Adoption (Jersey)
Law 1961[1] [2]
Part 1
General
1 Interpretation
(1) In
this Law, unless the context otherwise requires –
“adoption order” means –
(a) an order under Article 10(1); or
(b) a Convention adoption order;
“Adoption Rules”
has the meaning assigned to it by Article 18(2);
“Adoption Service” has the meaning assigned
to it by Article 2(3) of this Law;
“approved adoption society”
means –
(a) the adoption service;
(b) an adoption society approved under the
Adoption Act 1976 (c.36) of the United Kingdom; and
(c) the Committee of the States of Guernsey with
responsibility for matters relating to the adoption of infants;
“civil partnership
couple” means a couple who have formed a civil partnership;
“Convention” means the Convention on
Protection of Children and Co-operation in respect of Intercountry Adoption,
concluded at The Hague on 29th May 1993;
“Convention adoption” means an adoption
effected under the law of a Convention country outside the British Islands and
certified in pursuance of Article 23(1) of the Convention;
“Convention adoption order” means an
adoption order made in accordance with Article 11C of this Law;
“Convention country” means any country or
territory in which the Convention is in force;
“Court” means the Inferior Number of the
Royal Court;
“father”, in relation to an illegitimate
infant, means the natural father;
“guardian” has the same meaning as in the
Children (Jersey) Law 2002[3];
“infant” means a person under the age of
majority, but does not include a person who is or has been married, or who is or
has been a civil partner;
“Minister” means the Minister for Health and
Social Services;
“overseas adoption” means an adoption
appearing to the Court to be effected under the law of any country outside the
British Islands;
“panel” has the meaning assigned to it by
Article 7;
“parent” means, in relation to an infant,
any parent who has parental responsibility for the infant under the Children
(Jersey) Law 2002; and
“parental responsibility” has the same
meaning as in the Children (Jersey) Law 2002;
“prescribed” means prescribed by Adoption Rules;
“registered medical practitioner” means a
physician or surgeon registered under the enactments for the time being
regulating the exercise in Jersey of the profession of medical practitioner;
“relative”, in relation to an infant, means
a grand-parent, brother, sister, uncle or aunt, whether of the full blood or
half blood or by marriage or civil partnership, and includes –
(a) where an adoption order has been made in
respect of the infant or any other person by a court of competent jurisdiction
in the British Islands any person who would be a relative of the infant within
the meaning of this definition if the adopted person were the child of the
adopter born in lawful wedlock or in the course of a civil partnership;
(b) where the infant is illegitimate, the father
of the infant and any person who would be a relative of the infant within the
meaning of this definition if the infant were the legitimate child of the
infant’s mother and father.[4]
(2) [5]
(3) For
the purposes of this Law, a person shall be deemed to make arrangements for the
adoption of an infant if the person enters into or makes any agreement or
arrangement for, or for facilitating, the adoption of the infant by any other person,
whether the adoption is effected, or is intended to be effected, in pursuance of
an adoption order or otherwise, or if the person initiates or takes part in any
negotiations of which the purpose or effect is the conclusion of any agreement
or the making of any arrangement therefor, or if the person causes another to
do so.
(3A) In
this Law, in determining with whom or where an infant has his or her home, any
absence of the infant at a hospital or boarding school and any other temporary
absence shall be disregarded.[6]
(3B) In
this Law, in relation to the proposed adoption of an infant resident outside
the British Islands, references to arrangements for the adoption of an infant
include references to arrangements for an assessment for the purpose of
indicating whether a person is suitable to adopt an infant or not.[7]
(3C) In
this Law, in relation to –
(a) an adoption proposed to be effected by a
Convention adoption order; or
(b) an adoption of an infant habitually resident
outside the British Islands which is proposed to be effected otherwise than by
a Convention adoption order,
references to an infant placed
with any persons by an adoption agency include references to an infant who, in
pursuance of arrangements made by such an agency, has been placed with those
persons under the law of a country or territory outside the British Islands.[8]
(4) This
Law applies to citizens of the Republic of Ireland as it applies to British
subjects, and references in this Law to British subjects shall be construed
accordingly.
(5) Any
reference in this Law to any other enactment shall be construed as a reference
to that enactment as amended by any subsequent enactment; and in this paragraph
“enactment” includes an enactment of the United Kingdom.[9]
2 Establishment
of Adoption Service[10]
(1) The
Minister shall continue to maintain in Jersey a service designed to meet the
needs, in relation to adoption, of –
(a) infants who have been or may be adopted;
(b) parents
and guardians of such infants; and
(c) persons
who have adopted or may adopt an infant,
and for that purpose shall
continue to provide the facilities referred to in paragraph (2) of this
Article, or secure that they are provided by another approved adoption society.[11]
(2) The
facilities to be provided as part of the service maintained under
paragraph (1) include –
(a) arrangements
for assessing infants and prospective adopters, and placing infants for
adoption;
(b) counselling
for persons with problems relating to adoption.
(3) The
services maintained by the Minister under paragraph (1) may be
collectively referred to as the “Adoption Service”.
(4) In
Articles 2 to 9 of this Law references to adoption are to the adoption of
infants, wherever they may be habitually resident, effected under the law of
any country or territory, whether within or outside the British Islands.[12]
3 Duty
to promote welfare of infant[13]
In reaching any decision relating
to the adoption of infants the Court or the Minister shall have regard to all
the circumstances, first consideration being given to the need to safeguard and
promote the welfare of the infant throughout the infant’s childhood, and
shall, so far as practicable, ascertain the wishes and feelings of the infant
regarding the decision and give due consideration to them, having regard to the
infant’s age and understanding.
4 Religious
upbringing of adopted child[14]
The Minister shall in placing an
infant for adoption have regard, so far as is practicable, to any wishes of an
infant’s parents and guardians as to the religious upbringing of the
infant.
5 Duty
to use approved adoption societies[15]
The Minister shall, if he or she
cannot place an infant for adoption in Jersey or in Guernsey, use an adoption
society approved under the Adoption Act 1976
(c.36) of the United Kingdom.
6 Restriction
on arranging adoptions and placing of children[16]
(1) A
person other than the Minister shall not make arrangements for the adoption of
an infant, or place an infant for adoption, unless –
(a) the
proposed adopter is a relative of the infant; or
(b) the
proposed adopter is acting in pursuance of an order of the Court.
(2) A
person who –
(a) takes
part in the management or control of a body of persons which exists wholly or
partly for the purpose of making arrangements for the adoption of infants;
(b) contravenes
paragraph (1); or
(c) receives
an infant placed with the person in contravention of paragraph (1),
shall be guilty of an offence and
liable on conviction to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 3 months or to a
fine not exceeding level 3 on the standard scale or to both.
(3) In
any proceedings for an offence under paragraph (2)(a), proof of things
done or of words written, spoken or published (whether or not in the presence
of any party to the proceedings) by any person taking part in the management or
control of a body of persons, or in making arrangements for the adoption of
infants on behalf of the body, shall be admissible as evidence of the purpose
for which that body exists.
7 Adoption
Panel[17]
(1) There
is established an Adoption Panel (in this Law referred to as the “panel”) –
(a) to carry out such of the powers and duties
of the Minister as may be determined pursuant to Article 8; and
(b) to recommend to the Minister where an
allowance payable under Article 9 is appropriate.
(2) Subject
to paragraph (3), the panel shall comprise the Minister or such officers
in the employment of an administration of the States for which the Minister is
assigned responsibility, and such members of the public, as the Minister shall
from time to time think fit.
(3) Nothing
in paragraph (2) shall be construed as a requirement that the Minister
shall at all times be a member of the panel.
8 Delegation
to the Panel[18]
The Minister may delegate to the
panel such of his or her powers and duties in relation to the maintenance of
the Adoption Service as the Minister may by Order determine.
9 Allowances[19]
The Minister may, after considering
a recommendation of the panel, pay an allowance to persons who have adopted, or
intend to adopt, infants, where the Minister is satisfied that such an adoption
is not practicable without payment of an allowance.
Part 2
Making of Adoption Orders
10 Power to make
adoption orders
(1) Subject
to the provisions of this Law, the Court may, upon an application made in the
prescribed manner –
(a) by a person domiciled in the British
Islands; or
(b) jointly by 2 spouses, or both partners of a civil
partnership, at least one of whom is domiciled in the British Islands,
make an order authorizing the
applicant or, in the case of an application by 2 spouses, or both partners of a
civil partnership, the applicants, to adopt the infant.[20]
(2) Where
the application is for a Convention adoption order and complies with Article 3C
of this Law the requirements of paragraph (1) of this Article in respect of
domicile shall not apply.[21]
(3) An
adoption order may be made authorizing the adoption of an infant by the mother
or father of the infant, either alone or jointly with his or her spouse or
civil partner.[22]
(4) An
adoption order may be made in respect of an infant who has already been the
subject of an adoption order made by a court of competent jurisdiction whether
in Jersey or elsewhere; and in relation to an application for an adoption order
in respect of such an infant, the adopter or adopters under the previous or
last previous adoption order shall be deemed to be the parent or parents of the
infant for all the purposes of this Law.[23]
(5) [24]
11 Age and sex of
applicant
(1) Subject
to paragraph (2), an adoption order shall not be made in respect of an
infant unless the applicant –
(a) is the mother or father of the infant; or
(b) is a relative of the infant, and has
attained the age of 20 years; or
(c) has attained the age of 25 years.
