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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 >> Local Authority v HP & Anor [2009] EWCA Civ 143 (27 February 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/143.html Cite as: [2009] 2 FCR 105, [2010] WLR 419, [2009] EWCA Civ 143, [2009] 2 FLR 66, [2009] Fam Law 387, [2010] 1 WLR 419 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM
Her Honour Judge Nasreen Pearce, sitting in the
Luton County Court on 16 and 23 October 2008
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WALL
and
LORD JUSTICE MOORE-BICK
____________________
Local Authority |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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HP and MB |
Respondents |
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P-B (Children) |
____________________
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Ms Marcia Hyde (for the Guardian) and Mr Daniel Kingsley (for the Father) did not appear but provided position statements in writing of their representative positions
Hearing date: 18th December 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Wall:
Introduction
does a judge sitting in the county court have the power to attach to a contact order made in public law proceedings under section 34 of the Children Act 1989 a penal notice addressed to the local authority stating that if the order is not obeyed, the local authority will be in contempt of court and the officer responsible for the implementation of the order – alternatively the Head of Children's Services- may be sent to prison?
The appeal
The facts giving rise to the appeal
51. If there is going to be a breakdown of the placement and (the foster father) is child focused, then he will follow any proper structured planned removal of the child at a time and at a place when the placement is found, which is appropriate to the needs of the child. If (the foster father) wants removal forthwith, then he is not fit to have the care of this child.
52. I am not going to be threatened by any person. I have carried out a balancing exercise. I have applied the welfare checklist to this case. Although I have not made reference to each and every criteria (sic) set out in section 1 of the (1989 Act), I have those factors very much in mind, and I hope I have dealt with those issues in the course of my judgment. It is because of my concern for the welfare of this child, and the attitude of the foster carer, that the court has to take a robust view and make a robust determination.
53. There will be Sunday contact. I take on board what the guardian has said about fortnightly contact. I think once a month Sunday contact for three hours must be permitted. In order to make sure that this contact takes place, I am going to make a specific order to that effect, and there will be a penal notice attached to the order.
54. I am saddened by the fact that (the foster father) is still ignoring the telephone contact order I made on 13 August and there are difficulties about that. There will also be a penal notice attached to that contact order, which will provide that, during those telephone contacts, there is to be no tape recording of the telephone contact when it takes place. That will be a condition of the order I make.
(emphases supplied)
It has come to the point where the court has been totally frustrated with all the attempts it has made, since August until now, to ensure that this matter can be dealt with in a reasonable way, with negotiations taking place, and the local authority imposing their authority on their own foster carer. They have not done that. It is not simply a question of face to face contact. There were also difficulties over telephone contact.
20. Mr Main Thompson, on behalf of the local authority submits before me today that I can only attach a penal notice if there is a defined contact order, but there has never been a defined contact order and, therefore, I should not do it. I can only impose a penal notice when I make a defined contact order, and then make other attempts to ensure that the court order is complied with and, because that has not been done, I have no authority to endorse a penal notice on the court order.
21. I disagree with him. This is a local authority case, and the court does not, at the first instance, go along with imposing a contact order. One treads along, on the basis that the local authority will act responsibly and there will be an agreement on contact. There was an agreement on contact in relation to, for example, the telephone contact and the other contact that was taking place. The local authority, however, did not ensure that that contact occurred agreeably and appropriately as it was agreed.
22. There were many instances, which I have already referred to, when the local authority did not actually do what they should have done, as I have indicated. In my judgment, before a penal notice is imposed, particularly in a case such as this (which is an exceptional case) the court does not have to make a defined contact order and then wait for another event to occur, when the court is clearly faced, as it is in this case, with continued, repeated breaches of arrangements that have been made, notwithstanding the fact that the court had given indications as early as August that, unless the arrangements are properly complied with, a penal notice would be endorsed.
