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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> FM (A Child) [2016] EWCA Civ 189 (23 March 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/189.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Civ 189 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE FAMILY COURT AT BOURNEMOUTH AND POOLE
HH Judge Bond
BH14C00890
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE SHARP
and
MR JUSTICE BAKER
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RE FM (A CHILD) JM |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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BOURNEMOUTH BOROUGH COUNCIL (1) D (2) FM (by his children's guardian) (3) MR and MRS W (4) and (5) |
Respondent |
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Jason Hughes (instructed by Local Authority Solicitor) for the First Respondent
John Ward-Prowse (instructed by Ellis Jones) for the Fourth and Fifth Respondents
The other parties were not represented at the hearing
Hearing date : 9th February 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Baker :
The judgment at first instance
"…society must be willing to tolerate very diverse standards of parenting, including the eccentric, the barely adequate and the inconsistent. It follows too that children will inevitably have both very different experiences of parenting and very unequal consequences flowing from that. It seems that some children will experience disadvantage and harm, while others flourish in atmospheres of loving security and emotional stability. These are the consequences of our fallible humanity and it is not the provenance of the state to spare children or the consequences of defective parenting. In any event, it simply could not be done."
The judge approached his task by asking the question: are there compelling reasons why F should not live with his parents?.
"215. Placement with Mr and Mrs W. The advantages of such a placement including retention for F within his birth family; a very high level of care and parenting; the good intentions of the Ws to repair relations with the parents; the perpetuation of F's bond and attachment with the Ws. The disadvantages of such a course are that F will not be raised by his mother; he may be confused as to his sense of identity if not raised by his parents; disconnection from the extended paternal family although the guardian was not able to find very much information about them.
216. A placement with DJ [the paternal aunt]. The advantages of such a placement include DJ's extensive professional experience in caring for children of varying needs and ages; F would maintain close links with his parents. The disadvantages of such a course: F would not be raised by one of his parents but may suffer future confusion about his sense of identity. Contact with the W's as the maternal family will be difficult and may not continue.
217. A placement with the mother either on her own or with her friend LS. The advantages of such a placement include: F's reunification with his mother; such a placement would support F's sense of identity. F would have contact with the father. The disadvantages of such a course would include risk of a relapse in the mother's state of health given that she is in the very early stages of recovery; the risk that the parents would conceal the breakdown in the mother's mental health; the father's volatile nature; the risk that the mother would put her need for the relationship with the father above her concern for F's welfare; the difficulties about contact with the Ws."
i) F continues to be a vulnerable child who requires stable, loving care.ii) F has only been cared for by the Ws. At present his primary attachments are to them. He has a bond and attachment to his parents. If F moves to live with his parents there will be a period of transition which will cause short-term disruption.
iii) F urgently requires a decision as to his future.
iv) A return to his mother's care would place him at risk of future emotional harm. The risk comes from a potential relapse on the mother's mental health; a relapse by the father into misuse of drugs; F's exposure to the father's volatile and unpredictable behaviour; the severing of F's relationship with Mr and Mrs W and the likely denigration of them by the parents; the risk that the parents place their own emotional needs ahead of F's.
v) There are various doubts about the present capacity of each of the F's parents in particular as to the reality of the parents' separation.
"I find that there are compelling reasons why F should remain in the care of Mr and Mrs W. In coming to that conclusion I have considered whether there might be some interim arrangement whereby the process of rehabilitation of the mother takes place under the auspices of an interim care order. This would require further assessment by [the local authority of the area where she lives] of the details of the mother's proposals. Although that has superficial attraction, it would involve further delay. The making of an SGO provides Mr and Mrs W with what is sometimes known as 'super parental responsibility'. Notwithstanding that, if and when the parents are able to show that they have overcome their various difficulties which impinge upon their parenting capacity, an application can be made to discharge the SGO."
"Each of the parents has some way to go in respect of recovery…. The court has to consider the balance between embarking upon a course leading to F's move to the care of the mother at a time when her recovery is on Dr Ewbank's timetable 6-7 months into a two year period. I also accepted that [the father] had only been clear of drugs since May 2015. Although it is not the parents' case that F would live in the same household as the father, there are serious concerns about his recovery and the reality of the parents' separation. Further assessment of the situation by [the local authority] will be necessary. This might require an interim care order. The outcome of such a process from F's point of view is uncertain. Section 1(2) of the Children Act emphasises the dangers of delay. F needs the security of a settled and secure placement as soon as possible. He is still a small and vulnerable child. The court has sufficient information upon which to make a decision."
