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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 (Children), Re (Rev 1) [2010] EWCA Civ 324 (30 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/324.html Cite as: [2010] 2 FLR 283, [2010] EWCA Civ 324, [2010] Fam Law 576 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM
His Honour Judge Cleary, sitting in the Coventry County Court 5th March 2010
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WALL
and
LORD JUSTICE AIKENS
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MB (The Mother) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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County Council AB (The Father) KB and EB (The Children) |
1st Respondent 2nd Respondent 3rd and 4th, Respondents |
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B (Children) |
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Rebecca Franklin (instructed by Warwickshire County Council) for the 1st Respondent
Davinder Dhaliwal (instructed by Maurice Andrews – Solicitors) for the 2nd Respondent
John Vater (instructed by Johnson & Gaunt – Solicitors) for the Children and the Guardian
Hearing date: 11th March 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Wall :
22. The threshold can be summarised thus. (MB) is unable, it is reported, to prioritise her children's needs before her own and has not always cooperated with social services. There has been persistent domestic violence between the parents and the children have been constant witnesses to these incidents; and hitherto neither parent appears to have understood the seriousness of the violence and the impact of this violence upon the children. (MB) is, it is said, unable to protect the children from their father or from witnessing the violence between them, and although she has stated to social services on a number of occasions in the past that she wishes to leave him because of her fear of him she has not done so. For his part (AB) has been very aggressive and confrontational with social services generally, throughout professional involvement. Further, father has struck the children and has, it is reported and asserted, struck (EB) in particular and with a belt. His threats to (MB) are reported by her. She has included very serious threats and terrifying ones which include a threat of assault with an axe, and indeed the children have seen him brandishing an axe from time to time. Those are just some of the allegations and although I do not at this stage make findings particularly against the father it is clear from a perfectly frank admission by the mother in the position statement lodged very helpfully by her counsel that the threshold criteria certainly are met for the purpose of this application.
23. In brutally short summary, and I hope I can be forgiven for this, the issue before this court is not whether there should be an interim care order but whether within the terms of that order the younger two children should be kept from the family home while assessments are carried out, assessments being essentially of a psychological nature to assess whether, with clinical help, the mother genuinely can disengage herself from this father, and indeed whether this father can no doubt again with professional help moderate his behaviour and eschew violence and abuse both towards the mother of his children and indeed of his stepchildren and the children themselves.
"The making of an interim care order is an essentially impartial step which effectively maintains the status quo and does not give a local authority in whose favour it is granted a tactical advantage over other parties; the regime of an interim care order should operate as a tightly run procedure closely monitored by the court and affording all parties the opportunity of frequent reviews as events unfold".
I added:-
53 For these propositions, three authorities are cited, two of which are decisions of this court Re G (Minors) (Interim Care Order) [1993] 2 FLR 839 and Re M (a minor)(Appeal: interim order)(No 1) [1994] 1 FLR 54.
50. I have considered the law. As I have indicated I have considered the statutory requirements.
51. I must bear in mind of course that before I make an interim order I must be satisfied that there are reasonable grounds for believing that the threshold criteria under section 31 of the legislation are satisfied and that it is better for the child to make an order than to make no order.
52. I must consider the child's welfare pursuant to the subsection to which I have already made reference.
53. As to the threshold, section 31.2 provides that a court may only make a care or supervision order if it is satisfied that the child concerned is suffering or is likely to suffer significant harm and that the harm or likelihood of harm is attributable to the care given to the child or likely to be given to him if the order were not made not being what it would be reasonable to expect a parent to give him.
54. In an application for an interim order I need only be satisfied that there are reasonable grounds for believing that the section 31 conditions to which I have referred are satisfied. 'Is suffering' can be translated as 'at the moment of the hearing or at the commencement of the proceedings.' 'Is likely to suffer' is translated as 'a real possibility, a possibility that cannot sensibly ignored.' And 'significant harm' is in part defined. That is as to harm. Under section 31.9 the legislation is helpful by indicating that 'harm' includes ill treatment which includes not only sexual abuse but other forms of ill treatment which are not physical. By that I pause and remark to myself, and I doubt that there is any argument against this, exposure to domestic abuse between the parents, impairment of physical or mental health or, finally, impairment of physical, intellectual, emotional, social or behavioural development. And when I consider a real possibility, a possibility that cannot sensibly be ignored, I hear, and this resonates throughout that which I have heard over the last two days, N's comment. When she heard her mother say that she would disengage from her father or stepfather she said words to the effect of: "Oh, yeah, for the 500th time."
55. It is of course for the local authority to satisfy the court on the balance of probabilities that there are reasonable grounds for believing that the threshold criteria are satisfied and in this case the mother does accept that.
56. The issue now is whether or not, the threshold criteria having been met, there is a need, an urgent need, to keep the children from their mother for the weeks to which I have referred rather than any longer period.
57. In his skeleton argument on behalf of the mother counsel argues that the risk of harm to the children is a two-sided coin and that there is a balancing exercise which must include consideration of the risk of short term emotional harm in separating a child from parents, siblings and home, and a very high standard must be established to justify interim removal.
