retained the boy in the United States without Navani’s consent in violation of his rights of custody over the child as defined under English law, and that no exception to the mandatory return remedy under the treaty and statute applied.
During the pendency of this appeal, the English family court with jurisdiction over the child’s custodial arrangements issued a new custody order concerning each parent’s custodial rights. Navani argues that the new custody order moots Shahani’s appeal because it effectively strips Shahani of her custodial rights over the child. We agree with Navani that the new custody order prevents us from granting Shahani any effectual relief and therefore we dismiss her appeal because it fails to present a live case or controversy.
I.
A. The Hague Convention
The Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction, Oct. 25, 1980, T.I.A.S. No. 11,670, 1343 U.N.T.S. 49 (“the Hague Convention”) seeks to deter parents who are dissatisfied with current custodial arrangements from abducting their children and seeking a more favorable custodial ruling in another country.
Shealy v. Shealy,
The International Child Abduction Remedies Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 11601-11610 (2007) (“ICARA”), implements the Hague Convention in the United States and grants federal and state courts “concurrent original jurisdiction of actions arising under the Convention.” 42 U.S.C. § 11603(a). A petitioner who seeks an order returning a child to his country of habitual residence must show that: “(1) the child was habitually resident in a given state at the time of the removal or retention; (2) the removal or retention was in breach of petitioner’s custody rights under the laws of that state; and (3) petitioner was exercising those rights at the time of removal or retention.”
Shealy,
B. Factual and Procedural Background
Navani and Shahani were married in London, England, on December 14, 1995. Born on August 4, 1996, Jivan is the couple’s only child. Navani and Shahani’s marriage ended in divorce on February 16, 2004. As part of the divorce proceedings, an English family court issued a custody order (“the original custody order”) concerning Jivan, which stated in relevant part:
*1125 The Court orders that:—
1. the child Jivan NAVANI shall reside with the mother Bina SHAHANI
2. the father John NAVANI shall
(i) be entitled to all information provided to parents with parental responsibility by Rosemary Works School or any other school attended by the child Jivan NAVANI
(ii) in particular John NAVANI shall be entitled to have access to the child Jivan NAVANI’s attendance records held by Rosemary Works School or any other school the said child attends
3. the mother Bina SHAHANI and the father John NAVANI are prohibited from removing the child Jivan NAVANI from the jurisdiction of the Court, namely England and Wales, without the written consent of the other or order of the court
4. the child Jivan NAVANI shall not be removed from Rosemary Works School without the written consent of the father John NAVANI or order of the court
5. the father John NAVANI shall have' contact with the child Jivan NAVANI as follows:
(i) during school terms, on alternate weekends, staying contact from the end of the school day on Friday to the start of the school day on Monday
(ii) half of each school holiday, including school half-terms, in the absence of agreement for the first half of each holiday, where the first half if half term does not fall on a term time contact weekend, the holiday arrangement shall prevail if there is a conflict....
ApltApp. at 13-14.
On August 16, 2004, Shahani made a written request to Navani, pursuant to the original custody order, asking for his consent to allow the mother and the boy to take a holiday in the United States. After Navani consented, and Shahani failed to return to England on the agreed upon date, Navani contacted English law enforcement. Navani did not see his son again until he located Shahani and Jivan in New Mexico more than a year later.
■ On March 14, 2006, Navani filed a Hague Convention petition in'the District of New Mexico asserting that Jivan had been wrorigfully retained in the United States in violation of Navani’s custody rights as established by English law. Na-vani asked the court to order the boy’s return to England under the Hague Convention and ICARA. After a one-day trial, the district court granted Navani’s petition on March 31, 2006, finding that Shahani had breached Navani’s rights of custody under English law by retaining him in the United States, thereby warranting the child’s repatriation to England. The district court ordered Jivan’s return to England by June 15, 2006, where he now lives. Separately, Navani moved for an award of attorney’s fees and costs pursuant to § 11607. In two orders issued on May 30, 2006 and December 5, 2006, the district court partially granted Navani’s two motions for fees and costs and awarded him a total of $46,779.99.
