BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Y (Leave to Oppose Adoption), Re [2020] EWCA Civ 1287 (07 October 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/1287.html Cite as: [2021] 1 FLR 1248, [2020] EWCA Civ 1287 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE FAMILY COURT AT NORTHAMPTON
HH Judge Wicks
NN112/2019
IN THE MATTER OF THE ADOPTION AND CHILDREN ACT 2002
AND IN THE MATTER OF Y (LEAVE TO OPPOSE ADOPTION)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
(Vice-President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division))
LORD JUSTICE HENDERSON
and
LORD JUSTICE BAKER
____________________
A LOCAL AUTHORITY |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
PROSPECTIVE ADOPTERS (1) A MOTHER (2) A FATHER (3) Y (by his children's guardian) (4) |
Respondent |
____________________
Malcolm Macdonald and Jessica Purchase (instructed by HCB Solicitors) for the Second Respondent
Joanne Ecob (instructed by Scott Beaumont Solicitors Ltd) for the Third Respondent
Hena Vissian (instructed by Borneo Martell Turner Coulston) for the Fourth Respondent
The First Respondents were not represented
Hearing date: 3 September 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE BAKER:
Introduction
Background
The judge's reasons
"The mother has filed a witness statement, setting out the changes in circumstances since the placement order was made:(a) The parents have re-located since the conclusion of the care proceedings. They are happier where they live now, and their relationship has consequently improved. There have been no further instances of domestic abuse.(b) The mother has sought treatment for depression from her general practitioner and is now on a course of antidepressants.(c) The father has sought help from the team at [X], an organisation which provides domestic abuse support for deaf people. He has been referred for counselling sessions, which began in December 2019. I am not told whether the counselling has concluded; it was still in progress at the time when public health restrictions were introduced in March 2020, and it is therefore likely that there has been a delay in the father completing the course.(d) The father has been prescribed medication for low mood, depression and anger management, and has been consistent in taking this medication.(e) The parents have severed their links with the maternal family, in light of the risks posed by [other members of the family]. It is unclear whether the parents have severed links with the maternal great aunt who is caring for Y's older half-siblings, with whom the mother continues to have contact.(f) Y has continued to have direct contact with his half-siblings since the placement order was made in July 2019, a period of nearly a year. He has, it is said, formed ties with his older siblings and they with him, such that it would be distressing for both if the sibling tie was severed completely."
"I remind myself that the court should not set the bar too high, or discourage parents from making attempts to better themselves. Both parents have clearly taken steps to deal with their particular problems, and both should, as the local authority and guardian accept, be commended for that. On the face of it, their relationship has stabilised, and the father has taken steps to deal with his anger management. This is a particularly important step, because the father's ability to control his anger was clearly a key factor in the care proceedings. There have been no further instances of domestic abuse (although I am mindful that, at this stage, I only have the parents' word for that). In all the circumstances, I am satisfied that there has been a sufficient change in circumstances to justify a consideration of whether the court should grant leave to oppose the making of the adoption order."
"33. If the court grants leave, it will in due course have to analyse, with the appropriate rigour, the various options for Y, of which adoption will be one. The court will need to weigh in the balance all the relevant factors, including the parents' abilities to care safely for Y, either immediately or in the future, Y's relationships with his wider family, in particular his siblings, his need for a stable and secure placement, and so on (this is not intended to be an exhaustive list). I am of course aware that I have already carried out that exercise once before, in considering the placement application, but nearly a year has passed since then, circumstances have changed, and Y has continued to have a relationship with his siblings. When I considered the placement application, I was of the view that the need to preserve a sibling relationship was outweighed by the greater degree of permanency, of 'belonging', that an adoptive placement offered. That may not be the case now, nearly a year on. Of course, I keep an absolutely open mind, but the advantage of granting leave is that these issues can be revisited, in the light of the changed circumstances, which must be to the benefit of Y when I consider his welfare throughout his life.
34. The granting of leave will inevitably mean further delay, but again that has to be considered in the context of Y's welfare throughout his life, a period of 80 years or more on present life expectancies. There remain real concerns about the parents, not the least of which is their completely contradictory approaches to the findings I made in the care proceedings. Although they are in a relationship, the mother is clear that she opposes any review of the findings (and is therefore presumed to accept those findings), whilst the father's very clear position is that he does not accept those findings, and does not accept that he was responsible for Y's injuries. The parents lied about their relationship in the care proceedings, and there must be a very real risk that they are putting their need to be in a relationship with each other above the needs of any child in their care."
"This is a finely balanced case. However, I do not think that the parents' case lacks solidity. They have taken steps to deal with some of the concerns around their relationship, and I remind myself that, before Y's injuries, there had been no real concerns about the mother's parenting of the elder half-sibling who had been in her care. The parents ruled themselves out in the care proceedings, as they did not put themselves forward to care for any of the children. Further, the relationship between Y and his half siblings has continued and it is at least arguable that this needs to be re-evaluated as part of any welfare analysis of the competing options for Y. All of those factors lead me to conclude, on balance, that the parents have a solid case for opposing the making of an adoption order, and that leave should therefore be granted."
"my welfare analysis in the care proceedings was in no small part based upon the fact that the local authority had committed itself to finding prospective adopters who would be willing to promote sibling contact".
Finally, the local authority enquired whether the court had assessed the fact that Y has remained in the care of the same foster carers for 27 months when analysing the second stage of the test. The judge responded by pointing out that he had referred to the security of the placement in his judgment but added that he had to set that against consideration of the child's welfare throughout his life.
Submissions to this Court
Discussion and conclusion
"First, the court has to be satisfied that there has been a change of circumstances of a sufficient nature and degree. Only if there has been such a change will the court have a discretion to permit the parents to defend the proceedings, the child's lifelong welfare being the paramount consideration in that decision."
"when deciding either limb [i.e. of the two-stage process], the judge has a discretion whether or not to hear oral evidence. It will be perfectly proper, for example, for the judge in an appropriate case to assume as true the facts asserted by the parents, and equally proper for him to dismiss the application on the ground that it was not in the interests of the child for the parents to be given leave to defend the proceedings. It is not necessary for the judge to conduct a full welfare hearing unless the issues which arise for decision positively require such a hearing, or require oral evidence in one or more particular respects."
"it will be important for direct contact to be explored. If this is possible, it will be recommended for the sibling to have direct contact twice yearly. Should direct contact not be possible, it would be recommended for [the three siblings] to have twice yearly letterbox contact."
In her report for the final hearing in the care proceedings, the children's guardian reported that the father had told her that, if Y was adopted, he would not stop until he found the child and was certain that he will be able to do so as he wanted to ensure he was safe. The guardian observed:
"This statement does concern me due to the disruption this could mean to any placement and has an adverse impact on my view of direct sibling contact post adoption."
In the conclusion to her report, the guardian made the following recommendation:
"If a plan of adoption is endorsed for Y, the local authority proposed consideration of direct contact of twice yearly for [the siblings] or twice yearly letterbox if not. As previously discussed, it is my view that direct contact will not be possible, and I therefore support twice yearly letterbox contact."
In the judgment delivered at the conclusion of the final hearing of the care proceedings, there is nothing to indicate that it had been part of the judge's welfare analysis that the local authority had committed itself to finding adopters willing to promote sibling contact. The judge recorded the importance which the parents attached to the sibling relationship and added the observation that sibling relationships are enduring and important. He described the local authority's case as being that there should be letterbox contact and made no reference to the possibility of face-to-face contact. Having set out the parties' positions, he concluded that
"while the sibling relationship is important, it is secondary to the importance and stability of being part of a family."
LORD JUSTICE HENDERSON
LORD JUSTICE UNDERHILL