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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> N-S (Children), Re [2017] EWCA Civ 1121 (25 July 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/1121.html Cite as: [2017] 3 FCR 137, [2017] 4 WLR 133, [2017] WLR(D) 529, [2017] EWCA Civ 1121 |
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HIS HONOUR JUDGE WILDING
WD1600101
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE McFARLANE
and
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
____________________
Re N-S (Children) |
____________________
Mark Twomey QC and John Church (instructed by Hertfordshire County Council) for the First Respondent Local Authority
Matthew Stott (instructed by Reeds Solicitors) for the Children's Guardian
Hearing date : 29 June 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice McFarlane :
"135 I will be making orders in respect of each of the children and in respect of [the four children] I will make care orders and placement orders. I am satisfied that their welfare throughout their lives requires that the orders be made and that the parents' consent be dispensed with.
136 In the complicated circumstances of this case I consider that the local authority plan to conduct the sibling assessment after the children are settled offers the best opportunity for the children to be placed according to their needs. I acknowledge the considerable difficulty in placing the children and ensuring that they maintain a relationship after adoption. [The social worker] said that whilst it would be difficult to place all four children together they would try to do so but wouldn't prioritise the need for the children to attach to a new primary carer as soon as possible. (sic)"
Lack of judicial reasoning raised with judge
"The last two comments I make are in relation to issues in the case.
Firstly, (the mother and father) say that there is a gap in the evidence. As I read your judgment you do not accept this proposition. It might be helpful for the parents if you were able to set out your conclusions as to this issue in more detail and why you reject the suggestion that there is a gap in the evidence.
Secondly, the (parents) request that the youngest four children be returned to their care. As I read your judgment you do not consider it safe for any of the children to be returned to the care of (the parents) as they would be likely to suffer significant harm. Please would you set out your conclusions/reasoning so that the parents are able to understand why the court does not accept their first position and has chosen adoption for the youngest four children."
"Para 131 (the parents) seek the return home of the four youngest children. Perhaps the court could set out what it considers to be the realistic options and the Re BS factors and the conclusions reached in this paragraph??"
"Dear Judge
Further to the email and attachment below (the email of 9 January) I have re-read the judgment again.
As set out below the (parents' case) was that the four youngest children should be returned to their care. The (parents) would be assisted in understanding the court's rejection of their case if the judgment was to set out that each of the children's needs has been considered individually and collectively against the parents' ability to meet those needs.
The parents need to be able to read the judgment and see why, if they are not able to have all the four youngest children returned to their care, why one, two or three of the children cannot return to their care."
"I have recently seen Mr Church's emails suggesting that it might be helpful to the (parents) to see the reasons set out as to why the youngest four children cannot be returned to their care and should be adopted. I agree with Mr Church, particularly in view of these parents' difficulties, this would be helpful in enabling them to accept the decision. I also agree with Mr Church's other comments set out in the documents attached to his email."
"I have no additional amendments to propose in relation to the draft judgment."
"In addition I have made some changes to the body of the judgment in an effort to save requests for clarification on Friday (the hand down date). The changes are to the last few paragraphs."
"Ms Pollock: Your Honour, one other point arises. I know that on Tuesday or Wednesday counsel for the local authority invited the court to augment the judgment in relation to two specific points, the "gap in the evidence" point and also the "why adoption?" point.
Judge: I thought I dealt with it.
Ms Pollock: Your Honour, I have to say that having read the version that was circulated in the latter part of yesterday afternoon regarding the point about placement orders, I had anticipated on the basis of the local authority's email, that any additional paragraph would include a "why adoption? as opposed to long term fostering", and indeed "why closed adoption?". Your Honour, I apologise if I have simply overlooked the relevant sentence but I cannot see any elaborated or expanded wording in that regard.
Judge: I have accepted the analysis of the guardian and the other experts that the children's welfare requires that they be placed in a permanent place and that, given their ages, the best placement for them will be in an adopted placement."
The appeal
"19. It follows that if the appellate process is to work satisfactorily, the judgment must enable the appellate court to understand why the judge reached his decision. This does not mean that every factor which weighed with the judge in his appraisal of the evidence has to be identified and explained. But the issues, the resolution of which, were vital to the judge's conclusions should be identified and the manner in which he resolved them explained."
As I shall explain in due course, in the context of family proceedings, the identification in each welfare judgment of the realistic options, and therefore the issues to be determined, is an important and useful discipline. If, having identified the realistic options, they are then adequately addressed in the judgment, a challenge based on lack of reasons is unlikely to be sustained.
"38. I wish to make it as clear as possible that after a judge has given judgment, counsel have a positive duty to raise with the judge not just any alleged deficiency in the judge's reasoning process but any genuine query or ambiguity which arises on the judgment. … The object, of course, is to achieve clarity and – where appropriate – to obviate the need to come to this court for a remedy."
a) Analysis of why, in circumstances where these children could not be returned to their parents' care, nothing but adoption "would do" in terms of meeting their welfare needs and thereby making it a requirement that the parents' consent should be dispensed with (in short, "the Re BS analysis" – Re BS (Children) [2013] EWCA Civ 1146);
b) Consideration of long term fostering, as opposed to adoption, as an option for one or more of the children;
c) Justification for refusing all but indirect contact between the four children and their natural family after adoption.
"The local authority accepts that the written judgment is inadequate in that:
(a) there is no express analysis of the advantages and disadvantages of the care plan of adoption for each child;
(b) there is no express explanation why care plans of adoption meet the welfare best interests of each child as opposed to, for example, placement with their parents."
Mr Twomey submits, however, that a judge is entitled to rely upon counsel to put their case. At the hearing the parties only placed two options before the court, namely rehabilitation or adoption, and the judge cannot now be criticised for failing to address long-term fostering (which was not raised) or direct contact (which was only referred to briefly in closing submissions). Mr Twomey also draws attention to the fact that it was counsel for the local authority and the guardian who alerted the judge to a need for further reasons, whereas the Appellant's counsel, who was under a duty (per Wall LJ in Re M) to do so, made no separate request to the judge.
Discussion
Lord Justice Lewison:
The President of the Family Division: