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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> NP v South Gloucestershire County Council & Anor [2005] EWCA Civ 1329 (10 November 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/1329.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 1329 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM
HHJ Rutherford
BRISTOL COUNTY COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WALL
____________________
NP |
Appellant |
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- and |
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South Gloucestershire County Council - and MLC ( A child) by his guardian |
1st Respondent 2ndRespondent |
____________________
Stephen Cobb QC and Judi Evans (instructed by Mowbray Woodwards) for the Guardian
Stephen Cobb QC and Elizabeth Hudson (instructed by South Gloucestershire County Council) for the Local Authority
Hearing date : 3rd November 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Wall: :
Introduction
(1) whose child is made the subject of a final care order in proceedings under Part IV of the Children Act 1989 (CA 1989); and
(2) where the care plan for the child on the basis of which the care order was granted proposes a particular course of action for the child; but
(3) the care plan is either not implemented, or is changed in a way which the parent perceives may be adverse to the interests of the child and / or the parent.
The facts
The care proceedings relating to M
Events post care order
The judgment given on 15 September 2005
There then followed a disastrous period in the history of this case, and I think it is probably right to say that with the wisdom of hindsight, if I had known what was going to happen on 9th December, I would have willingly embraced the idea of a further interim care order. Equally, I am pretty sure, had all the parties and the judge known on 14th December, they would also probably have gone down the interim care order route, but of course hindsight is wonderful, but we are not blessed with it at the time when we are doing these things, and so the court made the final care order.
31. In her closing submissions, counsel for the mother, Miss Duthie, dealt at some length with the Human Rights Act and Article 8 of the European Convention, and quite rightly said that when the local authority came to make its decision on 5th January of 2005, and when this court makes its decision now, those matters are engaged. However, she had to accept and did accept very properly that she could not seek any relief under the Human Rights Act, not least because the Family Proceedings Rule specifically provide the procedure to be followed if you are seeking to invoke the Human Rights Act, a procedure which is designed to enable the people you are accusing of not complying with the convention, enabling them to know precisely what it is they have to meet. I need not take everybody to it, but it is in fact Rule 10, Point 26 of the Family Proceedings Rules of 1991, which set out in considerable detail what a person alleging a breach is required to do.
32. Consequently, because in the first place she accepts that she cannot ask me to grant relief under the Act, and secondly, because it would be it seems to me wholly unfair on the local authority, when the rules have not been complied with and that proper notice has not been given, and it is right to say that Miss Hudson for the local authority did her best, but was very much having to do it 'on the hoof', it would be quite wrong of me to make any findings against the local authority of a breach of the European Convention of Human Rights, and I do not propose to do so. That does not mean that I am not left with some feelings of unease about the way things went, and I am going to deal with those now.
So the decision was made to remove Morgan on the 6th. It was done without any warning to the mother; without any indication to the mother between 14th December and 6th January that the placement was seriously at risk. Why am I uneasy? I am uneasy for these reasons and this is why it seems to me it must look incredibly unfair to the mother."
58. However, I do think that, with hindsight, there were better procedures that could have been adopted. I think I have tried to set out what they were. I do think there could have been better consultations. Whether or not it would have led to any different decision, I know not, but to simply tear up the care plan three weeks into its existence, when it was recognised that there were all these sorts or problems that could arise, indeed the very support under the care plan was going to help the mother to deal with them, so there was not anything new in any of this. To tear it up at that stage is bound to leave the mother, and indeed the court to some extent, to feel that it was unfair and somewhat precipitate.
If, on the 14th December, the court, considered, as did all the parties, that the evidence in the case by which I mean, I suppose, in particular the various assessments to which I referred were such that the child's welfare required a care order, what evidence is there before me to suggest that nine months later, this is not still required?
62. No-one has called any evidence to suggest that the child could safely be returned to the mother without the protection of a care order. No-one has called any evidence to suggest that the mother's position has changed so as to make a residence order to the mother viable at this stage. No-one has called any evidence to suggest that the massive support programme, and I use those words deliberately because if you look at it in the care plan, it is a very, very detailed support programme, no-one has called any evidence to suggest that that programme required back in December, if mother and child were to live together, is no longer needed.
63. The risks which were identified by all the professionals and which the care plan sought to minimise, are all present today just as they were before the court on 14th December. Indeed, the mother's own statement I think the only statement she has made in support of her application does not seek to suggest otherwise. All that could be said to me by her counsel who is in a very difficult position as is the mother, because of the law all that could be said to me was that I could make my own assessment of the mother from seeing her in the witness box, and observing her throughout the trial and her demeanour and that I could, therefore, conclude she had sufficiently matured so that the care order could be discharged."
66. If the court thought there were grounds for a care order on the 14th, as indeed did everybody, I cannot see that anything has changed to enable the court to say I should discharge the care order. Where we are all stuck, where the mother and I are stuck, is that Parliament has taken away from the courts the power to regulate the way the local authority discharges its care order once that order is made and I think, in a sense, I have gone round in a complete circle, but there simply is not, if I apply Section 1, evidence which would enable me to say that the interests of this child would justify my discharging the care order. Indeed, on the contrary, the very matters that led the court to impose it in December are still there the very worries and fears and one would be bound to say, I think, as of today, that a care order is necessary for the protection of Morgan, and therefore, the application to discharge the care order has to be dismissed.
The grounds of appeal
"By CPR Part 52.11(3): "The appeal court will allow an appeal where the decision of the lower court was (a) wrong; or (b) unjust because of a serious procedural or other irregularity in the proceedings in the lower court."
1. The learned Judge was wrong to dismiss the application for discharge of the care order and should have either, (i) discharged the order and substituted a fresh interim care order, or (ii) adjourned the application for discharge.
2. The Judge's decision was unjust because of a serious irregularity and should be set aside because of a failure (through no fault of his own) to consider remedies under the Human Rights Act 1998.
Section 9:
the appeal court makes the following additional orders:-
An interim care order. Alternatively,
An order remitting the hearing of the application to discharge the care order to either HHJ Rutherford or a Judge of the Family Division. "
The attack on the judgment
Discussion
The power to substitute an interim order
Discharge and variation etc of care orders and supervision orders
(1) A care order may be discharged by the court on the application of
(a) any person who has parental responsibility for the child;
(4) Where a care order is in force with respect to a child the court may, on the application of any person entitled to apply for the order to be discharged, substitute a supervision order for the care order.
(5) When a court is considering whether to substitute one order for another under subsection (4) any provision of this Act which would otherwise require section 31(2) to be satisfied at the time when the proposed order is substituted or made shall be disregarded.
Interim orders
(1) Where
(a) in any proceedings on an application for a care order or supervision order, the proceedings are adjourned; or
(b) the court gives a direction under section 37(1),
the court may make an interim care order or an interim supervision order with respect to the child concerned.
(2) A court shall not make an interim care order or interim supervision order under this section unless it is satisfied that there are reasonable grounds for believing that the circumstances with respect to the child are as mentioned in section 31(2).
Should the judge have adjourned the application to discharge the care order?
Serious irregularity
"A party who seeks to rely on any provision of or right arising under the Human Rights Act 1998 or seeks a remedy available under that Act"
(a) shall state that fact in his originating document or (as the case may be) answer; and
(b) shall in his originating document or (as the case may be) answer:
(i) give precise details of the Convention right which it is alleged has been infringed and details of the alleged infringement;
(ii) specify the relief sought;
(iii) state if the relief sought includes a declaration of incompatibility.
The judge's response to the discharge application
Lord Justice Laws