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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Birmingham City Council v LR & Ors [2006] EWCA Civ 1748 (20 December 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1748.html Cite as: [2007] 2 WLR 1130, [2006] EWCA Civ 1748, [2007] 1 FLR 564, [2007] 1 FCR 121, [2007] Fam 41 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM
His Honour Judge Cardinal
sitting in the Birmingham County Court
on 3 August 2006.
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TUCKEY
and
LORD JUSTICE WALL
____________________
BIRMINGHAM CITY COUNCIL |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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LR (MRR's Mother) – by the official solicitor PNG (MRR's father) AK and KW (MRR's maternal grandparents) MRR (A Child) - through her guardian Bharat Pattni |
1st Respondent 2nd Respondent 3rd and 4th Respondent 5th Respondent |
____________________
1st Respondent – not represented at the appeal but was represented in the care proceedings by the official solicitor – Anthony Collins
2nd Respondent – not represented at the appeal and was represented in the care proceedings by Tyndallwoods Solicitors
3rd and 4th Respondents – Jeremy Weston (instructed by Challinors Solicitors)
5th Respondent – Peter Anthony (instructed by Glaisyers Solicitors)
Hearing date : 23rd November 2006
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Wall :
This is the judgment of the court
Introduction: the nature of the appeal in outline
(1) Is it open to an individual who needs the leave of the court to make an application for a special guardianship order to give notice to the local authority of his intention to apply for such an order under section 14A(7) of the 1989 Act prior to leave being obtained, thereby triggering a mandatory duty on the local authority to investigate the matter and prepare a report for the court under section 14A(8)?
(2) Is it a proper exercise of judicial discretion under section 14A(9) of the 1989 Act for the court to ask a local authority to conduct an investigation and prepare a report pursuant to section 14A(8) (a request which the local authority must obey); (a) when leave to make an application for a special guardianship order has not been obtained; and / or (b) without considering whether or not a prospective application for a special guardianship order has any realistic prospect of success?
(3) Where the court makes a request under section 14A(9) is it at the same time open to the court to define (and thereby limit) the scope of the local authority's obligation to investigate and report under section 14A(8) and the regulations?
The facts
The appeal
The hearing before the judge on 3 August 2006
(1) Upon hearing counsel for the (local authority) and the (grandparents) and solicitors for (M and her parents);
(2) AND UPON the undertaking by counsel on behalf of (the grandparents) to file and serve an application for a special guardianship order within 7 days (sic), subject to being granted public funding to make such an application;
(3) AND UPON solicitors for (the grandparents) urgently referring the matter to a circuit judge in the event of failure to lodge any application for a special guardianship order within 7 days;
(4) AND UPON the local authority indicating that it may dispute the nature and extent of any report and assessment and its obligations under section 14 A of the (1989 Act) (as amended by the (2002 Act)) the matter is listed in accordance with paragraph 5 of the order set out below.
4. The local authority shall undertake an assessment of (the grandparents) under section 14A of (the 1989 Act) as amended by (the 2002 Act).
5. The matter shall be listed for a hearing before His Honour Judge Cardinal to consider the local authority's duties and obligations under section 14A of the (1989 Act) (as amended by the (2002 Act) [on] 15 September 2006 at 10.30am with a time estimate of one day. The local authority has liberty to vacate this hearing upon 10 days notice.
Events after 3 August 2006
The statutory provisions
14A Special guardianship orders
(1) A "special guardianship order" is an order appointing one or more individuals to be a child's "special guardian" (or special guardians).
(2) A special guardian—
(a) must be aged eighteen or over; and
(b) must not be a parent of the child in question,
and subsections (3) to (6) are to be read in that light.
(3) The court may make a special guardianship order with respect to any child on the application of an individual who—
(a) is entitled to make such an application with respect to the child; or
(b) has obtained the leave of the court to make the application,
or on the joint application of more than one such individual.
(4) Section 9(3) applies in relation to an application for leave to apply for a special guardianship order as it applies in relation to an application for leave to apply for a section 8 order.
(5) The individuals who are entitled to apply for a special guardianship order with respect to a child are—
(a) any guardian of the child;
(b) any individual in whose favour a residence order is in force with respect to the child;
(c) any individual listed in subsection (5)(b) or (c) of section 10 (as read with subsection (10) of that section);
(d) a local authority foster parent with whom the child has lived for a period of at least one year immediately preceding the application.
(6) The court may also make a special guardianship order with respect to a child in any family proceedings in which a question arises with respect to the welfare of the child if—
(a) an application for the order has been made by an individual who falls within subsection (3)(a) or (b) (or more than one such individual jointly); or
(b) the court considers that a special guardianship order should be made even though no such application has been made.
(7) No individual may make an application under subsection (3) or (6)(a) unless, before the beginning of the period of three months ending with the date of the application, he has given written notice of his intention to make the application—
(a) if the child in question is being looked after by a local authority, to that local authority, or
(b) otherwise, to the local authority in whose area the individual is ordinarily resident.
(8) On receipt of such a notice, the local authority must investigate the matter and prepare a report for the court dealing with—
(a) the suitability of the applicant to be a special guardian;
(b) such matters (if any) as may be prescribed by the Secretary of State; and
(c) any other matter which the local authority consider to be relevant.
(9) The court may itself ask a local authority to conduct such an investigation and prepare such a report, and the local authority must do so.
(10) The local authority may make such arrangements as they see fit for any person to act on their behalf in connection with conducting an investigation or preparing a report referred to in subsection (8) or (9).
(11) The court may not make a special guardianship order unless it has received a report dealing with the matters referred to in subsection (8).
(12) Subsections (8) and (9) of section 10 apply in relation to special guardianship orders as they apply in relation to section 8 orders.
(13) This section is subject to section 29(5) and (6) of the Adoption and Children Act 2002.
(1) Before making a special guardianship order, the court must consider whether, if the order were made—
(a) a contact order should also be made with respect to the child, and
b) any section 8 order in force with respect to the child should be varied or discharged,
(2) On making a special guardianship order, the court may also—
(a) give leave for the child to be known by a new surname;
(b) grant the leave required by section 14C(3)(b), either generally or for specified purposes.
(1) The effect of a special guardianship order is that while the order remains in force—
(a) a special guardian appointed by the order has parental responsibility for the child in respect of whom it is made; and
(b) subject to any other order in force with respect to the child under this Act, a special guardian is entitled to exercise parental responsibility to the exclusion of any other person with parental responsibility for the child (apart from another special guardian).
(2) Subsection (1) does not affect—
(a) the operation of any enactment or rule of law which requires the consent of more than one person with parental responsibility in a matter affecting the child; or
(b) any rights which a parent of the child has in relation to the child's adoption or placement for adoption.
(3) While a special guardianship order is in force with respect to a child, no person may—
(a) cause the child to be known by a new surname; or
(b) remove him from the United Kingdom,
without either the written consent of every person who has parental responsibility for the child or the leave of the court.
(4) Subsection (3)(b) does not prevent the removal of a child, for a period of less than three months, by a special guardian of his.
(5) If the child with respect to whom a special guardianship order is in force dies, his special guardian must take reasonable steps to give notice of that fact to—
(a) each parent of the child with parental responsibility; and
(b) each guardian of the child,
but if the child has more than one special guardian, and one of them has taken such steps in relation to a particular parent or guardian, any other special guardian need not do so as respects that parent or guardian.
(6) This section is subject to section 29(7) of the Adoption and Children Act 2002.
The regulations
The grounds of appeal
1. The learned judge ordered the Appellant local authority to investigate and prepare a report for the court as required under sub-section 14A(8) on a basis that was plainly wrong.
2. The discretion to request an investigation and report under sub-section 14A(9) is to be exercised only when it appears to the court, having regard to evidential material before it, that there is at least a real possibility that the court will make the special guardianship order under sub-section 14A(6)(b) in the proceedings.
3. The learned judge acknowledged that he did not know "the reality of the prospects of this application [for a special guardianship order] succeeding". He acted simply upon intimation from counsel for the grandparents that there would be an expert's report recommending that a special guardianship order be sought. He declined to consider material indicating that a special guardianship order for either or both of the grandparents would not be realistic.
4. Further, the learned judge exercised his discretion upon a mistaken belief that by not implementing sub-section 14A(9) he would merely be delaying a statutory obligation that would fall upon the local authority in any event by the imminent written notice of the grandparents under sub-section 14A(7). It was conceded that the grandparents were not "entitled to apply for a special guardianship order" within section 14A(5) of (the 1989 Act) and that they required the leave of the court to apply under section 14A(3)(b). It was not open to the grandparents to give a written notice of intention to make application for a special guardianship order as provided for by section 14A(7) before obtaining leave under section 14A(3)(b).
The thinking of the judge, as revealed by the transcript
"That is a very serious criticism and one that must be answered as to the commitment of (the grandparents) in reality, to M and I entirely accept that and it may well be that I am with you in due course, if I were having the final hearing, which I am not, as to the reality of the prospects of this application succeeding. I do not know. I just do not know. But this is not – does that appertain to matters I must consider in my discretion as to whether or not a report is started now that will be required by statute upon (counsel for the grandparents) lodging his application? Because the obligation – all that is happening by my not ordering it, by my not implementing subsection (9) this morning, is I am delaying the statutory obligation that falls upon the local authority anyway on the filing of the application, which, if (counsel) is right, is going to happen some time in the next 14 days that is the point. This is wildly unrealistic to me."
"The logic is defeating me because the obligation under subsection (8) or subsection (9) falls, whether or not I make this order today or whether it is done by an application by (counsel for the grandparents). You are going to have to do it anyway your obligation is there under the statute, whether or not it is by order from me that accelerates the process, or whether it is triggered by counsel's application. The extent of the local authority's obligations remain the same whether or not I trigger them today or they are triggered next week."
Judge:-
But the extent of the local authority's obligations remain the same whether or not I trigger it them today or they are triggered next week.
Counsel:
Well, your Honour, I would submit that our obligations remain the same but, if you make an order under your discretion today, you are actually ordering a full assessment.
Judge
No, I am not.
Counsel
You …..
Judge
I am ordering you to comply with sub-rule (8), with sub-clause (8), to write a report, which is what your obligation is, whether or not it is triggered by the application or by my order. You then are perfectly able to seek clarification as to what your obligations are and you can do that whether I make the order or whether it is triggered by application.
Counsel
Well you honour, I would submit that there is a difference between the obligation upon a request of the local authority and a discretion of your honour to make the order but –
Judge
No, there is not. "Such a report" is the word,. "Such a report" plainly means the report referred to in sub-clause (8).
Counsel
We, you honour, I am not going to take the point any further. I think –
Judge
No, you are wrong. No, I am against you, it is as simple as that. There we are …..
The attack on the order made on 3 August 2006
Where the person applying for leave to make the application … is not the child concerned, the court shall, in deciding whether or not to grant leave, have particular regard to –
(a) the nature of the proposed application for the … order;
(b) the applicant's connection with the child;
(c) any risk there might be of that proposed application disrupting the child's life to such an extent that he would be harmed by it; and
(d) where the child is being looked after by a local authority –
(i) the authority's plans for the child's future; and
(ii) the wishes and feelings of the child's parents."
(1) a special guardianship order had characteristics akin to adoption, its closest neighbour in the range of disposals available to the court;(2) in this case, at the stage when the judge made the order, there was material before the court indicating that the intending applicants were unsuitable to take over the care of the child either as foster parents or under a residence order; a fortiori as special guardians. Although those remained live issues in the proceedings, the evidence available to the judge fell far below the threshold at which a special guardianship order could be considered a realistic option;
(3) the court must ensure that a special guardianship application is not used as a means of compelling a local authority to repeat an extensive (and expensive) assessment exercise that has already produced a conclusion adverse to the applicants;
(5) a special guardianship application should not become an automatic addition to any application to care for a child by fostering or under a residence order, especially in view of the support services required to be provided under the regulations.
(1) subsection (8) was expressed in mandatory terms (unless there is some subtle distinction between "must" and "shall");(2) the Schedule to the regulations was specific as to the "Matters to be Dealt with in the Report for the Court", (including at paragraph 6 a summary of the health history of the child including current treatment), culminating in recommendations under paragraphs 8 to 10. In this respect, the prescribed matters closely followed the requirements in Adoption: Practice Directions under rule 29(3) Family Procedure (Adoption) Rules 2005 – see the section "Reports by the Adoption Agency of Local Authority, Annex A and B";
(3) in practice, the local authority has to appoint an independent social worker to carry out the investigation and make the report (as envisaged in s.14A(10)), at an average cost of £1500 - £2000. Such person must be in a position to justify the independence, the thoroughness and the conclusions of the investigation, which involves that the requirements of the statutory provisions are complied with. It is not possible, for example, to adopt the investigation and findings of an earlier investigation, as here a Form F (Part 2) Assessment.
The case for the grandparents
(i) a circuit judge on 8 June 2006 had clearly taken the view that there was merit in further assessment of the maternal grandparents and had given permission for there to be an independent social work assessment by Mr Sharratt;
(ii) the report heavily relied upon by the local authority was subsequently the subject of significant criticism by Mr Sharratt. It was accepted that the contents of the latter's report were not available to HHJ Cardinal on 3rd August but the fact that Mr Sharratt supported placement with the maternal grandparents under a special guardianship order was known;
(iii) the judge was plainly entitled on the facts of this case to exercise his discretion under Section 14A(9) in the manner he chose.
The case for the guardian
Discussion
Where the court makes a request under section 14A(9) is it at the same time open to the court to define (and thereby limit) the scope of the local authority's obligation to investigate and report under section 14A(8) and the regulations?
(1) a person who requires the permission of the court to make an application for a special guardianship order cannot either make an application for such an order or give notice of his intention to do so unless and until he has obtained the court's permission to make the application.
(2) Section 14(A)8 is not triggered where a person who requires the court's permission to make an application but has not obtained it, purports to give notice of his intention to make an application for a special guardianship order;
(3) A judge should not invoke section 14A(9) to compel a local authority to perform its obligations under section 14A(8) at the instance of a person who needs but has not obtained permission to apply for a SGO unless section 14A(6)(b) applies.
(4) There is nothing in the Act or the regulations which permits the court to restrict the nature and scope of a report under section 14A(8).
Footnote
Individuals entitled to apply for Special Guardianship: (involves reading together s.14A(5) and s.10(5)(b)(c) and s.10(10))
14A(2)(a) (b) |
A special guardian – must be aged 18 or over; and - must not be a parent of the child |
14A(5)(a) | Any guardian of the child |
(b) | Any individual in whose favour a residence order is in force with respect to the child |
14A(5)(c) 10(5)(b) 10(10) |
- any individual listed in s.10(5)(b), read with s.10(10): i.e. - any person with whom the child has lived for a period of at least three years; - which need not be continuous but must have begun not more than five years before, or ended more than three months before, the making of the application. |
14A(5)(c) 10(5)(c) |
- any individual listed in s.10(5)(c): i.e any person who - - (i) has the consent of each person in whose favour a residence order is in force; (ii) has the consent of the local authority where the child is in care; or (iii) has the consent of those who have parental responsibility for the child. |
14A(5)(d) | a local authority foster parent with whom the child has lived for at least one year immediately preceding the application. |
S.14A(4) brings in s.9(3) as it applies to s.8 orders: local authority foster parents "within the last six months" may not apply for leave to apply unless: (a) has the consent of the authority; (b) is a relative of the child; or (c) the child has lived with him for at least one year preceding the application.
S.14A(13): when an adoption placement order is in force, leave to apply for a special guardianship order is required under s.29(5) and (6) Adoption & Children Act 2002.
APPENDIX 2
Persons entitled to apply for Section 8 Orders:
Any s.8 Order | Residence or Contact only | Residence Only | |
10(4)(a) | any parent, guardian or special guardian | ||
10(4)(aa) | any person with parental responsibility | ||
10(4)(b) | any person with a residence order in force | ||
10(5)(a) | Any party to a marriage where the child is a child of the family | ||
10(5)(aa) | Any civil partner where the child is a child of the family | ||
10(5)(b) 10(10) |
Any person with whom child has lived for at least 3 years - which need not be continuous but must have begun not more than five years before, or ended more than three months before, the making of the application |
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10(5)(c) | Any person who – (i) has the consent of each person with a residence order in force; (ii) has the consent of the local authority where the child is in care; or (iii) has the consent of those with parental responsibility |
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10(5A) | a local authority foster parent with whom the child has lived for at least one year immediately preceding the application. |