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Thursday, February 20, 2025

Tatari v Durust, 2025 WL 327984, Not For Publication, (United States District Court, E.D. New York, 2025) [Turkey] [Habitual residence][rights of custody] [ne exeat right]

 

[Turkey] [Habitual residence][rights of custody] [ne exeat right]

In Tatari v Durust, 2025 WL 327984, Not For Publication, (United States District Court, E.D. New York, 2025) the district court granted the Petition of Zuhtu Onur Tatari to have his son, O.T., returned to Turkey.

 

The issue before the court was whether or not Tatari and his ex-wife Durust’s divorce decree (“DD”) gave Tatari rights under Turkish law which the Hague Convention recognizes as custodial. Although the terms of the Divorce Decree were unambiguous in awarding Tatari certain custodial rights, the terms were in tension with Turkish law that does not formally recognize joint custody.  The parties, who were married in 2016, had O.T. in 2018, and divorced in January 2022. The court previously found that Tatari had shown the first element of his Hague Convention case, that Turkey was O.T.’s habitual residence at the time Durust and O.T. moved to Brooklyn. In Turkey, for a married couple to be granted an uncontested divorce, they must present a signed divorce protocol to the court (Turkish Civil Code (“TCC”) Art. 166/3. The Turkish court must review the protocol, hear the parties’ statements regarding their decision to divorce and the construction of the protocol, and decide whether to adjust any provisions of the protocol. Any adjustments by the judge will be recorded in the divorce decree, which then can be approved by the court and the parties. The parties submitted a much-negotiated protocol to the Turkish family court. Tatari testified that he was especially concerned with the provisions governing visitation, O.T.’s schooling, country of residence, and healthcare. Durust testified she was most concerned about having sole custody of O.T. After hearing the parties’ statements and some discussion, the judge modified the visitation schedule slightly but did not adjust the other provisions of the Protocol. The Protocol was included in the Divorce Decree according to TCC Art. 184/5, and the exclusion of the Protocol’s visitation schedule was noted.

 

At summary judgment, the parties disputed the correct translation of Section 3.7. Tatari’s preferred translations obligated Durust to “obtain the approval and opinion” of Tatari if “she decides to live abroad together with” O.T., while Durust’s preferred translation obligated her only to “consult and seek the opinion” of Tatari “where she decides to live abroad together with” O.T. At trial, Tatari presented two experts, who testified that his preferred translation was a truer rendition of the original Turkish. The Court found that Tatari’s preferred translation of Section 3.7 was more faithful to the Turkish original.

 

Turning to the remainder of the Divorce Decree’s recitations in the Protocol, Section 3.8 obligated Durust to “obtain the approval and opinion of” Tatari “when any decision is required with regards to the health status” of O.T.  In the fall of 2023, Durust asked Tatari to sign a consent form to renew O.T.’s American passport, which Tatari refused to do. As a result, Durust filed a lawsuit in a Turkish court to allow O.T. to receive an American passport without Tatari’s signature. In her complaint, she explained that the American consulate officials would require her to get Tatari’s signature even if Durust has sole custody of O.T. In December 2023, Durust and O.T. traveled to the Ivory Coast, where she was able to obtain an emergency U.S. passport for O.T. without Tatari’s signature.  Following Durust and O.T.’s return to Turkey, Tatari filed a petition for custody of O.T. He also sought a preliminary injunction for custody of O.T. The Turkish court rejected his request for a preliminary injunction “since the request is of the essence of the case and requires a trial. In July 2024, Tatari petitioned the Turkish court overseeing the passport case to prevent Durust from taking O.T. abroad and to notify the Turkish and American authorities of this. Two days later, the Turkish court denied his request “since the parties were divorced, the mother has custody,” and “the party with custody rights may use her rights arising from custody, and she has the initiative to go abroad.” On August 20, 2024, Durust flew to America with O.T. She failed to advise Tatari of the move, much less seek his approval. The next day, she emailed him indicating her intention to remain in America. After Durust’s move to America, she filed a third action in Turkish court to change Tatari’s visitation schedule for O.T. given their move to America, which was currently pending. Finally, in October 2024, Tatari sought to expedite the custody case in Turkish court, which the family court declined to do. Nonetheless, Tatari’s witnesses were heard in that case on November 28, 2024, and Durust’s witnesses were scheduled to be heard in February 2025.

 

The provisions of the Protocol were approved by the judge according to TCC Art. 184/5, which provides validity to agreements as to accessorial consequences of divorce upon judicial approval. Because the judge approved the provisions of the Protocol, Tatari had at least some right to the interests established there. Based on the evidence presented at trial, the court found that under Turkish law, the provisions of the Protocol—and specifically Sections 3.7 and 3.8—provide Tatari “rights relating to the care of the person of the child.” In sum, the court held that under the Turkish Divorce Decree Tatari had the right to approve, or disapprove, certain decisions about O.T.’s life, including whether he may live abroad.

 

The Court held that Tatari’s right to approve or disapprove decisions about O.T.’s residence is precisely the type of right the Hague Convention recognizes as custodial. In Abbott, the Supreme Court explained that a ne exeat right was a right to “determine” the child’s place of residence because the parent can effectively limit the child’s country of residence to only the home country. 560 U.S. at 11. The child’s home country may have important influences on the child’s absorption of culture and traditions as well as his education. Id. at 11-12. Therefore, a ne exeat right is the sort of custodial right that allows the parent to effect his influence on the child. When a parent’s “consent is legally required before the other parent may move the child to another country,” that parent has a custodial right to determine the child’s residence recognized by law. Radu v. Toader, 463 F. App’x 29, 30 (2d Cir. 2012).

 

Persuasive caselaw from other circuits showed that Tatari’s ability to object to O.T.’s relocation abroad and present a claim subsequent to that relocation was sufficient to constitute a custodial right. In Palencia v. Perez, the Eleventh Circuit considered an unmarried father’s custody right of patria potestad under Guatemalan law. 921 F.3d 1333, 1339 (11th Cir. 2019). Guatemalan law provided that all natural parents, whether or not married, have the right and duty to exercise the parental authority of patria potestad, but that when the parents are not married, “the children shall be in the mother’s custody.” Id. at 1339-40. The mother argued that because she had custody over the children, the father could not have an effective patria potestad. The Eleventh Circuit rejected this conclusion because Guatemalan law “provides an unmarried father with certain obligations (and therefore certain rights) with respect to his child, with the caveat that ... the mother [has] the final say when the parents disagree on a given issue.” Id. at 1341. Because the father had the authority to participate in the decision-making about his child’s residence, he had a right of custody, despite the fact that the mother had the final say. Id. at 1342. Here too, even under Durust’s reading of the Divorce Decree, Tatari has the right to participate in making decisions about O.T.’s residence, even if Durust has the final say.

 

The Court concluded that Tatari had shown that he had a custodial right, specifically a ne exeat right, under Turkish law which was infringed when O.T. was brought to the United States without 

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