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Delhi High Court Upholds Custody of Minor Child in Arizona — “Forceful Removal by One Parent Cannot Confer Jurisdiction; Child’s Welfare Best Served in Original Home State, Where the Child Was Born, Raised, and Lawfully Domiciled”

Delhi High Court Upholds Custody of Minor Child in Arizona — "Forceful Removal by One Parent Cannot Confer Jurisdiction; Child’s Welfare Best Served in Original Home State, Where the Child Was Born, Raised, and Lawfully Domiciled"

Delhi High Court Upholds Custody of Minor Child in Arizona — "Forceful Removal by One Parent Cannot Confer Jurisdiction; Child’s Welfare Best Served in Original Home State, Where the Child Was Born, Raised, and Lawfully Domiciled"

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Court’s Decision

The Delhi High Court dismissed the wife’s appeal against the Family Court’s rejection of her guardianship petition for lack of jurisdiction and allowed the husband’s habeas corpus petition, directing the return of the minor child to Arizona, USA. The Court held:

“Forceful removal/detention, even by a parent, at a place that is not the natural habitation of the minor child, would not render such other place the ordinary place of residence.”

The Court upheld the Arizona Court’s parenting order and concluded that the child’s best interests lay in returning to the USA, where the child was born, raised, and lawfully domiciled.


Facts


Issues

  1. Whether the minor child can be said to “ordinarily reside” in Delhi to invoke jurisdiction under Section 9 of the G&W Act.
  2. Whether the High Court should exercise its writ jurisdiction in a habeas corpus petition to enforce a foreign custody order.
  3. What is in the best interest of the minor child.

Petitioner’s Arguments (Wife)


Respondent’s Arguments (Husband)


Analysis of the Law


Precedent Analysis

The Court relied on the following judgments:


Court’s Reasoning


Conclusion


Implications

Also Read – Supreme Court Rejects Remand in Land Title Dispute — “When Matter Can Be Decided on Interpretation of Documents, No Justification to Appoint Court Commissioner Again; Appointment of Another Court Commissioner Would Further Delay the Proceedings Which Have Been Pending for Over 14 Years”

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