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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 >> CM v Blackburn With Darwen Borough Council [2014] EWCA Civ 1479 (18 November 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/1479.html Cite as: [2015] 2 FLR 290, [2015] 2 FCR 116, [2015] 1 WLR 2441, [2014] EWCA Civ 1479, [2014] WLR(D) 494, [2015] Fam Law 18 |
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ON APPEAL FROM Preston County Court
Her Honour Judge Singleton QC
DI13C00154
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RYDER
and
LORD JUSTICE UNDERHILL
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CM |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Blackburn with Darwen Borough Council [1] |
Respondents |
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- and - |
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M (A Child) [2] (by her Children's Guardian) - and - Others |
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Ms Gillian Irving QC and Mr Paul Hart and Mr Zimran Samuel (instructed by Blackburn with Darwen Legal Services) for the First Respondent
Ms Frances Heaton QC and Ms Lisa Houghton (instructed by Farleys Solicitors LLP) for the Child 'M'
Hearing date: 2 September 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Ryder:
"It is expected that it will take 6-12 months to identify an appropriate placement for [M]. The local authority plans to search for an adoptive placement for 6 months and then twin track a plan of (sic) adoption and long term foster care after 6 months
[…]
[the local authority] is confident that an adoptive placement will be identified for [M]."
The Submissions
"the language used in Re B (A Child) [2013] UKSC 33 is striking. Different words and phrases are used, but the message is clear. Orders contemplating non-consensual adoption – care orders with a plan for adoption, placement orders and adoption orders – are a 'very extreme thing, a last resort' only to be made where 'nothing else will do' and where 'no other course [is] possible in [the child's] interests', they are 'the most extreme option', a 'last resort – when all else fails', to be made 'only in exceptional circumstances and where motivated by overriding requirements pertaining to the child's welfare, in short, where nothing else will do'."
[M had been subject to] "inconsistency, instability, separation and loss and frightening adult behaviour, together with pressure to withhold truth. One more move for this child is inevitable, but it seems to me imperative that there should only be one more move. She is only 4 ½ years of age. Her driving need is for security, permanence and stability."
"the court has to countenance the possibility of substantial difficulty and thus delay in finding a suitable adoptive placement or even of failure to find one at all"
and of Wall LJ (as he then was) in Re P (supra) at [137]:
"In our judgment a local authority can be satisfied that the child ought to be placed for adoption within the meaning of section 22(1)(d) of the 2002 Act even though it recognises that a search for adoptive parents may be unsuccessful and that, if it is, the alternative plan will have to be for long term fostering".
Discussion
"The court cannot dispense with the consent of any parent or guardian of a child to the child being placed for adoption or to the making of an adoption order in respect of the child unless it is satisfied that –
[…]
(b) the welfare of the child requires the consent to be dispensed with."
"mere uncertainty as to whether an adoption will actually follow is not a reason for not making a placement order" and that
"a placement order can be, and perhaps usually should be, made at the same time as a care order is made on a plan for adoption which the judge approves, even though at that stage a good deal of investigation and preparation is needed before the child can actually be placed, and it is not known whether a suitable family will be found or not."
Formulation
"we have real concerns about the recurrent inadequacy of the analysis of reasoning put forward in support of the case for adoption, both in the materials put before the court by local authorities and guardians and also in too many judgments. This is nothing new, but it is time to call a halt."
"[16] … There is no objectively certain answer on which two or more possible courses is in the best interests of a child. In all save the most straightforward cases, there are competing factors, some pointing one way and some another. There is no means of demonstrating that one answer is clearly right and another clearly wrong. There are too many uncertainties involved in what, after all, is an attempt to peer into the future and assess the advantages and disadvantages which this or that course will or may have for the child."
"…I note that the terminology frequently deployed in arguments to this court and, no doubt to those at first instance, omit a significant element of the test as framed by both the Supreme Court and this court, which qualifies the literal interpretation of "nothing else will do". That is, the orders are to be made "only in exceptional circumstances and where motivated by the overriding requirements pertaining to the child's best interests." (See In Re B, paragraph 215)…."
In Re M (A Child) (Long Term Foster Care) [2014] EWCA Civ 1406 Black LJ said:
"What is necessary is a complex question requiring an evaluation of all of the circumstances. As Lord Neuberger said at [77] of Re B, speaking of a care order which in that case would be very likely to result in the child being adopted:
"It seems to me inherent in section 1(1) [Children Act 1989] that a care order should be the last resort, because the interests of the child would self- evidently require her relationship with her natural parents to be maintained unless no other course was possible in her interests. " (my emphasis)
I emphasise the last phrase of that passage ("in her interests") because it is an important reminder that what has to be determined is not simply whether any other course is possible but whether there is another course which is possible and in the child's interests."
With respect, I agree.
a) The judge's methodology was right. She conducted a fact finding exercise, a welfare analysis of each realistic option, a comparative welfare evaluation and a proportionality evaluation.
b) The statutory tests are not re-drawn. 'Nothing else will do' is the conclusion of a proportionality evaluation after a process of deductive reasoning not a new presumption and not a standard of proof.
c) It is not necessary to have a contingency in a care plan although it is desirable. A timetable within which a local authority have to implement a substantive order once proceedings have concluded is beyond the jurisdiction of the court and is not part of the prescribed content of a care plan.
d) Recognising the possibility of failure by a contingency plan is appropriate. That is quite different from deciding that something other than adoption is required.
e) There is no objection in principle to dual planning in an appropriate case. This case was appropriate because the placement decision was neither conditional upon the happening of an event nor the success of some extraneous process such as therapy. It was not a decision that one of two options would do.
Lord Justice Underhill:
Lord Justice Beatson: