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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 >> X and Y (Revocation of Adoption Orders), Re [2024] EWHC 1059 (Fam) (25 April 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2024/1059.html Cite as: [2024] 2 FLR 1080, [2024] 1 WLR 5167, [2024] WLR(D) 207, [2024] EWHC 1059 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Re X and Y (Revocation of Adoption Orders) |
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Ms Elisabeth Richards (instructed by Greens Solicitors) for the First Respondent
The Second Respondent did not attend and was not represented
Mr Timothy Bowe KC and Mr Mark Cooper-Hall (instructed by Whatley Recordon Solicitors) for the Third and Fourth Respondents
Mr Nick Brown (instructed by the Local Authority Legal Department)
for the Fifth Respondent
Hearing date: 6 March 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Lieven DBE :
The chronology
"[Y] wants to stay with Mum:
I've never had the proper love from a mum, but my mum gave birth to me so we have that connection and she has just tried to make sure that the last bit of my childhood has been good.
[X] met with [the social worker] and said she wanted to stay with her father but see [AM] more often as she liked spending time with her."
"[Y] and [X] were removed from parental care at a young age due to concerns in respect of [Y] sustaining a non-accidental physical injury and care proceedings resulted in their being placed for adoption, this severing links to their birth family. The accounts given by [Y] and [X] suggest that they did not receive the safe, consistent and attuned care which they required whilst they were in foster care and those given by their adoptive mother [AM], suggest that [Y] and [X] difficult life experiences, have at least in part, affected their ability to invest in their adoptive placement, which in turn has led to the breakdown of the relationship and adoption with [AM]."
a. X no longer wanted to be 'unadopted.' According to the social worker's statement dated 26 February 2024 X told him on 23 January 2024 that her adoption order could be revoked but that she would in fact be 'happy either way'.
b. Y continued to support AM's application. She has remained clear for some considerable time that she wishes to be 'unadopted.' Furthermore, Y wants to change her surname from AM's surname to BM's surname.
The Law
Statute
"67 Status conferred by adoption
(1) An adopted person is to be treated in law as if born as the child of the adopters or adopter.
…
(3) An adopted person—
(a) if adopted by one of a couple under section 51(2), is to be treated in law as not being the child of any person other than the adopter and the other one of the couple, and
(b) in any other case, is to be treated in law, subject to subsection (4), as not being the child of any person other than the adopters or adopter;
but this subsection does not affect any reference in this Act to a person's natural parent or to any other natural relationship."
"55 Revocation of adoptions on legitimation
(1) Where any child adopted by one natural parent as sole adoptive parent subsequently becomes a legitimated person on the marriage of, or formation of a civil partnership by, the natural parents, the court by which the adoption order was made may, on the application of any of the parties concerned, revoke the order."
"31F Proceedings and decisions
…
(6) The family court has power to vary, suspend, rescind or revive any order made by it, including—
(a) power to rescind an order and re-list the application on which it was made,
(b) power to replace an order which for any reason appears to be invalid by another which the court has power to make, and
(c) power to vary an order with effect from when it was originally made."
The caselaw
"An adoption order has a quite different standing to almost every other order made by a court. It provides the status of the adopted child and of the adoptive parents. The effect of an adoption order is to extinguish any parental responsibility of the natural parents. Once an adoption order has been made, the adoptive parents stand to one another and the child in precisely the same relationship as if they were his legitimate parents, and the child stands in the same relationship to them as to legitimate parents. Once an adoption order has been made the adopted child ceases to be the child of his previous parent and becomes the child for all purposes of the adopters as though he were their legitimate child."
"The act of adoption has always been regarded in this country as possessing a peculiar finality. This is partly because it affects the status of the person adopted, and indeed adoption modifies the most fundamental of human relationships, that of parent and child. It effects a change intended to be permanent and concerning three parties. The first of these are the natural parents of the adopted person, who by adoption divest themselves of all rights and responsibilities in relation to that person. The second party is the adoptive parents, who assume the rights and responsibilities of parents in relation to the adopted person. And the third party is the subject of the adoption, who ceases in law to be the child of his or her natural parents and becomes the child of the adoptive parents."
"An adoption order is not immune from any challenge. A party to the proceedings can appeal against the order in the usual way. The authorities show, I am sure correctly, that where there has been a failure of natural justice, and a party with a right to be heard on the application for the adoption order has not been notified of the hearing or has not for some other reason been heard, the court has jurisdiction to set aside the order and so make good the failure of natural justice. I would also have little hesitation in holding that the court could set aside an adoption order which was shown to have been obtained by fraud."
"There are cases where an adoption order has been set aside by reason of what is known as a procedural irregularity: see In re F. (R.) (An Infant) [1970] 1 Q.B. 385, In re R.A. (Minors) (1974) 4 Fam. Law 182 and In re F. (Infants) (Adoption Order: Validity) [1977] Fam. 165. Those cases concern a failure to effect proper service of the adoption proceedings on a natural parent or ignorance of the parent of the existence of the adoption proceedings. In each case the application to set aside the order was made reasonably expeditiously. It is fundamental to the making of an adoption order that the natural parent should be informed of the application so that she can give or withhold her consent. If she has no knowledge at all of the application then, obviously, a fundamental injustice is perpetrated. I would prefer myself to regard those cases not as cases where the order has been set aside by reason of a procedural irregularity, although that has certainly occurred, but as cases where natural justice has been denied because the natural parent who may wish to challenge the adoption has never been told that it is going to happen. Whether an adoption order can be set aside by reason of fraud which is unrelated to a natural parent's ignorance of the proceedings was not a subject which was relevant to the present appeal...As the case law stood, certainly in 1976, the powers of the court to set aside an adoption order as known to Parliament would, in my view, have been limited to the power to set aside such an order on the basis of a breach of natural justice such as I have described above, and not an inherent power to set aside an adoption order by reason of a mistake or misrepresentation."
"There is no case which has been brought to our attention in which it has been held that the court has an inherent power to set aside an adoption order by reason of a misapprehension or mistake. To allow considerations such as those put forward in this case to invalidate an otherwise properly made adoption order would, in my view, undermine the whole basis on which adoption orders are made, namely that they are final and for life as regards the adopters, the natural parents, and the child. In my judgment Mr. Holman, who appeared as amicus curiae, is right when he submits that it would gravely damage the lifelong commitment of adopters to their adoptive children if there is a possibility of the child, or indeed the parents, subsequently challenging the validity of the order."
"This is a case in which the court has to go back to first principles. Adoption is a statutory process. The law relating to it is very clear. The scope for the exercise of judicial discretion is severely curtailed. Once orders for adoption have been lawfully and properly made, it is only in highly exceptional and very particular circumstances that the court will permit them to be set aside."
"The question, therefore, is whether or not a substantial miscarriage of justice, assuming that this is what has occurred, is or can be sufficient to enable the adoption orders in the present case to be set aside."
"There is no need for me to embark upon any detailed analysis of the case law. For present purposes it is enough to draw attention to a few key propositions: (i) Under the inherent jurisdiction, the High Court can, in an appropriate case, revoke an adoption order. In relation to this jurisdictional issue I unhesitatingly prefer the view shared by Bodey J in In re W (Inherent Jurisdiction: Permission Application: Revocation and Adoption Order), para 6, and Pauffley J in PK v K, para 4, to the contrary view of Parker J in In re PW (Adoption), para 1. (ii) The effect of revoking an adoption order is to restore the status quo ante: see In re W (Adoption Order: Set Aside and Leave to Oppose), paras 11–12. (iii) However, "The law sets a very high bar against any challenge to an adoption order. An adoption order once lawfully and properly made can be set aside 'only in highly exceptional and very particular circumstances'": In re C (A Child) (Adoption: Placement Order), para 44, quoting Webster v Norfolk County Council, para 149. As Pauffley J said in PK v K, para 14: "public policy considerations ordinarily militate against revoking properly made adoption orders and rightly so." (iv) An adoption order regularly made, that is, an adoption order made in circumstances where there was no procedural irregularity, no breach of natural justice and no fraud, cannot be set aside either on the ground of mere mistake (In re B (Adoption: Jurisdiction to Set Aside)) or even if there has been a miscarriage of justice (Webster v Norfolk County Council). (v) The fact that the circumstances are highly exceptional does not of itself justify revoking an adoption order. After all, one would hope that the kind of miscarriage of justice exemplified by Webster v Norfolk County Council is highly exceptional, yet the attempt to have the adoption order set aside in that case failed."
"i) An adoption order effects a change that is, and is intended to be legally permanent. The effect of an adoption order is to extinguish any parental responsibility of the natural parents. Once an adoption order has been made, the adoptive parents stand to one another and the child in precisely the same relationship as if they were his legitimate parents, and the child stands in the same relationship to them as to legitimate parents. Once an adoption order has been made the adopted child ceases to be the child of his previous parent and becomes the child for all purposes of the adopters as though he were their legitimate child.
ii) There are strong public policy reasons for not permitting the revocation of adoption orders once made, grounded in the nature and intended effect of an adoption order but also in the grave damage that would be done to the lifelong commitment of adopters to their adoptive children if there was a possibility of the child, or indeed the parents, subsequently challenging the validity of the order and in the dramatic adverse effect on the number of prospective adopters available if prospective adopters thought that the natural parents could, even in limited circumstances, secure the return of the child after the adoption order was made.
iii) Within this context, the courts discretion under the inherent jurisdiction to revoke a lawfully made adoption order is severely curtailed and can only be exercised in highly exceptional and very particular circumstances.
iv) Those highly exceptional circumstances must comprise more than mistake or misrepresentation or serious injustice and amount to a fundamental breach of natural justice."
"77. The starting point in these applications is the lodestar provided in paragraph 149 in Webster. The position could not be set out more clearly. The court's discretion under the inherent jurisdiction to revoke a lawfully made adoption order is severely curtailed and can only be exercised in 'highly exceptional and very particular circumstances'. The permanent and lifelong nature of adoption orders and the very powerful public policy reasons, as articulated in the cases, underpin this rationale. The cases, Webster included, have given examples of when, on the very particular facts of the case, the discretion has and has not been exercised. Obviously, each case is highly fact dependent. In my judgment, there is no exhaustive category of cases where the court may exercise its discretion, although Webster and other cases make it clear the very steep hill that has to be climbed and why.
78. I also reject the submission that welfare can play no part in the exercise of the court's discretion. The cases demonstrate it clearly has been to a greater or lesser extent, depending on the circumstances of the case (for example Re M, PK and Re O). That approach is not inconsistent with the provisions in s 1 (7) ACA 2002, which expressly includes welfare considerations in applications to revoke an adoption order. It is not necessary for me to determine whether welfare in the exercise of the court's inherent jurisdiction should specifically be guided by the statutory framework for welfare as set out in s 1 ACA 2002, although I agree with the submissions that it should not be inconsistent with it."
"Welfare can, in appropriate cases, be taken into account in deciding whether to exercise the court's discretion where the highly exceptional and particular circumstances of the case justify it (see Re M, Re B, Re PK and Re O). The extent to which it can, or should be taken into account will vary, depending on the circumstances of the particular case."
81. The relevant considerations in this case are as follows:
(1) The order sought in this case is supported by all parties and reflects the factual reality of their respective day to day position, both in the short and long term.
(2) For A she has been living back with her natural family for over two years and shares a home with her natural mother, three younger siblings and her own child. They live and identify as one family.
(3) For B she has been back living within her natural family for over two years. Although, not currently being cared for by Ms T, Ms T continues to exercise de facto parental responsibility in relation to B and B identifies herself as a member of the natural family.
(4) Both A and B feel very strongly about their legal status, they feel very much a part of the natural family and want their legal status and identity to reflect that.
(5) Ms T has directly and indirectly cared and provided for both A and B over the last two years. The child arrangement orders in relation to both A and B in 2019 restored her parental responsibility in relation to both of them. Ms T identifies with A and B as her children and as siblings to her three younger children. Ms T provides a home for A's child, who she regards as her grandchild although at the moment she has no legal relationship with him.
(6) Mr and Mrs X accept the relationship between them and A and B has permanently and irretrievably broken down. They accepted the interim threshold criteria were established in the care proceedings in 2018 and made it clear to Ms N in her recent report their position to no longer wanting to be regarded as the legal parents of A and B."
"Exceptionality
51. It is necessary to address the proposition that it will only be in "very highly exceptional cases" that it will be appropriate for the court to consider a proportionality argument. Such a proposition undoubtedly derives support from the views expressed by Lord Bingham and has been referred to with apparent approval by the EurCtHR in more than one case. Nevertheless, it seems to us to be both unsafe and unhelpful to invoke exceptionality as a guide. It is unhelpful because, as Lady Hale pointed out in argument, exceptionality is an outcome and not a guide. It is unsafe because, as Lord Walker observed in Doherty v Birmingham [2009] 1 AC 367, para 122, there may be more cases than the EurCtHR or Lord Bingham supposed where article 8 could reasonably be invoked by a residential tenant.
52. We would prefer to express the position slightly differently. The question is always whether the eviction is a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim. Where a person has no right in domestic law to remain in occupation of his home, the proportionality of making an order for possession at the suit of the local authority will be supported not merely by the fact that it would serve to vindicate the authority's ownership rights. It will also, at least normally, be supported by the fact that it would enable the authority to comply with its duties in relation to the distribution and management of its housing stock, including, for example, the fair allocation of its housing, the redevelopment of the site, the refurbishing of sub-standard accommodation, the need to move people who are in accommodation that now exceeds their needs, and the need to move vulnerable people into sheltered or warden-assisted housing. Furthermore, in many cases (such as this appeal) other cogent reasons, such as the need to remove a source of nuisance to neighbours, may support the proportionality of dispossessing the occupiers."
"We must construe 'exceptional' as an ordinary, familiar English adjective, and not as a term of art. It describes a circumstance which is such as to form an exception, which is out of the ordinary course, or unusual, or special, or uncommon. To be exceptional a circumstance need not be unique, or unprecedented, or very rare; but it cannot be one that is regularly, or routinely, or normally encountered."
Change of name
The inherent jurisdiction
"100. Before going any further a few general remarks about the inherent jurisdiction may not be out of place. Counsel remind me of Lord Donaldson of Lymington MR's famous description (In re F (Mental Patient: Sterilisation) [1990] 2 AC 1, 13) of the common law – here, the inherent jurisdiction – as the "great safety net which lies behind all statute law, and is capable of filling gaps left by that law, if and insofar as those gaps have to be filled in the interests of society as a whole." But the choice of metaphor is revealing: the inherent jurisdiction is a safety net, not a springboard. And Lord Donaldson would have been the first to acknowledge that the inherent jurisdiction, whatever its theoretical reach, is, in settled practice, recognised as being subject to limitations on what the court can and should do. For an example, see his observations in In re R (A Minor) (Wardship: Criminal Proceedings) [1991] Fam 56.
101. I recognise of course that, as Singer J said in Re SK (Proposed Plaintiff) (An Adult by way of her Litigation Friend) [2004] EWHC 3202 (Fam), [2005] 2 FLR 230, relief can be granted in what he acknowledged was a "novel" case. As he said (para [8]):
"the inherent jurisdiction of the High Court can, in an appropriate case, be relied upon and utilised to provide a remedy ... the inherent jurisdiction now, like wardship has been, is a sufficiently flexible remedy to evolve in accordance with social needs and social values."
102. I emphatically agree. Striking examples are its recent use in cases of forced marriage, female genital mutilation and, more recently radicalisation. So, as I said in Re SA (Vulnerable Adult with Capacity: Marriage) [2005] EWHC 2942 (Fam), [2006] 1 FLR 867, para 45:
"New problems will generate new demands and produce new remedies."
103. But novelty alone does not demand a remedy. Any development of the inherent jurisdiction must be principled and determined by more than the length of the Chancellor's foot (John Selden, Table Talk, 1689; Selden Society, 1927)."
"132. "The third reason why the inherent jurisdiction is not available to assist the applicant is because of the fundamental principle which I summarised in In re X (A Child) (Jurisdiction: Secure Accommodation), In re Y (A Child) (Jurisdiction: Secure Accommodation) [2016] EWHC 2271 (Fam), [2017] Fam 80, where I referred (para 37) to:
"the well known and long-established principle that the exercise of the prerogative – and the inherent jurisdiction is an exercise of the prerogative, albeit the prerogative vested in the judges rather in ministers – is pro tanto ousted by any relevant statutory scheme."
133. The question in that case was whether the inherent jurisdiction could be exercised to put a child in secure accommodation in a case which fell outside the provisions of section 25 of the Children Act 1989. Having gone through the authorities, I said (para 45):
"Section 25 does not, to use Lord Dunedin's phrase, [in Attorney General v De Keyser's Royal Hotel Ltd [1920] AC 508] at p 526, cover "the whole ground", it is not, in contrast to the legislation being considered in B v Forsey 1988 SC (HL) 28, a comprehensive statutory scheme intended to be exhaustive. To have recourse to the inherent jurisdiction in a situation, as here, wholly outside the territorial ambit of the statute, does not, to use Lord Sumption YC's phrase in In re B (A Child) (Reunite International Child Abduction Centre intervening) [2016] AC 606, para 85, "cut across" the statutory scheme, nor, to use Sir John Dyson YC's phrase in R (Child Poverty Action Group) v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2011] 2 AC 15, para 34, would it be "incompatible with" the statutory scheme."
134. Mr Amos referred me to Anderson v Spencer [2018] EWCA Civ 100, [2019] Fam 66. Although it is not apparent that either the Court of Appeal or the judge at first instance (Peter Jackson J, [2016] EWHC 851 (Fam), [2016] Fam 391) had been referred to these earlier authorities, their approach was exactly the same. Holding that the inherent jurisdiction had not been ousted, Peter Jackson J said (para 71(1)):
"The [Family Law Reform Act 1969, as amended] is the only statute concerned with testing for evidence of biological relationships. It is comprehensive in relation to cases falling within its scope … In contrast, the testing of DNA post-mortem falls distinctly outside the scope of the legislation. The FLRA cannot be read purposively or convention-compliantly so as to cover cases of the present kind. I therefore do not accept that a power to give directions for post-mortem DNA testing has been ousted by the Act."
The Court of Appeal agreed (para 40):
"The Act is, of course, comprehensive in relation to cases falling within its ambit … whereas post-mortem testing is, as the judge put it 'distinctly outside the scope of the legislation'."
135. The point was put very pithily by Lieven J in JK v A Local Health Board [2019] EWHC 67 (Fam), (2019) 171 BMLR 184, para 57:
"The inherent jurisdiction cannot be used to simply reverse the outcome under a statutory scheme, which deals with the very situation in issue, on the basis that the court disagrees with the statutory outcome."
136. Of course, on one view this all depends on the degree of generality or specificity with which one chooses to define or describe the ground or scope or ambit of the relevant statutory scheme. In DL there was a bright-line distinction between incapacity and capacity, the relevant legislation dealing exclusively with the former. In In Re X there was similarly a bright-line distinction between secure accommodation in England and secure accommodation in Scotland, the relevant legislation dealing exclusively with the former. In Anderson v Spencer there was a bright-line distinction between testing inter vivos and testing post mortem, the relevant legislation dealing exclusively with the former.
137. The legislation with which I am here concerned is rather different. Between them, the 1973 Act and the 1989 Act provide a comprehensive statutory scheme dealing, along with much else, with the circumstances in which a child, including, as here, an adult child, can make a financial claim against a living parent (I put the point this way to make clear that I have not overlooked section 1(1)(c) of the Inheritance (Provision for Family and Dependants) Act 1975). More specifically, the legislation, in its general reach, applies to the applicant, as to every adult child, and is comprehensive in relation to cases falling within its ambit. Furthermore, as Mr Warshaw and Mr Viney point out, the legislation deals explicitly with the very claims the applicant seeks to make; indeed, in the case of the 1989 Act it explicitly prohibits the claim he seeks to pursue. There is accordingly, in my judgment, no scope for recourse to the inherent jurisdiction. To exercise the inherent jurisdiction in these circumstances would simply be to do what Lieven J has rightly said is impermissible.
138. For all these reasons it is quite clear, in my judgment, that the inherent jurisdiction is not available to the applicant."
Submissions
Conclusions