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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> E (A Child : Contact) [2015] EWHC 180 (Fam) (29 January 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2015/180.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 180 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(In Private)
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JB | Applicant | |
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KS | Respondent | |
- and - | ||
E (a child acting by his Children's Gaurdian) |
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MR. H. KHAN appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
MISS S. ANNING appeared on behalf of the Guardian.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE HAYDEN:
(1) The intention of the parties as to their respective roles in E's life prior to his birth;
(2) Whether prior to his conception and birth either of the parents knowingly misled the other as to their intentions;
(3) What was agreed about decision-making for E prior to his conception and birth?
(4) The extent to which the parties were able to work cooperatively prior to and following E's birth;
(5) What the applicant told his parents/colleagues and what they have now been told about his relationship with the mother;
(6) Whether there was an initial agreement that the applicant should be on the birth certificate.
"I am cautious in reaction to Mr Howard's repeated submissions that great weight should be attached to adult autonomy and the plans that adults make for future relationships between the child and the relevant adults. Human emotions are powerful and inconstant. What the adults look forward to before undertaking the hazards of conception, birth and the first experience of parenting may prove to be illusion or fantasy. B and C may have had the desire to create a two parent lesbian nuclear family completely intact and free from fracture resulting from contact with the third parent. But such desires may be essentially selfish and may later insufficiently weigh the welfare and developing rights of the child that they have created. No doubt they saw the advantages of A as first an ideal known father and later as a husband to ease problems in the maternal extended family. It would have been naïve not to foresee that the long term consequences held disadvantages that had to be balanced against the immediate advantages".
"There are a number of authorities which are useful in demonstrating how the courts have approached the issue of parental responsibility with single sex families. What follows is by no means a comprehensive review of the authorities, but rather an attempt to isolate aspects that may be of assistance in the present case. It has been said many times that there is no universal solution and that each case depends on its individual facts, but a consideration of previous decisions can help to shape thinking appropriately.
43. Re G (Residence: Same-Sex Partner) (supra) is one of the catalogue of relevant authorities. The litigation in that case continued and a later issue between the same parties found its way to the House of Lords as In re G (Children)(Residence: Same-sex Partner) [2006] UKHL 43 [2006] 1 WLR 2305. Baroness Hale there considered the weight to be attached to the fact that one party is both the natural and legal parent of the child and the other is not. In a well-known passage in her speech, beginning at §32, she considered the different ways in which a person may be a parent to a child dealing with legal parenthood (§32), genetic parenthood (§33), gestational parenthood (§34) and social and psychological parenthood (§35).
44. In A v B and C (Lesbian Co-Parents: Role of Father) [2012] EWCA Civ 285 [2012] 2 FLR 607, this court declined to give generalised guidance for this area of family law and stressed that: 'In the end the only principle is the paramountcy of child welfare.' (§23 and see also §39).
45. Thorpe LJ rejected the submission that great weight should be attached to adult autonomy and the plans that the adults had made for future relationships between the child and the relevant adults observing (§27) that human emotions are powerful and inconstant and that faced with reality, plans may prove to be illusion or fantasy. The adults' preconception intentions can be a relevant factor but they are not determinative and what must dictate is not the interests of the adults but the welfare of the children (§44). As I said (§45), it is likely to be important in deciding what is in the child's best interests to identify the source of the child's nurture, stability and security. Some children are used to an amalgam of parenting, some less so. Disruptions to the child's security and stability, even if arising indirectly because one of the adults is distressed, are relevant as potentially harmful to the child. Particular consideration also has to be given to the part that each adult can play in the child's life (§46).
46. I said that I would return to Re G; Re Z (Children: Sperm Donors: Leave to Apply for Children Act Orders). I need not go into all the intricacies of that case. It suffices to know that a man provided sperm to a female couple who were civil partners. The first child was born prior to the 2008 Act and the father had not infrequent contact. The second child was born after the 2008 Act came into force. The father had contact with that child too. He was entitled to apply for section 8 orders in relation to the first child as of right but the 2008 Act provisions meant that he was not considered the legal father of the younger child and he therefore required leave to apply for section 8 orders in relation to that child, which he sought from Baker J. He wished to apply for contact but also, as he could only acquire parental responsibility through a residence order, for 'parental responsibility/joint residence'. The decision is of importance because it was thought to be the first involving an application for leave to apply for section 8 orders by men who were the biological fathers but, by virtue of the 2008 Act, not the legal fathers of their children. The issues requiring determination exposed the tension between the legal position as to fatherhood and the biological reality.
47. Baker J examined the policy underpinning the relevant provisions of the 2008 Act which he considered to be 'simply to put lesbian couples and their children in exactly the same legal position as other types of parent and children' (§114), acknowledging that alternative family forms without fathers are sufficient to meet a child's needs (§113). He observed (§116) that as a matter of law, it was right to describe the father as a 'stranger' to the child but that in another sense, he was not a stranger. He had been chosen by the lesbian couple to father their children, they had involved him in the preparations for birth and allowed him regular and frequent contact thereafter. Baker J said that whilst the 2008 Act denied the biological father the status of legal parent it did not prevent the lesbian couple, in whom legal parenthood was vested, encouraging or enabling the biological father to become a psychological parent. So, he accepted the submission that 'the potential importance of genetic and psychological parenthood is not automatically extinguished by the removal of the status of legal parenthood, and that social and psychological relationships amounting to parenthood can and often do co-exist with legal parenthood' (§119).
"Parental responsibility is a question of status and is different in concept from the orders which may be made under section 8 in Part II of the Children Act. The grant of the application declares the status of the applicant as the father of that child. It has important implications for a father whose child might for example be the subject of an adoption application or a Hague Convention application. In each of those examples, a father with parental responsibility would have the right to be heard on the application. He would have the right to be consulted on schooling, serious medical problems, and other important occurrences in a child's life".
Conclusions:
i. The parties have a relationship now spanning many years in which they have shown a real capacity to work cooperatively towards a shared objective, both prior to and after the birth of their child;
ii. The parent's capacity for cooperation is plainly based on a core mutual respect which continues to be evident and produced an agreed and thoughtful contact schedule;
iii. At very least both parties agreed from the outset that this father will be known to this child and play a part in his life. That relationship has, as a fact, now been established and has shown to be a very positive one for the child;
iv. The parents share common aspiration for the child's future, both agreeing that the mother, as primary carer, is likely to take the key decisions in E's life;
v. The father is highly unlikely to use a Parental Responsibility Order to undermine the mother's care or to seek to countermand her decision making. He is likely to resort to court proceedings only as a measure of last resort;
vi. The father provides financial support for his son based on a Child Support Agency calculation, which application was made by the mother.
vii. The father is now registered on the child's birth certificate.
viii. The order merely reflects the proper legal status of the father in his son's life and properly equips him to exercise it, particularly in circumstances where an emergency of some kind might arise;
ix. To fail to make a Parental Responsibility Order at this juncture would inevitably lead to protraction of the litigation which is in inherently undesirable;
x. The child's Guardian supports the making of a Parental Responsibility Order.