"Dr Ewbank was concerned at the catastrophic collapse in the mother's mental health in 2014. The doctor said that two years without a relapse would present good progress…the mother has been stable since February 2015. Examination of her support mechanisms would be part of the assessment which [the local authority] would undertake."
As to his finding that the parents would conceal the breakdown in the mother's mental health, the judge added these additional reasons:
"The evidence of the parents was clear to the effect that they regarded the case as a battle between them and the Ws who had stolen their child. The mother in my judgment would have difficulty in admitting that her health was in decline if the likely consequence was the removal of F from her care."
As to his finding that the risk that the mother would put her need for the relationship with the father above her concern for F's welfare, the judge added the following:
"The guardian was clear in her evidence that the mother did not see the father as a risk. The mother felt that she was being forced to separate from the father. The guardian said that the mother told her that she did not the father's drug use as a risk to F. That is very concerning. The parents only asserted their separation at the beginning of the final hearing to satisfy the concerns of the court."
As to his finding that there would be difficulties about contact with Mr and Mrs W, the judge added:
"Given the obvious and entrenched hostility of the parents to the Ws, I am of the view that, if F lives with the mother, contact for F with the Ws will be very difficult. It will not be encouraged by the parents. I think that the mother is incapable of doing so. She still feels that the Ws stole her child. The Ws are important figures in F's life. F's needs include contact with the Ws. As I said in the judgment, my view is that the Ws will encourage contact with the parents if F lives with the Ws."
"This was considered. The father's difficulties in the situation as put are partially of his own making. Although the Ws are wary of the father's behaviour, it is my assessment that they will try and make father's contact work because they see the value of that for F. If there is a supervision order, help with available (at least for a while) to organise contact."
The Appeal
i) in depriving F of the opportunity of being brought by at least one of his parents, a special guardianship order was a unnecessary and disproportionate interference with the right to respect for family life to which he and the parents were entitled;ii) the judge did not examine the reality of the situation created by his order and confront the foreseeable risk that F would lose any relationship with his parents as a result of their attitude to Mr and Mrs W;
iii) the judge placed undue weight on the need to avoid delay when the evidence of Dr Ewbank was guardedly positive about the mother's prognosis and when local support services may have been available.
Ground One – the SGO was unnecessary and disproportionate interference with the right to respect for family life.
"It is a halfway house between a residence order and an adoption order. Its purpose is to provide permanence short of the legal separation involved in adoption."
Ms Harman cites criticism of the use of SGOs, including that contained in the response of the Association of Lawyers for Children to the Department for Education's Consultation on SGO's (September 2015), that the SGO is treated as the default option to be used in all cases where a child is to be placed with kindship carers with no or little consideration as to whether a child arrangements order would be more appropriate. Whether or not these criticisms are justified, to my mind they have no bearing on this case.
Ground two – the judge failed to examine the reality of the situation created by his order and confront the foreseeable risk that F would lose any relationship with his parents as a result of their attitude to the applicants
"If F were to remain in the care of Mr and Mrs W, I would have concerns about their capacity to manage a family relationship because I suspect that the family dynamics would be unmanageable in the sense that the parents are likely to be become more hostile towards Mr and Mrs W and the rift within the family would deepen….If F were to reside with Mr and Mrs W, then as long as the parents maintain their current position it is difficult to see how this could be managed in the best interests of the child. There is a risk that the anger and resentment that the parents are likely to feel towards Mr and Mrs W as having "stolen their child" would have an adverse impact on F as he grows older. …If F remains living with Mr and Mrs W, then the family dynamics are likely to remain extremely conflicted and very acrimonious."
Ground three – the judge placed undue weight on the need to avoid delay when the evidence of Dr Ewbank was guardedly positive about the mother's prognosis and when local support services may have been available.
"is not, and must never be allowed to become, a straightjacket, least of all if rigorous adherence to an inflexible timetable risks putting justice in jeopardy".
i) the potential relapse of the mother's mental health, and the risk of concealment of relapse;ii) the father's relapse into misuse of drugs;
iii) F's exposure to the father's volatile and unpredictable behaviour towards others;
iv) the risk of a severance in F's relationship with Mr and Mrs W and the likely denigration of them by the parents;
v) the risk that the parents place their own emotional needs ahead of F's, and
vi) the judge's doubts about the incapacity of each of F's parents and in particular about the reality of the parent's separation.
The respondents submit that it was for all of these reasons that the judge concluded that F would be at risk of emotional harm in his mother's care.
Discussion and Conclusion
Lady Justice Sharp
Lord Justice McFarlane