23. On the last occasion, during the course of the hearing, I mentioned the issue of a penal notice. There was never any suggestion that I neither had the power to do so; nor that I should delay imposing such a notice until the local authority has had the opportunity of complying with a defined contact order.
(emphasis supplied)
27. In so far as the argument is raised that I do not have the power to ensure that court orders are complied with by imposing a penal notice, Mr Main Thompson has pointed out that (CCR) Order 29 rule 1 has been incorporated in the (FPR) 1991 4.21(A). I have considered that, and the submission that those provisions only apply to the specific conditions which are mentioned within that rule. The section 34(4) application under the (1989 Act) is not referred to in those rules and therefore the court has no authority to impose a penal notice on an order made under section 34(4).
28. To that I say that the (FPR) are subject to the (CPR) and it is made clear within the (FPR) (in rule 1.3) that, where there is a lacuna within the (FPR) I can apply the normal (CPR). If it was ever the intention of the drafters of the legislation and the statutory instrument that the court should not impose a penal notice against a local authority, then it would have specifically said so, as they did with the provision relating to section 8. It does not do so. If that was the case, it would make a mockery of any court order made against any public body. Furthermore, as I said earlier, I find that there is authority for me to make such an order, because there is provision to do so under the CPR
29. It is on that basis that I find that I have the authority to make such an order. If I am wrong on that, I have specifically today sought permission to sit as a section 9 judge and, under the inherent jurisdiction of this court, I have the power to impose such an order when there is a blatant repeated non-compliance of arrangements for contact made, and the local authority have clearly shown that they are more beholden to the foster carer than their duty towards the parents and the child.
30. Mr. Main Thompson submits that there is no precedent for a penal notice to be imposed on a local authority. This is an exceptional case. The court does not normally impose a penal notice except as a last resort. This court has bent over backwards to get this local authority to do what is best for the child and in that child's interests. They have failed in that duty, and it is in these circumstances that exception forces the court to take exceptional steps.
31. It is in those circumstances that I find myself unable to do anything else to ensure that the local authority will, in fact, now do as they are supposed to do, rather than follow the guidance given to them by their foster carer, over whom I am afraid they have absolutely not control The penal notice will, therefore, remain as I directed in my judgment last week.
The (local authority) shall make (AB) available for supervised contact with (Mr. B) on one Sunday every month for a period of 3 hours at a time at a venue to be agreed commencing Sunday 26 October 2008.
Question 1: did the judge have the power to enforce by committal the order for contact which she undoubtedly made under section 34 of the 1989 Act?
34 Parental contact etc with children in care
(1) Where a child is in the care of a local authority, the authority shall (subject to the provisions of this section) allow the child reasonable contact with—
(a) his parents;
(b) any guardian [or special guardian] of his;
[(ba) any person who by virtue of section 4A has parental responsibility for him;]
(c) where there was a residence order in force with respect to the child immediately before the care order was made, the person in whose favour the order was made; and
(d) where, immediately before the care order was made a person had care of the child by virtue of an order made in the exercise of the High Court's inherent jurisdiction with respect to children, that person.
(2) On an application made by the authority or the child, the court may make such order as it considers appropriate with respect to the contact which is to be allowed between the child and any named person.
(3) On an application made by—
(a) any person mentioned in paragraphs (a) to (d) of subsection (1); or
(b) any person who has obtained the leave of the court to make the application,
the court may make such order as it considers appropriate with respect to the contact which is to be allowed between the child and that person.
4.21A Attachment of penal notice
CCR Order 29, rule 1 (committal for breach of order or undertaking) shall apply to section 8 orders and orders under section 14A, 14B(2)(b), 14C(3)(b), or 14D as if for paragraph (3) of that rule there were substituted the following—
"(3) In the case of a section 8 order (within the meaning of section 8(2) of the Children Act 1989) or an order under section 14A, 14B(2)(b), 14C(3)(b), or 14D of the Children Act 1989 enforceable by committal order under paragraph (1), the judge or the district judge may, on the application of the person entitled to enforce the order, direct that the proper officer issue a copy of the order, endorsed with or incorporating a notice as to the consequences of disobedience, for service in accordance with paragraph (2); and no copy of the order shall be issued with any such notice endorsed or incorporated save in accordance with such a direction.
1.3 Application of other rules
(1) Subject to the provisions of these rules and of any enactment the County Court Rules 1981 and the Rules of the Supreme Court 1965 shall apply, with the necessary modifications, to family proceedings in a county court and the High Court respectively.
(2) For the purposes of paragraph (1) any provision of these rules authorising or requiring anything to be done in family proceedings shall be treated as if it were, in the case of proceedings pending in a county court, a provision of the County Court Rules 1981 and, in the case of proceedings pending in the High Court, a provision of the Rules of the Supreme Court 1965.
The argument for Mr B
To make matters abundantly plain, and to demonstrate to the local authority that this is an order which we expect to be obeyed, this order will be endorsed with a penal notice and the director is to be given the assurance by those who represent him today that his contemptuous disregard of this order could lead to an application to commit him and, without prejudging that matter, my preliminary view is that it stands a good prospect of success and he should be advised accordingly.
CCR and RSC "shall continue to apply" (FPR rule 1.3(1)) —The application of CCR and RSC in their original form (ie those rules in force immediately before 26 April 1999) is mandatory in the absence of other, or inconsistent, provision in these rules or in any other enactment. Thus, for example, the provisions of RSC Ord 38 and CCR Ord 20, concerning evidence (especially leave to adduce expert evidence: RSC Ord 38, r 36 and CCR Ord 20, r 27) apply in family proceedings.
"family proceedings" (r 1.3(1), (2))—See "family proceedings" under r 1.2.
Civil Procedure Rules 1998—With effect from 26 April 1999 the Civil Procedure Rules 1998 came into operation for all civil proceedings, save for "family proceedings" as defined by Matrimonial and Family Proceedings Act 1984, s 32 (CPR 1998, r 2.1(2)). The result of this is that there are three regimes for the various forms of family process referred to in Family Court Practice (see Table below) namely:
(a) the original RSC and CCR which continue to govern family proceedings for as long as CPR 1998 do not apply directly to family proceedings within the meaning of MFPA 1984, s 32;
(b) various of the existing RSC and CCR (as modified to bring them into line with CPR 1998 and set out in Schs 1 and 2 thereto) continue to apply (such as the rules relating to enforcement of orders); and
(c) the Civil Procedure Rules 1998 which are applicable to proceedings under Inheritance (Provision for Family and Dependants) Act 1975, Protection from Harassment Act 1997, Trusts of Land and Appointment of Trustees Act 1996, s 14, judicial review and appeals to the Court of Appeal.
(1) Where a person required by a judgment or order to do an act refuses or neglects to do it within the time fixed by the judgment or order or any subsequent order the judgment or order may be enforced, by order of the judge, by a committal order against that person or, if that person is a body corporate, against any director or other officer of the body.
(2) [deals with service]
(3) In the case of a section 8 order (within the meaning of section 8(2) of the Children Act 1989) or an order under section 14A, 14B(2)(b), 14C(3)(b), or 14D of the Children Act 1989 enforceable by committal order under paragraph (1), the judge or the district judge may, on the application of the person entitled to enforce the order, direct that the proper officer issue a copy of the order, endorsed with or incorporating a notice as to the consequences of disobedience, for service in accordance with paragraph (2); and no copy of the order shall be issued with any such notice endorsed or incorporated save in accordance with such a direction.
The position of the guardian
Discussion
Question 2: Did the judge have power to impose a penal notice?
Was it necessary or appropriate for the judge to assume the powers of a High Court judge under section 9 of the Supreme Court Act 1981 (the 1981 Act)?
The final question: should the penal notice remain in place now that contact, it appears, is working smoothly?