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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> DM, Re (Rev 1) [2014] EWHC 3119 (Fam) (29 September 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2014/3119.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 3119 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Royal Courts of Justice, Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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IN THE MATTER OF DM |
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1st Floor, Quality House, 6-9 Quality Court
Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1HP.
Tel No: 020 7067 2900, Fax No: 020 7831 6864, DX: 410 LDE
Email: [email protected]
Website: www.martenwalshcherer.com
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hayden:
i) interference with the mother/baby relationship following the birth, to a degree which involved some unspecified level of forced separation and, potentially, removal of the child;
ii) that the mother should not be informed of key aspects of the plan.
I phrase the ambit of the relief sought carefully, because it seems to me that, whilst the local authority thought long and hard about the birth plan, it had not managed to reflect fully on the practicalities, extent of their intervention or the proportionality of the measures required.
(1) Does she have the capacity to make decisions as to the contact she has with professionals?
(2) Does she have the capacity to make decisions in relation to the safe management of the birth of her baby and particularly in deciding whether and when to undergo an induction?
(3) Does she have the capacity to make decisions as to the treatment that she should receive following the birth of the baby?
"Full inter-agency co-operation, including sharing information and participating in decision making is essential whenever a possible care or supervision case is identified. The local authority should lead by example and be prepared to make full use of the new provisions on co-operation between agencies in sections 47 and 27. A multi-disciplinary, multi-agency case conference should always be held, based on the principles and arrangements set out in Working Together and local guidelines on joint planning and co-operation, and it should seek to recommend an agreed course of action.
Parents, the child, (if of sufficient age and understanding) and others with a legitimate interest in the child's future should be involved wherever possible. Involvement will be more than just attendance; families should be able to participate in the decision making process and they will need to be kept informed of decisions as they are made, the reasoning behind those decisions and their likely consequences.
No decision to initiate proceedings should be taken without clear evidence that provision of services for the child and his family (which may include an accommodation placement voluntarily arranged under section 20) has failed or would be likely to fail to meet the child's needs adequately and there is no suitable person prepared to apply to take over care of the child under a residence order."
"Parents should be informed of case conferences and should be invited to attend for all or part of the conference, unless in the view of the Chairman of the conference their presence will preclude full and proper consideration of the child's interests."
These are the principles that underpin the core right of every adult facing a plan, which envisages the removal of a child, namely to be consulted and involved in the process.
The status of the unborn child.
"That said however, how can a forced invasion of a competent adult's body against her will even for the most laudable of motives (the preservation of life) be ordered without irremediably damaging the principle of self-determination? When human life is at stake the pressure to provide an affirmative answer authorising unwanted medical intervention is very powerful. Nevertheless the autonomy of each individual requires continuing protection even, perhaps particularly, when the motive for interfering with it is readily understandable, and indeed to many would appear commendable: hence the importance of remembering Lord Reid's warning against making 'even minor concessions'. If it has not already done so medical science will no doubt one day advance to the stage when a very minor procedure undergone by an adult would save the life of his or her child, or perhaps the life of a child of a complete stranger. The refusal would rightly be described as unreasonable, the benefit to another human life would be beyond value, and the motives of the doctors admirable. If however the adult were compelled to agree, or rendered helpless to resist, the principle of autonomy would be extinguished." [page 742]
"… a competent woman who has the capacity to decide may, for religious reasons, other reasons, or for no reasons at all, choose not to have medical intervention, even though … the consequence may be the death or serious handicap of the child she bears or her own death. She may refuse to consent to the anaesthesia injection in the full knowledge that her decision may significantly reduce the chance of her unborn child being born alive. The foetus up to the moment of birth does not have any separate interests capable of being taken into account when a court has to consider an application for a declaration in respect of a caesarean section operation. The [law] does not have the jurisdiction to declare that such medical intervention is lawful to protect the interests of the unborn child even at the point of birth."
That powerful elucidation of the law remains the starting point in all applications of this kind.
"In an appropriate case the court can, and indeed should, in the public interest and for the proper protection of a public authority, grant that authority an anticipatory declaration that a proposed course of conduct is either lawful or, as the case may be, unlawful"