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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 >> T (A Child), Re [2018] EWCA Civ 650 (28 March 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/650.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Civ 650, [2018] 4 WLR 121, [2018] 2 FLR 926, [2018] 3 FCR 61 |
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ON APPEAL FROM BIRMINGHAM CIVIL JUSTICE CENTRE
HHJ DOWDING
BM16C00243
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PETER JACKSON
and
LORD JUSTICE NEWEY
____________________
T (A Child), Re |
____________________
Deirdre Fottrell QC and Julien Foster (instructed by Birmingham City Council) for the Local Authority
Lucy Hendry (acting pro bono) for the Mother
Lawrence Messling (acting pro bono) for the Father
Nina Bache (instructed by Osborne & Co. Solicitors) for the Children's Guardian
Hearing date: 13 March 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Peter Jackson:
Introduction
Background
9.9.16 Application for care order16.9.16 Interim care order
20.10.16 Assessment of grandmother by Miss B, identifying concerns but agreeing to progress special guardianship assessment
25.1.17 Special guardianship assessment of grandmother by Mrs C – a number of positives, but on balance negative
16.2.17 Addendum special guardianship assessment – negative
28.2.17 Fostering panel refuses to approve grandmother as a family and friends foster carer
28.3.17 Application for placement order
20.4.17 Grandmother granted party status
19.6.17 Final hearing – evidence taken over 5 days from local authority witnesses and mother, adjourned part heard
8.17 Family plan started by family group conference team but not completed
28.8.17 Hearing resumes, evidence taken over two days from father, grandmother, guardian and others; during this hearing, the parents' case changed to supporting the grandmother; the case was adjourned for written submissions
2.11.17 Main judgment handed down
6.11.17 Second fostering panel refuses to recommend approval of grandmother
9.11.17 Agency Decision Maker accepts panel recommendation
13.11.17 Hearing resumed for oral submissions
21.11.17 Second judgment handed down and orders made
The judgments and the panel decision
- Miss B, the allocated social worker and author of the Schedule 4 assessment, identified a number of positives in the grandmother's potential as a carer and her willingness to accept support to improve her parenting skills. However, Miss B was concerned about aspects of the family situation that might cause emotional harm to Alan if he was placed within the family. She referred to the unhelpful influence of the grandmother's own mother. She was also concerned about the grandmother's ability to maintain boundaries and stop the father from seeing Alan whenever he wanted.
- Mrs C, the special guardianship assessor, also expressed views of this kind. She was not concerned about the grandmother's parenting skills, but about her conflict management and what she described as "entrenched family dynamics". She noted problems in the relationship between the grandmother and her own mother and between the grandmother and her other sons. She considered the fact that M(15) had moved away from home to live with his grandmother at the age of 13 to be a serious issue. She also expressed serious reservations about the grandmother's ability to manage contact, although she was supporting her son's contact with his older children, making the point that the current good relationship between mother and son may not last. Mrs C was also concerned about the grandmother's relationship history. It was not the number of relationships, but the speed at which they developed and the involvement of the children with her partners, with one partner moving into the home some years ago within four months of the relationship beginning. The grandmother's most recent relationship ended in September 2015.
- The mother expressed positive views about the grandmother, but the judge noted that, though a pleasant young woman, she was capable of moments of aggression which might cause discord in their future relationship.
- The father said that he would fully support Alan's placement with his mother. The judge noted that the father's mental health issues meant that she had to consider whether he would be likely to comply with restrictions upon his contact with Alan. She concluded that he was a young man who likes his own way.
- The grandmother described family relationships as being good at the present, except as regards her own mother. She described her involvement in the supervision of the father's contact with his older children as working well. The judge described the grandmother as a very warm-hearted and protective person, but not always truthful and more complex than the straightforward, down-to-earth impression she seeks to present.
- The grandmother's eldest son, A, gave evidence about the family situation. He was considered by the judge to be a thoroughly decent young man who was doing his best to help his family but had little or no insight into the "enormity" of the task his mother was proposing to take on.
