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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> G (A Child) [2005] EWCA Civ 896 (14 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/896.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 896 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM
His Honour Judge Altman
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KEENE
and
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
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G (A CHILD) |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr A Hayden QC and Miss M Hughes (instructed by ) for the 3rd Appellant
Mr J Baker QC and Mr E Devereux (instructed by Buckinghamshire County Council) for the 1st , 2nd and 3rd Respondents
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Ward :
Introduction
The Background
"What have you got now. You have let yourself go. Fat and ugly. You have got the attitude that you can get by in life. You say you can get a pass in your exams by hardly going to school and you will scrape by with a pass. … You look like you want to be just like your mother. What a waste of a person with your brains …
If that is what you really want, then get on with it. I am ashamed to call you my daughter. I would not give you house room if you were on the street. You appear to aspire to the sort of person I detest more than any other in this country. Low ability and scrounging. The sort of people that would turn a palace into a slum and when they did that they complain whilst getting yet another free handout from the state. Breeding more kids with the same low expectation, thugs, vandals, etc. To be unemployed and good for nothing. If that is the way you want to go, do so. Don't come crying to me when you are up the duff, with an abusive boyfriend and never the ability to have nice things. …
Or you can pull yourself together, see the world for what it is, put yourself on the proper track, accept the help and love offered to you for the right reasons and not the poison you are exposed to now and make your future the way you want for yourself. It is up to you. I will help you to do well or I will leave your mother to continue screwing you up the way she has started to do so well. Let me know what you decide!"
He says the letter was intended to give her a jolt and both now agree it had that effect though the scars of bitterness may remain. There was a rapprochement and in this court they stand united.
"[D] is somebody who could make use of treatment which would have to be of a psychological nature and to continue for several months. Unfortunately, in my view, it would not be within the time scale of her daughter. In my opinion [D] does pose a physical risk to H and I do not think it is going to be possible for her to consistently put H's needs above her own at the moment."
I have added the emphasis to make the point that treatment, which may or may not be the same as Doctor Akomalafe had in mind, was envisaged to take months, rather than years.
"There is a lengthy chronology relating to the SSD's involvement with [D] as a child. This raises concerns regarding the maternal grandfather and step-mother's suitability to care for H on a permanent basis. Mr and Mrs G are aware of the allocated social worker's reservations and are still willing to be assessed. It is a possibility that after 1-2 visits a decision will be made to discontinue the assessment, based on the family history alone."
i) Mr G's continuing to blame either the system or his ex-wife for all the difficulties within the family;ii) Mr and Mrs G's deep rooted and longstanding antipathy towards Social Services and the court system which makes it difficult to envisage them working co-operatively with social workers to promote H's welfare;
iii) Their very negative view of D;
iv) H's being affected by that negative view;
v) Their lack of insight into their practising naturism;
vi) Their own lack of a support and network.
I must deal with these in detail in due course.
"It seems therefore that Mrs Draper's conclusions espouses a threshold for "good enough parenting" far higher than that shared by the child protection process."
"In explaining to the couple how I had reached the conclusions in my statement I was left in no doubt that the issues, which gave me the greatest concern, that of not taking any responsibility for their own actions preferring to blame others and holding a negative view of D had not changed."
The hearing.
"This to me represents a gross inequality of representation that can only be stark and very troubling. It forms a part of my conclusion that, whilst I must, as I do, try this case on the evidence and reach a conclusion on the balance of probabilities, I am left without that extra degree of certainty that I sense I would have had if this case had been presented with legal representation."
The judgment.
"He [the judge] has said that he is alive to the fact that there were issues that he did not deal with in his judgment. He has therefore requested that if there are any particular issues that anyone wishes him to deal with specifically then would you please let us know within the next 14 days of any specific matters upon which you would seek additional reasons so that these can then be relayed to the judge. Judge Altman has indicated he would then provide reasons. He has asked us to refer you to Re B (Appeal: Lack of Reasons] [2003] EWCA Civ 881 which is also reported at [2003] 2 FLR 1035. We annex the Lawtel summary."
"does the judgment sufficiently explain what the judge has found and what he has concluded as well as the process of reasoning by which he has arrived at his findings, and then his conclusions?"
The disappointed party is entitled to know why he has lost.
My analysis of the judgment.
"I have considered very carefully the arguments presented by Mr and Mrs G. They have given me, and everyone I imagine, very great cause for thought. Not only have they expressed their position but they have subjected the evidence in the case to very careful analysis. But at the end of the day it seems to me a judgment has to be made."
What follows can, therefore, be taken to be that judgment.
"The case is presented by Mr and Mrs G on the basis that now everything is satisfactory, and they have a household in which there is room for a single child to grow, untroubled by others claiming rivalry or perhaps being involved sexually with her. The Mother will co-operate and fit in with any pattern that may follow, that Mrs C with the possible lead-in to a very abusive situation, can be kept at arm's length. She gave evidence that she would co-operate. It paints a picture of an environment in which, if it is correct, H could live a fulfilled and happy childhood.
But looking at all the evidence in this case and noting that that is the way the case has been presented in this court, I am driven to conclude that it is probably wishful thinking.
I am driven to the conclusion that this is not a case where grandparents step in and demonstrate that they themselves can exhibit a history of good and successful parenting. Sometimes there are cases in which someone in a position like the Mother suffers from an illness which prevents her looking after her child and the grandparents can step in and say that they will deal with it. But those are generally cases in my experience where that is an isolated consideration. Here the position is far more complicated. The prospect of the Mother's complying with the grandparents having her child is very unlikely, bearing in mind that the nature of her illness is to have its ups and downs, and at times of downs she is not the mistress of her feelings and her attitude. I did not see in Mrs C as a real partner for Mr and Mrs G in co-operation and compliance. I interpret her evidence as someone who has developed a technique of shutting the door on reality and simply papering over the cracks in order to explain things to herself.
In those circumstances" [I add the emphasis] "I am driven most regretfully to the conclusion that the reality is that, genuine and deeply felt as the [grandparents'] offer is, they are probably confronting the impossible. They have great love for their daughter, as I say, I differ to that extent from Mrs Draper, because the evidence, I believe, has moved on since the diagnosis of Doctor van Velsen. In the reality of day to day life it could not be a question of: "Well, we will look after H and we will not look after the Mother". But there are complicated family situations in which there are overlaps of attention to one another, and day to day, week after week, the balance cannot really be struck in a way that leaves everyone sure that Mr and Mrs G will provide protection and a risk-free environment for the child. I perhaps have dealt at length, possibly too much length, on these considerations, but there has been a lot of criticism of Mr and Mrs G for their attitudes, and the reasoning that I have expressed as leading to my conclusion is not based on all those criticisms. …
As I have said, the issue in this case has been what is called "disposal". The local authority care plan, supported by the guardian, seems to me to be consistent with all the expert evidence in this case, and for the reasons I have given I consider that it should be endorsed."
"The case has involved to a large extent an examination of the position of the grandparents in being able to offer a home. This has been viewed in the light of the way in which their own children grew up. There has been much emphasis upon this. A problem which I sympathise over with the grandparents is that many, many allegations have been made about their approach to parenting over the years but they emphasise that they have had great difficulty and have great difficulty in being able to prove their innocence of this. Much of the material is from unreliable sources and contradictory. That has been my difficulty to an extent as well. Nonetheless, the fact remains that three children grew up in their household (and sometimes not in their household) disturbed, and in a way that I am sure they and anyone else would wish had not happened. This court has not engaged or been asked to engage on any fact finding exercise in relation to that history. "
"The stance of the experts and local authority has been that the history dictates the future."
"I do not know where the truth lies in all this history. But I cannot find any positive endorsement of the proposition that Mr and Mrs G can demonstrate a history of successful and good parenting. I have not come to a finding that they were specifically deficient in any particular way, but the puzzle I had at the outset of this case is supported by the very fact that three children grew up in their household who were upset and disturbed. If it be that that disturbance was caused within the C household in a period when they had care of the children, that that household is proposed to be, even to a reduced extent, and even if confined to contact with Mrs C, part of an on going family background leaves me very troubled."
