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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) >> M & N (Twins: Relinquished Babies: Parentage), Re [2017] EWFC 31 (24 May 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/HCJ/2017/31.html Cite as: [2018] 1 FLR 293, [2017] EWFC 31 |
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SITTING IN LEEDS
East Parade Leeds |
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B e f o r e :
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Re M & N (Twins: Relinquished Babies: Parentage) |
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Jennifer Heckingbottom (a solicitor from Switalskis) for the Children's Guardian
The mother and father were neither present nor represented
Hearing dates: 9 May 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr. Justice Cobb :
i) For a declaration under section 55A of the Family Law Act 1986 that Mr B is indeed the father of M and N; this is not required as part of any legal process engaged here, but the application has been made in order to achieve clarity to support life-story work for the twins;ii) For a declaration (on an application issued under Part 19 FPR 2010, in accordance with the guidance in Re RA (Baby Relinquished for Adoption: Case Management) [2016] EWFC 25: see [50/51]) that it need not notify, let alone investigate or assess, any extended family member of the mother or the father as potential carers for the children;
iii) For a care order under section 31 of the Children Act 1989 ("CA 1989") (application dated 3 March 2017)'
iv) For a placement order under section 21 Adoption and Children Act 2002 ('ACA 2002') (application dated 4 May 2017).
Background
Involvement of the parents in the hearing
Declaration of parentage
i) That the mother and her husband separated some years ago, and were divorced by decree absolute in September 2015; Ms A's former husband should not realistically be considered as a putative parent of these children;ii) The mother has informally and consistently named Mr B as the father; she did not, however, formally register him as such on the children's birth certificates;
iii) Mr B appears to accept that he was in a relationship with the mother at the time when she conceived;
iv) Discussions between social work professionals and Mr B have been predicated on the basis that he is the father of the twins; he has actively considered the issue of future placement of the twins; he has not sought to argue or contend that he is not the father;
v) Mr B specifically referred to the twins as "my children" in a telephone discussion with the Children's Guardian on 15 March 2017.
"it is thought good practice and beneficial to an adopted child to have information relating to his birth family. Life story books are prepared carefully by social workers and others and left in the adoptive home so that an adopted child can be encouraged and enabled to acquire as much information as is possible as to the natural birth family from which he or she came. It is an important part of enabling an adopted child to be confident as to his or her status and to know as much about his or her background as is possible". (emphasis by underlining added)
Declaration that no other family member need be notified
i) There are few extended family members who could be considered as carers;ii) There are no extended family members on the paternal side;
iii) The maternal grandparents are of an age (although we do not know their precise age, the mother is in her 40s), which would be likely to exclude them as long-term carers for twin babies;
iv) The maternal aunt has commitments to older children;
v) That the mother – a thoughtful and mature professional woman – has indicated clearly her intolerance to the notion of the children being raised within her own family.
"the wishes and feelings of the parents are likely to carry significant weight in the evaluation of the child's welfare. But they are not invariably decisive. As a result, the local authority cannot give any guarantee that it will keep the existence of the baby confidential. Each case will turn on its own facts. In some cases, an analysis of the circumstances will lead the local authority to conclude that it is unnecessary to inform the natural family, but in other cases the authority will decide that it must consult the extended family in order to carry out the necessary evaluation of the realistic options. Each case turns on its own facts, but the child's welfare will always be the paramount consideration".
At [55]:
"Where parents have relinquished their baby and expressed a wish that he or she be adopted outside the natural family, the degree of interference with family life rights is less than where the parent-child relationship is severed against the parents' wishes. The fact that the parents have taken this decision is an important consideration when determining whether the interference is necessary and proportionate. It follows, therefore, that approval of adoption in such cases does not depend on the local authority or court reaching the conclusion that nothing else will do. Instead, they must approach the case by applying s.1 of the 2002 Act as set out above, making sure that they give paramount consideration to the child's welfare throughout his or her life and allocating such weight as they consider appropriate to the comprehensive list of factors in s.1(4) In such cases, the local authority and the court must consider the parents' wishes that their child be adopted in the context of all of those factors, including the child's background, the likely effect on the child of having ceased to be a member of the original family and the ability and willingness of any of the child's relatives to meet the child's needs".
And at [56]:
"… in all adoption cases – non-consensual and consensual – the local authority is under an obligation to carry out a thorough analysis of the realistic options for the child, as highlighted in Re B-S. Indeed, a thorough analysis of all the realistic options should surely be carried out in all cases where a local authority is making plans for a child's future." (emphasis by underlining added).
Care and Placement order
i) Neither the mother nor the putative father have any relationship with the children;ii) Neither the mother nor the putative father have sought, or wish, to have any relationship with the children, or to offer care to the children;
iii) Neither the mother nor the putative father has sought any contact with the children;
iv) Neither the mother nor the putative father has proposed or made arrangements for any alternative family placement,
and that this is not what it would be reasonable to expect a parent to give to the children.