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England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) >> SZ v Birmingham City Council & Ors [2021] EWFC 15 (02 March 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/HCJ/2021/15.html Cite as: [2021] EWFC 15 |
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BM20C07010 |
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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SZ |
Applicant |
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-v- |
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BIRMINGHAM CITY COUNCIL |
First Respondent |
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- and- |
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DK |
Second Respondent |
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-and- |
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BD and SD (children acting by their Guardian) |
Third and Fourth Respondents |
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Ms Adele Cameron-Douglas (instructed by Birmingham City Council) for the First Respondent
The Second Respondent did not appear and was not represented
Mr Narinder Singh of Anthony Collins Solicitors LLP for the Third and Fourth Respondents
Hearing date: 25 February 2021
The case was heard remotely using Microsoft Teams
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mostyn:
"Through all the work completed with K he has said his biggest fear is his father finding him and killing him. His wishes and feelings are sought routinely by the care staff and he continues to report the same fear. B would not travel independently due to the same fear of her father. On one occasion she became very frightened as she saw a man that she thought was her father. At the age of sixteen her mother had to travel on the bus with her to escort her to school as she was afraid to travel alone."
"Both B and K are not emotionally ready at this stage, I have spoken with the care workers who have built good relationships with S, I have spoken to previous Social Worker's TESS worker and the Independent Reviewing Officer. All share the view that even just telling the children about this application could have a detrimental affect on their emotional regulation and home stability."
"Considering the welfare and best interests of B and S, Birmingham Children's Trust neither supports the children being informed of the father's application or any form of contact between B, K and their father. Birmingham Children's Trust request the Sec 34 order made to refuse contact remains in place. Birmingham Children's Trust are not proposing any further assessment of the father for the purpose of contact."
"The Children's Guardian and the writer recognise the reasoning behind the local authority recommendation that the children are not informed of the applicant father's request for contact. It is against that context that the Children's Guardian has not sought to ascertain directly from the children their wishes and feelings in respect of the application."
"It is important to recognise the nature of the proceedings before Judge Cliffe. These were family proceedings, not ordinary civil proceedings where the function of the judge is in large part to act as the umpire determining the competing cases put before him by the litigants. In ordinary civil litigation the circumstances in which a judge can prematurely stop a case are limited, albeit less limited now in accordance with the Civil Procedure Rules than was once upon a time the case. But these are not ordinary civil proceedings, they are family proceedings, where it is fundamental that the judge has an essentially inquisitorial role, his duty being to further the welfare of the children which is, by statute, his paramount consideration. It has long been recognised – and authority need not be quoted for this proposition–that for this reason a judge exercising the family jurisdiction has a much broader discretion than he would in the civil jurisdiction to determine the way in which an application of the kind being made by the father should be pursued. In an appropriate case he can summarily dismiss the application as being, if not groundless, lacking enough merit to justify pursuing the matter. He may determine that the matter is one to be dealt with on the basis of written evidence and oral submissions without the need for oral evidence. He may, as Judge Cliffe did in the present case, decide to hear the evidence of the Applicant and then take stock of where the matter stands at the end of the evidence."
"1. LA to file statement within 14 days setting out its risk assessment as to the basis upon which the children would suffer harm if even told about the application, to include primary evidence relied upon.
2. F to file a statement within 7 days thereafter setting out his proposals for contact including the letter he says should be shared with them;
3. Initial analysis from the Guardian within 21 days thereafter to include if and how the children should be told about the application and how their wishes and feelings might be obtained."
Conclusions on the father's applications
"Where a child is being looked after by a local authority, the authority shall, unless it is not reasonably practicable or consistent with his welfare, endeavour to promote contact between the child and his parents."
If the father were to send to the local authority a letter for his children, then the local authority will have to make its decision as to whether to pass on that letter to them or otherwise apprise them of their father's concern. In so doing, it would have to apply the duty set out in paragraph 15(1). It could only refuse to do so if it were objectively and reasonably satisfied that promotion of contact was either not reasonably practicable or was not consistent with the children's welfare. Thus, I agree with Ms Cameron-Douglas's argument that the relief that is being sought by the father adds nothing to the reasonable expectations which accrue to him from the local authority's duty as set out above.
The local authority's application
"a. M has sustained positive changes since the final care order was made;
b. M's engagement has always been good and continues to be so. She is accommodating of the LA's involvement;
c. B has lived with M since 2018 and is settled there. The home environment M has created is stable, warm and B is observed to be happy and comfortable there;
d. M has a good level of insight and provides B with good care;
e. B herself has expressed that she is ready to live a normal life without social work involvement;
f. the LA are confident in M's ability to seek support in the future if required; and
g. the LA's only concern relates to F – a situation which is mitigated by way of F residing in the Czech Republic, and that Interpol have been alerted and F has informed the court that he is unable in any event to travel to this country."