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England and Wales County Court (Family)


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales County Court (Family) >> A (A Child), Re [2009] EWCC 3 (Fam) (2009)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCC/Fam/2009/3.html
Cite as: [2009] EWCC 3 (Fam)

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WRITTEN REASONS

The written reasons are being distributed on the strict understanding that in any report, no person may be identified by name or location (Other than a person identified by name in the reasons themselves) and that in particular the anonymity of the children and the adult members of their family must be strictly preserved



Neutral Citation Number: [2009] EWCC 3 (Fam)

 

 

In the County Court

 

 

 

Before:

District Judge CR Dawson

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Between:

 

 

Local Authority

Applicant

 

and

 

 

RE:A

Respondent

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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See also: A (A Child), Re [2009] EWCC 4 (Fam) (2009)

 

Application

 

  1. This case concerns a seven-month-old male child who was made the subject of a final care order at an Issues Resolution Hearing on 10 November 2009.

 

Chronology

 

  1. The 53-year-old father has parental responsibility for his son because he is recorded as the father on the son's birth certificate. He is the present partner of the mother; but she remains married to another man; and that man (her husband) has participated in these proceedings solely to convey that he wishes to have no further involvement (and, accordingly, service upon the husband of ongoing orders/outcome has been dispensed with).

 

  1. The father himself has told the Guardian that he would like his son to live with the mother and him and be brought up by them. But the Guardian reports that he recognises the difficulties such an outcome would present; on the one hand, he understands that his parenting skills would need to be assessed, (because historically he couldn't cope with his oldest son, who was brought up by his sister); and, on the other hand, even if that assessment proved positive, he would need to give up work in order to be available to the child 24 hours a day because (as is set out below), the mother is unable to look after him; and the father has repeatedly said that he will not give up work because he needs to pay his bills and "it would drive him mad to stay home all day".

 

  1. The mother has told the Guardian that she would like to care for her son, but the unchallenged medical evidence makes that aspiration unrealistic. A medical report on file confirms that the 40-year-old mother lacks capacity to conduct these proceedings, so the Official Solicitor acts on her behalf. He has filed a statement accepting the medical opinion that she would require 24 hour supervision of her care of any child; and she recognises that neither her partner nor any member of either of their families is available to assist her to care for the child. Indeed, it is said, on her behalf, that such an arrangement would not be in the child's interest as he grew older, nor would it be in the mother's interests (even if it could be afforded/arranged) since she would not want to have such supervision.

 

  1. In addressing who else from the family might be able to look after the son, the mother spoke of a cousin called Carol who might be prepared to look after the child, but nothing has come of that line of enquiry. The Guardian and the local authority reported that the maternal grandparents have explained that they are unable to care for the child; and the father confirmed that there was no one from his side of the family who might do so either.

 

  1. The Official Solicitor also acted for the mother in earlier proceedings relating to a daughter born in 2007 to the union of this mother and her husband. At the daughter’s birth, the husband/father was serving a sentence of imprisonment for drink/driving offences; and the mother went to live in a Parenting Support and Assessment Unit for 12 weeks. The assessment experience was not a positive one for the mother; and when the husband was released from prison the mother left her daughter in the unit and resumed cohabitation with the husband. This outcome was consistent with the report of the chartered psychologist that this mother was unable to anticipate or prioritise her daughter's needs. Those proceedings concluded in September 2008 with a care order in favour of the local authority; a placement order was made and that daughter has now been placed for adoption. The earlier proceedings concerning the daughter have been disclosed into these proceedings concerning the son.

 

  1. This son was born shortly after the conclusion of the care proceedings for the daughter. The local authority made immediate application for a care order under section 31 (1) of The Children Act 1989, to the intent that he might be placed for adoption.

 

  1. I stress that the child’s welfare is my paramount concern. I have to take account of all matters recited in the welfare checklist as set out in section 1 (3) of the Children Act 1989, to some detail of which I allude below.

 

Welfare Checklist

 

Age, gender & background characteristics

 

  1. Born at the parents’ home and taken immediately to hospital, the seven-month male baby has been living with his foster family since two days after the birth (which is “the relevant date” for the purposes of section 31 CA 89 as will become clear later). He has a half sister.

 

 

Physical, emotional and educational needs

 

  1. He appears to be meeting his developmental milestones. He may have inherited some learning difficulties but he is too young for such diagnosis to be accurately made. His physical emotional and educational needs are being met by his foster carers with whom he has been living since birth. He has settled with the foster carers and is reported to be thriving.

 

  1. As to contact the mother initially declined the offered contact, fearing she would find it too upsetting to have to say goodbye. But she relented and has attended 15 out of the 21 twice-weekly sessions arranged; father has attended seven of those sessions too.

 

  1. The court accepts that it would not be in the child's best interests to change his living arrangements until the conclusion of these proceedings. In the longer term, all parties agree the son needs the security of living in a permanent and settled family unit.

 

 

Capability of meeting the child’s needs

 

  1. The father has not submitted to a parenting assessment and has made it abundantly clear that he intends to continue to work full-time and so rules himself out of being able to help care for the child during the day.

 

  1. In the earlier care proceedings the chartered consultant psychologist concluded that the mother needed prompting at every stage during contact to provide for her daughter's needs; she lacked the ability to anticipate her needs and to intervene proactively. As a child develops so anticipation of need becomes more and more important; the mother was having trouble in the very early stages, so the psychologist had no confidence that she would be able to cope later. It was his considered opinion that there is no treatment or therapy which would enhance this mother's intellect to a point where she might become competent to safely parent a child.

 

  1. The chartered psychologist who prepared a detailed report upon mother in August 2009 found her to be of “a very low intellect… weak memory …and with an IQ below the 0.1 percentile.” He concluded that the mother lacked capacity to consent to the making of any of the orders that are available to the court.

 

  1. The medical and social work assessments conclude that the mother has a clear and severe learning disability; she does not have the ability to safely parent her son and the court is satisfied that there is no reasonable package of support that would enable her to do so.

 

  1. I emphasise that it is not necessary for the court to attribute blame for this situation; each parent may well be trying his/her hardest and yet still may be failing to meet the needs of the child, thus causing him significant harm. And that is the situation here; there is no assessment of father, but from the assessment of mother it is clear that she is not a viable carer for her son; and her own inability to anticipate his needs will inevitably lead her to neglect the child, from which he would suffer harm.

 

 

Wishes & feelings

 

  1. At seven months, the son is not yet of an age at which his wishes and feelings can be ascertained. I can assume that this child would probably wish to be cared for by his birth family – for, in general terms, every child is better off being raised within his family of origin, if at all possible; a child has a right to be brought up by his natural family unless there are cogent reasons why it is not in his best interests for that to happen.

 

  1. This concept was explained by Mrs Justice Butler-Sloss (as she then was) in Re O (A minor) (Custody: Adoption) [1992] 1 FLR 77 – “if it were a choice of balancing the known defects of every parent, with some added problems that this father has, against idealised perfect adopters, in a very large number of cases children would immediately move out of the family circle and towards adopters.  That would be social engineering and it is important to bear that in mind in looking of the problems which arise in this case. It was put far better than I could hope to put it by Lord Templeman in Re KD (a Minor) (Ward: termination of access) [1988] 1 AC 806 at page 812 ‘the best person to bring up a child is the natural parent.  It matters not whether the parent is wise or foolish, rich or poor, educated or illiterate, provided the child's moral and physical health are not in danger.  Public authorities cannot improve on nature.’”

 

  1. Although mother and father both would prefer their son to be brought up by them, the contents of paragraphs 3 - 6 and 13 – 17 above sadly show why that is not a realistic option in this case.

 

 

Articles 6 & 8.

 

  1. I have firmly in mind Articles 6 and 8 of the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms 1950: which set out the right to a fair trial and the precept that every citizen has the right to enjoy a private family life free from the interference of the state unless there are proper and sufficient grounds to intervene. 

 

  1. K. v. Finland [2003] 1 FLR 696 sets out the precise terms of the relevant Articles and the judgment makes it clear that;-

 

(a) any order related to the public care of the child has to be capable of convincing an objective observer that the measure was based on a careful and unprejudiced assessment of all evidence on file, with the distinct reasons for the care order stated explicitly;

(b) the reasoning adopted has to reflect the careful scrutiny which any court could be expected to carry out by balancing the evidence in favour and against making an order; and

(c) there is a positive duty to take measures to facilitate family reunification as soon as reasonably feasible but that has to be balanced against the duty to consider the best interests of the child.

 

  1. I conclude that family reunification is not feasible in this case and that it is in the best interests of the child for an order to be made. I now consider what that order should be.

 

Range of court powers

 

  1. In the absence of application for any other orders, the options facing the court are to make no order, to make a care order or to make a supervision order; I agree with the Guardian that this is not a case in which the court can properly conclude that it is in the child's best interests for it to make no order.

 

  1. S. 31(1) of the Children Act 1989 states that “on the application of any local authority or authorised person, the Court may make an order -- (a) placing the child with respect to whom the application is made in the care of the designated local authority; or (b) putting him under the supervision of the designated local authority.”

 

Threshold criteria

 

  1. S. 31 (2) states that "the court may only make a care order or supervision order if it 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) …(not relevant).”

 

  1. Before any court may entertain the making of a care order (or indeed a supervision order) the statutory threshold criteria must have been established.  The court has to be satisfied that the child concerned is suffering or is likely to suffer significant harm attributable to a lack of reasonable care being afforded to him. 

 

  1. In this case the threshold criteria set out by the local authority are not disputed, and, in view of the absence of contention about the evidence, it is not necessary for me to set out matters in detail. I adopt as my findings of fact the threshold document (agreed between the solicitors for the mother, the guardian and the local authority, and not disputed by the father – who was not present in court today because he was suffering from flu). I have already directed that the document be annexed to my order.

 

  1. The facts advanced by the local authority are based essentially on the allegations of neglect and abandonment of the older half-sibling which amounted to actual neglect and which, by reason of the mother’s learning disability, I find to be likely to be repeated for the son. I am satisfied that he is likely to suffer significant harm in future unless there had been intervention on the relevant date, two days after the birth; that situation continues at the present and into the foreseeable future.

 

  1. A supervision order is clearly not appropriate in the circumstances.

 

  1. On the findings I have made above, and on the relevant date, I find that the child was likely to suffer significant harm; and the likelihood of that harm was attributable to the probable want of care from the parents were the order not to be made. The threshold criteria are thus satisfied and a care order must be made to enable the local authority to share parental responsibility and to exercise its duty to act in the best interests of the child.

 

  1. A child has the right to be raised in an environment where his welfare is not placed in jeopardy and where he is provided with the opportunity to flourish and reach his potential. The local authority sets out how it intends to achieve such a future by its Care Plan.

 

Care Plan

 

  1. The court may only pass responsibility over to the local authority by way of a final care order when all the facts are as clearly known as can be hoped. I approve the care plan in the bundle. Under the Act, the local authority must apply for a placement order if satisfied that the child should be placed for adoption. I accept that an adoption order is likely to be the best way to ensure that this child is afforded secure, stable and permanent care of high quality with carers who are able to meet his needs in a positive and sensitive manner.

 

  1. There is no application for a placement order before me today, but the child’s circumstances were explained to the adoption panel on 30/9/09 and placement for adoption was approved; that decision was ratified by the local authority decision-maker on 4/11/09; and I have now listed a placement hearing to take place before me in the near future in order to preserve judicial continuity.

 

 

 

 

 Conclusion

 

  1. I am happy to record a note of optimism that pleases everyone and which emerged at the hearing. The Official Solicitor told me – and indeed I was able to see for myself on mother’s generous beaming face – how relieved and happy she was that the local authority's adoption panel has approved prospective adopters who could care for both the son and his half sibling, (the daughter in the earlier proceedings) together.

 

  1. Knowing the mother and exercising considerable imagination, the local authority has shown the mother a DVD recording and photographs of a contact session which has taken place between the two children; and the mother was clearly delighted that both children looked well and happy. The authority has agreed to use its best endeavours to provide the mother with a copy of the DVD recording and of the photographs, and my order is made upon that basis.

 

  1. I confirm the order published on the 10th November 2009 when I made a Care Order in respect of the child in favour of the local authority, with no order for costs between the parties; and a Legal Service Commission Funding Assessment Direction for any Assisted Party.

 


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCC/Fam/2009/3.html