- The father's former partner, mother of his two older children, was called by the family and gave evidence about past incidents, some of which the judge accepted.
- The guardian described the case as finely balanced. She considered that placement with the grandmother under a care order would be supportive and provide for monitoring, support and coordination of services. She recommended that a final decision be adjourned until the local authority had the opportunity to reconsider its refusal to approve the grandmother as a kinship foster carer. She would not be drawn on her final recommendation in the event that such approval was not provided, saying that she would wish to consider the reasons for continuing to withhold approval. In that event, updated evidence would be required. The judge considered that the guardian minimised many of the concerns about the family dynamics and was in a number of respects overly optimistic.
- Alan is a much loved and cherished boy whose family members are desperate to keep him within the family.
- The father has mental health problems, but shows no will to address them; until he does, this unpredictability must be taken seriously in determining issues relating to the safety of his children.
- The reasons for the family's change in position have to be considered. It is more likely than not that the parents will expect a great deal of contact if Alan lives with the grandmother. Her ability to manage that expectation appropriately must be considered.
- Neither parent understands why the contact should be restricted and this risks ongoing conflict within the family.
- The grandmother's use of social media to ventilate concern about her older grandchildren was extraordinary and immature.
- An incident of unauthorised contact between the parents and the father's older children at the grandmother's home flags up the family's capacity for deception.
- The father does not accept that there is anything amiss in his parenting, and there are grave reservations about his willingness to accept any restrictions upon his contact with Alan.
- The family has a very poor record of conflict management. There are lengthy estrangements going well beyond routine disagreements. The departure of M(15) is particularly troubling.
- The grandmother is a very sociable lady who is likely to enter into one or more further relationships without reflecting on the disadvantages that might follow for the children.
- The grandmother is a kind-hearted woman who genuinely wants what is best for her grandson and will fight tenaciously to achieve that. However, good intentions are not sufficient, and what must be considered is whether she is able to identify any risks and address them. Are the risks of such magnitude that Alan cannot safely be committed to her care?
- In dealing with the issues of age, sex and background, she considered it important to recognise that Alan is a very young baby who is still within the optimum age range for successful adoption, but will not be for very much longer.
- Alan needs good-enough parenting, and no more, in order to fulfil his developmental potential.
- As to the grandmother's parenting capacity, there is no suggestion that this is impaired by abuse of drugs or alcohol, and she is looking after her youngest child to an appropriate standard.
"It seems to me that the risks could be managed – just – if Alan were to be placed with his grandmother under the auspices of a care order, but with a higher than usual number of statutory visits, including unannounced visits, in order to… keep the grandmother 'on her toes'. However, I find that it would be optimistic in the extreme to assume that any care order would be of only 12 months duration: in my judgment, an order is likely to be required for some years to come, whilst the various family members gain in maturity and learn, it is to be hoped, more appropriate methods of conflict resolution.
I am satisfied that there are far too many risks to Alan to justify placing him with his grandmother under any regime less protective than that of a care order… I am thus satisfied that the making of a care order is an essential and proportionate prerequisite to any placement of Alan with his grandmother, and thus I am prepared to take the unusual step of deferring my final decision long enough for the grandmother to be re-presented to the Panel with disclosure of this judgment. I acknowledge, however, that I have no power within these proceedings to compel the local authority to approve the grandmother as a foster-carer and, notwithstanding the absence of a definitive final recommendation from the Guardian in that eventuality, I am satisfied that if the grandmother is not able to care for Alan under a care order, then the only realistic option is likely to be placement for adoption."
- At the outset, in the presence of the panel members alone, the adviser explained that the judge's recommendation that the case be reheard is very unusual and has "no remit under Fostering Regulations". The grandmother would have no appeal process following the meeting.
- The paperwork before the panel consisted of the January 2017 negative assessment that had been considered at the first panel, along with the judgment and a few other papers. The grandmother was given an opportunity to address the concerns raised in the previous panel decision. She said that she would welcome the local authority's involvement and support.
- In response, the social workers strongly argued their case, as appears from this passage in the minutes, which is the only point at which the panel engaged with the court's judgment:
1.54 [A panel member] highlighted point 96 in the court judgment which stated the risks could be managed if [Alan] was placed under the auspices of a care order for 12 months and in the judgement of the court is likely to be required for some years and a higher than usual number of statutory visits and unannounced visits required in order to keep [the grandmother] 'on her toes'. [Another panel member] said from what [team manager M] was saying the Local Authority could not or would not commit to this.
1.55 [Ms B, the social worker] said such intrusion would not be fair on Alan in the long term, given his young age.
1.56 [Team manager M] said it was not in the best interest of any child to be on a care order for the 12 months without permanence.
1.57 …
1.58 … [A panel member] said this was not a great starting point for a Connected Persons placement if it needed to be crowded with additional support and supervision."
- The panel then continued in the absence of the social workers and grandmother. The adviser said it was important to note that Alan had already had a difficult start in life and that his needs in the future may be higher than normal. She also made a negative comment about the grandmother's approach to relationships and about her inability to verbalise and provide detail about her regrets about past mistakes. The panel members made contributions that were on the whole critical of the grandmother's application. They considered that she would not meet seven of the twelve National Minimum Standards for Fostering.
- The adviser then reminded the panel members that they were being asked to consider the January 2017 assessment conclusion that a positive assessment cannot be made.
- The panel members noted that the judgment had given further insight into the case and that some of them were new to it. They did not however discuss the contents of the judgment or its conclusion in any greater detail.
- The panel unanimously resolved not to recommend the grandmother as a connected foster carer. They gave these reasons, which I again quote verbatim:
"(1) The risks and vulnerabilities outweigh strengths to the application.
(2) It is likely that Alan's needs for emotional stability, sense of positive role modelling of internal family dynamics, safeguarding of contact and sense of identity will be compromised.
(3) Panel members felt the likely risk to Alan's safety around contact with birth parents and the grandmother's ability to manage this over the long term.
(4) The grandmother's lack of insight into the impact of her relationships and family dynamics and discord has on children in her care and her ability to manage this.
(5) The grandmother's inability to grasp the emotional needs of Alan given his traumatic start to life and future uncertainties.
(6) Concern that the grandmother may not work in partnership with professionals in an open and honest way.
(7) That the following National Minimum Standards for fostering are not met:" [quoting seven of the twelve standards to the same effect as above].
"5. In concluding my substantive judgment, I noted that if Alan could not be placed with his grandmother under a care order, then the only realistic option was likely (my emphasis) to be placement for adoption, but in the unusual circumstances of the case, I indicated that it was only right that the parties had the opportunity to make further submissions once the outcome of the panel was known.
…
10. I should firstly make it clear that my findings rule out any placement of Alan with the grandmother, unless such placement could be bolstered not just by a care order, but by increased local authority vigilance. The main, but not only, reason why such increased vigilance is required is to ensure that the grandmother was equipped to withstand demands by the parents for unauthorised contact.… I specifically found that I was persuaded that the various risks identified within my substantive judgement could be managed – just – under the auspices of a care order, but that there are far too many risks to justify placing Alan with the grandmother under any regime less protective than a care order. The local authority declines to approve the grandmother as a kinship foster carer and I have absolutely no power to compel them so to do. The Guardian for her part, no longer supports placement of Alan with his grandmother.… It follows that it would expose Alan to very significant risk of harm if I placed him with the grandmother under a private law and order, even if supported by the limited utility of a supervision order. It would be wholly inappropriate to make a care order on the basis of what would effectively be an inchoate care plan prompted by unjustified optimism that the local authority would then change its mind in the face of the court's refusal to back down and would then approve the grandmother after all.
11. Mrs Seddon disputes whether I have conducted a balancing act as to which of the two identified realistic options would be best. My evaluation is set out, in particular, at paragraph 95 [the tabular evaluation]….