58. In support of that argument I am reminded of the case of Re M. (I assume this to be a reference to the decision of this court in Re M (Interim Care Order: Removal) [2005] EWCA Civ 1594, [2005]1 FLR 1043) As is acknowledged I think by counsel every case before this court is fact-specific. It is difficult if not impossible to find a rule to which all cases can be compared when faced with these unhappy applications. And of course I remind myself that Re M involved retention in foster care under a decision taken in the knowledge that because a professional assessment was to be undertaken by (in that case a hospital) the judge was validating an arrangement which would extend the absence of the child from the family home for some ten months.
59. It was argued persuasively in the case of Re H (I take this to be a reference to the decision of this court in Re H (a child) (interim care order) [ 2002] EWCA Civ 1932, [2002] 1 FCR 350)-- the citations of both these cases are plain from the submissions of counsel -- again persuasively that the interim application was a 'dry run' because an order sanctioning separation was effectively determinative of the parents' long term case.
60. I therefore derive limited assistance from those two cases.
61. More recently, in the case of Re LA, (this is plainly a reference to the decision of this court in Re LA (Care: Chronic Neglect) [2009] EWCA Civ 822, [2010] 1 FLR 80) it is acknowledged that the test for removal is not so high as to require an imminent risk of really serious harm.
62. In my judgement, I must balance the harm which in my view is a distinct possibility, a possibility that cannot sensibly be ignored, given the quite dreadful history in this case and in particular the wholesale failure of the mother to engage the protective mechanism put at her disposal on the 25th February and even unhappily not to report it to the local authority but to only do so after her sister in despair revealed what had happened against the risk of ascertainable emotional harm to these children if they are not immediately returned.
63. I have said already that the two younger children are, if I can use the term, if not resigned to it, ready for it. They will not be wrenched from their mother's side. They are not at home. They see their mother regularly and under minimal if any supervision, for she has been taking them to and from school, she has been staying over with them, but in a protective environment. That is when she has been staying over in other family homes.
64. In my judgment the balance is struck in favour of the local authority concerns. There is a real possibility that mother will not disengage. Despite her best wishes, her endeavours will come to nothing. That is a risk and it is a real risk. It is entirely right for the guardian and indeed the local authority to oversee whether or not she can, for it will be an emotional as well as physical struggle, to maintain that which she has not adhered to over the last decade when she has already hitherto obtained an injunction in the past and it has availed her nothing. That was in 1999 when the husband's, the father's behaviour was perhaps at a similar height. It has not gone away.
65. At that time and at that height she still failed to maintain her distance from him. I do not belittle her for that. I acknowledge that it is terribly difficult when she has been under his control, his controlling behaviour, for so long. She is very vulnerable at this moment and she admits that. She admits she needs help. It is during these very important weeks that the children have to be in a protective environment, an environment from which they can be ring-fenced away from the gunfire.
66. If mother passes muster, if I can use that term, then the signs are good, good to the extent that I will limit the period, and this will have to be on the local authority care plan. They must acknowledge this, and if they don't I would like to know why, given their acceptance at the stand that this is a sensible idea. I will limit this period until the next time that I can engage with it, which I think is, as I have already indicated, in May. And I will expect the local authority - if the guardian supports this -- to have already put in place a phased return to the mother of her younger children.
67. Whereas I made it plain during this hearing that I would expect the mother to show cause why the children should not be accommodated in the way suggested by the guardian and ultimately accepted by the local authority, next time the ball will pass and the local authority will have to show me why the children should not be returned. I hope that is clear. But of course I will rely heavily on that which the guardian has observed over what I think is a six or seven week period.
68. Thus in generality I do make interim care orders in respect of the two younger children.
69. I think by common consent we have arrived at a situation where in respect of I, I make a residence order in respect of that little boy, subject to the supervision of the local authority.
70. As to the care plan, I do expect the parties to agree the issue of contact, which should be endorsed on the care plan. If that causes difficulty then this now being five o'clock in the evening, and I apologise for not only the inelegant nature of my judgment but also the fact that I have spoken for now well over an hour, I will entertain this case at ten o'clock on Monday morning to be told where the care plan is causing difficulty. I hope it will not. I do not think it will because I think the local authority does continue to harbour a significant amount of goodwill toward this mother, even if she finds at the moment in her distress that it is difficult to ascertain that.
counsel asserted (when seeking permission to appeal) that I had undertaken an inappropriate test when I indicated that it was for the mother to show cause why the children should not be placed in temporary accommodation.
I made it plain at the time and on Monday (that is 8 March 2010, when the judge's directions order was drawn) and I am disappointed that I have to do so again, that that remark was made at the conclusion of the local authority evidence, midway through the case, and before the short adjournment, having received and digested not only the conceded threshold but also the oral evidence of the local authority and the children's guardian.
I did not advance that offering as a legal test. As counsel was, and is reminded, I articulated my thoughts at that stage in an attempt to secure cooperation between the parties. I made what I took to be a similarly helpful remark at the conclusion of my judgment when I made it plain that upon the review (in June) I would expect the contrary to be the case – namely that the local authority will then have to show cause why the children should not be returned to the mother (rather than her mounting a case to show why they should.
Lord Justice Aikens
Lord Justice Thorpe