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England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) >> A and B v Rotherham Metropolitan Borough Council [2014] EWFC 47 (05 December 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/HCJ/2014/47.html Cite as: [2014] EWFC 47 |
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AT SHEFFIELD
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting in public)
____________________
A and B |
Applicants |
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- and - |
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Rotherham Metropolitan Borough Council |
Respondents |
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Mr Charles Prest appeared on behalf of Rotherham Metropolitan Borough Council
The mother was served but was not present or represented
Miss Caroline Ford appeared on behalf of the genetic father
Mr Andrew Wynne, generously acting pro bono, appeared on behalf of the aunt
Miss Dawn Tighe, generously acting pro bono, appeared on behalf of Miss D
Miss Alison Hunt appeared on behalf of the child's guardian
Hearing dates: 17 – 21 November 2014, sitting at Sheffield
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Crown Copyright ©
In this judgment:
A and B are the applicants for an adoption order.
C is the child concerned.
The mother is C's birth mother.
The father is, unless the context otherwise requires, C's genetic father.
The aunt is the father's sister (and therefore C's aunt).
D or Miss D is the father's long term, but non-residential, partner.
E or Mr E is the man currently named on C's birth certificate as his father.
F is the joint child of Miss D and the father.
G is the child of the aunt.
(The above letters are merely alphabetical from A – G and are not actual initials of any of the persons concerned.)
The court directs that no report of, or reference to, this case in the press, media or elsewhere, including any form of electronic or telephonic or broadcast communication, may name or otherwise identify any of the above persons or their addresses or (save to the extent described in this judgment) whereabouts. (Persons who are specifically named in this judgment may be named.)
Mr Justice Holman:
Introduction
The case in outline
The legal framework
The facts in more detail
A and B, and C's attachment to them
The assessment of the aunt
The professional evidence
Miss Lancaster
Miss Fogwill
Ms Parfrement
The psychologist, Dr Ben Harper
"2.1 The assessment indicated that it would not be within C's best interests to remove him from his current stable family environment to place him with unknown adults (albeit birth family) without further comprehensive psychological assessment.
2.2 It would not be in C's best interests to place him in a placement with a care-giver(s) with an insecure attachment style, those with unresolved childhood difficulties and those with a poor understanding of child's emotional needs.
2.3 However, it should be acknowledged that the process of further assessment may be extremely disruptive for C and his prospective adoptive parents. The pressure of these proceedings could have a significantly detrimental impact on the prospective adopters' emotional wellbeing which could negatively impact upon their ability to remain psychologically available to C."
The child's guardian, Mrs Hassall
Analysis and outcome
i) For A and B:
"The factors which support the making of an adoption order are:-
- A and B's application, although opposed by the paternal family, is not opposed on the basis that he is to be placed with a parent wishing to care for him;
- C was placed for adoption by RMBC with A and B and all have been primed to form attachments as a permanent family;
- C is 20 months old and has lived with A and B for 13 months – 2/3rds of his life. He is happy, content, settled and developing well in a stable, secure, tried and tested family home environment;
- As a result he has formed secure attachments and sees A and B as his parents and their family as his family – they are his psychological parents;
- C's "internal world" or "blueprint" is enmeshed and his reality is his home with A and B (as per Dr Harper);
- A and B are "perfect adopters" (as per Clare Fogwill, Elizabeth Lancaster, Jane Parfrement and Sheila Hassall) who go above and beyond what would be expected of them to meet all of C's holistic needs to an excellent level;
- The severance of that attachment brings with it significant emotional harm which has the potential to have lifelong negative effects (to include long term attachment difficulties and disorders notwithstanding the existence of previous secure attachments);
- Moving C from A and B is not the same as moving a child from foster care to a permanent home as the relationships, dynamics and attachments involved are significantly different ;
- Although the assessment of the aunt is positive her ability to parent C and meet his specific needs which will arise upon the severance of that attachment and its establishment with her is untested;
- Clare Fogwill's evidence was that A and B are better placed to offer C the parenting that he needs;
- A and B accepted C as a dual heritage child and continue to do all that they can to promote his heritage;
- C's heritage is equally represented in the home of A and B and the home of the aunt;
- There is no robust evidence to suggest that children raised outside of their heritage have any worse outcomes (Dr Harper and CG);
- Concerns that C may have emotional difficulties in the future when he discovers that he could have been brought up by the aunt is speculative and unknown and is countered by A and B's positive promotion of C's history and lifestory;
- A and B have demonstrated that they have the skills to deal appropriately with C's journey into adulthood in the specific circumstances of his case;
- A placement of C with the aunt also differentiates him as he remains a child not living with his birth parents but where his ½ sister does "live" with the father in the sense that he spends most days with her;
- The reality of a move to the aunt is that contact with A and B will end, whereas by remaining with A and B there is the potential for direct contact with the paternal family;
- A and B are open to such a prospect and their good faith in this regard is supported by their exploration of contact with other adopted siblings (which it is accepted is seen on a different footing) and the evidence of all social workers. The guardian's evidence must be seen in this context and the court has had the benefit of hearing from A on this issue;
- If C moves to the aunt he will lose the opportunity of a relationship with his adopted ½ siblings;
- C has no relationship with his paternal family which has arisen as a result of the father's actions – it is clear that he knew C was likely to be his son within weeks of his birth, that he was aware that there were risk factors associated with his mother and her other children have been removed;
- C's family life is with A and B;
- Neither of the social workers working with C advocate that he should be moved.
The factors which militate against the making of an adoption order are:-
- There is a birth aunt who is willing to care for C and the assessment of her ability to parent him "on balance" recommends that she is able to meet his needs although there is no evidence that she is able to meet those needs better than A and B;
- A placement with the aunt would enable C to have a greater level of contact with the father and F (although the extent of this contact appears likely to be relatively limited and he would not have the benefit of living with his ½ sister);
- His legal ties with his paternal family would be maintained (although he has, and never has had, any actual relationship with them)."
ii) For the aunt:
Prospective adopters | Aunt |
Positive viability – no concerns re ability to care for a child/children | No concerns |
No concerns of emotional care/support | Moving to the aunt will require careful and gradual thought – ameliorated by preparatory work/'saying goodbye' – ameliorated as per Dr Harper 6.2.1 |
Ability to develop relationship with adopters and their families | Ability to meet birth family (both immediate and wider) including father, siblings, and relatives of mixed and dual heritage. |
Problems with enabling contact with birth (half) siblings of C | Ease with which contact can be promoted with all family members of C |
Ability to learn about heritage from secondary perspective. NOT birth family | Ability to learn about heritage first hand, greater sense of identity from birth family |
Promotion of African heritage | Carer with personal knowledge of African background |
As child grows, knowledge that he is not with birth family, but that they exist and sought to care for him permanently | Knowledge that adult carer is his birth family, with significant access to family members. Ability to understand reasons why A&B cared for him due to failures of RMBC and other professionals and not because of negative attributes of A&B |
iii)
iii) By the guardian:
The aunt | A & B |
No concerns re general care – physical, home conditions, education etc | No concerns re general care – physical, home conditions, education etc |
Emotional care gives rise to risk as result of C having been removed from settled home with A&B. No concerns re emotional care of G. RMBC will provide training & support to reduce risk – the aunt will fully co-operate with this. |
No concerns re emotional care |
Opportunity to develop relationships with his Father, with G & with paternal grandmother & extended paternal family, including white & dual heritage relatives; to learn family history | Opportunity to develop relationships with extended families of A&B; to learn family history |
Carer with understanding and experience of racial discrimination | Carers with understanding but no experience of racial discrimination |
Opportunity to develop relationship with F in context of extended family and its shared experiences | Potential opportunity to develop relationship with F in context of "contact sessions" |
Opportunity to develop relationship with adopted maternal half-siblings | |
Living with carer & in family who have personal knowledge & experience of Africa [and Shona language] | Willingness and ability to promote C's knowledge of Africa |