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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 >> B (A Child), Re [2009] EWCA Civ 545 (11 June 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/545.html Cite as: [2009] Fam Law 812, [2009] EWCA Civ 545, [2009] 2 FLR 632 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM
His Honour Judge Richards sitting as a judge of the High Court
in Norwich on 3 April 2009
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE ELIAS
____________________
GB |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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RJB and GLB |
1st Respondent 2nd Respondent |
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B (A Child) |
____________________
Cherie Parnell (instructed by Allan Rutherford Ltd - Solicitors) for the 1st Respondent
GLB appeared in person and represented herself
Hearing date: 21st May 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Wall:
Introduction
The appeal
Section 55(1) of the Access to Justice Act 1999 (the 1999 Act)
(1) Where an appeal is made to a county court or the High Court in relation to any matter, and on hearing the appeal the court makes a decision in relation to that matter, no appeal may be made to the Court of Appeal from that decision unless the Court of Appeal considers that
(a) the appeal would raise an important point of principle or practice, or
(b) there is some other compelling reason for the Court of Appeal to hear it.
Permission to appeal may only be given where
(a) the court considers that the appeal would have a real prospect of success; or
(b) there is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard.
The essential facts
The justices' reasons; did they make any error of law?
Obvious difficulty is parents' capacity to balance the competing needs in a situation that is new to all. That is untested. I have no reason to think (father and his new wife) could not manage it, it is part of the equation for me.
It has a lot to do with competition, rivalry and jealousy. With their ages not such a major issue presently, but it may arise later. Sometimes it works really well for the children but we need all adults to work together.
(14) Re G (Residence: Same Sex Partner) [2005] EWCA Civ 462 [2005] 2 FLR states a child should not be removed from primary care of biological parents. H has never resided with his father. Grandmother has been his psychological parent as mentioned in Re G.
(17) We have not found compelling reasons to disrupt H's continuity of care and the consistency and predicatability that accompanies it.
The law: Re G [2006] UKHL 43 (Re G)
[2] I wish to emphasise one point. In this case the dispute is not between two biological parents. The present unhappy dispute is between the children's mother and her former partner Ms CW. In this case, as in all cases concerning the upbringing of children, the court seeks to identify the course which is in the best interests of the children. Their welfare is the court's paramount consideration. In reaching its decision the court should always have in mind that in the ordinary way the rearing of a child by his or her biological parent can be expected to be in the child's best interests, both in the short term and also, and importantly, in the longer term. I decry any tendency to diminish the significance of this factor. A child should not be removed from the primary care of his or her biological parents without compelling reason. Where such a reason exists the judge should spell this out explicitly.
[3] I would simply say that in my opinion both Bracewell J and, in the Court of Appeal, Thorpe LJ failed to give the gestational, biological and psychological relationship between CG (the birth mother) and the girls the weight that that relationship deserved. Mothers are special and, even after account is taken of CG's breach of the "residence" order (the justification for which I, for my part, doubt) and her reprehensible attitude towards the important relationship between the girls and CW, their other parent, CG was, on the evidence, a good and loving mother. I find myself unable to accept that the circumstances of this case came even close to justifying the judge's and the Court of Appeal's conclusion that the welfare of the girls required their primary home to be changed from that of their mother to that of CW.
[7] There are two issues of principle. The first is the weight to be attached to the fact that one party is both the natural and legal parent of the child and the other is not. This will require us to explore the concept of "natural" parenthood and its significance both for the adults and for the child. The second is the approach to be adopted by the court where the party with whom the child has her principal home is reluctant to acknowledge the importance of the other party in the child's life.
I am very concerned at the prospect of removing these children from the primary care of their only identifiable biological parent who has been their primary carer for most of their young lives and in whose care they appear to be happy and thriving. She is both a biological parent and a 'psychological' parent. Mindful as I am of the changing social and legal climate, on the facts of this case, I would attach greater significance perhaps than some to the biological link between the appellant and her children.
It is this point which Mr Peter Jackson QC has put at the forefront of his submissions on behalf of the mother. He argues that, whatever the test to be adopted, it was wrong for the courts below to attach no significance whatever to the fact that CG is the child's mother. He also argues that the judge allowed herself to be distracted, by her disapproval of the mother and her behaviour, from a full consideration of the evidence relating to the children's welfare, which would have led her to a different conclusion.
[30] We conclude, therefore, that the welfare of each child in the family should continue to be the paramount consideration whenever their custody or upbringing is in question between private individuals. The welfare test itself is well able to encompass any special contribution which natural parents can make to the emotional needs of their child, in particular to his sense of identity and self-esteem, as well as the added commitment which knowledge of their parenthood may bring. We have already said that the indications are that the priority given to the welfare of the child needs to be strengthened rather than undermined. We could not contemplate making any recommendation which might have the effect of weakening the protection given to children under the present law.'
[30] Nor should we. The statutory position is plain: the welfare of the child is the paramount consideration. As Lord MacDermott explained, this means that it "rules upon or determines the course to be followed". There is no question of a parental right. As the Law Commission explained, "the welfare test itself is well able to encompass any special contribution which natural parents can make to the emotional needs of their child" or, as Lord MacDermott put it, the claims and wishes of parents "can be capable of ministering to the total welfare of the child in a special way".
[31] None of this means that the fact of parentage is irrelevant. The position in English law is akin to that in Australian law, as explained by Lindenburgh J in Hodak, Newman and Hodak (1993) FLC 92-421, and subsequently approved by the Full Court of the Family Court of Australia in Rice v Miller (1993) FLC 92-415 and Re Evelyn [1998] Fam CA 55:
I am of the opinion that the fact of parenthood is to be regarded as an important and significant factor in considering which proposals better advance the welfare of the child. Such fact does not, however, establish a presumption in favour of the natural parent, nor generate a preferential position in favour of the natural parent from which the Court commences its decision-making process Each case should be determined upon an examination of its own merits and of the individuals there involved." (emphasis added).
[44] My Lords, I am driven to the conclusion that the courts below have allowed the unusual context of this case to distract them from principles which are of universal application. First, the fact that CG is the natural mother of these children in every sense of that term, while raising no presumption in her favour, is undoubtedly an important and significant factor in determining what will be best for them now and in the future. Yet nowhere is that factor explored in the judgment below. Secondly, while it may well be in the best interests of children to change their living arrangements if one of their parents is frustrating their relationship with the other parent who is able to offer them a good and loving home, this is unlikely to be in their best interests while that relationship is in fact being maintained in accordance with the court's order.
[45] I would therefore allow the appeal.
The grandparent cases
(a) an application for the order has been made by a person who
(i) is entitled to apply for a section 8 order with respect to the child; or
(ii) has obtained the leave of the court to make the application;
So it is not a case of parental right opposed to the interests of the child, with an assumption that parental right prevails unless there are strong reasons in terms of the interests of the child. It is the same test which is being applied, the welfare of the child. And all that Re K ...[1990] 2 FLR 64) is saying, as I understand it, is that of course there is a strong supposition that, other things being equal, it is in the interests of the child that it shall remain with its natural parents.
How did the judge deal with the case?
So far as the law is concerned I must be satisfied, if I am to allow this appeal that the justices have got it plainly wrong. That is the test set out in G v G, They have a wide discretion and I must be satisfied that they have strayed outside that wide discretion. It is not for me to substitute an order that I would have made, but only if I am satisfied they are plainly wrong could I change their decision. It is open to me, either to remit it to the justices for re-hearing or for me to make substitute orders.
24. That, it seems to me, is a repeating of the theme in respect of the approach to children living with their natural parents that had started as long ago. (sic) It has been said of the parents that wise or foolish, rich or poor, it is the right of the child to be brought up in the home of his or her natural parent. Of course, those rights are enshrined by Articles 6 and 8 of (ECHR).
25. In coming to my decision I have had regard to the way in which that principle has underlined the cases which now go back some 25 years. The principle was illustrated again in the case of Re W as long ago as 1993 in which the Court of Appeal were clear that it is best for a child to be placed with, and brought up by, his or her natural parents, all other things being equal. Whilst of course particular needs, in particular situations, mean that is not an absolute rule, and it would need to give way to those particular needs or situations, the court was clear that the proper test is the welfare of the child and that ordinarily that welfare is met by the child living with his or her natural parents.
27. Accordingly, it seems to me that the decision in Re G that was cited to the justices is illustrative of a principle that is well established in family law. The issue that I identify in this appeal is whether in fact the justices sufficiently had regard to that principle and whether in exercising their discretion this is a case in which the particular needs and situations of H are such that it should give way to his living with his natural parents.
28. I do not form the view that there is fundamentally sufficient in the argument that his circumstances with his grandmother are such that he should move. They may not be ideal, but they are "good enough".
29. There is a wider consideration than that. The wider consideration is his short and his long term welfare. I have come to the view that the justices were distracted by their consideration of the settled way in which he has been brought up. I have formed the view that whilst (the grandmother) is entitled to every credit for what she had done, that overall it is in this child's right to be brought up by his natural parents. His father can provide a satisfactory house in every respect. Accordingly, I have come to the view, applying as I do the test of whether this was plainly wrong, that in circumstances where it is clear that the father can meet this child's needs that he would have settled and established home with his own family, that the justices were plainly wrong in coming to their conclusion that H should remain with his grandmother.
30. In my judgment, the authorities and the facts support H's moving to live with his father. He is entitled to be brought up by his natural parents. Whether that will be precisely as good is immaterial. The test is whether it is good enough and it is not my task to protect him from every vagary of parenting. The evidence is that it will be more than good enough.
31. Indeed, it seems to me on the evidence that handled sensitively there is no reason why it cannot be successful. On the evidence, the father is able to meet H's needs. Accordingly, it my judgment, for those reasons I am prepared to allow the appeal against the order`
Postscript