(2) An
adoption order may be made in respect of an infant on the joint application of 2
spouses or both partners of a civil partnership –
(a) if either of the applicants is the mother or
father of the infant; or
(b) if the condition set out in
paragraph (1)(b) or (c) is satisfied in the case of one of the applicants,
and the other of them has attained the age of 20 years.[25]
(3) [26]
11A Implementation
of Convention[27]
(1) Subject
to the provisions of this Law, the Minister may by Order make provision for
giving effect to the Convention, and such provision may include amendments to
this Law.
(2) The
text of the Convention (so far as material) is set out in Schedule 2.
(3) An
Order under this Article may provide that any person who contravenes or fails
to comply with any provision of the Order shall be guilty of an offence and
liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 3 months, or a fine not
exceeding level 4 on the standard scale, or both.
(4) Any
power to make subordinate legislation under or for the purposes of this Law
includes power to do so with a view to giving effect to the provisions of the
Convention.
11B Central
authority and accredited bodies[28]
(1) The
Minister shall discharge the Central Authority’s functions under the
Convention but any of its functions under Articles 8, 9 or 15 to 21 of the
Convention may be discharged by an accredited body on the Minister’s
behalf.
(2) An
approved adoption society is an accredited body for the purposes of the
Convention if the approval extends to the provision of facilities in respect of
Convention adoptions and adoptions effected by Convention adoption orders.
11C Convention
adoption orders[29]
An adoption order shall be made as
a Convention adoption order if –
(a) the
application is for a Convention adoption order; and
(b) such
requirements as may be prescribed by Order made by the Minister are complied
with.
12 Freeing infant
for adoption[30]
(1) Where,
on an application by the Minister, the Court is satisfied in the case of each
parent or guardian of the infant that –
(a) the
person freely, and with full understanding of what is involved, agrees
generally and unconditionally to the making of an adoption order; or
(b) the
person’s agreement to the making of an adoption order should be dispensed
with on a ground specified in Article 13(2),
the Court shall make an order
declaring the infant free for adoption.
(2) No
application shall be made under paragraph (1) unless –
(a) it
is made with the consent of a parent or guardian of an infant; or
(b) the
Minister is applying for dispensation under paragraph (1)(b) of the
agreement of each parent or guardian of the infant, and the infant is in the
care of the Minister.
(3) No
agreement required under paragraph (1)(a) shall be dispensed with under
paragraph (1)(b) unless the infant is already placed for adoption or the
Court is satisfied that it is likely that the infant will be placed for
adoption.
(4) An
agreement by the mother of the infant is ineffective for the purposes of this Article
if given less than 6 weeks after the infant’s birth.
(5) On
the making of an order under this Article parental responsibility for the
infant is given to the Minister and Article 20(2) applies as if the order were an
adoption order and the Minister was the adopter.[31]
(6) Before
making an order under this Article, the Court shall satisfy itself, in relation
to each parent or guardian of the infant who can be found, that the person has
been given an opportunity of making, if the person so wishes, a declaration
that he or she prefers not to be involved in future questions concerning the
adoption of the infant, and any such declaration shall be recorded by the
Court.
(7) Before
making an order under this Article in the case of an infant whose father does
not have parental responsibility for the infant, the Court shall satisfy itself
in relation to any person claiming to be the father that –
(a) the person has no intention of applying
within the next 6 months for an order under Article 5 of the Children (Jersey)
Law 2002 or a residence order under Article 10 of that Law; or
(b) if the person did make any such application,
it would be likely to be refused.[32]
(8) An
order under this Article may be made in respect of an infant who has already
been the subject of an adoption order made by a court of competent jurisdiction
whether in Jersey or elsewhere.[33]
12A Progress
reports to former parents[34]
(1) Within
14 days following the date 12 months after the making of an order under Article
12, the Minister, unless he or she has previously by notice to the former
parent informed him or her that the infant has been adopted, shall inform that
parent by notice –
(a) whether the infant has been adopted; and
(b) if the infant has not been adopted whether
he or she has his or her home with a person with whom he or she has been placed
for adoption.
(2) Where
a notice has been given as described in paragraph (1)(b) the Minister shall
inform the former parent by notice –
(a) if and when the infant is adopted; and
(b) if the infant ceases to have his or her home
with a person with whom he or she has been placed for adoption.
(3) If
at any time the former parent by notice makes a declaration to the Minister
that he or she prefers not to be involved in future questions concerning the
adoption of the infant –
(a) the Minister shall secure that the
declaration is recorded by the Court; and
(b) the Minister shall be released from any
further requirements under paragraph (2).
(4) In
this Article and Article 12B of this Law “former parent” means any
person required to be given an opportunity of making a declaration under
Article 12(6) but who did not do so.
12B Revocation
of Article 12 order[35]
(1) Where
at any time more than 12 months after the making of an order under Article 12
of this Law (an “Article 12 order”), if the infant –
(a) has not been adopted; and
(b) does not have his or her home with a person
with whom he or she has been placed for adoption,
his or her former parent may
apply to the Court for an order revoking the Article 12 order on the ground
that he or she wishes to resume parental responsibility.
(2) While
an application under this Article is pending the Minister shall not place the
infant for adoption without the leave of the Court.
(3) The
revocation of an Article 12 order operates –
(a) to extinguish the parental responsibility
given to the Minister;
(b) to give parental responsibility to the
infant’s mother and, where the infant’s father and mother were
married at the time of the infant’s birth, the infant’s father; and
(c) to revive –
(i) any
parental responsibility agreement,
(ii) any
order pursuant to Article 5 of the Children (Jersey) Law 2002 that the
father shall have parental responsibility for the infant, and
(iii) any
appointment of a guardian in respect of the infant (whether made by a court or
otherwise),
extinguished by the making of
the Article 12 order.
(4) Subject
to paragraph (3)(c), the revocation does not –
(a) operate to revive –
(i) any
order under the Children (Jersey) Law 2002; or
(ii) any
duty referred to in Article 20(2)(a)(iii) of this Law,
extinguished by the making of
the Article 12 order; or
(b) affect any person’s parental
responsibility so far as it relates to the period between the making of the
Article 12 order and the date of revocation of that order.
(5) Subject
to paragraph (6), where the Court dismisses an application under this Article
on the grounds that to allow it would contravene the principle embodied in
Article 3 of this Law –
(a) the applicant shall not be entitled to make
a further application in respect of the infant; and
(b) the Minister shall be released from the duty
of complying further with Article 12A(2) as respects that parent.
(6) Paragraph
(5)(a) shall not apply where the Court gives leave to the former parent to make
a further application to revoke the Article 12 order, but such leave shall not
be given unless it appears to the Court that because of a change in
circumstances or for any other reason it is proper to allow the application to
be made.
13 Parental
agreement[36]
(1) An
adoption order shall not be made unless –
(a) the
infant is free for adoption by virtue of an order made under Article 12 or by
order of a court of competent jurisdiction in any other part of the British Islands;
or
(b) in
the case of each parent or guardian of the infant the Court is satisfied
that –
(i) the
parent or guardian freely, and with full understanding of what is involved,
agrees unconditionally to the making of an adoption order, whether or not he or
she knows the identity of the applicants, or
(ii) the
parent or guardian’s agreement to the making of the adoption order should
be dispensed with on a ground specified in paragraph (2).[37]
(2) The
grounds mentioned in paragraph (1)(b)(ii) are that the parent or
guardian –
(a) cannot
be found or is incapable of giving agreement;
(b) is
withholding his or her agreement unreasonably;
(c) has
persistently failed without reasonable cause to exercise his or her rights,
duties, obligations and liabilities as a parent or guardian in respect of the
infant;
(d) has
abandoned or neglected the infant;
(e) subject
to paragraph (4) has persistently ill-treated the infant;
(f) has
seriously ill-treated the infant;
(g) is
incapable of caring for the infant or is of such habits or mode of life as to
be unfit to have the care of the infant.[38]
(3) Agreement
is ineffective for the purposes of paragraph (1)(b)(i) if given by the
mother less than 6 weeks after the infant’s birth.[39]
(4) Paragraph
(2)(e) does not apply unless because of the ill-treatment or for other reasons,
the rehabilitation of the infant within the household of the parent, or
guardian is unlikely.
(5) Where
there has been a finding by a court of competent jurisdiction as to any grounds
specified in paragraph (2)(c), (d), (e), (f) or (g) in the course of
earlier proceedings to which the parent or guardian was given the opportunity
of being a party, that finding shall be sufficient but not conclusive evidence
of those grounds.
(6) Before
making an adoption order in the case of an infant whose father does not have
parental responsibility for the infant, the Court shall satisfy itself in
relation to any person claiming to be the father that –
(a) he has no intention of applying within the
next 6 months for an order under Article 5 of the Children (Jersey) Law 2002 or
a residence order under Article 10 of that Law; or
(b) if he did make any such application, it
would be likely to be refused.[40]
14 Evidence of
consent of parent or guardian
(1) Where
a parent or guardian of an infant does not attend in the proceedings on an
application for an adoption order for the purpose of giving his or her consent
to the making of the order, a document signifying his or her consent to the
making of such an order shall –
(a) if the person in whose favour the order is
to be made is named in the document or (where the identity of that person is
not known to the consenting party) is distinguished therein in the prescribed
manner; and
(b) if the document is attested by a person of
any such class as may be prescribed,
be admissible as evidence of that
consent and of the signature of the document by the person by whom it is
executed:
Provided that a document
signifying the consent of the mother of an infant shall not be admissible under
this Article unless the infant is at least 6 weeks old on the date of the
execution of the document.
(2) For
the purposes of this Article, a document purporting to be attested in the
manner provided by paragraph (1) shall be deemed to be so attested, and to
be executed and attested on the date and at the place specified in the
document, unless the contrary is proved.
