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England and Wales Family Court Decisions (other Judges) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (other Judges) >> Gloucestershire County Council v M & Ors [2016] EWFC B77 (02 October 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/OJ/2016/B77.html Cite as: [2016] EWFC B77 |
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B e f o r e :
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Between: |
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Gloucestershire County Council |
Applicant |
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-and- |
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M |
First Respondent |
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-and- |
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F |
Second Respondent |
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-and- |
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G (a child) by her guardian |
Third Respondent |
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Zahra Manji for the mother.
Judi Evans for the father
Henrietta MacMillan Scott for the child, G
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Crown Copyright ©
HHJ Wildblood QC:
i) She looks after G impeccably and lovingly;ii) Because G is a somewhat demanding and vulnerable child (unsurprisingly, given her background) FC is able to give G the degree of attention and care that she needs;
iii) FC has now been looking after G for 14 months, slightly more than one third of her life. G is settled and happy with FC.
iv) FC and G have developed a strong and obvious attachment to each other. G is now used to turning to FC for her emotional comfort and thinks of FC's house as her home. For the past fourteen months her social connections have been made within the environment in which she now lives.
v) A change in G's circumstances now would have a great impact upon her emotional well-being.
vi) FC, who is quite obviously a very intelligent and mature woman, is accepting of involvement in G's life by her family. Thus FC knows the mother well and has a good working relationship with her. FC also accepts that the father and his family should have contact with G, if she remains in her care, and is open to the father having the high-level of contact proposed by the Guardian.
vii) The local authority and the Guardian have both assessed FC's ability to care for G as a special Guardian and have given very positive reports to the court about it. There is strong professional backing for FC.
viii) By comparison with the care that could be offered by the paternal aunt and uncle, FC offers a more stable, certain and proven environment for the promotion of G's welfare – that suggested comparative advantage is the only one of these factors that the father would seriously dispute.
i) They are available members of G's family and are committed to caring for her. They have been asking repeatedly for more contact with G since she moved to this area 21 months ago but have only been able to see her twice – something about which they complain with force, clarity and justification;ii) The paternal family are united and so, if G lives with them, she will have easy contact with her father, her grandparents, her cousins, etc. If G remains living in the south-west it will be much more difficult for the father to have contact with G (although he will do it) and the opportunities for the paternal family to see G will be much more limited. The suggestion that was made at one point that they should hire a mini-bus and travel down, and back, in one day with four children under five was hardly realistic – that would involve about twelve hours travel in one day if, uniquely, the roads happen to be clear.
iii) They have four young children of their own and could provide G with a full and loving family life within her natural environment. Their children are all under six years of age and so there would be plenty of companionship for G. The mother, father, G and B lived with the aunt and uncle for eight months when G was a small baby and the paternal family love G. As they said: 'she is family'. The father said: 'when G is talking to her friends about what she will do after school she should be able to say that she will playing with her cousins, seeing her daddy and being looked after by her family';
iv) The paternal grandparents live within a stone's throw of them (as the father put it) and the father lives in the same area (he described it as a 35 minute train journey away);
v) When the local authority social worker carried out an assessment of them as potential special guardians of G the resultant report concluded at C 209: 'I make a strong recommendation and support the paternal aunt and uncle in their application to obtain a special guardianship order for G. I feel G's physical, social and emotional needs will be met in this environment'. Thus, at the time of that report (which appears to have been written on or about the 10 May 2016) the local authority was itself fully supportive of the aunt and uncle.
i) It was influenced by the contents of the Guardian's report. I do not understand how it could be other than influenced by a report that states that four professionals involved with the aunt and uncle in the north-west were all 'clear that G should not be placed with the aunt and uncle'.ii) It was only after the Guardian spoke to FC at the time of writing her report (i.e. when the Guardian had made her enquiries into the position of the aunt and uncle) that FC put herself forward with clarity as a potential Special Guardian of G. FC is undoubtedly a very kind and perceptive woman, on everything that I have read and heard. She and the Guardian would have been very alive to the fact that if G could not live with her parents and if there was no one in the extended families who could care for her, the only remaining options would be care by an unknown third party (in circumstances where adoption might very well have arisen for consideration) or that she should remain in the care of FC. Thus FC in her devotion to G, put herself forward as G's long-term carer at a time when the guardian had expressed her firm opposition to placement with the only available family members, the aunt and uncle. I accept the Guardian's evidence that, although initially FC had said that she would wish to adopt G, later in these proceedings she expressed the understandable wish not to do so. Thus, the second reason why the local authority changed its care plan is that FC came forward firmly as a potential Special Guardian. The local authority therefore became able to conduct a comparative and balancing analysis between the family care offered by the aunt and uncle and the offer of very good and established care by FC.
i) As matters currently stand there could be no question of G being placed with the aunt and uncle in her interests. G is settled, happy and well cared for where she is and there are very significant risks to her emotional well-being if she were to be moved to the aunt and uncle. Therefore, in summary, her advice was: 'As matters currently stand don't do it'. In the medium-term things are unlikely to alter.ii) FC is such a mature and intelligent woman that there is good reason to think that she would be able to meet the demands of caring for G with the proposed level of family contact. The mother and FC already know each other and FC is receptive to the involvement of the paternal family.
iii) The Local Authority will have to remain involved to help FC and the natural family in their dealings with each other. This is not a question of mediation; it is a question of the Local Authority acting as an intermediary to assist where necessary (e.g. what happens if on a Friday evening the father is ill and has to cancel contact on Saturday –or one of his four trains is cancelled?). With that support the practical arrangements for contact should be possible, even if difficult.
iv) How things will develop in the longer-term is guess work. It is possible that the father will continue to make the adjustments to his life that he has set in train. So may the mother. Balanced against the impact of that must also be the fact that it is likely that G will become increasingly dependent on FC as the years pass by and as the insecurities of the past quieten in her mind. Therefore it would be wrong to approach the current arrangement as unsustainable in the long-term. It will probably be sustainable, although the risks have to be understood and predictive measures put in place through the Local Authority's continued involvement as an intermediary.
i) The order must state on its face that the special guardianship order is made on the basis that contact will take place as I have stated in this judgment – i.e. once a month for the parents, separately, with a review after six months. The father's family should be able to join in with some of his contact.ii) There must be revised supervision and special guardianship support plans that are submitted to the court by 4 p.m. on 10th October 2016 recording the future arrangements. Those documents must be prepared in consultation with the other parties. If they cannot be agreed by that time, the case will have to be restored before me.
i) I think it essential that there should be a proper and formal meeting between the father and FC which the Local Authority should arrange and support.ii) This judgment should be shown to FC and to the aunt and uncle. I also give permission for the paternal grandparents to see it, if the father thinks that would help.
iii) I think that the review of contact must take place on an open basis and with full involvement from the parents, FC and the Local Authority. The playing field for that review meeting should be level and based on full and timely exchanges of information. I do not foresee that there will be any reduction in contact at that stage.
iv) I would ask the Local Authority to give the father as much assistance as possible with the contact. If it really cannot assist him with the cost of travel then I would ask that the practical arrangements for travel should be discussed with him. The guardian's suggestion that a pay-as -you go mobile should be provided to FC for use only in relation to the father's contact seemed to me to be a very good one; I cannot see why the father should not at least have that phone number.
HHJ Stephen Wildblood QC
2nd October 2016.