"As this case has proceeded I have understood the letter Mr G wrote in 1998 a little better. If a child says to a parent hateful things, it is very difficult to do anything other than take them at face value and seriously, particularly in the absence of any medical advice to the effect it is the illness speaking, not the daughter. I can understand as we look with the benefit of hindsight and now know the Mother was having medical difficulties that the context of that letter was in the absence of any such knowledge that the Mother's behaviour had any explanation other than her own attitude and personality. So it seems one can perhaps be a little harsh in judging the way in which that letter was written. The information we now have as to the mother's condition may well inform, it seems to me , the extent to which Mr and Mrs G 's previous negative views of the Mother may be changed."
"I can understand Mr and Mrs G are now seeking to find some explanation, than the assessment itself, for the negative conclusions of Mrs Draper, but I can find none. She was conscientious and is a very experienced social worker who produced a reasoned and careful analysis, and came to the conclusion that she did. The only extent to which in a very modest way I would query her conclusion is whether or not the negative view of the mother, which was expressed in earlier days, is still such a prevalent one on the part of the grandparents in this case." [The emphasis was added by me].
"It is suggested that they have been hostile to the local authority, demonstrated unwarranted criticism and therefore an inability to work with them. I ask myself: how much is that the Gs as grandparents or the Gs as people managing the litigation and trying to find a way to confront the evidence that is against them? I am quite sure that, as most lay people would, when faced with a mountain of evidence against them, they seek to criticise it and find fault with it and resist it. The ability to draw a line between what is to do with their parenting and what to do with them as litigators is impossible to draw."
"It has been suggested by Mrs Parr that part of Mr G's motivation for these proceedings has been to use them and the application as a means of getting back at the local authority. She has instanced her sense of that in the hostility that from time to time plainly Mr and to a lesser extent Mrs G have displayed to the local authority. There does not seem to me to be evidential support for that conclusion, because there are so many other explanations, not least being the position that the [grandparents] occupy as having to mount their own case. I am satisfied that the [grandparents] participated in these proceedings only because of their love for their granddaughter and their desire to struggle to do what they possibly can to enable their grandchild to grow up within their family."
"5.19 The local authority file suggests that, at times, the local authority has accepted that their involvement may not have been as it could have been. Unfortunately, Mrs Draper has not addressed this aspect of the context, in so doing there is the appearance of a lack of balance. Sadly, this, in turn, fuels Mr G's view that it is the local authority who struggles to work with him.
5.20 It cannot be denied that, arguably, one of the most distress free periods in H's life could well be the period when Mr and Mrs G had the primary responsibility to ensure that she was safely kept. The documents filed by the local authority appear to support the view that the household, including Mr and Mrs G, worked well with all the professionals involved while H was on the Child Protection Register, furthermore, and perhaps of greatest import, H appeared to thrive.
5.21 The then difficulties between D and Mr and Mrs G were not accorded the high level of concern that now appears to be assigned to them.
5.22 Looking at the local authority's actions, at the time, one has to question very carefully indeed whether they would have initiated proceedings had D decided to place H in her father and step-mother's care, as opposed to having sought foster care."
"The information we now have as to the mother's condition may well inform, it seems to me, the extent to which Mr and Mrs G's previous negative views of the mother may be changed."
"5.38 Whilst I accept that D has changed her position regarding whether she would support her father and step-mother as full-time carers for H, it is not clear why the social worker emphasises only D's wish for her father and step-mother not to be considered. Both of D's statements support her father and step-mother as alternative carers."
"They did not hesitate to say that they were not committed naturists and that henceforward most especially if H were in their care would not go around naked. They would adhere to appropriate boundaries especially in the interests of risk management. I am of the view they will abide by appropriate body covering in the future."
"Sheila Draper came to a conclusion about one feature that I have discounted, which is an interest in, which she described as a commitment to naturism, on the part of Mr and Mrs G. There has been a degree of physical openness in the household and with an interest in naturism on the part of Mr and Mrs G, but I accept their evidence that it is something that they can discard as easily as pick up, and they accept the evidence that in fact it is thought in this particular context to be inappropriate. I accept Mrs G's evidence that they have adopted a more modest approach, even in their own household, to nakedness."
"9.6 Mr and Mrs G have a substantial support network. This is reflected in the number of letters that have been submitted in support of their application attached to [their] statement."
The Local Authority's case
Conclusions.
Lord Justice Keene :
Lord Justice Longmore :