15 Infant to live with adopters
and notification to Minister[41]
(1) An
adoption order shall not be made unless the infant, at all times during the
preceding 3 months (not counting any time before he or she attained the age of 6
weeks), had his or her home with the applicant (or, in the case of an
application by 2 spouses or both partners of a civil partnership, one of the
applicants).[42]
(2) Except
where the applicant or one of the applicants is a parent of the infant, an
adoption order shall not be made unless the applicant has, at least 3 months
before the date of the order, given notice in writing to the Minister of his or
her intention to apply for an adoption order in respect of the infant.[43]
(3) Where
an application for an adoption order in respect of an infant is pending, a
parent or guardian of the infant who has signified his or her consent to the
making of an adoption order in pursuance of the application shall not be
entitled, except with the leave of the Court, to remove the infant from his or
her home with the applicant, and in considering whether to grant or refuse such
leave the Court shall have regard to the welfare of the infant.[44]
(4) In
relation to –
(a) an adoption proposed to be effected by a
Convention adoption order; or
(b) an adoption of an infant habitually resident
outside the British Islands which is proposed to be effected otherwise than by
a Convention adoption order,
paragraph (1) shall have effect
as if the reference to the preceding 3 months were a reference to the preceding
6 months.[45]
16 Functions of Court
as to adoption orders
(1) The
Court before making an adoption order shall be satisfied –
(a) that every person whose consent is necessary
under this Law, and whose consent is not dispensed with, has consented to and
understands the nature and effect of the adoption order for which application
is made, and in particular in the case of any parent understands that the
effect of the adoption order will be permanently to extinguish his or her
parental responsibility for the infant;
(b) that the order if made will be for the
welfare of the infant; and
(c) that the applicant has not received or
agreed to receive, and that no person has made or given or agreed to make or
give to the applicant, any payment or other reward in consideration of the
adoption except such as the Court may sanction.[46]
(2) In
determining whether an adoption order if made will be for the welfare of the
infant, the Court shall have regard (among other things) to the health of the
applicant, as evidenced, in such cases as may be prescribed, by the certificate
of a registered medical practitioner, and shall give due consideration to the
wishes of the infant, having regard to the infant’s age and
understanding.
(3) The
Court in an adoption order may impose such terms and conditions as the Court
may think fit, and in particular may require the adopter by bond or otherwise
to make for the infant such provision (if any) as in the opinion of the Court
is just and expedient.
17 Interim orders
(1) Subject
to the provisions of this Article, the Court may, upon any application for an
adoption order, postpone the determination of the application and make an
interim order giving parental responsibility for the infant to the applicant
for a period not exceeding 2 years by way of a probationary period upon such
terms as regards provision for the maintenance and education and supervision of
the welfare of the infant and otherwise as the Court may think fit.[47]
(2) All
such consents as are required to an adoption order shall be necessary to an
interim order but subject to a like power on the part of the Court to dispense
with any such consent.
(3) An
interim order shall not be made in any case where the making of an adoption order
would be unlawful by virtue of Article 15.
(4) Where
an interim order has been made giving parental responsibility for an infant to
the applicant for a period of less than 2 years, the Court may by order extend
that period, but the total period for which the custody of the infant is given
to the applicant under the order as varied under this paragraph shall not
exceed 2 years.[48]
(5) An
interim order shall not be deemed to be an adoption order within the meaning of
this Law.
18 Procedure
(1) In
this Law “Adoption Rules” means
rules made under paragraph (2).
(2) Rules
in regard to any matter to be prescribed under this Law and dealing generally
with all matters of procedure and incidental matters arising out of this Law
and for carrying this Law into effect shall be made by the Superior Number of
the Royal Court.
(3) Adoption
Rules may provide for applications for adoption orders to be heard and
determined otherwise than in open court.
(4) Article 3
of the Official Publications (Jersey) Law 1960[49], shall apply to Adoption Rules as it applies to enactments
mentioned in that Article and, accordingly, as soon as may be after any such rules
are made, the Judicial Greffier shall transmit a certified copy thereof to the
Greffier of the States.
(5) In
all proceedings, whether oral or written, under this Law, any member of the
Court and any party or person engaged or concerned in such proceedings or
giving evidence therein may use the English language.
(6) For
the purposes of any application for an adoption order, the Court shall, subject
to Adoption Rules, appoint some person or body to act as guardian ad litem of the infant upon the hearing of the
application with the duty of safeguarding the interests of the infant before
the Court.
(7) Adoption
Rules may make provision –
(a) as to the form of a direction under Article
20(5) or an application for such a direction;
(b) as to the information required to be given
by an applicant for such a direction;
(c) as to the persons who are to be parties to
proceedings on an application under that paragraph; and
(d) requiring notice of an application under
that paragraph to be served on the Attorney General and on persons who may be
affected by the direction.[50]
19 [51]
Part 3
Effects of Adoption Orders
20 Consequences of adoption[52]
(1) An
adopted infant shall be treated in law –
(a) where his or her adopters are a married
couple or a civil partnership couple, as if he or she had been born as a child
of the marriage or civil partnership, as the case may be (whether or not he or
she was born after that marriage or civil partnership); and
(b) in any other case as if he or she had been
born to the adopter –
(i) in
wedlock (but not as a child of any actual marriage of the adopter), or
(ii) in
the course of a civil partnership.[53]
(1A) An
adopted infant shall be treated in law as if he or she were not a child of any
person other than any adopter.[54]
(1B) In
the case of an infant adopted solely by a natural parent, paragraph (1A) has no
effect as respects entitlement to property depending on relationship to that
parent, or as respects anything else depending on that relationship.[55]
(2) Where
an adoption order is made –
(a) the following are extinguished –
(i) the
parental responsibility which any person has for the infant immediately before
the making of the order,
(ii) any
order under the Children (Jersey) Law 2002 unless the court directs otherwise,
and
(iii) any
duty arising by virtue of an agreement or the order of a court to make
payments, so far as the payments are in respect of the infant’s
maintenance or upbringing for any period after the making of the order, unless
made under an agreement which constitutes a trust or expressly provides that
the duty is not to be extinguished by the making of an adoption order; and
(b) the adopter shall have parental
responsibility for the adopted infant.[56]
(3) Where
it becomes necessary to appoint a guardian for an adopted child, the adopter or
adopters and the relatives of the adopter or adopters shall, in all matters
appertaining to the formation of the guardianship, be deemed to be the
relatives of the adopted child, and, where an adoption order is made in respect
of an infant who is under guardianship, the Court shall order that the
guardianship be reconstituted unless it is of the opinion that it is in the
interests of the child that the guardianship be maintained.
(4) For
the purposes of the law relating to marriage or civil partnership, an adopter
and the person whom the adopter has been authorized to adopt under an adoption order
shall be deemed to be within the prohibited degrees of consanguinity; and the
provisions of this paragraph shall continue to have effect notwithstanding that
some person other than the adopter is authorized by a subsequent order to adopt
the same infant.[57]
(5) Where,
in the case of an infant adopted under a Convention adoption, the Court is
satisfied, on an application under this paragraph –
(a) that under the law of the country in which
the adoption was effected the adoption is not a full adoption;
(b) that the consents referred to in Article
4(c) and (d) of the Convention have not been given for a full adoption, or that
Jersey is not the receiving State (within the meaning of Article 2 of the
Convention); and
(c) that it would be more favourable to the
infant for a direction to be given under this paragraph,
the court may direct that the
adoption shall have effect other than as a full adoption.[58]
(6) In
paragraph (5) “full adoption” means an adoption by virtue of which
the infant falls to be treated in law as if he or she were not the infant of
any person other than the adopters or adopter.[59]
21 Friendly societies,
insurance, etc.
(1) For
the purposes of the enactments for the time being in force relating to friendly
societies, collecting societies or industrial insurance companies, an adopter
shall be deemed to be the parent of the infant whom the adopter is authorized
to adopt under an adoption order.
(2) Where,
before the making of an adoption order in respect of an infant, the natural
parent of the infant has effected an insurance with any such society or company
for the payment, on the death of the infant, of money for funeral expenses, the
rights and liabilities under the policy shall by virtue of the adoption order
be transferred to the adopter and the adopter shall, for the purposes of the said
enactments, be treated as the person who took out the policy.
(3) In
this Article “adoption order” means an adoption order made by a
court of competent jurisdiction whether in Jersey or elsewhere.[60]
22 Orders and
agreements for maintenance of illegitimate infants
(1) Where
an adoption order is made in respect of an infant who is illegitimate, then,
unless the adopter is the infant’s mother and the mother is a single
woman, any order or agreement whereby the father of the infant is required or
has undertaken to make payments specifically for the benefit of the infant,
shall cease to have effect, but without prejudice to the recovery of any
arrears which are due under the order or agreement at the date of the adoption order.
(2) After
an adoption order has been made in respect of an infant who is illegitimate, no
order requiring the father of the infant to make payments specifically for the
benefit of the infant shall be made unless the adoption order was made on the
application of the mother of the infant alone.
23 Intestacies, etc.[61]
(1) Where,
at any time after the making of an adoption order, the adopter or the adopted person
or any other person dies intestate in respect of any real or personal property
(other than personal property subject to an entailed interest under a
disposition to which paragraph (3) does not apply), that property shall
devolve in all respects as if the adopted person were the child of the adopter
and were not the child of any other person.[62]
(2) For
all the purposes of the law relating to the indefeasible right of a person to
succeed to the personal property of the person’s ascendants, an adopted person
shall be deemed to be the child of the adopter and not the child of any other person.[63]
(3) In
any disposition of real or personal property made, whether by instrument inter vivos or by will (including codicil), after the
date of an adoption order –
(a) any reference (whether express or implied)
to the child or children of the adopter shall, unless the contrary intention
appears, be construed as, or as including, a reference to the adopted person;
(b) any reference (whether express or implied)
to the child or children of the adopted person’s natural parents or
either of them shall, unless the contrary intention appears, be construed as
not being, or as not including, a reference to the adopted person; and
(c) any reference (whether express or implied)
to a person related to the adopted person in any degree shall, unless the
contrary intention appears, be construed as a reference to the person who would
be related to the adopted person in that degree if the adopted person were the
child of the adopter and were not the child of any other person.[64]
(4) For
the purposes of paragraph (3), a disposition made by will or codicil shall
be treated as made on the date of the death of the testator.
(5) For
the avoidance of doubt, it is hereby declared that an adopted child born before
a natural child shall rank as principal heir in preference to the natural
child.
(6) In
the application of the law regarding the devolution of acquired real property (acquets) and personal property (meubles) and for the purposes of the construction of
any such disposition as is mentioned in this Article, an adopted person shall
be deemed to be related to any other person being the child or adopted child of
the adopter or (in the case of a joint adoption) of either of the
adopters –
(a) where the adopted person was adopted by 2
spouses jointly or by both partners of a civil partnership jointly, and that
other person is the child or adopted child of both of them, as brother or
sister of the whole blood;
(b) in any other case, as brother or sister of
the half-blood.[65]
(7) Notwithstanding
anything in this Article, an executor of the will or an administrator of the
personal estate of a deceased person may distribute any personal property to or
among the persons entitled thereto without having ascertained that no adoption order
has been made by virtue of which any person is or may be entitled to any
interest therein, and shall not be liable to any such person of whose claim the
executor of the will or an administrator of the personal estate has not had
notice at the time of the distribution; but nothing in this paragraph shall
prejudice the right of any such person to follow the property, or any property
representing it, into the hands of any person who may have acquired it by means
of devolution or descent.
(8) Where
an adoption order is made in respect of a person who has been previously
adopted, the previous adoption shall be disregarded for the purposes of this Article
in relation to the devolution of any property on the intestacy of, or any right
to the personal property of, any person dying after the date of the subsequent
adoption order, and in relation to any disposition of property made, or taking
effect on the death of a person dying, after that date.
(9) References
in this Article to an adoption order and to an adopted person include
references to an adoption order made before 24th November 1963 either
under this Law or under the Adoption of Children (Jersey) Law 1947 and to
a person adopted under such an order, but nothing in this Article shall affect
the devolution of any property on the intestacy of, or any right to the
personal property of, any person who died before that date, or affect any
disposition made before that date.[66]
(10) In
this Article “adoption order” means an adoption order made by a
court of competent jurisdiction whether in Jersey or elsewhere.[67]
Part 4
Registration
24 Adopted Children Register
(1) The
Superintendent Registrar shall maintain a register, to be called the Adopted
Children Register, in which shall be made such entries as may be –
(a) directed to be made in it by adoption
orders; or
(b) required to be made under Article 25,
and no other entries shall be
made.[68]
(2) A
certified copy of an entry in the Adopted Children Register, if purporting to
be signed by the Superintendent Registrar shall, without any further or other
proof of that entry, be received as evidence of the adoption to which it
relates and, where the entry contains a record of the date of the birth or the
country or the parish of the birth of the adopted person, shall also be
received as aforesaid as evidence of that date or country or parish in all
respects as if the copy were a certified copy of an entry in the Registers of
Births.
(3) The
Superintendent Registrar shall cause an index of the Adopted Children Register
to be made and kept in the Superintendent Registrar’s office and every person
shall be entitled to search that index and to have a certified copy of any entry
in the Adopted Children Register in all respects upon and subject to the same
terms and conditions as to payment of fees and otherwise as are applicable
under the Marriage and Civil Status
(Jersey) Law 2001[69] in respect of searches in other indexes kept in the office of the
Superintendent Registrar and in respect of the supply by the Superintendent
Registrar of certified copies of entries in the Registers of Births, Deaths and
Marriages.[70]
(4) The
Superintendent Registrar shall, in addition to the Adopted Children Register
and the index thereof, keep such other registers and books, and make such
entries therein, as may be necessary to record and make traceable the
connection between any entry in the Registers of Births which has been marked
“Adopted” pursuant to Article 25 or any enactment at the time
in force, and any corresponding entry in the Adopted Children Register.
(5) The
registers and books kept under paragraph (4) shall not be, nor shall any
index thereof be, open to public inspection or search and, except under an order
of the Royal Court, the Superintendent Registrar shall not furnish any person
with any information contained in or with any copy or extract from any such
registers or books.
25 Registration of
adoptions
(1) Every
adoption order shall contain a direction to the Superintendent Registrar to
make in the Adopted Children Register an entry in the form set out in Schedule
1, and (subject to paragraph (2)) shall specify the particulars to be
entered under the headings in columns 2 to 6 of that Schedule.
(2) For
the purpose of compliance with the requirements of
paragraph (1) –
(a) where the precise date of the infant’s
birth is not proved to the satisfaction of the Court, the Court shall determine
the probable date of the infant’s birth and the date so determined shall
be specified in the order as the date of the infant’s birth;
(b) where the country of birth of the infant is
not proved to the satisfaction of the Court, then, if it appears probable that
the infant was born within the United Kingdom, the Channel Islands or the Isle
of Man, the infant shall be treated as having been born in Jersey, and in any
other case the particulars of the country of birth may be omitted from the order
and from the entry in the Adopted Children Register,
and the names to be specified in
the order as the name and surname of the infant shall be the name or names and
surname stated in that behalf in the application for the adoption order, or, if
no name or surname is so stated, the original name or names of the infant and
the surname of the applicant.
(3) The
particulars to be entered in the Adopted Children Register under the heading in
column 2 of Schedule 1 shall include, in the case of an infant born in Jersey,
the parish in which the birth took place; and where the infant was born in Jersey
but the parish in which the birth took place is not proved to the satisfaction
of the Court, or where the infant is treated by virtue of paragraph (2)(b)
as born in Jersey, the infant shall be treated for the purposes of this paragraph
as born in the parish of St. Helier.
(4) Where
upon any application for an adoption order in respect of an infant (not being
an infant who has previously been the subject of an adoption order under this Law
or the Adoption of Children (Jersey) Law 1947),[71] there is proved to the satisfaction of the Court the identity of
the infant with a child to whom an entry in the Registers of Births relates,
any adoption order made in pursuance of the application shall contain a
direction to the Superintendent Registrar to cause the entry in the Registers
of Births to be marked with the word “Adopted”.
(5) Where
an adoption order is made in respect of an infant who has previously been the
subject of an adoption order made under this Law or any enactment at the time
in force, the order shall contain a direction to the Superintendent Registrar
to cause the previous entry in the Adopted Children Register to be marked with
the word “Re-adopted”.
(6) The
Judicial Greffier shall cause every adoption order to be communicated to the
Superintendent Registrar, and upon receipt of the communication the
Superintendent Registrar shall cause compliance to be made with the directions
contained in the order.
(7) If
the Superintendent-Registrar is satisfied, on an application under this
paragraph, that he or she has sufficient particulars relating to an infant
adopted under a Convention or overseas adoption to enable an entry to be made
in the Adopted Children Register for the infant –
(a) he or she shall make the entry accordingly;
and
(b) if he or she is also satisfied that an entry
in the Registers of Births relates to the infant, he or she shall secure that
the entry in those Registers is marked “Adopted” or
“Re-adopted”, as the case may be, followed by the name in brackets
of the country in which the adoption was effected.[72]
26 Amendment of
orders and rectification of registers
(1) The
Court may, on the application of the adopter or of the adopted person, amend an
adoption order by the correction of any error in the particulars contained
therein, and may –
(a) if satisfied on the application of the
adopter or of the adopted person that within one year beginning with the date
of the order any new name has been given to the adopted person (whether in
baptism or otherwise), or taken by the adopted person, either in lieu of or in
addition to a name specified in the particulars required to be entered in the
Adopted Children Register in pursuance of the order, amend the order by
substituting or adding that name in those particulars, as the case may require;
(b) if satisfied on the application of any person
concerned that a direction for the marking of an entry in the Registers of
Births or the Adopted Children Register included in the order in pursuance of
Article 25(4) or (5) was wrongly so included, revoke that direction.
(2) Where
an adoption order is amended or a direction revoked under paragraph (1),
the Judicial Greffier shall cause the amendment to be communicated to the
Superintendent Registrar, who shall –
(a) cause the entry in the Adopted Children
Register to be amended accordingly; or
(b) cause the marking of the entry in the
Registers of Births or the Adopted Children Register to be cancelled.
(3) Where
an adoption order has been amended, any certified copy of the relevant entry in
the Adopted Children Register which may be issued pursuant to
Article 24(3) shall be a copy of the entry as amended, without the
reproduction of any note or marking relating to the amendment or of any matter
cancelled pursuant thereto; and a copy or extract of an entry in any register,
being an entry the marking of which has been cancelled, shall be deemed to be
an accurate copy if and only if both the marking and the cancellation are
omitted therefrom.
(4) If
the Superintendent-Registrar is satisfied –
(a) that a Convention adoption, a Convention
adoption order or an overseas adoption has ceased to have effect, whether on
annulment or otherwise; or
(b) that any entry or mark was erroneously made
in pursuance of Article 25(7) in any register mentioned in that paragraph,
he or she may cause such
alterations to be made in that register as he or she considers are required in
consequence of the cesser or to correct the error; and where an entry in the
register is amended in pursuance of this paragraph, any copy or extract of the
entry shall be deemed to be accurate if and only if it shows the entry as
amended but without indicating that it has been amended.[73]
27 Adoption Contact Register[74]
(1) In
this Article –
(a) “relative”
means any person, other than an adoptive relative, who is related to the
adopted person by blood, marriage or civil partnership; and
(b) “address”
includes any address at or through which the person concerned may be contacted.[75]
(2) The
Superintendent Registrar shall maintain at the Superintendent Registrar’s
Office a register to be called the Adoption Contact Register.
(3) The
register shall be in 2 parts –
(a) Part
I: Adopted Persons; and
(b) Part
II: Relatives.
(4) The
Superintendent Registrar shall, on payment of such fee as the Minister may by
order prescribe, enter in Part I of the register the name and address of any
adopted person who fulfils the conditions set out in paragraph (5) and who
gives notice that he or she wishes to contact any relative of his or hers.[76]
(5) The
conditions referred to in paragraph (4) are that –
(a) a
record of the adopted person’s birth is kept by the Superintendent
Registrar; and
(b) the
adopted person has attained the age of 18 years and –
(i) has
been supplied by the Superintendent Registrar with information under
Article 30, or
(ii) has
satisfied the Superintendent Registrar that the adopted person has such
information as is necessary to enable the adopted person to obtain a certified
copy of the record of his or her birth.
(6) The
Superintendent Registrar shall, on payment of such fee as the Minister may by
order prescribe, enter in Part II of the register the name and address of any person
who fulfils the conditions set out in paragraph (7) and who gives notice
that he or she wishes to contact an adopted person.[77]
(7) The
conditions referred to in paragraph (6) are that –
(a) a
record of the adopted person’s birth is kept by the Superintendent
Registrar; and
(b) the
person giving notice under paragraph (6) has attained the age of 18
years and has satisfied the Superintendent Registrar that –
(i) the
person is a relative of the adopted person, and
(ii) the
person has such information as is necessary to enable him or her to obtain a
certified copy of the record of the adopted person’s birth.
(8) The
Superintendent Registrar shall, on receiving notice from any person named in an
entry in the register that he or she wishes the entry to be cancelled, cancel
the entry.
(9) Any
notice given under this Article shall be in such form as may be determined by
the Superintendent Registrar.
(10) The
Superintendent Registrar shall transmit to an adopted person whose name is
entered in Part I of the register the name and address of any relative in
respect of whom there is an entry in Part II of the register.
(11) Any
entry cancelled under paragraph (8) ceases from the time of cancellation
to be an entry for the purposes of paragraph (10).
(12) The
register shall not be open to public inspection or search and the Superintendent
Registrar shall not supply any person with information entered in the register
whether in an uncancelled or a cancelled entry except in accordance with this Article.
(13) The
register may be kept by means of a computer.
28 Recording of
change of name in Public Registry of Contracts
Where, by virtue of Article 25
or 26, the name of an adopted child is changed, then, if the name of the child
is recorded in the books of the Public Registry of Contracts, the Judicial
Greffier shall record the change of name in those books in such manner as the
Court may direct.
29 Registration of
baptism
Where a child in respect of whom an
adoption order has been made is baptised, the entry to be made in the Register
of Baptisms shall describe the child as the adopted son or daughter of the person
or persons by whom the adopted person was adopted, instead of as the son or
daughter of the natural parents.
30 Disclosure of
birth records of adopted infants[78]
(1) Subject
to this Article, the Superintendent Registrar shall on an application made in
such manner as the Minister may by order prescribe by an adopted person a
record of whose birth is kept by the Superintendent Registrar and who has
attained the age of 18 years supply to him or her on payment of such fee as the
Minister may by order prescribe such information as is necessary to enable that
person to obtain a certified copy of the record of his or her birth.[79]
(2) On
an application made in such manner as the Minister may by order prescribe by an
adopted person under the age of 18 years, a record of whose birth is kept
by the Superintendent Registrar and who is intending to be married or to form a
civil partnership in Jersey, and on payment of such fee as the Minister may by
order prescribe the Superintendent Registrar shall inform the applicant whether
or not it appears from information contained in the registers of live births or
other records that the applicant and the intended spouse or intended civil
partner may be within the degrees of relationship prohibited or restricted by
Articles 3, 4, and 5 of the Marriage
and Civil Status (Jersey) Law 2001 or by Article 4 of, and Schedule 2
to, the Civil Partnership (Jersey) Law 2012[80].[81]
(3) Before
supplying any information to an applicant under paragraph (1), the Superintendent
Registrar shall inform the applicant that counselling services are available to
the applicant from the Minister.
(4) Where
an adopted person applies for information under paragraph (1) –
(a) it
shall be the duty of the Minister to provide counselling services for that person
if asked by him or her to do so; and
(b) the
Superintendent Registrar shall not supply the information unless the adopted person
has attended an interview with a counsellor arranged by the Minister.
31 Legitimation:
revocation of adoption orders and cancellations in registers
(1) Where
any person adopted by his or her father or mother alone has subsequently become
a legitimated person on the marriage of his or her father and mother, the Court
may, on the application of any of the parties concerned, revoke the relevant
adoption order.
(2) Where
an adoption order is revoked under this Article, the Judicial Greffier shall
communicate the revocation to the Superintendent Registrar who shall
cancel –
(a) the entry in the Adopted Children Register
relating to the adopted person; and
(b) the marking with the word “Adopted”
of any entry relating to the adopted person in the Registers of Births,
and a copy or extract of an entry
in any register, being an entry the marking of which is cancelled under this Article,
shall be deemed to be an accurate copy if and only if both the marking and the
cancellation are omitted therefrom.
(3) Where
any person legitimated by virtue of Article 2 of the Legitimacy (Jersey) Law 1963[82], had been adopted by his or her father and mother before 16th
July 1963, the Court may, on the application of any of the parties
concerned, revoke the adoption order.[83]
(4) The
revocation of an adoption order under this Article shall not affect the
operation of Article 23 in relation to an intestacy which occurred, or a
disposition which was made, before the revocation.[84]
32 Legitimation:
marking of entries on re-registration of births
Without prejudice to the provisions
of Article 31 of this Law, where after an entry in the Registers of Births
has been marked with the word “Adopted”, the birth is re-registered under Article 56 or 57 of
the Marriage and Civil Status (Jersey) Law 2001[85], the entry made on the re-registration shall be marked in the like
manner.[86]
Part 5
Supervision of Children
Awaiting Adoption
33 Meaning of
protected child
(1) Subject
to the following provisions of this Article, where notice of intention to apply
for an adoption order in respect of a child is given under Article 15(2),
then, while the child has his or her home with the person giving the notice, the
child is a protected child for the purposes of Articles 34 to 38.[87]
(2) A
child is not a protected child by reason of any such notice as is mentioned in
paragraph (1) while –
(a) he or she is in the care of any
person –
(i) in
any voluntary home or children’s home,
(ii) in
any school where he or she is receiving full-time education,
(iii) in
a hospital; or
(b) he or she is –
(i) suffering
from a mental disorder within the meaning of the Mental Health (Jersey) Law
1969[88], and
(ii) resident
in a residential care home; or
(c) he or she is liable to be detained or
subject to guardianship under the Mental Health (Jersey) Law 1969;[89]
(3) In
sub-paragraph (2) “hospital”, “residential care home”,
“school” and “voluntary home” have the same meaning as
in the Children (Jersey) Law 2002.[90]
(4) A
protected child ceases to be a protected child –
(a) on the grant or refusal of the application
for an adoption order;
(b) on the notification to the Minister that the
application for an adoption order has been withdrawn;
(c) in a case where no application is made for
an adoption order, on the expiry of a period of 2 years from the giving of the
notice;
(d) on the making of a residence order, a care
order or a supervision order (other than an interim care order or an interim
supervision order) under the Children (Jersey) Law 2002 in respect of the
child;
(e) on the appointment of a guardian for him or
her under that Law;
(f) on his or her attaining the age of
majority;
(g) on his or her marriage; or
(h) on becoming a civil partner,
whichever first occurs.[91]
34 Duty to secure well-being of
protected children
It shall be the duty of the
Minister to secure that protected children are visited from time to time by
officers employed by an administration of the States for which the Minister is
assigned responsibility, who shall satisfy themselves as to the well-being of
the children and give such advice as to their care and maintenance as may
appear to be needed.
35 Power to inspect
premises
Any officer of an administration of
the States for which the Minister is assigned responsibility generally or
specially authorized in writing in that behalf shall be entitled, subject to
the production by the officer if so required of evidence of his or her
authority, to enter and inspect any premises in which protected children are to
be or are being kept.
36 Notices and
information to be given to the Minister
(1) Where
a person with whom a protected child has his or her home changes his or her
permanent address, the person shall, not less than 2 weeks before the change,
or, if the change is made in an emergency, not later than one week after the
change, give to the Minister notice in writing specifying the new address.[92]
(2) If
a protected child dies, the person with whom the child had his or her home at
his or her death shall within 48 hours of the death give to the Minister notice
in writing of the death.[93]
(3) A
person with whom a protected child has, or is proposed to have, his or her home
shall at the request of the Minister give to the Minister the following
particulars, so far as known to the person, that is to say, the name, sex and
date and place of birth of the child, and the name and address of every person
who is a parent or guardian or acts as a guardian of the child or from whom the
child has been or is to be received.[94]
37 [95]
38 Offences in relation
to protected children
(1) A
person shall be guilty of an offence if –
(a) being required, under any provision of
Article 36, to give any notice or information, the person fails to give
the notice within the time specified in that provision or fails to give the
information within a reasonable time, or knowingly makes or causes or procures
another person to make any false or misleading statement in the notice or
information; or
(b) the person refuses to allow the visiting of
a protected child by a duly authorized officer of an administration of the
States for which the Minister is assigned responsibility or the inspection,
under the power conferred by Article 35, of any premises. [96]
(2) A
person guilty of an offence under this Article shall be liable to imprisonment
for a term not exceeding 6 months or to a fine not exceeding level 4 on the
standard scale or to both such imprisonment and such fine.[97]
Part 6
Miscellaneous
39 Prohibition of
certain payments
(1) Subject
to the provisions of this Article, it shall not be lawful to make or give to
any person any payment or reward for or in consideration of –
(a) the adoption by that person of an infant;
(b) the grant by that person of any consent
required in connection with the adoption of an infant;
(c) the handing over of an infant by that person
with a view to the adoption of the infant; or
(d) the making by that person of any
arrangements for the adoption of an infant.[98]
(2) Any
person who makes or gives, or agrees or offers to make or give any payment or
reward prohibited by this Article, or who receives or agrees to receive or
attempts to obtain any such payment or reward, shall be liable to imprisonment
for a term not exceeding 6 months or to a fine not exceeding level 4 on the
standard scale or to both such imprisonment and such fine.[99]
(3) This
Article does not apply to any payment made to an administration of the States
or a parochial authority by a parent or guardian of an infant or by a person
who adopts or proposes to adopt an infant, being a payment in respect of
expenses reasonably incurred by the administration of the States or parochial
authority in connection with the adoption of the infant, or to any payment or
reward authorized by the Court to which an application for an adoption order in
respect of an infant is made.
(4) This
Article does not apply to any allowance paid by the Minister pursuant to
Article 9.[100]
39A Restriction
on bringing infants into Jersey for adoption[101]
(1) A
person habitually resident in the British Islands who at any time brings into
Jersey for the purpose of adoption an infant who is habitually resident outside
those Islands shall be guilty of an offence unless such requirements as may be
prescribed by Order made by the Minister are satisfied either –
(a) before that time; or
(b) within such period beginning with that time
as may be so prescribed.
(2) Paragraph
(1) of this Article does not apply where the infant is brought into Jersey for
the purpose of adoption by a parent, guardian or relative.
(3) A
person guilty of an offence under this Article shall be liable to imprisonment
for a term not exceeding three months or to a fine not exceeding level 4 on the
standard scale, or to both.
39B Annulment
etc. of overseas adoptions[102]
(1) The
Court may, upon application under this Article, by order annul a Convention
adoption or a Convention adoption order on the ground that the adoption or
order is contrary to public policy.
(2) The
Court may, upon application under this paragraph –
(a) order that an overseas adoption or a
determination shall cease to be valid in Jersey on the ground that the adoption
or determination is contrary to public policy or that the authority which
purported to authorize the adoption or make the determination was not competent
to entertain the case;
(b) decide the extent, if any, to which a
determination has been affected by a subsequent determination.
(3) Any
court in Jersey may, in any proceedings in that court, decide that an overseas
adoption or a determination shall, for the purposes of those proceedings, be treated
as invalid in Jersey on either of the grounds mentioned in paragraph (2).
(4) Except
as provided by this Article the validity of a Convention adoption, a Convention
adoption order or an overseas adoption shall not be impugned in Jersey in
proceedings in any court.
(5) In
this Article “determination” means a determination mentioned in
Article 39C.
39C Effect
of determination and orders made in other parts of the British Islands and
overseas[103]
(1) Where –
(a) an authority of a Convention country having
power under the law of that country –
(i) to
authorize, or review the authorization of, a Convention adoption, or
(ii) to
give or review a decision revoking or annulling such an adoption or a
Convention adoption order; or
(b) an authority of any other part of the
British Islands or any colony having power under the law of that
territory –
(i) to
authorize, or review the authorization of, a Convention adoption or an adoption
effected in that territory, or
(ii) to
give or review a decision revoking or annulling such an adoption or a
Convention adoption order,
makes a determination in the
exercise of that power, then, subject to Article 39B and any subsequent
determination having effect under this Article, the determination shall have
effect in Jersey for the purpose of effecting, confirming or terminating the
adoption in question or confirming its termination as the case may be.
40 Restriction on
removal of infants for adoption outside British Islands
(1) Except
under the authority of an order under Article 41, it shall not be lawful
for any person to take or send an infant who is a British subject out of Jersey
to any place outside the British Islands with a view to the adoption of the
infant (whether in law or in fact) by any person not being a parent or guardian
or relative of the infant; and any person who takes or sends an infant out of Jersey
to any place in contravention of this paragraph, or makes or takes part in any
arrangements placing an infant with any person for that purpose, shall be
liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 6 months or to a fine not
exceeding level 4 on the standard scale or to both such imprisonment and such
fine.[104]
(2) In
any proceedings under this Article, a report by a British consular officer or a
deposition made before a British consular officer and authenticated under the
signature of that officer shall, upon proof that the officer or the deponent
cannot be found in Jersey, be admissible as evidence of the matters stated
therein, and it shall not be necessary to prove the signature or official
character of the person who appears to have signed any such report or
deposition.
41 Provisional
adoption by persons domiciled outside Jersey
(1) If
the Court is satisfied, upon an application being made by a person who is not
domiciled in Jersey, that the applicant intends to adopt an infant under the law
of or within the country in which the applicant is domiciled, and for that
purpose desires to remove the infant from Jersey either immediately or after an
interval, the Court may, subject to the provisions of this Article, make an order
(in this Article referred to as a “provisional adoption order”)
authorizing the applicant to remove the infant for the purpose aforesaid, and
giving to the applicant parental responsibility for the infant pending his or
her adoption as aforesaid.[105]
(2) A
provisional adoption order may be made in any case where, apart from the
domicile of the applicant, an adoption order could be made in respect of the
infant under this Law, but shall not be made in any other case.
(3) Subject
to the provisions of this Article, the provisions of this Law, other than this Article
and Article 23, shall apply in relation to a provisional adoption order as
they apply in relation to an adoption order, and references in those provisions
to adoption, to an adoption order, to an application or applicant for such an order
and to an adopter or a person adopted or authorized to be adopted under such an
order shall be construed accordingly.
(4) In
relation to a provisional adoption order, Article 15(1) and (2) shall have
effect as if for the word “3”, where it occurs in those paragraphs,
there were substituted the word “6”.
(5) Any
entry in the Registers of Births or the Adopted Children Register which is
required to be marked in consequence of the making of a provisional adoption order
shall, in lieu of being marked with the word “Adopted” or
“Re-adopted” be marked with the words “Provisionally
adopted” or “Provisionally re-adopted” as the case may
require.
42 Orders[106]
(1) The
Minister may make Orders for any purpose for which Orders may be made under
this Law and generally for the purposes of carrying this Law into effect.
(1A) Orders
under this Law may –
(a) make different provision for different
purposes or areas; and
(b) make such incidental, supplementary,
consequential or transitional provision as appears to the Minister to be
expedient.[107]
(2) Without
prejudice to the generality of paragraph (1), Orders may
specify –
(a) the procedures to be followed by the panel;
(b) the circumstances the panel shall take into
account in recommending to the Minister the payment of an allowance; and
(c) the procedure for review, variation and
termination of allowances.
(3) The
Subordinate Legislation (Jersey) Law 1960[108] shall apply to Orders made under this Law.
43 Service of
notices, etc.
Any notice or information required
to be given under this Law may be given by post.
44 Extension of
enactments referring to adoption[109]
(1) Any
provision, however expressed, in any enactment passed before 25th
June 1965 under which a person adopted in pursuance of an adoption order
is for any purpose treated as the child of the adopter, or any other
relationship is deduced by reference to such an order, shall have effect, as
respects anything done or any event occurring on or after 25th June 1965,
if it extends only to adoptions in pursuance of orders made in Jersey, as
extending also to adoptions in pursuance of orders made, whether before or on
or after 25th June 1965, in the United Kingdom, the Isle of Man or the
Bailiwick of Guernsey, and Article 23(7) shall extend to any such order as
is mentioned in this paragraph.
(2) An
order authorizing adoption made outside Jersey on or after 25th June 1965
shall also have the same effect as an adoption order for the purposes of
Article 21(2) and Articles 22 and 29, if the order is made in the
United Kingdom, the Isle of Man or the Bailiwick of Guernsey.
(3) Where
a person adopted in pursuance of an order made, whether before or on or after
25th June 1965, in the United Kingdom, the Isle of Man or the Bailiwick of
Guernsey has subsequently become a legitimated person, and the order is then
revoked, the revocation shall not affect the operation of Article 23 as
extended by paragraph (1) in relation to an intestacy which occurred, or a
disposition which was made, before the revocation.
(4) Any
such provision as is mentioned in paragraph (1) which, by virtue of
Article 41(3) applies in relation to orders under that Article shall, as
respects anything done on or after 25th June 1965, apply also in relation
to similar orders made, whether before or after the commencement of this Law,
in the United Kingdom, the Isle of Man or the Bailiwick of Guernsey, and shall
be construed accordingly, and any such order made on or after 25th
June 1965 shall also have the same effect as an adoption order for the
purposes of the provisions mentioned in paragraph (2).
