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England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) >> N (Children), Re [2015] EWFC 37 (25 March 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/HCJ/2015/37.html Cite as: [2015] EWFC 37 |
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SITTING AT NEWCASTLE-UPON-TYNE
IN THE MATTER OF THE CHILDREN ACT 1989
AND IN THE MATTER OF: N (CHILDREN)
Quayside Newcastle-upon-Tyne NE1 3LA |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Re: N (Children) |
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Apple Transcription Limited
Suite 204, Kingfisher Business Centre, Burnley Road, Rawtenstall, Lancashire BB4 8ES
DX: 26258 Rawtenstall – Telephone: 0845 604 5642 – Fax: 01706 870838
Counsel for the Mother: MR AINSLEY
Solicitor for the Child, G: MRS SPENCELEY
Hearing dates: 10th November 2014, 25th March 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
HIS HONOUR JUDGE SIMON WOOD:
"The mother is likely to have experienced very serious emotional distress that is likely to have had a significant effect on her emotional state even if the mental health problems cannot be diagnosed."
Mrs Louw noted that the mother had had serious health problems, including tuberculosis, malaria and chronic neutropenia, there was a possible relationship between the conditions and her long term low mood and withdrawn behaviour. Mrs Louw identified the mother as having average ability, although her emotional state and cultural differences meant that she may interpret situations differently:
"Her overall level of functioning presents as being cautious and frozen which might reflect behaviour that was part of a survival strategy in the past."
"There is no indication at this time that she has other parenting approaches she could now implement that could be more effective than physical chastisement and emotional withdrawal that apparently happened and have led to B being very much afraid of his mother and not wanting to see her."
The absence of a diagnosis made it impossible to comment on treatment or therapy. She identified the possibility for improvement only if the mother was willing to engage with help that might be offered. In relation to advice and support, she advised the need for a social worker who understood the background, acknowledged the effects of trauma, have an understanding of African culture and she made a suggestion that a black social worker might assist.
"If she has asked prompted by wanting to do the work as opposed to being here [that is at court] it is going to be the right time for her."
"It must have been very traumatic looking at her behaviour and intense avoidance. Something has happened to affect her."
She would need individual work in terms of sharing values with her children, she had the capacity and intelligence to learn but the emotional block had to be removed first and she likened her to persons that she had worked with who were the children of holocaust victims. She advocated structured, befriending type work and said that above all trust had to be gained but it would be very hard to achieve that bearing in mind the circumstances in which the mother had been brought up. In responding to Mr Ainsley's suggestion that perhaps G's behaviour had been overstated, she said:
"Her behaviour is so challenging that the potential is for her to put the mother under such stress that she cannot cope and she will resort to previous learned behaviours."
"I know I have made mistakes but I love them from the bottom of my heart. I promise and swear it will never happen again."
I will return to her evidence shortly.
"It should only occur in exceptional circumstances motivated by overriding requirements pertaining to the children's welfare, where nothing else will do. In many cases it is necessary to explore and attempt alternative solutions."
"Society must be willing to tolerate very diverse standards of parenting, including the eccentric, the barely adequate and the inconsistent. It follows too that children will inevitably have both very different experiences of parenting and very unequal consequences flowing from it. It means that some children will experience disadvantage and harm, whilst others flourish in atmospheres of loving security and emotional stability. These are the consequences of our fallible humanity and it is not the provenance of the State to spare children all the consequences of defective parenting. In any event, it simply could not be done."
That latter remark was specifically picked up by His Honour Judge Jack, cited with approval by the President in the Darlington case and whilst I do not repeat what Judge Jack said in that case, it is perhaps at this point important to note that the key words are the finding in that case of a lack of evidence that the behaviour of those particular parents had had any adverse effect on their children who had been in their care when the behaviour complained of had occurred.
"But I would just want to talk about positive things when she comes back and have a positive attitude that she will then be a different person."
This, says the Local Authority, is really a worryingly naïve view of what lies ahead. The challenges in contact over, for example, G's material demands, her willingness to do whatever suits her even if it does not suit anyone else, taken out of contact into a domestic setting will not survive long without serious conflict.
(i) in favour, G could have the opportunity to be cared for by her mother which would be the normal order and in most cases by far and away the best.
(ii) G's own strongly held wishes and feelings would be met in terms of both her home and location therefore increasing the chance of it succeeding.
(iii) The mother undoubtedly loves G very much indeed.
(iv) The mother has a good relationship with SW2 which would be a good foundation for ongoing support.
(i) there are historic and current significant concerns regarding the mother's capability to meet G's emotional needs.
(ii) G is a wilful and challenging child who manipulates, the mother has not managed her historically and she has a naïve and simplistic view of how things will be in the future.
(iii) G's safety cannot be ensured. The conflict she is likely to create runs the real risk identified by Mrs Louw that the mother will either abuse her physically or emotionally freeze her out.
(iv) The mother continues to lack insight into the concerns and has not demonstrated a real willingness to address the deep-seated issues which result in this response to G and B.
(v) There is a significant question as to the mother's honesty. Although there is a good relationship with SW2, it has not translated into openness in a way that the Local Authority would be confident that the mother would share with it and her concerns issues over G with the risk of G thereby suffering further harm.
In reaching its conclusion the Local Authority, supported by the guardian, continues to hold the view that she would suffer significant harm based on its assessment of those pros and cons I have enumerated.
(i) G is likely to stay or be placed with experienced, professional foster carers who will have been comprehensively assessed and identified as having the ability to meet the challenges that she presents in an appropriate way that will keep her safe and meet her physical and emotional needs.
(ii) She will have the support of the Local Authority as a looked-after child in respect of her needs, in the wider sense overseen by the independent reviewing officer fully informed by the outcome of these proceedings with regular reviews and monitoring to ensure that needs continue to be met.
(iii) She will be able to maintain her relationship with her mother in an appropriate way under a suitable contact regime fully supported independently by the guardian and Mrs Louw.
(iv) There is little likelihood that she would suffer significant harm in the foster carers or the Local Authority, certainly not of the type that she suffered in the care of her mother.
(v) She would be able to remain at her school which is identified by her, her teachers and the Local Authority as a significant constant and stabilising factor enabling her to maintain her relationships with her established and chosen peer group.
(i) G does not want to be in foster care, she wants to live with her mother. Her wishes and feelings will therefore not have been respected and that is likely to have a negative impact on her welfare.
(ii) The history does not give the confidence that her specific needs will be met.
(iii) There is no guarantee that her cultural needs will be met by suitable foster carers, still less her wish to be in South Tyneside.
(iv) Those concerns taken in conjunction with her wilfulness and manipulative behaviour run the risk that she will either engineer placement failure or vote with her feet, either of which would expose her to the risk of harm that the Local Authority and other professionals seek to avoid.
The generic risks are the usual ones so:
(v) she would become a looked-after child with a statutory parent who cannot replicate the love and care of a natural parent.
(vi) The intrusion that being a looked-after child brings into her life in terms of observation, monitoring, meetings and so on.
(vii) The risk of instability through placement change, be it by way of breakdown or change in foster carer circumstances.
(viii) In addition, I am reminded of the extreme nature of separation of a child from a parent only to be considered where necessary in the child's best interests.