12. Having concluded, as I must, that Alan cannot be placed with the grandmother, then it does indeed follow, on the basis of the options put forward throughout the course of these proceedings and at final hearing… that the only possibility is placement for adoption. However, now that long-term fostering has been mooted, it is right that I evaluate that side-by-side with the application for a placement order.… [The judge then balanced long-term fostering against adoption and rejected it as an option.]
…
14. Balancing as I must the competing options of foster-care, placement with the grandmother or placement for adoption, I am driven to the conclusion that adoption is the only outcome which will safeguard and promote Alan's needs, both now and in the future, and that his welfare throughout his life requires placement for adoption. Accordingly, I dispense with the consent of each of his parents to adoption on the grounds that Alan's welfare so requires, and make care and placement orders.… I acknowledge that the orders made compromise the Article 8 rights of the parents and of the grandmother, but I am satisfied that such interference is both necessary and proportionate in order to protect and safeguard the child."
The grounds of appeal and the parties' submissions
"Nor was this a case where the local authority and the Judge disagreed in relation to whether the child should be placed in the care of the grandmother. Instead, it was a case where the court recognised that the decision in relation to whether the child should be placed in the care of the grandmother was not a question for the court."
Adoption: the roles of the local authority and the court
"The overarching principle remains as explained by Hale LJ, as she then was, in Re C and B [2001] 1 FLR 611, para 34:
'Intervention in the family may be appropriate, but the aim should be to reunite the family when the circumstances enable that, and the effort should be devoted towards that end. Cutting off all contact and the relationship between the child or children and their family is only justified by the overriding necessity of the interests of the child.'
To this we need only add what the Strasbourg court said in YC v United Kingdom (2012) 55 EHRR 967, para 134:
'family ties may only be severed in very exceptional circumstances and … everything must be done to preserve personal relations and, where appropriate, to "rebuild" the family. It is not enough to show that a child could be placed in a more beneficial environment for his upbringing.'"
"The interdisciplinary character of the family justice system emphasises the co-operation that should exist between the court and public authority. It is, from my perception, inconceivable that there should not be reciprocal respect between the court and public authority for their differing functions and differing views. Manifestly, the statutory responsibility post-care order remains solely with the local authority. It is equally manifest that the local authority will pay due regard to the function of the judge in giving judgment upon the care plan after careful appraisal. Manifestly, the local authority will have greater regard for a judgment that is considered and that has embraced all the relevant circumstances and all the necessary expert opinion. I have no doubt that no public authority would wish the judicial appraisal to be preceded by anything less."
I wholeheartedly agree with this analysis of the respectful cooperation that must exist between local authorities and the family court if the interests of children are to be best served.
"80. The court's powers extend to making an order other than that asked for by a local authority. … It is simply not open to a local authority within proceedings to decline to accept the court's evaluation of risk, no matter how much it may disagree with the same. …
81. It is likewise not open to a local authority within proceedings to decline to identify the practicable services that it is able to provide to make each of the range of placement options and orders work in order to meet the risk identified by the court. That is the purpose of a section 31A care plan. If a local authority were able to decline to join with the court in the partnership endeavour of identifying the best solution to the problem, then there would be no purpose in having a judicial decision on the question raised by the application. It might as well be an administrative act. Parliament has decided that the decision is to be a judicial act and accordingly, the care plan or care plan options filed with the court must be designed to meet the risk identified by the court. It is only by such a process that the court is able to examine the welfare implications of each of the placement options before the court and the benefits and detriments of the same and the proportionality of the orders sought.
