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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) >> A Local Authority v Y [2017] EWFC 69 (14 March 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/HCJ/2017/69.html Cite as: [2017] EWFC 69 |
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SITTING AT ROYAL COURTS OF JUSTICE
B e f o r e :
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A Local Authority |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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Y |
Respondent |
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Respondent Mother appeared as a Litigant in Person
Ms Penny Logan for Cafcass Legal appeared on behalf of the Child via the Guardian
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24-28 High Street, Hythe, Kent, CT21 5AT
Tel: 01303 230038
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Theis:
Introduction
"Consideration of birth father's Article 6 and Article 8 rights."
It is accepted by Miss Simmonds, who appears on behalf of the Local Authority, that this is, in effect, an application under the Family Procedure Rules 2010, Rule 14.21, invoking the Part 19 procedure to seek guidance from the Court in relation to what further steps, if any, the Local Authority should take in relation to a little girl and their plan to place her for adoption.
Background
"Mother explained that when she was certain of the pregnancy she and her mum met with the birth father and his mother and made them aware. Mother says the birth father's mum told her she could not allow mother to visit their house 'in that condition' and that the birth father said he wanted nothing more to do with mother. Mother told me it was 'understood' between them all that she would seek a termination. Mother said she and her mother looked into this but found she was too many weeks pregnant to just take a pill and she would have to travel to London for a surgical procedure. Mother said she did not want to have that type of procedure. Mother told me, 'They have assumed I have had an abortion. They do not know I kept the baby'."
"Mother said that she was worried that birth father would say he wants P 'then dump her just to mess things up'. Mother said she was worried that she would then be left having to look after P. Mother said she knew his surname but she was not sure where he lives. She said they had split up around March 2016 before the pregnancy was a certainty."
"The reasons why I put X up for adoption is because my mum, TT, said that she would have to kick me out so I would be on the street with a newborn baby and I did not want to bring her up on benefits and last of all I want her to have a life that I probably never have. I want X to explore the world. I also want X to be loved and cared for. I do not think I could do that."
"My reasons for not wanting to name X's father are as follows. He is good at telling lies, for example he lied about having testicular cancer just so he could send a girl a picture. He still has pictures of me on his phone which he will not delete and as I have previously mentioned both himself and his mum are not interested. They have no idea about X being born. He would just swan in and out of X's life and I do not want that. As far as I gather from MY, social worker, X is settled and happy. She has been there since birth."
"I do not agree to it. I do not agree on it because all of the family that know I have had X all have X's interests at heart and nobody knew his last name or where he lives."
"Also, one other thing. He ruined my career wanting to work with children by posting on social media that all I did in our relationship was abuse him. I have proof of this, when he was the one hitting me in the stomach to get rid of a child. I do not want this for X."
"I have considered carefully from a social care and welfare perspective the position of the mother regarding nondisclosure of X's father's identity and her rationale as stated to me and detailed in her statement. I genuinely believe she feels she is making the right decision for her daughter. I have thought carefully from X's father's perspective about the range of views he may have in regard to X, his future relationship with her, his wishes for her future care and welfare, the impact on him and the wider paternal family of being denied an opportunity to be told of her existence, being denied an opportunity to play a role significant or otherwise in X's life, develop relationships with her and crucially afford her a feeling of familial belonging. I have also thought carefully about the paramount consideration of X's best interests now and throughout her lifetime. I have been troubled by the fact that X may be denied the potential opportunity to be afforded permanence with her father or within her wider paternal family, denied a relationship with her father and her wider paternal family network and denied a full opportunity to know of her heritage and identity."
"After much consideration and on balance I believe that X should be given the opportunities which would be afforded to her through disclosure of her paternity to the Local Authority and to the Court, however I accept that there is no mechanism to compel the mother to divulge that information to the Court and I do respect her right not to do so."
"In doing so, I have considered circumstances in which the mother's fears regarding X's father's likely reaction to knowledge of X's existence were found to be correct and have reflected from X's viewpoint the implications both positive and negative of having knowledge that her father or paternal family did not seek to offer her care and familial belonging."
"This appears in my view to be a potential benefit to X by being afforded an honest and open account of his wishes and feelings in a similar manner to that which she will have from her mother and wider family."
The Legal Framework
"The child with whom he was concerned with was born in June 2006, her parents were not married. It would seem that their relationship was brief lasting no more than a few weeks. Since before the child's birth her mother has been resolute that the child should be adopted. She concealed her pregnancy from everyone and presented herself at hospital in labour, giving birth to the child two hours later. Since the child's birth, the child had been in the care of a Local Authority. In relation to the identity of the father, she has given the Local Authority certain information about him but she professes to be unable, the Local Authority and the guardian suspect that she is able but unwilling, to provide information which would enable him to be either identified or traced, and mindful of its obligations to the father and unable to progress matters any further, the Local Authority invoke the assistance of the Court."
"I do not propose to add to the jurisprudence. The Court has an unfettered discretion to be exercised having regard to all the circumstances and in a manner compliant with the requirements of the Convention. That said, and where there exists family life within the meaning of Article 8 as between the mother and the father, one generally requires strong countervailing factors or compelling reasons or cogent and compelling grounds to justify the exclusion from the adoption process of an unmarried father without parental responsibility, but at the end of the day every case is different and has to be decided having regard to its own unique circumstances."
:"This all assumes, of course, that there is family life. Based on what the mother has told us of her relationship with L's father I am sceptical as to whether he can in fact pray in aid Article 8 of the Convention. If what she has said is correct, there was almost certainly no family life but given how little we know it would not be safe to proceed on that basis. I shall assume though without deciding that the father's rights under Article 8 are indeed engaged."
"The benefits or possible benefits to L now and throughout her life of knowing who her father is, like any child, L should have the opportunity of growing up within her birth family if at all possible so adoption should not normally be considered until all possible family members have been ruled out. It may be that there is out there a father who would want to and be able to bring her up. If her father cannot himself bring her up then it might nonetheless be appropriate for L to have contact with him, even if only indirect contact after she has been adopted, and even if she is to be adopted then for the purposes of life story work, L needs to know as much as possible about her father and his family so that, for example, she can in later life if she chooses to do so try and trace him. Also, she needs the emotional security of knowing that all this was investigated along with any relevant medical, ethnic and financial inheritance matters before the final decision for her adoption was made. Her mother's stance is denying her all these things."
"The whole process, if that was to be proposed smacks too much of the inquisition to be tolerable and it is not to be justified merely because we believe however strongly that what we are doing is being done in the best interests of the child. Here again it seems to me the wise words of Holman, J, in relation to respecting the confidentiality and the position of the mother have a powerful resonance."
Discussion and Decision