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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> O (A Child): Interim Care Order [2019] EWCA Civ 583 (28 March 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/583.html Cite as: [2019] EWCA Civ 583 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE FAMILY COURT SITTING AT NORTHAMPTON
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE WICKS)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE PETER JACKSON
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IN THE MATTER OF O (A Child): Interim Care Order |
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8th Floor, 165 Fleet Street, London, EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7404 1424 Web:
www.epiqglobal.com/en-gb/ Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr D Howe, QC (appearing Pro Bono) and Ms H Mettam (instructed by PS Law) appeared on behalf of the Respondent Mother
Ms H Vissian (instructed by Wilson Browne) appeared on behalf of the Child's Guardian
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE PETER JACKSON:
"The guardian takes the view that if O is returned to his mother's care at this time he will be at risk of immediate harm. Hence, despite the mother not being faced with criminal proceedings, the guardian remains concerned as to the mother's association with risky adults and her lack of insight as to risk and poor decision-making which led to O being placed at risk in the first instance. The guardian has visited O in the foster placement, and it is her view that although there have been some issues in respect of his behaviour, he is happy and settled in his placement and, on balance, there will be a greater risk of harm to him by returning him to his mother's care immediately than any harm that he may be perceived to be suffering in foster care."
"4. The mother now says that in light of that change of circumstances [being the fact that the mother was not to be charged] O's continuing separation from her is no longer justified. The local authority disputes this and says that for other reasons unconnected with the incident in early August, O cannot safely be returned to his mother's care at this interim stage. This is a position supported by O's guardian. I have heard no evidence on this application which has been dealt with on the basis of submissions on the basis of my reading of the papers that have been put before me in two lever arch files.
5. As to the law, there is no dispute between the parties that the threshold for making an interim order under section 38 of the 1989 Act is crossed. The issue is O's welfare, which of course must be my paramount concern under section 1 of the 1989 Act, and I must have particular regard to the matters set out in section 1(3). I have considered all of those matters, but it seems to me that two are of particular relevance at this stage are O's wishes and feelings, as they can be determined from the papers before me, and the mother's capability as a parent. It is clear from the authorities which are referred to in the mother's position statement -- and I think not dissented from by any other party -- that any interim order must be one that holds the balance between the parties and is not intended to confer and advantage on any party. Any such order has to be proportionate to the risks of harm in a particular case. The authorities also make it clear that interim separation is only to be justified if the child's safety, understood in an emotional, psychological and a physical sense, requires it. The question that the court has to consider, particularly in a case such as this, is: is the child's continued removal from his parents proportionate to the risk of harm to which he would be exposed should he return to his parents' care."
"… It is my opinion, having considered those other concerns, that they would not on any reasonable view warrant interim separation of the child from his mother. It cannot be said in relation to the concerns that were expressed regarding the mother's inconsistent parenting and regarding his school attendance that those were matters which were so serious that O's immediate removal from his mother's care would be justified. What justified O's immediate removal from his mother's care was the fact that at the time when the order was made, the mother was facing a serious charge which would carry a substantial custodial sentence if the mother was convicted.
11. I have heard a number of submissions on behalf of both the guardian and the local authority that are addressed it seems to me to the longer-term issues about the mother's capabilities, which are in the process of being assessed. Those submissions, with all due respect, miss the point of an interim hearing, which is to consider whether the child's welfare requires or justifies continued separation from the parent."
"13. What is also clear from the papers is that O continues to suffer in foster care emotionally. I have read the foster care logs and I do not for one moment criticise or detract from the care that these foster carers are giving to O. However, it is abundantly clear from reading the notes the foster carers have prepared that O desperately misses his mother, is profoundly upset by being apart from his mother and that this upset has resulted in his displaying behaviour which the mother says -- and this is to some extent borne out by what O's school says -- was not displayed at home.
14. Thus it seems to me it is a matter of balancing the risks of harm -- the harm that O may be at risk of if he returns to his mother's care in the light of the other concerns which the local authority has about the mother against the harm that O is suffering and is likely to suffer if he remains separated from his mother.
15. It is I think a finely balanced case, but I have already identified that had this case come before me simply on the other concerns identified by the local authority in their amended threshold and within the other documents, I would have required a considerable amount of persuasion to separate O from his mother at that interim stage. As I have said, what undoubtedly must have tipped the balance in favour of interim separation was the fact that the mother was the subject of a police investigation into a serious offence.
16. I have to say, considered in the round, that the harm which O may be at risk of suffering were he to return to his mother's care at an interim stage is outweighed by the harm that he suffers in foster care by being apart from his mother. I do not see on any realistic view of the evidence and without making any findings one way or the other (and without indeed making any determination as to what might be the likely outcome at a final hearing) that O's separation from his mother at this stage is justified now, and in those circumstances I do not consider that the continuation of the interim care order is justified or proportionate in all of the circumstances of the case.
17. I therefore discharge the interim care order with immediate effect and replace it with an interim supervision order."
"I make it absolutely clear that I am in no way determining the likely outcome of any final hearing, but at this stage I cannot see on welfare grounds that O's separation from his mother is justified."
(i) the judge has minimised significance of the August incident;
(ii) he was wrong to depart from the professional views without hearing from them or giving reasons for departing;
(iii) it was premature for him to have made a decision when the parenting assessment was due two to three weeks later;
(iv) he did not carry out a true balancing exercise;
(v) he took the local authority's allegations piecemeal rather than globally; and
(vi) that he did not apply the welfare checklist.
LORD JUSTICE DAVIS:
Order: Appeal allowed