82. To do otherwise is to risk a disproportionate intervention into the lives of the child and the parents simply because of the financial or other priorities of different local authorities. To put it into stark terms, it cannot be right that in one local authority a child would be placed with a parent or other kinship carer with significant support to meet the risk whereas in another local authority the same child would be placed with a view to adoption in the implementation of a plan to meet the same risk. The proportionality of placement and order are for the court. The services that are available are for the authority. In this regard, I cannot improve on the words of the court most recently in Re B-S (Children) [2013] EWCA Civ at [29]:
"It is the obligation of the local authority to make the order which the court has determined is proportionate work. The local authority cannot press for a more drastic form of order, least of all press for adoption, because it is unable or unwilling to support a less interventionist form of order. Judges must be alert to the point and must be rigorous in exploring and probing local authority thinking in cases where there is any reason to suspect that resource issues may be affecting the local authority's thinking."
83. … For the reasons that follow, this court has concluded that although it is for the local authority to decide what services to supply, as a matter of law they must supply sufficient services to prevent the State's intervention becoming disproportionate. The decision about the proportionality of intervention is for the court, the decision about the services which are necessary is for the local authority. Not all services will be practicable and it is for these reasons that the court needs to know what services are practicable in support of each of the placement options and orders that the court may approve and make. A local authority cannot refuse to provide lawful and reasonable services that would be necessary to support the court's decision because it disagrees with the decision or the court's evaluations upon which the decision is based. It should form no part of a local authority's case that the authority declines to consider or ignores the facts and evaluative judgments of the court. While within the process of the court, the State's agencies are bound by its decisions and must act on them.
84. If the local authority's care plan fails to meet the court's expectations, the court may ask the local authority to reconsider. If the plan in its formulation or content is deficient on public law grounds, then once the family court has asked for that to be rectified (perhaps more than once) then the High Court may engage with the issue to decide the challenge. …
85. … The circumstance in which a local authority can or indeed should be judicially reviewed on the content of a care plan should be rare indeed. … For the avoidance of doubt, I shall be more plain. If the local authority disagree with the judge's risk evaluation they must in a case where it is wrong appeal it. The appellate court will be able to consider such an appeal, where that is integral to the order or judgment of the court. If the welfare evaluation is not appealed then it stands and the local authority must respect it and work with it while the proceedings are outstanding. To do otherwise risks disproportionate, irrational or otherwise unlawful conduct on their part.
86. There is no purpose in Parliament having decided to give the decision whether to make an order and the duty to consider the basis upon which the order is made to the judge if the local authority that makes the application can simply ignore what the judge has decided and act as if they had made the decision themselves and on a basis that they alone construe."
Fostering approval
Wardship
Conclusion
(1) The judge underestimated her powers. She should not have accepted the local authority's unchanged position without calling it to account for what was on the face of it an unconvincing response to her careful assessment of risk and welfare. This could have been done in a number of ways, as suggested by Ms Seddon, Mrs Hendry and Mr Messling.
(2) It is true that the judge stayed her order to allow for judicial review proceedings, but that amounted to an acknowledgement that the resources of the family court were exhausted, when they were not. In effect, she accepted the submission of the local authority, recorded at paragraph 34 above, that the decision in relation to whether the child should be placed in the care of the grandmother was not a question for the court. It was.
(3) Even if the point arrived where a decision had to be taken in circumstances where the local authority maintained a refusal to approve the grandmother as a foster carer, it was necessary for the judge to re-evaluate the remaining options for Alan's future. By not doing this, she effectively boxed herself in. Had she looked at matters afresh, she would inevitably have confronted the fact that this was a child who was being sent for adoption as a direct result of a decision of a non-court body, an outcome unprecedented in modern times so far as I am aware. She would then have been able to weigh that prospect against a range of lesser legal orders (interim care order, private law order, supervision order, injunctions, special guardianship, wardship) in order to arrive at a valid welfare outcome.
(4) The fact that the local authority's decision arose as a result of a second process (fostering approval) does not alter the general principles that apply. The Agency Decision Maker was not obliged to follow the recommendation of the panel. Nor was the Agency Decision Maker in relation to fostering approval responsible for the case put by the local authority to the court. The judge's further investigations would have led her to better understand who was ultimately directing the local authority's thinking and to achieve an effective engagement with them until the issue had been satisfactorily resolved.
Lord Justice Newey:
Lord Justice McFarlane: