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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> L (A Child), Re [2013] EWCA Civ 179 (13 March 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/179.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 179 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE FAMILY DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT
MRS JUSTICE PARKER
FD11P50007
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE McFARLANE
and
LORD JUSTICE DAVIS
____________________
Re: L (A child) |
____________________
Miss Anna McKenna (instructed by Wandsworth Legal Services) for the First Respondent
Miss Carole Parry-Jones instructed by NYAS for the Fourth Respondent
Hearing date : 19 February 2013
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice McFarlane:
Background
"These are the things I do not know:
1. Where M is at school;
2. Whether she is attending school four days a week or five days a week or less;
3. The address where she lives when she is attending school;
4. Who is looking after her;
5. How she is doing at school;
6. Why she is attending this particular school;
7. What surname she is registered under;
8. What she knows about her background;
9. What professional assessment might reveal about M, since Mrs S has refused to allow any assessment without her present or nearby within earshot;
10. What professional assessment might reveal about M's relationship with RL, since Mrs S has refused to allow M to be seen with RL without her present."
"In this case I have overwhelming evidence that it is in M's interests for her to have a relationship with her mother independently of her grandmother. I am in no doubt that for Mrs S to be present while RL sees M will become increasingly strange and stressful for her. The quality of contact is likely to be poor. M will be increasingly aware of the tensions, and Mrs S's insistence on being present or within earshot, and on bursting in when things she does not like are discussed will be oppressive and worrying. The capacity for active harm in the circumstances of this case is extremely high."
"Notwithstanding Wandsworth's view as at 17th September 2010, I am of the view that M is suffering harm in the care of the grandmother and Mr Feehan, on behalf of the Guardian, does not seriously challenge that view."
"The battle tactics have changed and M is being overtly manipulated in what I can only describe as a campaign. The only explanation for the change in attitude from a compliant child to a resistant one is that the grandmother had influenced M to take an adverse view about [the contact centre]."
"I said at the time [May 2010] that I accepted that RL was the more volatile and that Mrs S did not show her anger. I have to say, at a number of hearings since I handed down that judgment, I have seen a different side to Mrs S including last week when she has shown quite frightening anger and has shouted and behaved in a most intimidating manner. Whether that behaviour is under her control or not, I do not know."
"Mrs S's behaviour last week was alarming in the extreme. She made a number of different submissions to me, including interrupting other parties. She made a number of very personal comments about me. This is something which is, I am afraid, par for the course in this case but it seems to be that it is becoming more extreme….towards the end of what were intended to be final submissions she had the most extraordinary tantrum. This is not the first time this has happened, but this was more extreme, more alarming and more aggressive and she displayed less control than she has ever before. She repeatedly shouted saying 'take the child, she should go into care' and, in the end, she stormed out of court and refused to come back."
"I am very alarmed about the frequent changes of school, I am very alarmed at Mrs S's preoccupation of the musical ability of this little girl, right from the pre-school stage, because that was the reason why she was trekking her down to Exeter on a weekly basis at the age of 4 and three quarters, and I am very concerned at the emphasis on intellectual rather than emotional development. On the other hand, I know very well how difficult it is to remove a child to a different home at this stage, and how overwhelming must be the justification for so doing. Of course, if I even breathe a word about these prospects I am accused of undermining the placement, and it gets fed back to M and it increases her distress. Mrs S has talked about "double binds". I feel that I am in one myself. This is not just what I think, it is what everyone else thinks as well."
And then at paragraph 29:
"I find the question of the way forward almost impossibly difficult. I recognise that a life in foster care for this child could be very difficult indeed. She has the benefit of a middle class home and she has so far had the benefit of a reasonable education, although disrupted. She has the benefit of food, warmth, care, and all the good things her grandparents do, in particular her step-grandfather, who I think does far more than the grandmother, and is supportive, familiar and comforting. At the same time, I think the social services department needs to have a very careful and in-depth look at what is in her interest. A number of strategies can be considered, short term as well as long term, in order to break this particular cycle. No one is recommending that to me at the moment. I could not put my hand on my heart and say that things are sufficiently bad at the moment for me even to begin to suggest that that is a step that should be taken. As I say, it is made almost impossible for me even to articulate these thoughts because of the use that is made of them. I do think however that all options may need to be considered.
I am, as I said, very concerned that matters are getting worse rather than better. I repeat, as I have said so many times before, that I do not see the contact problems in this case as being isolated from the other problems. The conflict with the authority and those that disagree with Mrs S is really compulsive all the way through her interactions with the world".
14th December 2012: Interim Care Order
a) Making an interim care order with a plan for immediate removal was not justified and was plainly wrong;
b) The judge failed sufficiently to weigh up the negative impact upon M from a precipitate removal from home and failed to afford paramount consideration to M's welfare;
c) It was, in any event, plainly wrong to make an eight week order;
d) There was no basis on which the hearing to determine the application for an interim care order should have been conducted:
i) Without notice;
ii) In closed session;
iii) Without providing to Mr and Mrs S:
(a) a statement setting out the basis on which the threshold criteria were said to be satisfied;
(b) a copy of the application;
(c) information about the proposed care plan;
(d) a copy of the s 7 report;
iv) Without giving Mr and Mrs S an opportunity to be represented;
e) The judge failed to give adequate reasons for proceeding as she did;
f) In making the order that was made, the judge effectively determined the issues that will fall to be determined at a final hearing.
a) The use of a s 37 direction in circumstances where the local authority had already provided a s 7 report and had determined to issue an application for a care order. Mr Tolson submitted that, in the procedural circumstances of this case, the use of s 37 was an impermissible device;
b) The failure to comply with statutory procedure and practice (for example the Public Law Outline) designed to ensure a fair hearing;
c) The without notice hearing was so short, with no substantive submissions being made, that it is apparent that the judge had pre-ordained the outcome and the order that was to be made;
d) There was no equality of arms.
The case for an interim care order
"Whilst I was talking to M about contact with her mother and whilst she was expressing her feelings, Mrs S stormed into the room and asked in an angry voice if I wanted more tea and grabbed my cup (half filled with tea still) and stood at the entrance of the room and accused me of being a 'liar' and asked how 'dare' I come into her home and tell lies to a child. She repeated this several times. She went on to say that I am manipulative and that I scored zero. I noticed M rocking in her chair whilst Mrs S was venting her angry feelings."
"Mrs S accused me of lying because I told M that her mother wants to see her. She asked me how I truly knew this was the case."
Without notice hearing
"Miss McKenna: You can make a s 37 placing the child into our care, take the matter immediately and hear inter partes arguments.
Mrs Justice Parker: Including an application for discharge. Could I discharge the care order on that basis?"
On notice hearing
"I was prepared to entertain an application ex parte because I am satisfied that in the light of what I have been told that there is a risk to M of being emotionally harmed, and to agree to the local authority proposal for a care order. I have made an interim care order ex parte pursuant to section 37 to the local authority. This is to safeguard M for the immediate future. I am prepared to hear submissions by Mrs S, M and Mr S as to why I can't discharge the care order. I can sit tomorrow, or Monday if necessary."
"Oh yes, I mean you've got to work out how to destroy this child lock stock and barrel, haven't you? All's fair and square. I mean, you're being paid to destroy her so you ought to be allowed to get on with the job perfectly. Go ahead."
Discussion
'I was prepared to entertain an application ex parte because I am satisfied in the light of what I have been told that there is a risk to M of being emotionally harmed …. I have made an interim care order ex parte pursuant to s 37. This is to safeguard M for the immediate future'.
i) 'Pursuant to s 37 Children Act 1989 [M] shall be placed in the interim care of the London Borough of Wandsworth pending the conclusion of an inter-partes hearing of the local authority's application for an interim care order.
ii) The inter-partes hearing of the application by the London Borough of Wandsworth shall commence forthwith upon the conclusion of this ex parte hearing.'
That order was drawn up some time after the hearing, but it must have been approved by the judge and it is entirely compatible with what can now be seen from the transcript.
'… it appears to the court that it may be appropriate for a care or supervision order to be made …' [s 37(1)]
'… [the court] is satisfied that there are reasonable grounds for believing that the circumstances with respect to the child are as mentioned in s 31(2) [s 38(2)].
The 'circumstances … mentioned in s 31(2)' are that the court is satisfied:
(a) 'that the child concerned is suffering, or is likely to suffer, significant harm; and
(b) that the harm, or likelihood of harm, is attributable to:
(i) the care given to the child, or likely to be given to him if the order were not made, not being what it would be reasonable to expect a parent to give to him; or
(ii) the child's being beyond parental control.'
The threshold in s 37(1) is necessarily low ('may be appropriate'). The threshold in s 38(2) is higher ('reasonable grounds for believing') but not as high as that in s 31(2). The task facing Mr Tolson on appeal is the need to establish that the judge was plainly wrong in holding that the thresholds in s 37(1) and in s 38(2) were met on the facts of this case as they were known to be on 14th December 2012.
'… separation is only to be ordered if the child's safety demands immediate separation' and '…is not to be sanctioned unless the child's safety requires immediate protection'.
a) The use of s 37 as the foundation for making the interim care order;
b) The making of an interim care order at a without notice hearing.
a) The fact that the judge had the s 7 report which, in all but name, delivered that which a s 37 was designed to achieve. The use of s 37 was therefore, it is submitted, an empty sham;
b) In those circumstances, the use of s 37 was impermissible;
c) The local authority should have issued an application for either an emergency protection order or an interim care order in compliance with Family Procedure Rules 2010, PD12A (the Public Law Outline) requirements for pre-proceedings preparation, including sending to Mrs S a 'pre-proceedings letter' and disclosure to her of social work statements;
d) S 37 does not provide a local authority with some new or different mechanism by which to obtain an interim care order.
Lord Justice Davis
Lord Justice Thorpe