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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> N (A Child) [2012] EWCA Civ 1563 (31 October 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1563.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 1563 |
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ON APPEAL FROM SWINDON COUNTY COURT
(HER HONOUR JUDGE MARSHALL)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE McFARLANE
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IN THE MATTER OF N (a Child) |
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The Respondent did not appear and was not represented.
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Lord Justice McFarlane:
"12. One of the factors that the Court must take into account is whether delay is in the best interests of the child. These proceedings started in May 2011 in relation to TJ. I also take into account the fact that these are not the only proceedings that these parents have been engaged in. there are a number of other children that the Court has previously dealt with where care orders have been granted and the children have been placed for adoption.
13. There is a great deal of information available to the Court about these parents, about their history of parenting, plus all of the assessments that have been done for Miss Burden and Mr Newman. The evidence as it stands before the Court is that none of those assessments suggests that Miss Burden and Mr Newman have accepted the concerns which the Local Authority in seeking to making changes, and that therefore the evidence on the face of it would lead the Court at the moment to a conclusion that the parents are, sadly, unable to provide good enough parenting for TJ now and, more likely than not, not within his timescales, bearing in mind his age.
14. The question is whether the Court therefore should deal with these proceedings now on the basis of the evidence available, or allow the parents to file their final evidence and deal with matters by way of a final hearing. Article 6 obviously is engaged in relation to that decision. The Court has set a timetable, the parents have been aware of it and have not complied with it.
15. I am not satisfied that the explanations that have been put before the Court today, which in effect amount to the fact that the Father has been unwell, without any further evidence of that, or explanation as to why it prevented the Mother from dealing with these matters, is sufficient to say that to proceed today would be a breach of their right to a fair trial. They will know from the orders made that at the IRH the Court will narrow the issues in so far as it can, and make decisions to finalise proceedings, and final orders where that is appropriate, and even if they do not attend.
16. It seems to me, bearing in mind the threshold criteria, which in my view are made out on the evidence before the Court, and the welfare of the child as paramount, that the right course for this Court is to proceed today, on the basis of the evidence before it, to finalise these proceedings for TJ. The parents' general lack engagement in relation to these proceedings and other proceedings means there is a very real possibility, if the Court adjourns these proceedings further, that actually the parents will not take up the opportunity of properly filing their evidence, putting this matter before the Court and engaging in a proper full final hearing. It is not in TJ's interests, in my view, to delay finalising matters any further, particularly bearing in mind the weight of the evidence that is before the Court and the opportunity that the parents have had to participate."
On that basis, the judge went on short terms in the course of one paragraph each to make the final care order and placement order, recording that she was dispensing with the consent of the parents to adoption.
"There is a spectrum of procedure for family cases from the ex parte application on minimal evidence to the full and detailed investigations on oral evidence which may be prolonged. Where on that spectrum a judge decides a particular application should be placed is a matter for his discretion. Applications for residence orders or for committal to the care of a local authority or revocation of a care order are likely to be decided on full oral evidence, but not invariably. Such is not the case on contact applications which may be and are heard sometimes with and sometimes without oral evidence or with a limited amount of oral evidence."
"16.4 For the avoidance of doubt the purpose of an Issues Resolution Hearing is to –
(1) identify key issues which are not agreed;
(2) examine if those key issues can be agreed; and
(3) where those issues cannot be agreed, examine the most proportionate method of resolving those issues.
16.5 The expectation is that the method of resolving the key issues which cannot be agreed will be at a hearing (ordinarily the Final hearing) where there is an opportunity for the relevant oral evidence to be heard and challenged."
"28. The court had a number of options available to it:
(i) adjourn the IRH for 7 days to allow the parents a last opportunity to comply with the direction as to the filling and serving of final evidence
(ii) make it clear on the face of that order that failure to comply may well result in final orders being made.
alternatively
(iii) hear representations as to the outstanding issues and consider whether those issues could/should be further refined that day.
alternatively
(iv) if the parents, in the course of being pressed to identify issues for final hearing, indicated a purposeful intention to cross-examine a witness who was not present on 15th June or if there was insufficient court time to hear oral evidence on 15th to go on to fix a date for a final hearing / an abbreviated final hearing and affording an extension of time for the parents to file and serve their final evidence.
alternatively
(v) At the very least, invite the parties to make oral representations as to why the court might / might not make final orders without the benefit of either oral evidence / affording the parents an opportunity to challenge the LA case."
Lady Justice Hallett:
Order: Appeal allowed.