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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 >> K (Children) [2021] EWHC 1409 (Fam) (26 May 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2021/1409.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 1409 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Re K (Children) |
____________________
Mr Nkumbe Ekaney QC and Ms Wendy Frempong (instructed by Living Springs Solicitors) for the Respondent Mother
Mrs Kemi Ojutiku (instructed by Mould Haruna Solicitors) for the Respondent Father
Mr Richard Hadley and Ms Kathryn Taylor (instructed by Anthony Collins Solicitors) for the Children's Guardian
Hearing dates: 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th and 10th May 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
SIR ANDREW MCFARLANE P :
The factual background
"5. Unfortunately, the parents set their faces against cooperation with the local authority. In July 2017, the police found the father hiding in the family home. From October 2017, the local authority was repeatedly unable to make contact with the family and on 22 December 2017 it issued an application for a care order in respect of R. Papers relating to the proceedings had been posted through the letterbox of the family home and on 21 December the mother and R left the jurisdiction.
6. Because the child could not be found, the proceedings were allocated to High Court level and in January 2018 they came before the Judge for the first time. In the 2½ years that followed he conducted no fewer than 30 hearings. The mother returned to the jurisdiction, apparently without R. Orders were made that she should not leave the jurisdiction and that R should be returned. Despite this, both parents left the jurisdiction. At the time, unknown to the authorities, the mother was pregnant with J. Further orders were made and publicity was given to the return order relating to R.
7. J was born in Florida in July 2018. As a result of the publicity, the mother was by chance identified in hospital. The father was arrested and both children were placed in care in the USA. Care proceedings were issued in relation to J.
8. After legal proceedings in Florida, R was returned to the UK in August 2018 and J arrived here in October 2018. The boys were placed in the same foster home under interim care orders. The parents participated in a parenting capacity assessment over the course of several months. Their relationship with the children, seen at contact, was positive and R was noted to be a healthy child who had been well cared-for. They had suitable accommodation. Concerns remained about the initial incident in May 2017, about which the mother had changed her story, and about the events surrounding J's birth. Nonetheless, in January 2019, the local authority concluded that the two boys could be returned to their parents under a supervision order. The Children's Guardian did not agree. She expressed scepticism about the genuineness of the parents' co-operation and about the risks arising from domestic abuse and instability of care arrangements. She was concerned at the parents' stated intention to take the children to [Africa], where their welfare could not be monitored. More information was needed before a return to the parents could be supported and a plan for adoption also needed to be considered.
9. After a six-day fact-finding hearing ending on 29 March 2019, the Judge found that neither parent had told the truth about what had led to the injury to R and that it was caused by one or other of them, that the mother had abducted R to avoid the care proceedings, that the father was complicit and that the parents were a flight risk. He found that the mother had lied about her statements against the father, and about what she had said to a doctor, a police officer, her former solicitor and her counsel. The father had also lied about a number of matters. Directions were given for a welfare hearing to determine the children's future.
10. At the time of the hearing, again unknown to the authorities, the mother was expecting Q. From June 2019 she stopped attending contact to avoid her pregnancy being detected. She next saw the boys in December 2019."
"I made case management directions in respect of the progress of the rehabilitation plan. I required the father to return to the witness box, and with the assistance of [an] interpreter, under oath, the father agreed and confirmed the following matters in response to questions from me:
i) he had fully understood what had been said in court at this hearing;
ii) he understood that the court had found him to have lied to the court in the past;
iii) he understood that the court had found that he had not engaged openly and honestly with professionals;
iv) he understood that the court was of the view that there had been times in the past when he had allowed himself to be ruled by the mother, although the father did not think he had;
v) he understood that this was his final opportunity to prove that he was able to separate from the mother and to work openly and honestly with the local authority;
vi) he understood that the timescales for the children and the need for final decisions to be made for their future could not be delayed any further;
vii) understood that it was a condition that from today he did not have any contact with the mother whatsoever, including direct or indirect communication including by telephone, text, email or social media or via a third party;
viii) he understood that if the court found there was any communication between him and the mother, the assessment period would come to an end;
ix) he understood that this was his final opportunity to put his children first and promised the court that he would do so;
x) he understood that if he sought the support of the local authority for assistance with housing, then he must be open and honest with the local authority in terms of financial disclosure; and
xi) he understood that he must contact the police and local authority promptly in the event that the mother made contact with him or attended at the family home of [address]."
"Analysis: The Factual Matrix
97. The mother and the father have serially lied to the court, to the social workers, to the children's guardian and to every other professional with whom they have had contact, including the police and health professionals.
98. The mother is the most egregious liar I have ever encountered. The father has also serially lied to the court, to the social workers and to the children's guardian. Worst of all he lied to me about:
i) his separation from the mother;
ii) his commitment to maintain that separation and not to have any contact with the mother; and
iii) his commitment to put caring for [R] and [J] to the fore, which led me to require the local authority to pursue a rehabilitation plan for the boys to live with the father, which was contrary to the local authority's care plan and contrary to the recommendation of the children's guardian.
99. They were right and I was wrong to have placed trust in the father.
100. At the hearing on 18th December 2019 I had carefully explained to the father that:
i) I did not want to find myself forced to place his children for adoption;
ii) I wanted to give the children the chance to be cared for by a capable and loving father; and
iii) I required him to promise he would not have any further contact with the mother. I warned him, however, that if he breached my requirement for him not to have any further contact with the mother, it would be likely that I would be compelled and left with no choice but to place his children for adoption. I called him into the witness box, with his Twi interpreter, to explain these matters to him and to ask him if he understood. He said he did.
101. Nevertheless, as the parents phone records reveal, within moments of the father leaving court he breached his assurances to me and he contacted the mother by her mobile telephone. He then repeatedly breached his assurances to me by repeatedly contacting the mother. He demonstrated an utter and complete disregard for everything I had said and he had said on oath at that hearing.
102. I am bound to conclude, on the totality of the evidence that I have heard, that I cannot trust a single word said by either of these parents.
103. At several points in her evidence the mother, as did the father when he gave evidence, admitted making mistakes in the past, apologising for these mistakes and asking the court to give them another chance. The mother used the word 'mistakes' as a euphemism for 'lies'. However, when one delved beneath these spoken words it was clear the sentiments expressed were hollow and unfounded. The mother, like the father, does not regret any of her past actions during the course of these proceedings: she does not regret fleeing with [R] to the USA, later joined by the father, to give birth to [J] and she does not regret concealing the birth of [Q]. She, like the father, does regret and resents the involvement of the local authority in her life and these court proceedings. She, like him, does not even begin to understand or accept the significant harm the children have suffered in their care and the significant harm they would each be at risk of suffering if they were returned to the parents' care in the future. I consider, the prospects of the mother making any positive changes for the better are remote, whether in the short, medium or long term.
104. These observations and comments apply with equal force to the father.
105. If any of the children were returned to the care of either or both the parents they would immediately be removed from this jurisdiction and/or would not made available to the local authority or the children's guardian.
Findings of Fact
106. I make the following findings of fact, on the balance of probabilities:
i) neither the mother nor the father accept my findings of fact given in my judgment of 29th March 2019 but, in particular, that [R] sustained an injury on 6th May 2017 during the course of domestic abuse incident involving both parents;
ii) the mother lied to a midwife on 15th May 2019 when she told her that she had received antenatal care in [Africa] in respect of her pregnancy with [Q];
iii) it was the father and the mother who were stopped by officers of the Police Service of Scotland on 21st September 2019;
iv) the father was driving his motor car to take the mother to the ferry terminal at Stranraer;
v) the father knew the mother was pregnant, knew she wished to conceal her pregnancy and colluded with her to do so;
vi) the mother travelled to the Republic of Ireland to give birth to [Q] at a hospital in [town];
vii) she gave a false name and a false address to the hospital professionals in order to avoid the birth of [Q] being made known to the local authority and to the court;
viii) thereafter the parents colluded with each other to conceal the birth of [Q] and her presence in the jurisdiction;
ix) in truth the father was never separated from the mother whether between September 2019 and January 2020 or at all;
x) the father never had any intention of being a sole carer for [R] and [J] to the exclusion of the mother;
xi) there was a domestic abuse incident between the mother and the father on 26th November 2019 which led to the parents telephoning the police;
xii) the father had seen [Q] prior to on or around 21st January 2020;
xiii) the parents were stopped by officers from the Metropolitan Police in the evening of 21st January near Gatwick Airport.;
xiv) the parents' intention had been to flee the jurisdiction on a flight from Gatwick either the mother alone with [Q], the most likely, or together with the father, the least likely; and
xv) if the father's car had not been stopped by the police, the parents would have carried out their joint plan.
107. In relation to the children, I make the following findings of fact, on the balance of probabilities:
i) in her efforts to conceal her pregnancy with [Q], the mother absented herself from most contact visits with [R] and [J] between June and January 2020, which inevitably caused both boys emotional harm;
ii) in her efforts to conceal her pregnancy with [Q], the mother failed to provide her unborn child with appropriate antenatal care and, save in the immediate days after her birth, appropriate post-natal care, putting [Q] at risk of suffering physical harm;
iii) the parents' failure to engage with the local authority or with any professionals with whom they have had contact is wholly irrational and is not founded on any objectively reasonable grounds;
iv) there has been no change in the approach of the parents towards professionals over the course of the last three years and there is no basis for concluding there will be any change in the foreseeable; not least because, in truth, they discern no reason to change;
v) accordingly, if the children were returned to the care of the parents and any professional, most especially a social worker, was to seek subsequently to involve themselves with the family, the parents' instinctive and immediate response would be, at least, to refuse to engage and co-operate and, most likely, to flee irrespective of the welfare best interests of the children;
vi) therefore, the children would be at a real risk of suffering significant emotional and psychological harm from the stability of their lives being disrupted and abruptly changed over the years to come; and
vii) moreover, in light of the events of 6th May 2017 and 26th November2019, which the parents have consistently downplayed and minimised, the children would be at a real risk of suffering significant physical, emotional and psychological harm if they were returned to the care of the parents.
Threshold Criteria
108. On the basis of the findings of fact made at the conclusion of the hearing in March last year, set out in paragraphs 26-36 above, and the findings of fact made in this judgment, at paragraphs 104 & 105 above, I find the threshold criteria of s.31(2) of the 1989 are satisfied in respect of each of the three children."
The plan for placement for adoption
Recent developments in the proceedings
(a) Psychological Assessment of Parents
"The picture is of an individual who appears to practice deception through her attempts to bamboozle others, with this appearing related to narcissistic type tendencies in her functioning. There appears an underlying trend of the mother believing that she is able to 'talk her way out of anything' and mislead others without any apparent belief that others will be able to interpret her attempts at prevarication and that others cannot easily be fooled by her. This appears very much to be an underlying personality characteristic of the mother, rather than a situational defensive behaviour."
"I took the view that it would be very difficult to establish a cooperative agreement with either parent that would be upheld, due to the high level of defensive avoidance, denial and the huge degree of psychological defendedness used by both father and mother to avoid taking responsibility for their actions."
"The parents would benefit from a couples therapy approach which would need to take place with two family therapists who could work with the parents to help achieve an alteration in the parents' perspectives of their behaviours. The approach here will need to be direct and challenging and certainly not a non-directive type approach, as this would only lead to both parents going round in circles and having their existing views confirmed."
Dr Banks advised that a minimum of twenty sessions would be needed, but that this was within the children's timescales in his opinion.
(b) Parents' Response to Findings of Fact
(a) that the police came to the hospital and she gave a statement to them on 6 May 2017;
(b) that she lied about the evidence and the events of 6 May 2017;
(c) that by chance a nursing professional in America identified the mother and alerted the authorities at the time of the birth of J;
(d) that she gave birth to Q at a hospital in southern Ireland and that she gave a false name and address to the hospital professionals in order to avoid the birth of Q being made known to the local authority and to the court;
(e) that, thereafter, the parents colluded with each other to conceal the birth of Q and her presence in the jurisdiction (the mother states that she accepts this as she did not want a repeat of the USA trauma experience).
(a) that the father lied about the events of 6 May 2017, lied when saying there were no problems in the marriage, when he asserted he had placed R on a cot/sofa and when he denied that the mother had grabbed him around the throat and/or had intended to strike him with an iron;
(b) that both of them had lied about what occurred in the family home on 6 May 2017;
(c) that by chance a nurse in America identified the mother at the time of Q's birth;
(d) that neither the mother nor the father accepted the findings of fact made in the judgment of 29 March 2019;
(e) that the father never had any intention of being a sole carer for R and J to the exclusion of the mother.
(c) Delayed disclosure of Permanence Reports
Position of the parties
Oral evidence
"No request - sounds of a female arguing with a male - shouting and screaming at a male - shouting give me the phone".
(a) she could have been more open with the local authority only engaging with them to the extent of 40-60% rather than 100%;
(b) she had not always put the children's needs first, for example taking a three month break in Ireland when she should have remained in contact with them;
(c) putting the three children through stress, rather than settling the issues.
Further findings of fact
The Legal Context
"The court or adoption agency must have regard to the following matters (among others)—
(a) the child's ascertainable wishes and feelings regarding the decision (considered in the light of the child's age and understanding),
(b) the child's particular needs,
(c) the likely effect on the child (throughout his life) of having ceased to be a member of the original family and become an adopted person,
(d) the child's age, sex, background and any of the child's characteristics which the court or agency considers relevant,
(e) any harm (within the meaning of the Children Act 1989) which the child has suffered or is at risk of suffering,
(f) the relationship which the child has with relatives, with any person who is a prospective adopter with whom the child is placed, and with any other person in relation to whom the court or agency considers the relationship to be relevant, including—
(i) the likelihood of any such relationship continuing and the value to the child of its doing so,
(ii) the ability and willingness of any of the child's relatives, or of any such person, to provide the child with a secure environment in which the child can develop, and otherwise to meet the child's needs,
(iii) the wishes and feelings of any of the child's relatives, or of any such person, regarding the child."
Welfare analysis
Harm
"'harm' means ill-treatment or the impairment of health or development [including, for example, impairment suffered from seeing or hearing the ill-treatment of another];
'development' means physical, intellectual, emotional, social or behavioural development;
'health' means physical or mental health; and
'ill-treatment' includes sexual abuse and forms of ill-treatment which are not physical."
a) If any of the children were returned to the care of either or both parents they would immediately be removed from this jurisdiction and/or would not be made available to the local authority (per Keehan J welfare judgment para 105);
b) The children would be exposed to a wholly unstable home life with frequent and haphazard changes of location and residence, both on a domestic and international basis;
c) They would be exposed to a parent who habitually and consistently lies in order to deceive others and get her own way;
d) The children would be unable to rely upon the truth of anything either of their parents may say;
e) Neither parent would cooperate with the reasonable, child-focussed, interventions of social workers, health professionals and others;
f) The children would be likely to have haphazard and unpredictable access to health care, dictated by the needs of the parent rather than the child;
g) Similarly, there would be haphazard and unpredictable engagement with schooling and education, dictated by the needs of the parent rather than the child;
h) The children would be exposed to the unstable parental relationship including episodes of domestic abuse, following which, rather than protecting the children, the parents would be likely to react to police or social work intervention by giving a dishonest account of events;
i) The children would be cared for by parents who have no insight into the developmental needs of a young child;
j) They would be cared for by parents who would fail to prioritise the needs of their children over their own.
Capacity
Adoption
Conclusion