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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> P (A Child) (Interim Separation) [2021] EWCA Civ 499 (06 April 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2021/499.html Cite as: [2021] EWCA Civ 499 |
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ON APPEAL FROM LIVERPOOL FAMILY COURT
HHJ Greensmith
Case No: LV20C02350
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE EDIS
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Re P (a Child) (Interim Separation) |
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Mr Daniel Reilly (instructed by Watsons Solicitors) for the First Respondent Mother
Mr Stephen Mallinson (instructed by Nyland & Beattie Solicitors) for the Second Respondent Father
Mrs Ruth Scarisbrick (of Bell Lamb & Joynson Solicitors) for the Third Respondent Child
Hearing date: 6th April 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Peter Jackson:
"It is expected that during the latter stages of the assessment M would function with minimal support, including CCTV being removed and having unlimited supervised time out. However, towards the final stage of the assessment staff intervention appears to have increased; staff on a frequent, almost daily, basis have had to attend the apartment to prompt M to meet C's basic care needs. Due to the concerns present within the 12 weeks of the assessment, M has not been granted any unsupervised time out; it has therefore been difficult to assess M's independent abilities within the community."
The report also referred to occasions when the mother displayed verbally threatening behaviour that required the staff to remove C from her care. Its conclusion was that C could not return to the community with his mother.
"C has been placed in his M's care since birth one way or another. C is now 9 months old. Separating child from his M's care would be traumatic both for M and child.
M is a person with significant mental health difficulties, difficulties which need support, and this is a person who needs nurturing rather than criticising. The current placement has acted in the court's view in a manner which needs serious consideration as to whether it was reached proportionately as a provider of professional services… M has behaved in the way that she has for a considerable period of time. The unit knew what the M's mental health was and it knows what her limitations are. If it is the case that the M's behaviour has deteriorated since Mr T has joined the placement then the simple answer to that would be for Mr T to leave the placement and not the M. I and the court would be very disappointed if this provider was to refuse to continue to provide care for the M and Mr T and C before this matter can next come before the court. If the provider will not accommodate C and his mother and Mr T and Mr T's presence is by no means secure then I consider that it is a reasonable step for the LA to take to provide support for the M in her home and to provide any furniture or basic needs that she requires to secure that placement. The cost has been brought to the court's attention of £8000. The court expects the LA to take this on a short term basis possible week to week. The court has to consider whether it is a reasonable alternative and in my view it is.
I turn now to separation as fundamental issue: court does not have the evidence to enable it to make a decision in an informed way as to whether separation as a fundamental issue is necessary. It has not been adjudicated on judicially and it needs to be adjudicated upon judicially … The judge who next hears this needs to be equipped with that information. I am not approving the LA's plan of removal and I have made it plain why."
The Judge gave directions for the matter to return for a one-hour hearing before another judge on Friday 9 April.
Lord Justice Edis