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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> M & Ors v Suffolk County Council [2014] EWCA Civ 942 (15 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/942.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 942 |
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ON APPEAL FROM IPSWICH COUNTY COURT
HHJ Yelton
IP12C00802
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RYDER
and
LORD JUSTICE VOS
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M -and- GP & AK (Grandparents) |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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Suffolk County Council |
Respondent |
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Ms Tina Cook QC (instructed by Suffolk County Council Legal Department) for the Local Authority
Ms Christine Hayes (Instructed by the Children's Guardian) for the Children
The Grandparents appeared in person
Hearing date: 22 May 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Ryder:
a) the mother minimises events where they do not assist her;
b) the mother does not give a full and true account and can be misleading;
c) the mother is almost wholly self centred;
d) on occasion the mother loses her temper over trivial matters and becomes aggressive and confrontational;
e) on occasion the mother becomes overly assertive, controlling and abusive;
f) the mother does not easily regulate her own emotions, acts impulsively and with passion to the extent that she is unaware of the impact of her behaviour on others including her children;
g) the mother continues to have intemperate outbursts including in the presence of the children;
h) the mother failed to protect the children from domestic violence inflicted by the father;
i) the mother failed to prioritise the children over her own needs;
j) the mother has behaved in an emotionally unstable way; and
k) the mother has found it difficult or impossible to work with many professionals.
a) were committed to each other and to the children;
b) were used to the children and the children were used to them: there was a great mutual fondness between them;
c) had made a favourable impact on those with whom they had dealt and had found it easy to work with social work professionals;
d) had a great love for the children; and
e) would preserve the children's family ties that is, the undoubted advantages of being placed in their extended family in which they are known and loved by their grandparents.
a) they did not appear to connect (one of) the child(ren)'s distress at witnessing one of the mother's emotional outbursts;
b) they had adopted a non-interventionist approach in terms of active protection when the father turned up by arrangement with the mother at a family holiday;
c) they did not discourage the mother from allowing the father to attend the family holiday when they knew that he had perpetrated violence on the mother in front of the children;
d) during the first of their assessments the grandparents had taken the view that the mother was the proper person to look after the children;
e) the maternal grandmother would struggle to enforce boundaries in relation to her daughter;
f) the grandmother was unable to emotionally challenge her daughter;
g) the grandmother minimised the risk that the mother presents to the children now and in the future;
h) the grandparents' view was that they could look after the children until the mother was in equilibrium;
i) the grandparents would not provide the permanence that the children needed (which was urgently required) because they saw their care as being temporary; and
j) the grandparents would find it difficult to resist the wishes of the mother who is not only aggressive but also an intelligent woman who is skilled at manipulating people to her own advantage.
"[16] Plainly, in the case of judgments given before Re B-S the Court of Appeal must have regard to and make appropriate allowance for that fact. The focus must be on substance rather than form. Does the judge's approach as it appears from the judgment engage with the essence? Can it be said, on a fair and sensible reading, not a pedantic or nit-picking reading - that the judge directed his mind to and has provided answers to the key questions.
[17] [...] Nor, to take another example, will the mere fact that the judgment does not engage with matters referred to in paragraph 74 of Re B-S. What is crucial is the effect of the judgment read as a whole."
Lord Justice Vos:
Lord Justice Tomlinson: