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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> G v B [2010] EWHC 2630 (Fam) (25 October 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2010/2630.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 2630 (Fam), [2011] 1 FLR 1089, [2011] Fam Law 22 |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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G |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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B |
Respondent |
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Anita Guha (instructed by Williscroft & Co) for the Respondent
Michael Hinchliffe for CAFCASS Legal
Hearing dates: 13 October 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Nicholas Wall P:
(a) whether the report prepared by a CAFCASS Officer (whom I will call "CO1") dated 3 August 2010 pursuant to a court order that a report should be prepared should be disclosed to the court and the parties to the proceedings; and
(b) whether the court and the parties should be informed, and if so how, whether any substantive changes have been effected to the said report other than by (CO1) and/or by (CO1) at the instruction or request of any other person.
The facts
"On 3 August 2010 a Risk Assessment had been drafted by (CO1). Significant concerned had been identified , but key information ….… had yet to be received. Given that the report if filed at this stage would have been incomplete and taking into consideration the potential to increase risk upon filing the report, the decision had been taken not to file the report until it could be completed in full with (CO1) …. available to give a verbal report to the court"
On 2 September 2010 at the Directions Hearing, the CAFCASS Duty Officer had been misinformed as to the status of the Risk Assessment and subsequently mistakenly informed the court that the Risk Assessment had been filed on 4 August 2010. The court, not having had sight of the report, had ordered that I (CO2) attend the following hearing scheduled for 9 September 2010."
(1) that CAFCASS should hold no secrets from the court;
(2) that CO1 had completed a risk assessment which should be disclosed under the PLP;
(3) that CO2 appeared to have placed reliance on CO1's report in compiling her own report; and
(4) that if there was a material difference between CO1's report and CO2's report it would have occurred as a result of the actions of a manager who would not be required to justify the evidence at court.
DJB then concludes his note by asking the rhetorical question: can any subsequent report issued by CAFCASS be trusted?
The statement of Mr. Hinchliffe
Disclosure Protocol with CAFCASS and CAFCASS CYMRU in Private Law Cases dated 2008
What CAFCASS staff can do | What is not permitted | Comments |
Seek and receive information relating to the welfare of children on new private law cases as outlined in the Safeguarding Framework (2.13-2.25) | Information on third parties such as new partners without seeking specific written consent or permission of the court | Guidance on making a judgement as to whether or not to request a police check in private law applications is set out at 2.14 of the CAFCASS Safeguarding Framework |
Ask the local authority to do the same in public law cases | Routine requests for police information without checking what information held in the local authority file | Seeking information routinely, will both overload the police and reduce the responsibility of the social worker responsible for the child and family. We are seeking to ensure that these checks are undertaken by the local authority before they initiate proceedings |
Discuss this information with the party to whom it refers and the judge concerned; its is also permitted and often necessary to discuss any information relevant to the welfare of the child with the other parent or carers, subject to section 5 above | To give a copy of police documentation to any of the parties or their legal representatives To discuss sensitive information about one party with another unless it relates to the child, subject to section 5 above |
The police are rightly concerned with this sensitive information falling into the wrong hands |
Refer in the report to any police information which is relevant to the child's welfare, subject to section 5 above | To attach a copy of the police documentation to the court report or refer in report to any information which is not relevant to the child. | As above – in addition it does not help the conflict between the parties to disclose convictions or incidents unless they are relevant to the child |
Go back to the police if more information is needed – key to quote the original reference so time is not wasted on a fresh search from scratch | Care must be taken that we do not overuse what is a generally good service from the police | |
Disclose the information with the local authority Children's Social Care service if there are urgent child protection issues or if they are preparing a Section 7 report and are willing to abide by the same disclosure rules as CAFCASS/CAFCASS CWMRU | Disclose the information to other agencies when there are no urgent child protection issues | The police are willing to accept that if the local authority is preparing a report then they should benefit from the initial checks undertaken by CAFCASS rather than start again with their enquiries provided they abide by the contents of this procedure |