45 Evidence of
adoptions, etc.[110]
Any document which, under a provision
of any enactment of the United Kingdom, the Isle of Man or the Bailiwick of
Guernsey corresponding to Article 24(2) is receivable as evidence of any
matter in any part of the United Kingdom, the Isle of Man or the Bailiwick of
Guernsey, as the case may be, shall be so receivable in Jersey.
46 Registration of
adoptions outside Jersey[111]
(1) Where
the Superintendent Registrar is notified by the authority maintaining a
register of adoptions in the United Kingdom, the Isle of Man or the Bailiwick
of Guernsey that an order has been made in that country authorizing the
adoption of an infant to whom an entry in the Registers of Births or the
Adopted Children Register relates, the Superintendent Registrar shall cause the
entry to be marked with the words “Adopted” or “Re-adopted”,
as the case may require, followed by the name, in brackets, of the country in
which the order was made.
(2) Where,
after an entry has been so marked, the Superintendent Registrar is notified as
aforesaid that the order has been quashed, that an appeal against the order has
been allowed or that the order has been revoked, the Superintendent Registrar
shall cause the marking to be cancelled, and a copy or extract of an entry in
any register, being an entry the marking of which is cancelled under this paragraph,
shall be deemed to be an accurate copy or extract if and only if both the
marking and the cancellation are omitted therefrom.
(3) The
preceding provisions of this Article shall apply in relation to orders
corresponding to orders under Article 41 as they apply in relation to
orders authorizing the adoption of an infant:
Provided that any marking of an
entry required by virtue of this paragraph shall consist of the word “Provisionally”
followed by the words mentioned in paragraph (1).
(4) Without
prejudice to paragraphs (2) and (3), where, after an entry in the
Registers of Births has been marked in accordance with this Article, the birth
is re-registered under Article 56 or 57 of the Marriage and Civil Status (Jersey) Law 2001[112], the entry on the re-registration shall be marked in the like
manner.[113]
47 Citation
This Law may be cited as the
Adoption (Jersey) Law 1961.
SCHEDULE 1
(Article 25)
FORM OF ENTRY IN ADOPTED
CHILDREN REGISTER
SCHEDULE
2
(Article 11A(2))
CONVENTION
ON PROTECTION OF CHILDREN AND CO-OPERATION IN RESPECT OF INTERCOUNTRY ADOPTION
The States signatory to the present
Convention,
Recognizing that the child, for the
full and harmonious development of his or her personality, should grow up in a
family environment, in an atmosphere of happiness, love and understanding,
Recalling that each State should
take, as a matter of priority, appropriate measures to enable the child to
remain in the care of his or her family of origin,
Recognizing that intercountry
adoption may offer the advantage of a permanent family to a child for whom a
suitable family cannot be found in his or her State of origin,
Convinced of the necessity to take
measures to ensure that intercountry adoptions are made in the best interests
of the child and with respect for his or her fundamental rights, and to prevent
the abduction, the sale of, or traffic in children,
Desiring to establish common
provisions to this effect, taking into account the principles set forth in
international instruments, in particular the United Nations Convention on the
Rights of the Child, of 20 November 1989, and the United Nations Declaration on
Social and Legal Principles relating to the Protection and Welfare of Children,
with Special Reference to Foster Placement and Adoption Nationally and
Internationally (General Assembly Resolution 41/85, of 3 December 1986),
Have agreed upon the following
provisions –
CHAPTER I
SCOPE OF THE CONVENTION
Article
1
The objects of the present
Convention are –
(a) to
establish safeguards to ensure that intercountry adoptions take place in the
best interests of the child and with respect for his or her fundamental rights
as recognised in international law;
(b) to
establish a system of co-operation amongst Contracting States to ensure that
those safeguards are respected and thereby prevent the abduction, the sale of,
or traffic in children;
(c) to
secure the recognition in Contracting States of adoptions made in accordance
with the Convention.
Article 2
1. The
Convention shall apply where a child habitually resident in one Contracting
State (‘the State of origin’) has been, is being, or is to be moved
to another Contracting State (‘the receiving State’) either after
his or her adoption in the State of origin by spouses or a person habitually
resident in the receiving State, or for the purposes of such an adoption in the
receiving State or in the State of origin.
2. The
Convention covers only adoptions which create a permanent parent-child
relationship.
Article
3
The Convention ceases to apply if
the agreements mentioned in Article 17, sub-paragraph (c), have not been given
before the child attains the age of eighteen years.
CHAPTER II
REQUIREMENTS FOR
INTERCOUNTRY ADOPTIONS
Article
4
An adoption within the scope of the
Convention shall take place only if the competent authorities of the State of
origin –
(a) have
established that the child is adoptable;
(b) have
determined, after possibilities for placement of the child within the State of
origin have been given due consideration, that an intercountry adoption is in
the child’s best interest;
(c) have
ensured that –
(i) the persons, institutions and
authorities whose consent is necessary for adoption, have been counselled as
may be necessary and duly informed of the effects of their consent, in
particular whether or not an adoption will result in the termination of the
legal relationship between the child and his or her family of origin,
(ii) such persons, institutions and
authorities have given their consent freely, in the required legal form, and
expressed or evidenced in writing,
(iii) the consents have not been induced by
payment or compensation of any kind and have not been withdrawn, and
(iv) the consent of the mother, where required,
has been given only after the birth of the child; and
(d) have
ensured, having regard to the age and degree of maturity of the child,
that –
(i) he or she has been counselled and duly
informed of the effects of the adoption and of his or her consent to the
adoption, where such consent is required,
(ii) consideration has been given to the
child’s wishes and opinions.
(iii) the child’s consent to the adoption,
where such consent is required, has been given freely, in the required legal
form, and expressed or evidenced in writing, and
(iv) such consent has not been induced by payment
or compensation of any kind.
Article
5
An adoption within the scope of the
Convention shall take place only if the competent authorities of the receiving
State –
(a) have
determined that the prospective adoptive parents are eligible and suited to
adopt;
(b) have
ensured that the prospective adoptive parents have been counselled as may be
necessary; and
(c) have
determined that the child is or will be authorised to enter and reside
permanently in that State.
CHAPTER III
CENTRAL AUTHORITIES AND
ACCREDITED BODIES
Article
6
1. A
Contracting State shall designate a Central Authority to discharge the duties
which are imposed by the Convention upon such authorities.
2. Federal
States, States with more than one system of law or States having autonomous
territorial units shall be free to appoint more than one Central Authority and
to specify the territorial or personal extent of their functions. Where a State
has appointed more than one Central Authority, it shall designate the Central
Authority to which any communication may be addressed for transmission to the
appropriate Central Authority within that State.
Article
7
1. Central
Authorities shall co-operate with each other and promote co-operation amongst
the competent authorities in their States to protect children and to achieve
the other objects of the Convention.
2. They
shall take directly all appropriate measures to –
(a) provide information as to the laws of their
States concerning adoption and other general information, such as statistics
and standard forms;
(b) keep one another informed about the
operation of the Convention and, as far as possible, eliminate any obstacles to
its application.
Article 8
Central
Authorities shall take, directly or through public authorities, all appropriate
measures to prevent improper financial or other gain in connection with an
adoption and to deter all practices contrary to the objects of the Convention.
Article
9
Central Authorities shall take,
directly or through public authorities or other bodies duly accredited in their
State, all appropriate measures, in particular to –
(a) collect,
preserve and exchange information about the situation of the child and the
prospective adoptive parents, so far as is necessary to complete the adoption;
(b) facilitate,
follow and expedite proceedings with a view to obtaining the adoption;
(c) promote
the development of adoption counselling and post-adoption services in their
States;
(d) provide
each other with general evaluation reports about experience with intercountry
adoption;
(e) reply,
in so far as is permitted by the law of their State, to justified requests from
other Central Authorities or public authorities for information about a
particular adoption situation.
Article
10
Accreditation shall only be granted
to and maintained by bodies demonstrating their competence to carry out properly
the tasks with which they may be entrusted.
Article
11
An accredited body
shall –
(a) pursue
only non-profit objectives according to such conditions and within such limits
as may be established by the competent authorities of the State of
accreditation;
(b) be
directed and staffed by persons qualified by their ethical standards and by
training or experience to work in the field of intercountry adoption; and
(c) be
subject to supervision by competent authorities of that State as to its
composition, operation and financial situation.
Article
12
A body accredited in one
Contracting State may act in another Contracting State only if the competent
authorities of both States have authorised it to do so.
Article 13
The
designation of the Central Authorities and, where appropriate, the extent of
their functions, as well as the names and addresses of the accredited bodies
shall be communicated by each Contracting State to the Permanent Bureau of the
Hague Conference on Private International Law.
CHAPTER IV
PROCEDURAL REQUIREMENTS
IN INTERCOUNTRY ADOPTION
Article
14
Persons habitually resident in a
Contracting State, who wish to adopt a child habitually resident in another
Contracting State, shall apply to the Central Authority in the State of their
habitual residence.
Article
15
1. If
the Central Authority of the receiving State is satisfied that the applicants
are eligible and suited to adopt, it shall prepare a report including
information about their identity, eligibility and suitability to adopt, background,
family and medical history, social environment, reasons for adoption, ability
to undertake an intercountry adoption, as well as the characteristics of the
children for whom they would be qualified to care.
2. It
shall transmit the report to the Central Authority of the State of origin.