Shahani thereafter filed a notice of appeal concerning the district court’s March 31, 2006, order granting Navani’s petition for an order of return and the district court’s May 30, 2006, order denying Sha-hani’s motion for a new trial or to alter or amend the judgment. 1 In her opening brief, Shahani generally argued that Nava-ni failed to satisfy his burden under the *1126 Hague Convention and ICARA to show that he possesses rights of custody over Jivan, that the one-day trial violated her right to due process of law, and that the district court’s order of return was technically deficient because it ordered the child returned to Navani’s personal custody rather than to England. Navani disputed each of these contentions.
On April 30, 2007, a week before the scheduled May 7, 2007 oral argument in this case, Navani filed a motion to dismiss Shahani’s appeal as moot based on an order issued by the English family court on March 23, 2007 (“the new custody order”). In pertinent part, the new custody order provides:
(i) The Mother wrongfully and unlawfully, without the Father’s consent or leave of the Court, failed to return [Jivan Na-vani] to the jurisdiction of England and Wales on the 6th September 2004, and thereafter wrongfully and unlawfully retained Jivan Navani in the United States of America without the Father’s consent or leave of the Court, contrary to the terms of the Child Abduction and Custody Act 1984.
(v) By virtue of his having parental responsibility together with an order for contact (the latter made by Mr. Justice Hedley on 2nd January 2004) the First Respondent Father has and had at all material times equal rights of custody together with the Mother in relation to Jivan, including at the time of his wrongful retention in the United States in September 2004.
IT IS ORDERED THAT:-
1.The Residence Order in favour of the Mother, together with all other orders made by the Honourable Mr. Justice Hedley on the 22nd January 2004 and 28th November 2006 be, for the avoidance of doubt, discharged.
2. The child Jivan Navani shall reside with the father John Kishin Navani.
3. The Applicant Mother be forbidden to remove the child Jivan Navani from the care of the First Respondent Father and from the jurisdiction of this Court.
4. The Applicant Mother’s applications for a Residence Order and an order permitting her to remove the child Jivan Navani from the jurisdiction of England and Wales be dismissed.
5. There shall be by way of Prohibited Steps Order no direct contact between the Applicant Mother and the child Jiv-an Navani outside the jurisdiction of England and Wales.
6. The Mother shall have indirect contact with the child Jivan Navani as follows:-
(i) Telephone contact once per week for a period of thirty minutes at dates and times to be agreed, together with such other indirect contact by telephone letter and presents as is agreed between the parties.
(ii) Direct supervised contact within the jurisdiction as may be agreed in writing between the parties.
7. The Applicant Mother shall deliver up to the Father’s solicitors all travel documents, passports and applications for the same relating to Jivan Navani as may be in her possession.
8. The Mother shall be forbidden to apply for any passport or travel document or for the grant of United States Citizenship or Rights of Abode for Jivan Navani.
Mot. to Dismiss, Ex. A at 2-4. Navani argues that the new custody order moots Shahani’s appeal because it grants primary physical custody to Navani and prohibits returning the child to Shahani’s custody. In her response brief to the motion to dismiss and at oral argument, Shahani opposed the motion to dismiss, contending *1127 that the new custody order conflicts with English family law, the English family court issued the new custody order without hearing argument from her counsel, and the issue of fees and costs is sufficient in itself to keep her appeal alive.
II.
Before turning to the merits of Shahani’s appeal, we must first address Navani’s argument that the new custody order moots her appeal. “ ‘The mootness question necessarily constitutes our threshold inquiry, because the existence of a live case or controversy is a constitutional prerequisite to the jurisdiction of the federal courts.’ ”
In re L.F. Jennings Oil Co.,
A.
In the event that we would conclude that the district court erred in granting Nava-ni’s Hague Convention petition and in ordering Jivan’s return to England, Navani argues that the new custody order nonetheless precludes us from granting Shaha-ni any effectual relief and therefore moots her appeal. Navani argues that the new custody order renders Shahani’s appeal moot in two ways. First, the English family court concluded in the new custody order that Shahani wrongfully retained Jivan in the United States in violation of Navani’s rights of custody. Navani contends that the English family court’s ruling on wrongful retention settles the issue that Shahani raises in this appeal: whether Navani had rights of custody over Jivan sufficient to trigger the Hague Convention’s mandatory return remedy. Second, Navani argues that Jivan cannot be ordered to return to Shahani’s custody because the English family court has determined that custody should now be with Navani, not Shahani.
