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Whallon v. Lynn, 230 F.3d 450 (1st Cir. (Mass.) 2000)
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In Whallon v. Lynn, 230 F.3d 450 (1st Cir. (Mass.) 2000), the Court of
Appeals held that the father had "rights of custody" under Mexican law,
which was law of her habitual residence at time of her removal, as the
doctrine of patria potestas gave the father custodial rights greater
than mere visitation rights, notwithstanding the Mexican court's
rejection of father's petition to terminate the mother's parental
rights. The Affidavit of a Mexican attorney indicating that both parents
exercise patria potestas rights under Mexican law and stating that both
parents must consent to the removal of the child under Mexican law was
an acceptable form of proof in determining issues of foreign law, and
was permitted under the Hague Convention.
The child's return to Mexico would not subject child to grave risk of
physical or psychological harm or otherwise intolerable situation,
notwithstanding alleged instances of verbal and physical abuse committed
by father, who resided in Mexico, as none of abusive conduct was
directed at the child. An opposing return must establish that the
alleged physical or psychological harm is a great deal more than
minimal; the harm must be something greater than would normally be
expected on taking a child away from one parent and passing him or her
to another, and courts are not to engage in a custody determination or
to address such questions as who would be the better parent in the long
run. The father did not acquiesce the mother's removal of the child from
Mexico, even though he did not institute formal custody proceedings and
wrote a note allegedly acknowledging that the mother could relocate with
the child, in light of the father's subsequent increasing involvement in
child's life, and the father's prompt and persistent actions seeking the
child's return to Mexico following her removal.
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