Article
16
1. If
the Central Authority of the State of origin is satisfied that the child is
adoptable, it shall –
(a) prepare a report including information about
his or her identity, adoptability, background, social environment, family
history, medical history including that of the child’s family, and any
special needs of the child;
(b) give due consideration to the child’s
upbringing and to his or her ethnic, religious and cultural background;
(c) ensure that consents have been obtained in
accordance with Article 4; and
(d) determine, on the basis in particular of the
reports relating to the child and the prospective adoptive parents, whether the
envisaged placement is in the best interests of the child.
2. It
shall transmit to the Central Authority of the receiving State its report on
the child, proof that the necessary consents have been obtained and the reasons
for its determination on the placement, taking care not to reveal the identity
of the mother and the father if, in the State of origin, these identities may
not be disclosed.
Article
17
Any decision in the State of origin
that a child should be entrusted to prospective adoptive parents may only be
made if –
(a) the
Central Authority of that State has ensured that the prospective adoptive
parents agree;
(b) the
Central Authority of the receiving State has approved such decision, where such
approval is required by the law of that State or by the Central Authority of
the State of origin;
(c) the
Central Authorities of both States have agreed that the adoption may proceed;
and
(d) it
has been determined, in accordance with Article 5, that the prospective
adoptive parents are eligible and suited to adopt and that the child is or will
be authorised to enter and reside permanently in the receiving State.
Article
18
The Central Authorities of both
States shall take all necessary steps to obtain permission for the child to
leave the State of origin and to enter and reside permanently in the receiving
State.
Article
19
1. The
transfer of the child to the receiving State may only be carried out if the
requirements of Article 17 have been satisfied.
2. The
Central Authorities of both States shall ensure that this transfer takes place
in secure and appropriate circumstances and, if possible, in the company of the
adoptive or prospective adoptive parents.
3. If
the transfer of the child does not take place, the reports referred to in
Articles 15 and 16 are to be sent back to the authorities who forwarded them.
Article
20
The Central Authorities shall keep
each other informed about the adoption process and the measures taken to
complete it, as well as about the progress of the placement if a probationary
period is required.
Article
21
1. Where
the adoption is to take place after the transfer of the child to the receiving
State and it appears to the Central Authority of that State that the continued
placement of the child with the prospective adoptive parents is not in the
child’s best interests, such Central Authority shall take the measures
necessary to protect the child, in particular –
(a) to cause the child to be withdrawn from the
prospective adoptive parents and to arrange temporary care;
(b) in consultation with the Central Authority
of the State of origin, to arrange without delay a new placement of the child
with a view to adoption or, if this is not appropriate, to arrange alternative
long-term care; an adoption shall not take place until the Central Authority of
the State of origin has been duly informed concerning the new prospective
adoptive parents;
(c) as a last resort, to arrange the return of
the child, if his or her interests so require.
2. Having
regard in particular to the age and degree of maturity of the child, he or she
shall be consulted and, where appropriate, his or her consent obtained in
relation to measures to be taken under this Article.
Article
22
1. The
functions of a Central Authority under this Chapter may be performed by public
authorities or by bodies accredited under Chapter III, to the extent permitted
by the law of its State.
2. Any
Contracting State may declare to the depositary of the Convention that the
functions of the Central Authority under Articles 15 to 21 may be performed in
that State, to the extent permitted by the law and subject to the supervision
of the competent authorities of that State, also by bodies or persons
who –
(a) meet the requirements of integrity,
professional competence, experience and accountability of that State; and
(b) are qualified by their ethical standards and
by training or experience to work in the field of intercountry adoption.
3. A
Contracting State which makes the declaration provided for in paragraph 2 shall
keep the Permanent Bureau of the Hague Conference on Private International Law
informed of the names and addresses of these bodies and persons.
4. Any
Contracting State may declare to the depositary of the Convention that
adoptions of children habitually resident in its territory may only take place
if the functions of the Central Authorities are performed in accordance with
paragraph 1.
5. Notwithstanding
any declaration made under paragraph 2, the reports provided for in Articles 15
and 16 shall, in every case, be prepared under the responsibility of the
Central Authority or other authorities or bodies in accordance with paragraph
1.
CHAPTER V
RECOGNITION AND EFFECTS
OF THE ADOPTION
Article
23
1. An
adoption certified by the competent authority of the State of the adoption as
having been made in accordance with the Convention shall be recognised by
operation of law in the other Contracting States. The certificate shall specify
when and by whom the agreements under Article 17, sub-paragraph c, were given.
2. Each
Contracting State shall, at the time of signature, ratification, acceptance,
approval or accession, notify the depositary of the Convention of the identity
and the functions of the authority or the authorities which, in that State, are
competent to make the certification. It shall also notify the depositary of any
modification in the designation of these authorities.
Article
24
The recognition of an adoption may
be refused in a contracting State only if the adoption is manifestly contrary
to its public policy, taking into account the best interests of the child.
Article
25
Any Contracting State may declare
to the depositary of the convention that it will not be bound under this
Convention to recognise adoptions made in accordance with an agreement
concluded by application of Article 39, paragraph 2.
Article
26
1. The
recognition of an adoption includes recognition of
(a) the legal parent-child relationship between
the child and his or her adoptive parents;
(b) parental responsibility of the adoptive
parents for the child;
(c) the termination of a pre-existing legal
relationship between the child and his or her mother and father, if the
adoption has this effect in the Contracting State where it was made.
2. In
the case of an adoption having the effect of terminating a pre-existing legal
parent-child relationship, the child shall enjoy in the receiving State, and in
any other Contracting State where the adoption is recognised, rights equivalent
to those resulting from adoptions having this effect in each such State.
3. The
preceding paragraphs shall not prejudice the application of any provision more
favourable for the child, in force in the Contracting State which recognises
the adoption.
Article
27
1. Where
an adoption granted in the State of origin does not have the effect of
terminating a pre-existing legal parent-child relationship, it may, in the
receiving State which recognises the adoption under the Convention, be
converted into an adoption having such an effect –
(a) if the law of the receiving State so
permits; and
(b) if the consents referred to in Article 4,
sub-paragraphs c and d, have been or are given for the purpose of such an
adoption.
2. Article
23 applies to the decision converting the adoption.
CHAPTER VI
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Article
28
The Convention does not affect any
law of a State of origin which requires that the adoption of a child habitually
resident within that State take place in that State or which prohibits the
child’s placement in, or transfer to, the receiving State prior to
adoption.
Article
29
There shall be no contact between
the prospective adoptive parents and the child’s parents or any other
person who has care of the child until the requirements of Article 4,
sub-paragraphs a to c, and Article 5, sub-paragraph a, have been met, unless
the adoption takes place within a family or unless the contact is in compliance
with the conditions established by the competent authority of the State of
origin.
Article
30
1. The
competent authorities of a Contracting State shall ensure that information held
by them concerning the child’s origin, in particular information concerning
the identity of his or her parents, as well as the medical history, is
preserved.
2. They
shall ensure that the child or his or her representative has access to such
information, under appropriate guidance, in so far as is permitted by the law
of that State.
Article
31
Without prejudice to Article 30,
personal data gathered or transmitted under the Convention, especially data
referred to in Articles 15 and 16, shall be used only for the purposes for
which they were gathered or transmitted.
Article
32
1. No
one shall derive improper financial or other gain from an activity related to
an intercountry adoption.
2. Only
costs and expenses, including reasonable professional fees of persons involved
in the adoption, may be charged or paid.
3. The
directors, administrators and employees of bodies involved in an adoption shall
not receive remuneration which is unreasonably high in relation to services
rendered.
Article 33
A
competent authority which finds that any provision of the Convention has not
been respected or that there is a serious risk that it may not be respected,
shall immediately inform the Central Authority of its State. This Central
Authority shall be responsible for ensuring that appropriate measures are
taken.
Article
34
If the competent authority of the
State of destination of a document so requests, a translation certified as
being in conformity with the original must be furnished. Unless otherwise
provided, the costs of such translation are to be borne by the prospective
adoptive parents.
Article
35
The competent authorities of the
contracting States shall act expeditiously in the process of adoption.
Article
36
In relation to a State which has
two or more systems of law with regard to adoption applicable in different
territorial units –
(a) any
reference to habitual residence in that State shall be construed as referring
to habitual residence in a territorial unit of that State;
(b) any
reference to the law of that State shall be construed as referring to the law
in force in the relevant territorial unit;
(c) any
reference to the competent authorities or to the public authorities of that
State shall be construed as referring to those authorised to act in the
relevant territorial unit;
(d) any
reference to the accredited bodies of that State shall be construed as
referring to bodies accredited in the relevant unit.
Article
37
In relation to a State which with
regard to adoption has two or more systems of law applicable to different
categories of persons, any reference to the law of that State shall be
construed as referring to the legal system specified by the law of that State.
Article
38
A State within which different
territorial units have their own rules of law in respect of adoption shall not
be bound to apply the Convention where a State with a unified system of law
would not be bound to do so.
Article
39
1. The
convention does not affect any international instrument to which Contracting
States are Parties and which contains provisions on matters governed by the
Convention, unless a contrary declaration is made by the States parties to such
instrument.
2. Any
Contracting State may enter into agreements with one or more other Contracting
States, with a view to improving the application of the Convention in their
mutual relations. These agreements may derogate only from the provisions of
Articles 14 to 16 and 18 to 21. The States which have concluded such an
agreement shall transmit a copy to the depositary of the Convention.
Article
40
No reservation to the Convention
shall be permitted.
Article
41
The Convention shall apply in every
case where an application pursuant to Article 14 has been received after the
Convention has entered into force in the receiving State and the State of
origin.
Article
42
The Secretary General of the Hague
Conference on Private International Law shall at regular intervals convene a
Special Commission in order to review the practical operation of the
Convention.