We agree with Navani that the new custody order prevents us from ordering any effectual relief in this appeal. If we conclude that the district court should not have ordered Jivan’s return to England because Navani failed to make his threshold showing that he possesses rights of custody over Jivan, the only way to remedy the error would be to order Jivan’s return to the United States to be reunited with Navani. Yet the new custody order implicitly prohibits Jivan’s return to the United States to live with his mother by forbidding “direct contact between the Applicant Mother and the child Jivan Navani outside the jurisdiction of England and Wales.” Mot. to Dismiss, Ex. A at 3. The *1128 new custody order forbids Shahani from removing Jivan from his father’s care and the jurisdiction of the English family court. Id. Shahani cannot even possess the travel documents, such as Jivan’s passport, that would be necessary for international travel. Id. at 4. Further, for us to decide Shahani’s appeal we would have to determine whether Navani possessed rights of custody under the original custody order. But interpreting the rights of custody that the parties possessed under the original custody order would be a futile exercise because the new custody order discharges all prior custody orders. Id. at 3. Finally, the new custody order makes clear that contrary to Shahani’s argument before the district court and on appeal that Navani had no rights of custody at the time of the alleged wrongful retention, Navani “has and had at all material times equal rights of custody together with the Mother in relation to Jivan, including at the time of his wrongful retention in the United States in September 2004.” Id. at 2.
Although the Full Faith and Credit Clause does not require us to recognize judgments, such as the new custody order, which are rendered in foreign countries,
Soc’y of Lloyd’s v. Reinhart,
Second, and more fundamentally, factors unique to the Hague Convention suggest that the English family court should be given the final word, through the new custody order, in this matter. While Shahani believes that we can review the merits of her appeal without taking the new custody order into account and that the district court can order Jivan’s return to the United States in spite of the new custody order’s provisions holding otherwise, Aplt. Supp. Response Br. at 5-6, both the letter and spirit of the Hague Convention suggest that the new custody order ends this matter.
As we and our sister circuits have repeatedly explained, the Hague Convention attempts to prevent an international version of forum shopping, wherein a parent dissatisfied with current custodial arrangements flees with the child to another country to re-litigate the merits of custody and to obtain a more favorable custody order.
Shealy,
Neither party disputes that England is Jivan’s country of habitual residence.
See generally
Aplt. Opening Br. at 7; Aple. Response Br. at 12-18. As a result, the English family court had, and continues to have, plenary jurisdiction over Jivan’s custody.
See Dubois,
Indeed, granting Shahani the relief she seeks would create the evil that the Hague Convention was intended to prevent: dueling custody orders issued by separate national courts.
Ohlander v. Larson,
In
Miller,
an Ontario court granted custody in favor of the mother of two children, while a New York state court later granted custody in favor of the father of those children.
Finally, the Sixth Circuit in
Friedrich
articulated its test for when a custodial parent exercises custody rights under the Hague Convention: a custodial parent exercises custody rights unless the parent’s actions “constitute clear and unequivocal abandonment of the child.”
Although we recognize that these cases present facts different than those we encounter in our case, the harm that those cases addressed is the same that we face in this appeal — the threat of conflicting custody orders issued by separate national courts. If, after we reversed the district court’s order granting Navani’s petition, the district court ordered Jivan’s return to Shahani’s custody, the district court’s order would stand in direct opposition to the English family court’s custody order forbidding direct contact between Shahani and her son. The spirit, therefore, as well as the letter of the Hague Convention prevents us from granting any effectual *1131 relief to Shahani, thereby rendering her appeal moot.
B.
To reassure us that her case is not moot, Shahani makes four separate arguments. First, she contends that the issue in her appeal remains whether Shahani breached Navani’s rights of custody under the original custody order—an issue that she asserts remains regardless of the English family court’s subsequent custody proceedings. Aplt. Mot. to Dismiss Response Br. at 4; Aplt. Supp. Response Br. at 5. While in a narrow sense Shahani is correct that the issue she asks us to address is still before us, the fact remains that we cannot grant her any effectual relief, even if we decided the issue in her favor, for the reasons we stated above.
Second, Shahani asserts that the new custody order violates principles of English family law in determining that Navani had equal rights of custody at the time of the allegedly wrongful retention. Aplt. Mot. to Dismiss Response Br. at 2-3. According to Shahani, the new custody order therefore “fails” as controlling subsequent authority. Id. at 2. Even if we agreed with Shahani’s characterization of the new custody order as being contrary to settled principles of English law, the only way for us to remedy the error would be to hold that the English family court incorrectly interpreted its own law in deciding custody. The Hague Convention explicitly forbids us, however, from determining the merits of custody. Hague Convention arts. 16, 19. As the forum with plenary jurisdiction over custody, the English family court system is the only appropriate venue for challenging the new custody order.
Third, Shahani suggests that the new custody order should have no effect in American courts because it was issued ex parte without her participation. Aplt. Mot. to Dismiss Response Br. at 3-4. It is true that principles of comity generally require us to examine the fairness of the foreign country’s judicial procedures. See Restatement (Third) of the Foreign Relations Law of the United States § 482 cmt. b (1987) (“A court asked to recognize or enforce the judgment of a foreign court must satisfy itself of the essential fairness of the judicial system under which the judgment was rendered.”). In analyzing the fairness of a foreign judicial system, we inquire if
“there has been opportunity for a full and fair trial abroad before a court of competent jurisdiction, conducting the trial upon regular proceedings, after due citation or voluntary appearance of the defendant; and under a system of jurisprudence likely to secure an impartial administration of justice between the citizens of its own country and those of other countries, and there is nothing to show either prejudice in the court, or in the system of laws under which it is sitting, or fraud in procuring the judgment.”
Phillips USA v. Allflex USA,
Fourth and finally, Shahani asserts that this appeal is analogous to
Whiting v. Krassner,
Even if Fawcett and Whiting are correct that a child’s return to his country of habitual residence fails to moot an appeal — an issue we need not reach in this ease 3 — Shahani’s appeal differs from Faw-cett and Whiting in one critical aspect: Shahani’s appeal became moot as a result of the terms of the new custody order, not the mere fact of Jivan’s return to England. Assuming that we had the power to alter the status quo, prior to the issuance of the new custody order, by ordering Jivan’s return to the United States, we lost that authority once the English family court altered the terms of the child’s custody to forbid Jivan from traveling to the United States to have contact with his mother. As the English family court retained jurisdiction at all times over Jivan’s custody, and we have never had jurisdiction over the merits of the English family court’s custodial decisions, we are powerless to alter the current custodial regime forbidding the very relief that Shahani seeks: return of the child to the United States.
Shahani contends that Fawcett and Whiting are analogous, however, in two other respects. First, Shahani maintained at oral argument that an order reversing the district court’s granting of Navani’s Hague Convention petition would affect how the English family court, in the future, apportions custody among the parties. Beyond a citation to an email from Shahani’s English lawyer stating that if Shahani “wins [in America] it would help [in England],” Shahani provides no legal authority for such an assertion. The new custody order gives every indication that it resulted from the English family court’s own evaluation of the merits of custody, rather than being dependent on the outcome of the Hague Convention proceeding in New Mexico. Shahani makes no specific argument to the contrary.
Second, Shahani suggests that the district court’s orders on attorney fees and
*1133
costs prevent her appeal from becoming moot, but these rulings are insufficient to extend the life of this appeal.
See Citizens for Responsible Gov’t State PAC v. Davidson,
III.
Navani’s motion to dismiss this appeal as moot is GRANTED and this appeal is DISMISSED. Shahani’s motion for rear-gument is DENIED. Navani’s request for attorney fees is DENIED.
Notes
. Shahani’s notice of appeal states that she appeals, in part, the "May 26, 2006” order denying reconsideration. Aplt.App. at 509. It is clear that Shahani actually means the May 30, 2006, order denying Shahani’s motion for a new trial or to alter or amend the judgment.
. The Hague Conference that drafted the Hague Convention recognized the Explanatory Report “as the official history and commentary on the Convention and is a source of background on the meaning of the provisions of the Convention available to all States becoming parties to it.” Hague International Child Abduction Convention, 51 Fed.Reg. 10494, 10503 (March 26, 1986).
. It should be noted that the Eleventh Circuit, in disagreement with the Third and Fourth Circuits, has concluded that a Hague Convention case becomes moot upon the child's return to his country of habitual residence because federal courts become "powerless” to grant relief to the respondent afterward.
Bekier v. Bekier,
