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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> AV (A Child) (Expert Report) [2020] EWCA Civ 346 (05 March 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/346.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Civ 346 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE FAMILY COURT
IN THE MATTER OF THE CHILDREN ACT 1989
AND IN THE MATTER OF AV (EXPERT REPORT)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE POPPLEWELL
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A MOTHER |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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A LOCAL AUTHORITY (1) A FATHER (2) AV (BY HIS CHILDREN'S GUARDIAN) (3) |
Respondent |
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Julie Sparrow and William Horwood for the First Respondent
Karl Rowley QC and Christopher Rank for the Second Respondent
Joanna Moody for the Third Respondent
Hearing date: 5 March 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE BAKER :
"(7) When deciding whether to give permission as mentioned in subsection (1), (3) or (5) the court is to have regard in particular to—
(a) any impact which giving permission would be likely to have on the welfare of the children concerned, including in the case of permission as mentioned in subsection (3) any impact which any examination or other assessment would be likely to have on the welfare of the child who would be examined or otherwise assessed,
(b) the issues to which the expert evidence would relate,
(c) the questions which the court would require the expert to answer,
(d) what other expert evidence is available (whether obtained before or after the start of proceedings),
(e) whether evidence could be given by another person on the matters on which the expert would give evidence,
(f) the impact which giving permission would be likely to have on the timetable for, and duration and conduct of, the proceedings,
(g) the cost of the expert evidence, and
(h) any matters prescribed by Family Procedure Rules."
The judge reminded herself of the guidance given by Sir James Munby P in Re H-L [2013] EWCA Civ 655.
"I turn to the issue to which the expert evidence would relate and the questions the court would require the expert to answer … the court will need to determine and how the impact of trauma and loss may impact on those issues, they are questions as to his placement needs moving forward; the role of his birth parents in his care moving forwards and in particular whether A, given his loss and trauma would be able to attach positively to prospective adopters; whether given the trauma he has suffered, which may be triggered at different points in the future, there is an increased risk of adoption breakdown, with the detrimental impact that would have on A, and whether the importance for A of preserving his birth parent relationships is magnified or enhanced in this case given the experience he already has of the significant loss of his siblings."
"Turning to those questions and issues, they give rise to questions of attachment. There is already before the court detailed assessment by the social worker and Guardian as to the impact of the trauma suffered by A on his current emotional presentation, his current emotional development, his support needs both now and in the longer term and their assessment of his capacity to form and transfer positive attachments to alternative care givers. Of course that assessment and the evidence by the social worker and Guardian is yet to be subject to proper challenge on the part of the parents by way of cross-examination. Nobody however has shied away from the vulnerability of this little boy and the tragic circumstances that bring him to this court. It is covered at length in the social worker's final evidence, informed by the ongoing work of CAMHS with A and his carers and the progress, which the social worker and Guardian give evidence of…. The court is satisfied that issues over attachment, his capacity to build and transfer positive attachments lie squarely within the expertise of the social worker and Guardian. I am not therefore persuaded that further expert assessment of A will render any further forensically useful information to the court."
"In terms of the impact of loss on A and the value of his birth family relationships being preserved to protect him against the further loss and trauma he may suffer from adoption, it is of course a necessary and sad consequence of the vast majority of adoptions that the child will suffer the loss of both sibling and birth parent relationships. Adoption involves traumatic loss, of what are often valuable significant and ongoing relationships for children. Assessing the impact of that and how it feeds into the placement needs of the child is a task required of the court in every case where adoption is involved. Of course the court must be acutely aware of the tragic consequences is which the loss for A has occurred pre-adoption and in such traumatic circumstances. The court is profoundly concerned with how that will continue to impact on A in the short, medium and long term. … Every case requires the child's individual needs to be carefully and forensically examined. But again I am satisfied that those questions lie within the expertise of the social worker and Guardian and that the expert assessment of a child psychiatrist is not necessary for court to carry out its welfare analysis."
The judge concluded that the required evidence on these matters was already available from the local authority social worker and the guardian.
"The court continues to struggle as to how any assessment of A, now aged three, will provide forensically useful evidence … He currently presents as stable. The proposed questions of the expert are in my view highly speculative and academic. They are issues that will need to be assessed as A grows and will require special support and assistance as he develops but this court continues to struggle with how an assessment now will be able to assist in those questions. The crucial question is how his carers will be able to support and ensure his emotional needs are met successfully as and when they develop/emerge. That is a matter for assessment of prospective carers, not of A."
She therefore dismissed the renewed application.
(1) The judge was wrong to rule that the social worker and guardian had sufficient expertise properly to address the impact on A of adoption in the context of his siblings' death.
(2) The judge was wrong to characterise expert opinion on the effect on A of this double loss as "highly speculative" or "academic".
(3) The judge was wrong to conclude in her 14 February 2020 judgment that "the crucial question is how his carers will be able to support…his emotional needs" and that this was a "matter for the assessment of any prospective carers…not of A".
(4) The judge was wrong to rule that CAMHS could effectively address the issue.
LORD JUSTICE POPPLEWELL