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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 (Child), Re [2017] EWCA Civ 264 (12 April 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/264.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Civ 264 |
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ON APPEAL FROM NEWCASTLE-UPON-TYNE CONBINED COURT CENTRE
MR JUSTICE BODEY
NE196/15
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
THE SENIOR PRESIDENT OF TRIBUNALS
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RE B (CHILD) |
____________________
Miss Katherine Wood (instructed by Northumberland County Council Legal Services) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 28th March 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Black:
Preliminary matter
The background up to and including Moylan J's decision in 2014
"…in my view the key issues are the mother's mental health, as she has been diagnosed as having a borderline personality disorder, and the impact this will have on her ability to care for B. Are the risks of harm to B such as to justify a care order and a placement order, or, as the mother proposes, can she care for B whilst living with her parents? Can they support her and can they sufficiently protect B from any such risks of harm as may be established by the evidence?"
i) The mother was adopted when she was six years old, having been physically and emotionally abused whilst in the care of her birth parents.ii) She had a long history of involvement with psychiatric services, having first been referred to Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services in 2001 with a complex range of difficulties. She had problems at school in 2006 and 2007 and was harming herself.
iii) She was getting into trouble with the police and between 2007 and 2010 was arrested 21 times for a variety of matters.
iv) The history recounted by Moylan J of 2007 to 2011 is of considerable disturbance, including an episode when she was found in the River Tyne saying she was going to kill herself, a period when she ran away from home and slept rough, and an episode during a time of low mood when she said she had taken 24 paracetamol.
v) It was in 2012 that she formed a relationship with B's father and conceived B, the relationship with the father having ended before B was born.
vi) In general, to begin with the mother seems to have cared appropriately for B although some concerns were noted, such as missing medical appointments and being without sterilising tablets because she had run out of money.
vii) In May 2013, however, significant problems developed. She seems to have been receiving support from a friend called SS upon whom she came to rely before realising, she said, that SS had significant mental health problems of her own. The mother was low, and deliberately injured herself by cutting her arm.
viii) Early in June 2013, SS took an overdose. She, SS, reported that she was concerned about the mother who was behaving erratically. The mother herself reported a number of psychological symptoms and, on 5 June 2013, she agreed to B being accommodated by the local authority.
ix) The mother continued to make threats to her own life and to cut herself and in September 2013, the local authority decided that returning B to her care would not be appropriate. A parenting assessment of the mother completed in early 2014 also concluded that she could not safely care for B.
Following Moylan J's judgment
"4.1 B has not been in the care of her mother … since she was a very young child and moved to her adoptive placement in July 2015. The Court process for B has been lengthy and she is in need of permanence and security within a safe and stable home environment. Although she is still young and unaware, herself (sic) of the current Court process, she has had moves from carers which could, undeniably, impact on her and will impact on her should she not receive permanence or her current placement be disrupted or placed at risk.
4.2 It is the view of …Children's Services that since the making of the Care Order and Placement Order there is little evidence of any change in the fundamental issue that would lead the local authority to conclude that B's needs would be best suited in the care of her mother… Although her younger half sibling, C is currently in the care of [the mother], this is not without complication. Her view that there are no concerns about her parenting ability, shows a lack of understanding of both the past and present concerns for both B and C. C has already been subject to a Child Protection Plan once in the area of [Ireland] and is likely to be made subject to a Plan again. [The mother's] application to oppose the adoption of B is opposed on the basis of the above information and little evidence of any change being sustained or substantiated since the Placement Order was granted on 2nd December 2016."
i) A family support worker began working with the family in October 2015 and was to visit 4 times a week. When the service was reviewed at the end of November 2015, the maternal grandfather wanted it to be reduced to 2 or 3 visits a week but the mother was happy with it.ii) The mother changed the baby onto a different formula feed without discussion with a medical professional and the baby developed a rash; intervention from the nurse and GP was sought.
iii) The mother had agreed to submit her copies of the assessments that had been completed in the UK in respect of her capacity and mental health needs to a doctor who was going to complete an assessment of her but she had not done so, despite having said in December 2015 that she had.
iv) A review child protection conference was held on 18 January 2016 and it was acknowledged that the mother was cooperating with the family support worker and the public health nurse and no longer met the criteria to be listed on the Child Protection Notification System.
v) On 26 January 2016, the mother and the maternal grandfather said they wanted the family support work visits, which were carried out to support the mother and to monitor C, to be reduced.
vi) There was a meeting at the mother's house on 8 February 2016. The social worker said that "[t]he result of the meeting was that I withdrew myself and the Family Support Worker as [the maternal grandfather] became aggressive and threatening in his behaviour and tone." It was pointed out at the meeting to the mother that the Family Support Worker was trying to support her in parenting and caring for C but that the mother was regularly not dressed when she called or the grandfather had let the mother have a lie in after tending to C during the night.
vii) C had been seen by the public health nurse since 8 February 2016 and she reported that C presented very well.
viii) On an unidentified date, the "Social Work Team Leader wrote to [the mother] asking her to respond to the department or a Child Protection Conference would be requested given her withdrawal from services." She did not respond. A conference was scheduled for 18 April 2016 but postponed, it seems following the mother contacting solicitors. According to the 19 April letter, 10 May 2016 had been fixed as the new date for the conference.
"[The mother's] non engagement with the social work department given the history that was passed on from the UK, is very concerning."
It then goes on to deal with the fact that C's birth had not been registered and no free medical care or child benefit was available to her, and the mother was financially dependent on her parents which was "of concern given [the grandfather] indicated that he would need to travel to the UK to attend to business affairs."
Bodey J's treatment of the mother's application for leave to oppose
"Ms Harmer asserted on instructions that the mother was accepting of a voluntary support package which 'is working well'. She referred on instructions to the fact that the family is very receptive to support for the mother and C. Insofar as there was insufficient clarity about the Irish position, she asked me to consider postponing the decision about permission to oppose the adoption, for further clarification from that jurisdiction."
"33. I accept that the only change in circumstances is the birth and existence of C, a sibling for B, and the fact that the mother is caring for her with help from her parents and some support from the Southern Irish Child and Family Agency. Bearing in mind the terms of Moylan J's Judgment, I do not consider that a move to a different jurisdiction (which appears to have been to avoid the social services here becoming involved with the pending baby) nor the establishment of a rented property in that jurisdiction, nor the present support from her parents amount to a change of circumstances of the type which Wall LJ had in mind in Re P (Adoption: Leave Provisions) [2007] EWCA Civ 616. This is because the change comprising the existence of C and the fact of the mother's caring for her, is not a change that goes to the underlying reasons for which the care and placement orders were made in respect of B. Those reasons were the finding that unhappily there was an enduring personality disorder here, which had remained untreated and unrecognised by the mother and her family. That situation appears to pertain. Already the cracks are showing, as is evidenced by the material from the Child and Family Agency, which I have extracted in the above timeline. It is likely to be a somewhat fragile state of affairs emotionally in that jurisdiction, with the potential for problems which are under the surface. Cracks have emerged in the ways and with the deficiencies in real cooperation which appear from [the Irish social worker's] evidence. The cooperation is manifestly half-hearted, with an undercurrent of opposition, on the basis that it is not really recognised as being necessary."
"34. ….[B] is thriving with [the prospective adopters]. As [counsel for the local authority] says, the only options here are for B ultimately to be with the mother, or in foster care, or to be adopted by [the prospective adopters]. No one would seriously consider foster care for a child of this age, so the ultimate decision would be a binary one, as between the mother (with all her sad problems and with the ongoing concerns of the social services in Ireland) and [the prospective adopters].
35. In my judgment, therefore the mother's prospects are negligible. It is hugely unlikely that she would succeed in opposing the adoption and in persuading the court to transfer care of B to herself after all this time so as to bring her up with the maternal grandparents and C."
The proposed appeal: extension of time
The proposed appeal: substance
"16d) Leave to the Local Authority to serve documentation from an employee of [Irish] Child Protection and Welfare Team addressing the circumstances of the mother's second child, such document to be served after 10 May 2016 (when there is a review scheduled in respect of that child) but no later than 16.00 on 11 May 2016."
"This close focus on the circumstances requires that the court has proper evidence. But this does not mean that judges will always need to hear oral evidence and cross-examination before coming to a conclusion. Sometimes, though we suspect not very often, the judge will be assisted by oral evidence. Typically, however, an application for leave under section 47(5) can fairly and should appropriately be dealt with on the basis of written evidence and submissions: see Re P (Adoption: Leave Provisions) [2007] EWCA Civ 616, paras 53-54."
"If there has been a change in circumstances, should leave to oppose be given? – the court will, of course, need to consider all the circumstances. The court will in particular have to consider two inter-related questions: one, the parent's ultimate prospect of success if given leave to oppose; the other, the impact on the child if the parent is, or is not, given leave to oppose, always remembering, of course, that at this stage the child's welfare is paramount."
"iii) Once he or she has got to the point of concluding that there has been a change of circumstances and that the parent has solid grounds for seeking leave, the judge must consider very carefully indeed whether the child's welfare really does necessitate the refusal of leave. The judge must keep at the forefront of his mind the teaching of Re B, in particular that adoption is the "last resort" and only permissible if "nothing else will do" and that, as Lord Neuberger emphasised, the child's interests include being brought up by the parents or wider family unless the overriding requirements of the child's welfare make that not possible. That said, the child's welfare is paramount."?
"vii) The mere fact that the child has been placed with prospective adopters cannot be determinative, nor can the mere passage of time. On the other hand, the older the child and the longer the child has been placed the greater the adverse impacts of disturbing the arrangements are likely to be."
"viii) The judge must always bear in mind that what is paramount in every adoption case is the welfare of the child "throughout his life". Given modern expectation of life, this means that, with a young child, one is looking far ahead into a very distant future—upwards of 80 or even 90 years. Against this perspective, judges must be careful not to attach undue weight to the short-term consequences for the child if leave to oppose is given."
"when exercising his discretion under section 47(5) of the 2002 Act the judge was fully entitled—indeed bound—to give considerable weight to the fact that, from the date of the care order (May 2006) until the date of the hearing of the application for leave to defend the adoption proceedings (April 2007), a period of nearly a year, the plan for S had been adoption; that the plan had, moreover, been implemented by S's placement with the applicants in July 2006, and that it was a plan which was working."
Senior President: