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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> T (A Child), Re [2009] EWCA Civ 121 (04 March 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/121.html Cite as: [2010] PTSR 615, [2009] Fam Law 571, [2009] EWCA Civ 121, [2009] 2 FCR 367, [2009] 3 All ER 1078, [2009] 2 FLR 574 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM
His Honour Judge Ibbotson
LS07C05095
Strand. London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
and
LORD JUSTICE JACKSON
____________________
Re T (A Child) |
____________________
Malcolm Chisholm (Instructed by CAFCASS Legal) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 5 November 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir Mark Potter P:
Introduction and Background
2.12 "My recommendations for [B's] rehabilitation to his parents and family remain the same. It is my view that a Care Order would be too interventionist in this case. [The parents] have demonstrated a willingness and ability to work with all the professionals involved in ensuring [B's] safety. There is no reason to suppose that they will cease to do so if [B] was to be made the subject of a Supervision Order rather than a Care Order. It is my view that [the parents] should retain full parental responsibility for [B] in order to be able to make decisions about his day to day arrangements. [The parents] have demonstrated a willingness to work to the plan set out by the Local Authority, I feel that this, in conjunction with the three monthly reviews that are planned, would be enough to reduce risks to an acceptable level.....
2.14 It continues to be my view that there should be a formal written agreement between the Local Authority and [the parents] which clearly sets out the expectations that the Local Authority have. This would leave no room for error or confusion and such an agreement could be used as a measure of progress for the three monthly reviews."
"• That the local authority will continue to assist support and advise the parents, with the social worker initially visiting fortnightly, the frequency of visits to be reviewed in three months' time.
• That the care plan, the agreement of and B's progress will be formally reviewed every three months.
• That the parents shall ensure that B shall continue to attend nursery, with the parents to notify the local authority if B does not attend for any reason.
• The parents shall co-operate with all the health professionals, including the health visitor, and shall notify the social worker immediately if B sustains any significant injury.
• The parents shall continue to co-operate with social services, allow the social worker access and [the father] shall be present upon reasonable notice.
• The parents shall inform Social Services when they consider that they no longer need to attend their groups in advance of any attendance. The local authority will contact the respective agencies to confirm that they are in agreement.
• The parents shall attend and contribute to the three-monthly reviews.
• Failure to comply will lead to an immediate review of the appropriateness of the placement, which could include returning the matter to Court to seek B's removal."
The judgment below
"She also said, and I accept, that the father said that he would access STOP if necessary, but that he did not feel it was necessary, and that when counselling was suggested to the mother she said that she did not feel it was necessary. I accept that, as matters have turned out, both parents have attended their respective counsellors with commitment and enthusiasm but I accept also that this was not their original position. When the parents gave evidence I found little to ease my concerns about these matters. I acknowledge the clear and substantial progress made by each parent in co-operating with support agencies, social services and other professionals since the Broomhill Report. I am however, satisfied not only that both the father and mother have continued to deny the findings, but also that the overwhelming likelihood is that they will continue to do so. While I acknowledge that the parents were under considerable stress and anxiety at the final hearing, that does not, in my view, fully explain why the father was on occasion argumentative, somewhat truculent and even angry while in the witness box. I did not find him an impressive or reliable witness and I formed the impression, as it appears did Judge Kamil, that he was prepared to adjust his evidence as he thought fit. He maintained his bold assertion, rejected in the findings that Doctor Roper had lied when he said that the parents were asked about domestic violence. I also mention that in evidence the father said that he would give up drink for the rest of his life but later told [Ms JB] that he could not say that he will never get drunk again. None of these matters inspires confidence for the future.
My concerns about mother are less, but she did not fully impress me as a witness. Like father, she maintained a refusal to acknowledge non-accidental injury and she too maintained that Dr R had not asked about domestic violence, although she stopped short of calling him a liar."
"Physical, emotional, and educational needs
There is no suggestion that B's day to day needs are not being met. He has the care of his parents or when he is not with them his paternal grandmother or his paternal aunt and her husband. He has started nursery, but this is mainly for child protection purposes at this stage. While his day to day needs are met, it appears to a high standard, a remaining need is protection from further injury, a need which will continue for some time yet.
Age, sex and background and relevant characteristics
B is still less than 20 months old. He is still vulnerable and will for some time have limited ability to take himself out of harm's way or communicate adequately his fears and concerns. On the making of the final order, the support of the Guardian will cease."
Any harm which the child has suffered or is at risk of suffering.
B suffered serious harm in January 2007. The authority, the guardian, Broomhill and Ms JB agree that he remains at risk of further harm, and I so find. The reason is the continuing absence of explanation of how, why and at whose hands he suffered injury. The authority now shares the opinion of the guardian and of Ms JB that the risk could be managed in view of the parents' progress in addressing matters which can only be assumed to have triggered the injury.
Capability of parents and others to meet needs.
B's day to day needs are being met. The parents have brought up J and M without cause for criticism. They provided a permanent home for [B's cousin] and have apparently transformed him from an almost feral child to a happy and settled adolescent. My sole concern is the risk of further injury to B, a risk which seems set to remain although it will diminish as he becomes more able to protect himself and communicate more competently. The question is how this Court can ensure his safety if he is to live with one parent who injured him and another who has failed to protect him."
"B needs finality at this stage and there are no matters remaining to be dealt with to inform the choice of final order. The case of Re S (A Minor) (Care or Supervision Order) 1993 contains a useful comparison of those orders. A care order has more teeth than a supervision order. A supervision order has a limited duration of 12 months on first application with a possible extension period of up to 2 or more years - see T (A Child) v Wakefield MDC 2008 - whereas a care order remains in force until majority or earlier application is discharged. That is important because, under a supervision order the protection will cease at the latest when B is only 4 years and 8 months, and as early as when he is 2 years 8 months, absent any application to extend.
The care order power to remove a child immediately and without Court intervention is not crucial to my decision because that power does not protect B from what Mr Booth described as an acute event, which is the risk in this case."
"I must not disregard those views and the guardian's wishes without good reason. I accept that [they] are experienced witnesses. However I bear in mind the following. Broomhill initially advised that it was unsafe to rehabilitate B. Their view is unchanged and the reason for it is the parents' failure to accept the findings. That failure remains and is likely to continue. The effect of the parent's undoubted progress since the end of October 2007 reduced the risk but not so as to remove it. The favoured course for the supervision order can ensure protection for only 12 months. Thereafter it is for the authority to take the initiative to extend the order. Both the guardian and Ms JB said that the authority does not need to share parental responsibility and that the parents should be empowered to parent B without intervention.
That raises the question of which is the lesser evil -unnecessary intervention or expiry of protection before B can protect himself."
"Put in that way the question is easier to answer. I am not satisfied the continuing sharing of parental responsibility will be harmful as distinct from irksome to his parents.
I do not like to reject the view urged upon me, or the evidence before me. I feel however that its approach misses the real point of this case, which is the protection of B if he is to live with one of the persons responsible for his injuries, the true reason for which will never be known. I also bear in mind the way that this case has developed and the changes of stance (apart from that of the parents regarding acknowledgment of findings) which have characterised it and which might auger uncertainties. It is appropriate in such circumstances to place responsibility for B's safety on the authority rather than on his parents.
I therefore propose that the safeguards of a care order should continue as long as is necessary and I would not expect any application to discharge the order until B is 5 or starts full time school, whichever is later."
The law
"The nature of a supervision order is to help and assist the child where the parents have full responsibility for the care and upbringing. It does not involve any statutory level of monitoring and it does not give the local authority parental responsibility. Any conditions attached to a supervision order cannot in themselves be enforced by the court. That was made clear in the case of Croydon London Borough Council v A (No. 3) [1992] 2 FLR 350; breaches can only be evidence in further proceedings.
The essence of a supervision order is to advise, assist and befriend the child. The directions that may be attached under Sch. 3 to the Children Act 1989 are restricted to requiring a responsible person, that is the parent in this case, to take reasonable steps to ensure the child lives at a specified place, presents to a specified person, participates in specified activities and submits to various examinations where appropriate. The limits of such requirements do not, in my judgment begin to address the problems of parents who continue to exercise their parental responsibilities in a way which still merits some criticism.
The contract drawn up between the parents and the local authority cannot be enforced without further court proceedings, whereas a care order places on the local authority a positive duty to ensure the welfare of the child and protect her from inadequate parenting. That is the framework and essence of the Act."
"I think there may be cases where one can actually isolate a particular situation where parental responsibility may have to be exercised at a moment's notice by a local authority and is obvious that that is going to be a Care Order case.
However, I do not believe that that is the only approach .... It is not necessary, as I understand the relevant parts of the Children Act, to be able to isolate a likely circumstance for exercising parental responsibility before it becomes right to make a Care Order. I do not believe that the legislation is as restrictive as that. I believe that it is an appropriate approach for the court to look a the case as a whole, to look at the gravity of it, to decide what its view is as to the risk of harm to the child (both physical harm as in this case and also emotional deprivation or failure to thrive because of the situation in the home or of some other situation arising) and to decide whether, in the light of the gravity of the case as a whole, the local authority ought to have imposed upon it the extra duties that I have referred to. If it comes to the conclusion, looking at the case as a whole, that that is so, then it should make a Care Order. Therefore it is not necessary to be able to put one's finger specifically on some aspect of parental responsibility which might need to be exercised by the local authority."
"[24] ... There are three main points. First, it gives a local authority power to remove the child without recourse even to a family proceedings court in an emergency protection order. The parents' only means of challenging that removal is by an application to discharge the care order, which usually takes some time to be heard, especially if, as in this case, it would have to be transferred to a higher court...
[25] Secondly, it gives the local authority parental responsibility for the child coupled with the power to control the parents' exercise of that responsibility. Again, the care plan does not suggest that the local authority wished to exercise parental responsibility or control the parent's exercise of it. It expressly stated, for example, "that A's social, moral and academic education will be the responsibility of the parents". Under "Health" it points out that he continues to be in good health and he will need to receive the usual checkups and vaccinations by the health visitor and GP service". This is not indicative of the suggestion that the local authority needs to be in a position to arrange that for him. In any event, it can be done by inserting appropriate requirements in the supervision order.
[26] The third difference is one of timing. Mr Forbes in particular has argued that it might be difficult to achieve a further order in 3 years' time, but of course that difficulty would only arise if by then the risk of harm had disappeared or almost disappeared, or the need for an order had disappeared or almost disappeared. If that were not the case, the local authority would have to investigate and take any action which was though appropriate to protect the child.
[27] ... Each case [on the choice between care and supervision orders] is an exercise of discretion on its own particular facts and earlier case law may be of limited help in this context. But, in any event, it has to be considered in the light of the Human Rights Act 1998 and Art. 8 of the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms 1950....
[28] Proportionality ... is the key. It will be the duty of everyone to ensure that in those cases where supervision order is proportionate as a response to the risk presented, a supervision order can be made to work as indeed the framers of the Children Act 1989 always hoped that it would be made to work. "
The grounds of appeal
The permission to appeal
Was the judge obliged to give effect to the parties' agreement?
"... there is an overriding duty in the Court to investigate the proposals advanced by the parties, even when those proposals are fully agreed"
but went on to state that:
"... the profundity of that investigation must reflect the reality that there is consensus amongst the parties to the litigation, particularly when the parties include a public authority with statutory duties and a guardian ad litem on behalf of the child."
"... I respectfully agree with and adopt this sentence in Thorpe J's judgment. There is a plain and overriding duty in the court to investigate the material placed before it for the making of a care order under s.31. The court is no rubber-stamp".
"... a Court is [not] bound to allow the withdrawal of proceedings where all of the parties agree that that should occur. Family Proceedings Rules 1991, r4.5 (4) expressly provides that a precondition of withdrawal is that the "the Court thinks fit". There is thus a judicial discretion and it does not, therefore, follow as night follows day that the Court's discretion of proceedings would end simply because the parties all agree that then proceeding should be withdrawn. The withdrawal provisions (and indeed the guardian system in public law itself) came into existence as a result of childcare tragedies in the 1970s and 1980s. The Court's role in such matters is not to be that of a neutered rubber stamp for the parties' request."
See per McFarlane J in A County Council v DP, RS, PS (by the Children's Guardian) [2005] 2 FLR 1031 at para. [19].
"4 ... any proposed residence or contact order, whether to be made by agreement between the parties or otherwise must be scrutinised by the Court accordingly. The Court shall not make a consent order for residence or contact or give permission for an application for a residence or contact order to be withdrawn, unless the parties are present in Court, except where it is satisfied that there is no risk of harm to the child in so doing."
"The Court may -
(a) on an application for a care order, make a supervision order;
(b) on an application for a supervision order, make a care order"
"... The Judge was at liberty to depart from the opinion of the experts, even if unanimous, on issues of future placement and management and perhaps even on attachment, balancing risks as against advantages."
He added, however, in relation to the issues before him that:
"in so far as the Judge is fully entitled to depart from the experts in relation to issues of management, placement and welfare, it was incumbent upon him to explain his departure a good deal more fully than he did in the single paragraph I have cited."
The Judge's approach
"If there is indeed a discretion in which various factors are relevant, the evaluation and balancing of those factors is... a matter for the trial Judge. Only if his decision is so plainly wrong that he must have given far too much weight to a particular factor is the appellate court entitled to interfere (see G v G). Too ready interference by the appellate court, particularly if it always seems to be in the direction of one result rather that the other, risks robbing the trial Judge of the discretion entrusted to him by the law."
I would only seek to supplement that quotation by adding after the words "particular factor" the further words "or left some important consideration out of account".
Arden LJ:
Jackson LJ