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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 >> A (Children) [2015] EWCA Civ 1254 (08 December 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/1254.html Cite as: [2016] 2 FCR 35, [2015] EWCA Civ 1254, [2017] 1 FLR 1, [2016] Fam Law 269 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE FAMILY COURT AT LEEDS
HIS HONOUR JUDGE HEATON QC
LS12C05106
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
and
LORD JUSTICE KITCHIN
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Re: A (CHILDREN) |
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Mr Alex Taylor (instructed by Leeds Legal & Democratic Services) for the 1st Respondent
Miss Sara Anning (instructed by Zermansky & Partners) for the Children's Guardian
Hearing date: 29th September 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Black LJ:
Applications for permission to appeal and applications for adjournment of the appeal hearing
The ambit of the appeal hearing
"I give permission for this aspect of the proposed appeal, albeit with hesitation. The case is unusual for a number of reasons, however, including the age of the children (8 and 14), D's vulnerability, the fact that the children are being cared for by white British carers but are of Ghanaian descent, and the children's very important link with their older brother, R, who would cease to be their brother if they were adopted and who opposed their adoption. A good summary of the points against placement orders can be found at paragraphs 148 and 149 of the judgment; for those which influenced the judge in favour of placement, see paragraph 235 and 236. I cannot tell from the papers what the evidence was as to the commitment that the foster parents were prepared to make to D even if he was not adopted; that will need to be considered.
The grounds on which permission to appeal is granted are limited to the following:
a) the placement orders were not a proportionate response/in the best interests of the children in all the circumstances of the case;
b) the planned adoption was not permissible/in the children's best interests, because they are Ghanaian nationals and/or need to maintain their links with their Ghanaian culture and identity through remaining part of the birth family.
I intend that these grounds will enable the parents to advance arguments that too much weight was placed on the factors that weighed with the judge in relation to the placement orders (such as L's wishes in the light of his age and understanding) and insufficient weight on other factors (such as the relationship with R and other matters included in the submissions made on behalf of R)."
Judge Heaton's judgment
"D is a child who will grow up to be a vulnerable adult. He may never achieve independent living. He has a particular need to grow up in the confidence that his needs will be met into adulthood, including his need to access appropriate specialist services from health and social care. He is likely to need an advocate who can negotiate their way round the labyrinthine health and welfare systems to help him with all of that."
The local authority pointed out that if D remained the subject of a care order (or became the subject of a special guardianship order) rather than being adopted, the foster carers would have no standing once D reached adulthood.
"L in particular has never experienced being a full part of family life having been removed from the parents shortly after birth. He has a particular need to belong in this family and wants to be able to use the carers' name as a symbol of that belonging. He is fed up with the interventions of social workers consequent upon his position as a child placed under a care order which emphasise his status."
"148. In his [written summary of his submissions] Mr Bowman makes the following points:
(i) Placement orders are not proportionate here as the same result can be achieved by other forms of order
(ii) Too much weight is given by the Local Authority and Guardian to the emotional benefits of adoption and conversely too little weight to the disadvantages
(iii) Adoption would risk loss of inter-sibling contact
(iv) R would be upset by the ending of his legal relationship with his siblings as would D and L
(v) D and L's cultural needs are not met by the placement
(vi) There is the loss of the possibility of contact to the parents
(vii) The adopters do not meet the children's educational needs
(viii) The protection of the Local Authority for the placement is lost
(ix) Also lost would be independent supervision of the placement
(x) The risks of ongoing litigation are not stemmed by an adoption order
(xi) The needs could be met here by a [special guardianship order] with a change of name and a s 91(14) Children Act 1989 order.
149. In his oral submissions, Mr Bowman told me that he had two main points:
(i) The inter-sibling contact was of crucial importance here and
(ii) The emotional effect on all three boys of the severing of the legal ties between them."
"235. Firstly I have significant regard for L's need to belong to this family in a committed way, and live life free of Local Authority intervention and restriction. I accept the evidence of [the social work litigation manager] and the Guardian that an adoptive placement has a different feel from a placement under a special guardianship order or a care order. In my judgment only an adoptive placement can provide that sense of truly belonging which L craves both now and into adulthood.
236. Secondly there is the issue of D's long term interests. It is very important for him that the carers are able to provide him with a stable and secure home into adulthood. He will need people around him who can help him access the services his needs require. D will not benefit from continued conflict on these matters into adulthood, to the contrary such conflict has the capacity to destabilise him and destroy his security."
"237. Adoption will put the care of D in adulthood firmly at the door of the carers. They are willing and able to take on the role and in my judgment area the best placed persons to do so. Given the attitudes of the parents any other order here will not only open the door to conflict in D's later life, but beckon it in."
"240. For the younger boys the emotional harm they may suffer by adoption is overwhelmed by the advantages they will derive, as I find them to be, from being adopted by the carers. However, for R it seems to me that very sadly there is only loss.
241. In my judgment that loss can be mitigated, to a degree, by ongoing inter-sibling contact. Such contact can give R the knowledge that while the legal tie may have been lost to his biological brothers they will continue to play an important part in each others' lives. I do not say that is the full answer, R will still mourn the loss of the legal tie, but it will mitigate the pain for him to a degree."
The submissions on appeal
Discussion
Lewison LJ :
"In all save the most straightforward cases, there are competing factors, some pointing one way and some another. There is no means of demonstrating that one answer is clearly right and another clearly wrong. There are too many uncertainties involved in what, after all, is an attempt to peer into the future and assess the advantages and disadvantages which this or that course will or may have for the child."
"The function of the family judge in a child case transcends the need to decide issues of fact; and so his (or her) advantage over the appellate court transcends the conventional advantage of the fact-finder who has seen and heard the witnesses of fact. In a child case the judge develops a face-to-face, bench-to-witness-box, acquaintanceship with each of the candidates for the care of the child. Throughout their evidence his function is to ask himself not just "is this true?" or "is this sincere?" but "what does this evidence tell me about any future parenting of the child by this witness?" and, in a public law case, when always hoping to be able to answer his question negatively, to ask "are the local authority's concerns about the future parenting of the child by this witness justified?" The function demands a high degree of wisdom on the part of the family judge; focussed training; and the allowance to him by the justice system of time to reflect and to choose the optimum expression of the reasons for his decision. But the corollary is the difficulty of mounting a successful appeal against a judge's decision about the future arrangements for a child."
Kitchin LJ: