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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> In the matter of Thomas (Care order) [2018] JRC 081B (03 May 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2018/2018_081B.html Cite as: [2018] JRC 81B, [2018] JRC 081B |
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Before : |
T. J. Le Cocq, Esq., Deputy Bailiff, and Jurats Crill and Blampied |
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Between |
Minister for Health and Social Services |
Applicant |
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And |
A (the mother) |
Respondent |
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IN THE MATTER OF THOMAS (CARE ORDER)
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE ADOPTION (JERSEY) LAW 1961
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE CHILDREN (JERSEY) LAW 2002
Advocate P. F. Byrne for the Applicant.
Advocate C. Hall for the Respondent.
Advocate C. R. G. Davies for Thomas (the child).
Ms Elsa Fernandes as Guardian.
judgment
the deputy bailiff:
1. On the 8th October, 2014, the Court made an order ("the freeing order") freeing Thomas (this is not his real name) ("the child") for adoption.
2. On the 6th March, 2018, this Court made an order revoking the freeing order and, simultaneously, granting to the Minister a full care order pursuant to Article 24 of the Children (Jersey) Law 2002 ("the Children Law").
3. In brief the position is that the child suffers from autism and this has given rise to a significant impediment in finding adoptive parents for him. Because of this situation the Minister applies to revoke the freeing order and to take the child into his care under a final care order.
4. As this is, so it appears to us, the first time that such an application has been made in Jersey we will refer to the legal principles involved.
5. On the making of a freeing order the Minister becomes the sole holder of parental responsibility as if he were an adopter and any care order in existence prior to that time is extinguished.
6. Article 12(5) of the Adoption (Jersey) Law 1961 ("the Adoption Law") provides:
7. Article 20(2) of the Adoption Law provides:
8. The parents' interest in the child does not end, however, as Article 12A of the Adoption Law provides that the Minister shall inform the parent whether or not the child has been adopted. Article 12B of the Adoption Law provides, under sub-paragraph (i), as follows:
9. Article 12B(3) provides that the revocation of an Article 12 order operates to extinguish the parental responsibility given to the Minister and to give parental responsibility amongst other things to the child's mother. Article 12B(iv) makes it clear that a revocation does not revive any order previously made under the Children Law.
10. Somewhat curiously the Adoption Law does not provide for an application for a revocation of a freeing order to be made by the Minister. Although Article 3 of the Adoption Law provides that in reaching any decision relating to the adoption of the child the paramount consideration of the Court, the Minister and the Adoption service must be that child's welfare throughout his or her life, there is no statutory mechanism by which the Minister can, in pursuing that welfare, decide that a freeing order should be revoked and make an application to the Court to that end.
11. This is not dissimilar to the position that is obtained in the United Kingdom under the Adoption Act of 1976 and children who were freed for adoption but were not thereafter adopted became referred to, informally, as 'statutory orphans'.
12. Absent a statutory basis the Minister applies under the inherent jurisdiction of the Court to revoke the freeing order.
13. Were that order to be granted and for it to stand alone the effect would be that the child would be returned to the parental responsibility of his mother. In this case such an outcome is neither practical nor desirable.
14. The mother did not oppose the original freeing for adoption order and makes no claim to have the child returned to her parental responsibility.
15. The statutory position in the United Kingdom is now different but the courts there have previously considered the difficulty produced when a child is freed to adoption but adoption has proved impossible.
16. In Re G (A Minor) (Adoption: Freeing Order) [1997] 2 All ER 534, a decision of the House of Lords, Lord Browne-Wilkinson said this:
17. The case in question involved the refusal by the lower courts to revoke a freeing order because to have done so would have discharged the child's care to an inappropriate carer which the lower court felt that it had no means to prevent. Lord Browne-Wilkinson also said this:
18. As to the matter of the Court's inherent jurisdiction to revoke the freeing order, in Re J (Freeing for Adoption) [2000] 2 Flr 58 Black J said this:
19. Black J went on to say:
20. It seems to us that these principles apply to the Jersey statutory position and to the inherent jurisdiction of this Court in that regard.
21. If in our view it is right for the welfare of the child to revoke the freeing order then this Court has an inherent jurisdiction, on an application by the Minister, so to do.
22. Furthermore, as referred to Re G above, it is open to the Court, if the appropriate statutory criteria are met, to make any order that it could otherwise have done on an application by the Minister under the Children Law at the same time as exercising its inherent jurisdiction to revoke any freeing order.
23. Were it otherwise this would in our view perpetuate a position whereby the Court could not act in the best interests of a child in certain circumstances and we see no reason why we should be so constrained.
24. The Minister applies for a full care order to have effect immediately upon any revocation of the freeing order. The provisions relating to the making of a care order are well known and we do not need to set them out in this judgment. Suffice to say that the threshold statement, to which there was no challenge, provides as follows:
"1. The child is likely to suffer significant harm attributable to the fact the mother does not want to care for the child:
(a) The mother does not have any relationship with the child, she has not had contact with the child for over three years;
(b) The mother has not sought, nor wishes, to have any relationship with the child. The mother does not feel able to resume care of the child nor is she requesting direct contact at this time.
(c) The mother has not proposed or made arrangements for any alternative family placement for the child. There is no one identified within the child's biological family who have offered to be considered as long-term carers for the child. The child's father is unknown."
25. In this case the child has been in the care of the Minister for a significant period and had been freed for adoption, as we indicated, in 2014. It is clear when the freeing order was made that the Court anticipated that the child would be adopted in short order. In the judgment of the Court of the 3rd November, 2014, (In the matter of Thomas (Care order) [2014] JRC 210) originally freeing the child for adoption Sir Michael Birt, Bailiff (as he then was) said this:
26. In the context of those remarks, it is regrettable to say the least that it is only now that the Court is being asked to regularise the position where this child is concerned.
27. However, we heard evidence from the social worker in the case who has reviewed the file and we are satisfied that in this case very substantial efforts were made to find suitable adoptive parents for the child. This was to a great extent made difficult because of the child's autism.
28. In our view, however, the matter should have been returned before Court earlier than this so that the position with regard to the child could have been regularised and some form of permanency achieved. It does not seem right to the Court that more than three years have passed since that order was made, three times the statutory duration, before engagement with the Court. We do not say that there are not some cases in which such a delay might be seen to be appropriate but we nonetheless express our concern in this case.
29. That being said we are wholly satisfied that it is in the child's interest to exercise our inherent jurisdiction and revoke the freeing order.
30. We have heard from the guardian who is entirely supportive of this course and the mother has been represented before us and again there is no objection made. The mother accepts that she simply cannot offer what the child needs and therefore there is no objection made to a care order.
31. It seems to us the threshold is met in these circumstances, unusual as they are, and that for obvious reasons no order is not an option in this case.
32. This is an appropriate case for a full care order and accordingly we made that order.