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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 >> F (A Child) [2008] EWCA Civ 439 (01 May 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/439.html Cite as: [2008] Fam Law 715, [2008] 2 FCR 93, [2008] 2 FLR 550, [2008] EWCA Civ 439 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE BRIGHTON COUNTY COURT
HER HONOUR JUDGE COATES
HB07Z00163
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WALL
and
LORD JUSTICE WILSON
____________________
IN THE MATTER OF F (A CHILD) |
____________________
Miss J Briggs (instructed by East Sussex CC Legal Services) for the Local Authority
Miss G Buckley (instructed by Hillman Smart & Spicer) for the Mother.
Hearing dates: 19th March 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Thorpe:
"BY URGENT FAX: 01273 481900
URGENT ATTENTION OF
Dear Sirs
J-L F D.O.B. 11.06.06
We are instructed by M C, J-L's father.
We understand a Placement Order was made in the Brighton County Court on 17 August 2007. We have been instructed by Mr C to apply to the Court for leave to revoke the Placement Order on the basis that his circumstances have changed since the Order was made.
We have checked with the Court who inform us that the application has now been issued but, due to the fact that the Adoption clerk is away, may not be served until Monday. We have requested permission to abridge time for service of the Application.
In the meantime, we refer you to the Adoption and Children Act 2002 s24(5) and would you please confirm by return of fax that J-L has not yet been placed since we understand she went to Matching Panel early last week.
Yours faithfully"
"(1) The court may revoke a placement order on the application of any person.
(2) But an application may not be made by a person other than the child or the local authority authorised by the order to place the child for adoption unless
(a) the court has given leave to apply, and(b) the child is not placed for adoption by the authority.
(3) The court cannot give leave under (2)(a) unless satisfied that there has been a change in circumstances since the order was made.
(4) If the court determines, on an application for an adoption order, not to make the order, it may revoke any placement order in respect of the child.
(5) Where
(a) an application for the revocation of a placement order has been made and has not been disposed of, and(b) the child is not placed for adoption by the authority,
the child may not without the court's leave be placed for adoption under the order."
"Section 24(5) of the Act provides that, where an application for the revocation of a placement order has been made and has not been disposed of, the child may not be placed for adoption without the court's leave. Notwithstanding submissions on behalf of the mother to the contrary, the judge held that there was nothing, whether in that or elsewhere, which precluded a placement without leave while an application for leave to apply for revocation was pending. I agree with the judge; and in this court the mother does not argue to the contrary."
"where- (a) an application for the revocation of a placement order or an application for leave to apply has been made and has not been disposed of,"
or words to that effect.
"The judge went on to observe, however, that, were an application for leave to have been issued but not to have been disposed of, it would normally be good practice for a local authority either to agree not to place the child until its disposal or at least to agree to give notice, say of 14 days, to the applicant of any proposed placement. In this regard I also agree with him. Given such notice, the applicant might perhaps be able either to take steps to challenge the lawfulness of the decision to place at that juncture or, probably more easily, to seek an expedited hearing of the application for leave, from which might flow, in the fine, developing tradition of collaboration between local authorities and courts, a short further agreed moratorium on placement until the hearing."
Lord Justice Wall:
Introduction
The conduct of the local authority / adoption agency in this case
The argument for the appellant
"(1) whether the wording in section 24(5) of the 2002 Act, namely: "an application for the revocation of a placement order has been made" can be interpreted to include the application for leave to make the application;
(2) whether the wording of section 24(5) should be interpreted in this way so as to give effect to the Convention Rights of the applicant to a fair hearing, and to family life; and
(3) if not, whether section 24(5) is incompatible with the ECHR, and if so, whether a declaration to that effect should be made."
"Section 24(5) of the Act provides that, where an application for the revocation of a placement order has been made and has not been disposed of, the child may not be placed for adoption without the court's leave. Notwithstanding submissions on behalf of the mother to the contrary, the judge held that there was nothing, whether in that subsection or elsewhere, which precluded a placement without leave while an application for leave to apply for revocation was pending. I agree with the judge; and in this court the mother does not argue to the contrary. The judge went on to observe, however, that, were an application for leave to have been issued but not to have been disposed of, it would normally be good practice for a local authority either to agree not to place the child until its disposal or at least to agree to give notice, say of 14 days, to the applicant of any proposed placement. In this regard I also agree with him. Given such notice, the applicant might perhaps be able either to take steps to challenge the lawfulness of the decision to place at that juncture or, probably more easily, to seek an expedited hearing of the application for leave, from which might flow, in the fine, developing tradition of collaboration between local authorities and courts, a short further agreed moratorium on placement until the hearing."
"I approach the task of construing section 139(2), therefore, on the basis that Parliament, by enacting the procedural requirement to obtain leave, did not intend the result to be that a claimant might be deprived of access to the courts, unless there is express language or necessary implication to the contrary. If there is no express language, there will be no necessary implication unless the legislative purpose cannot be achieved in any other way. Procedural requirements are there to serve the ends of justice, not to defeat them. It does not serve the ends of justice for a claimant to be deprived of a meritorious claim because of a procedural failure which does no substantial injustice to the defendant."
" In other words, the statutory phrase "if .. the welfare of the child requires it", should be read as a non-exhaustive expression of the terms on which the discretion can be exercised, so that the power is exercisable not merely if the welfare for the child requires it, but wherever it was required to give effect, as required by the Convention, to the rights of others. This is a process of construction which in my judgment comfortably satisfies the criteria identified in Ghaidan v Godin-Mendoza [2004] UKHL 30, [2004] 2 AC 557, and which is therefore required by section 3."
Discussion
Good practice
"BY URGENT FAX (number given)
URGENT ATTENTION OF (named individual)
Dear Sirs,
(Child's name and date of birth given)
We are instructed by (the father's name) (the child's) father.
We understand a placement order was made in the (named) County Court on 17 August 2007. We have been instructed by (the father) to apply to the court for leave to revoke the placement order on the basis that his circumstances have changed since the order was made.
We have checked with the court who inform us that the application has now been issued but, due to the fact that the Adoption clerk is away, may not be served until Monday (21 January). We have requested permission to abridge time for service of the application.
In the meantime, we refer you to the Adoption and Children Act 2002. section 24(5) and would you please confirm by return of fax that (the child) has not yet been placed since we understand she went to Matching Panel early last week."
"It was agreed at this review that everything was going extremely well and therefore (the child) would move to the prospective adopters as proposed at the Introduction Meeting held on 15 January 2008."
What should have happened in the instant case.
"We invite you to give an undertaking that you will take no steps to place (the child) with prospective adopters pending the hearing of our client's application. If that undertaking is not received by 10.00 am on 18 January, we shall apply without notice in the first instance to the county court for an order in those terms."
Lord Justice Wilson:
"Certainly, the right of access to the courts is not absolute but may be subject to limitations; these are permitted by implication since the right of access by its very nature calls for regulation by the State, regulation which may vary in time and place according to the needs and resources of the community and of individuals Nonetheless, the limitations applied must not restrict or reduce the access left to the individual in such a way or to such an extent that the very essence of the right is impaired."
The essence of the appellant's entitlement to a fair hearing in relation to the child's placement for adoption was that he should have had, as he did, a full opportunity to participate in the proceedings which led to the making of the placement order on 17 August 2007. Thereafter and until placement the law furnished him with the right to seek leave to apply for its revocation; and I cannot accept that the law's failure to provide that a prohibition against placement without leave should be an automatic consequence of the issue of his application for leave (as opposed to its provision to him of an opportunity to apply for such prohibition) was other than a permissible limitation upon his right of access to the court at that stage. The application for leave made by this appellant, however poor its prospects, was made bona fide out of concern to offer the child a home with a biological parent and of a sensation that such was action which a responsible father should take. Applications for leave by other parents might however be made mala fide, in order simply to thwart the plan for adoption made by the local authority and endorsed by the court. If the automatic consequence of the mere issue of their applications for leave were to be a prohibition against placement without leave, they would be able to arrest, at any rate temporarily, a long-arranged placement for which the children had been fully prepared and which should in their interests proceed without hitch. Thus, while in the present case East Sussex have misused the law, as it stands, in order to thwart the appellant's proper approach to the court, an applicant could misuse the law, if it stood otherwise, in order to thwart a local authority's proper plans for the child.