Consent to Travel Forms

                                                                                                                                                     

We can draft and witness the signatures of parents on Travel Consent Forms.

Because of increasing instances of child abduction in custody cases and a growing number of children who are victims of trafficking and pornography, an immigration officer, airline or travel company may ask you to provide a Travel Consent Form if your child is traveling internationally with only one parent or with another adult, such as a grandparent, uncle or aunt.

 

In an effort to prevent international child abduction , many governments have initiated special procedures for minors at entry and exit points to their countries. These often include requiring documentary evidence of relationship and permission for the child's travel from the parent(s) or legal guardian (s),not present. Having such documentation on hand may facilitate entry or departure. To be of full effect, this document should be sworn and signed before a Notary Public Lawyer.

 

"Sole Custody" means that only one parent or guardian has the right to make decisions affecting the child. "Joint Custody" means that both parents have the right to participate in making these kinds of decisions. Parents may have Joint Custody even if the child resides with only one parent.

 

If you are a single parent (by divorce), in addition to the travel Consent Form which must be signed by the Notary Public Lawyer, you will require the long version of the Birth Certificate and a copy of your Custody Order, Judgment or equivalent.

 

If you are one parent traveling alone with your child, you need the Travel Consent Form to be signed by the absent parent. The Travel Consent Form must include the absent parent's address, telephone number, authorisation to travel, the destination and length of stay.

 

Travel Consent Forms which are sworn and signed before a Notary Public are required for single parents (by divorce) and minor children to travel to Australia, Canada, New Zealand, India, Jamaica,  China, Dominican Republic, Mexico, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Singapore, Korea,  United States of America, Chile, Brazil, Spain, France, Germany, Pakistan, Indonesia and Vietnam to name a few. 

You can’t move children to Canada, ex-wife is told. 

A “devoted” father has successfully stopped his divorced wife from moving to Canada with their children in a landmark case that will give hope to hundreds of parents a year whose children are taken abroad.

The ruling of the English Court of Appeal will make it far harder for one parent to take his or her children to live in another country, causing anguish to the one left behind.

It reverses ten years of practice by the courts in which judges tended to allow parents to move abroad on the ground that, if forced to stay, would be unhappy and children would suffer.

In future, if parents share the care of their children, courts will be far more reluctant to grant permission for a move abroad.  A parent can remove children permanently from England and Wales only with the consent of the other parent or by a court order.

There are more than 1,000 cases a year in which a parent usually the mother, gets permission from the courts to leave the country with the children after divorce.  

The court’s ruling is a radical, thought - provoking decision and a victory for common sense.

The parents in the case are bankers in their 40's who have two young daughters. The mother applied to return to her native Canada after the marriage broke down.

A judge ruled in February that she could, although he acknowledged that the father was “devoted to his two little girls”, who were aged 4 and 2 had been spending five nights in every fortnight with him.

Overturning that decision after the husband appealed, the Appeal Court said the judge had not balanced the pros and cons. The Court of Appeal urged the parents to consider mediation, and to explore an immediate future in this jurisdiction, flowing into a planned future move to Canada.

This will encourage fathers to seek shared care in any case where there is an international element, because fathers – or – mothers – will not want their children to move to the other side of the world.    

 

 

For further information or to book an appoinment, please either complete our online enquiry form or contact us on +44 (0)  20 3178 5780.

 




The international legal practice of Lowry LLP is a Limited Liability Partnership being registered in England and Wales, with registration number OC351289 and whose registered office is situated at 9 Devonshire Square, Bishopsgate, The City of London EC2M 4YF, England, where a list of members is open to inspection.  The term "Partner" means 'Member" of Lowry LLP or an employee or consultant with equivalent standing and qualifications. The firm are regulated by The Court of Faculties, 1 The Sanctuary, Westminster, London SW1P 3JT, England and by the Legal Ombudsman for England and Wales, P.O. Box 15870, Tamworth, B77 9LE, England.  Value Added Tax Registration Number 125 2760 31. The firm are members of the International Bar Association, are members of the International Business Lawyers Group, are members of the Asociacion Europea de Abogadas International Lawyers Network, are members of the Ecclesiastical Law Society of England  and are members of The Notaries Society of England and Wales. http://www.lowryllp.com http://www.notaryengland.co.uk Notary Public, Public Notary, Notaries. Apostilles, Powers of Attorney, Certified copies of passports and Commissioners for Oaths.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GAQI36xq-TE. Telephone:  +44(0)020 3178 5780.