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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Cameron v. Gibson [2003] ScotCS 298 (02 December 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2003/298.html Cite as: 2004 SCLR 219, [2003] ScotCS 298 |
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A1952/02
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OPINION OF LORD DRUMMOND YOUNG in the cause ALEXANDER CAMERON (ASSISTED PERSON) Pursuer; against IAN MacINTYRE GIBSON, as Executor Dative of the late Dugald MacIntyre and ANOTHER Defenders:
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Pursuer: J M Scott; Anderson Strathern WS
Defender: Wise; Morton Fraser
2 December 2003
[1] On 23 December 1950 Mary Ferris or Cameron presented a petition to the Sheriff Court at Fort William seeking authority to adopt the present pursuer. On 26 February 1951 the Sheriff granted authority to Mrs Cameron to adopt the pursuer and made an adoption order in respect of him. The pursuer has raised the present action for production and reduction of that decree. The compearing defender is the executor dative of the pursuer's natural brother, Dugald MacIntyre, who died on 25 May 1999. [2] In support of reduction, the pursuer makes the following averments. He was born on 26 February 1930, and was named Alexander Cameron MacIntyre. His mother was Margaret Finlayson MacIntyre. The pursuer was brought up in the household of Donald and Mary Cameron at 76 Camaghael, Fort William. In September 1950 he moved to Slough, Berkshire, where he has since resided. Since November 1950 he has been known as Alexander Cameron. On 23 December 1950 Mary Cameron presented the adoption petition referred to above to the Sheriff Court at Fort William. Decree of adoption was granted on 26 February 1951, which was the pursuer's twenty-first birthday. The pursuer avers that he was unaware that he had been adopted until he contacted the solicitors who acted on behalf of his brother, the late Dugald MacIntyre. The pursuer was then advised that he had been adopted and that he had no claim in relation to Dugald MacIntyre's estate. [3] The pursuer seeks reduction of the adoption order on two grounds. First, on 26 February 1951 the pursuer attained twenty-one years of age. Section 1(1) of the Adoption Act 1950, the statute in force at the time, permitted a court to make an order authorising the adoption of "an infant". Section 45 of the Act defined "infant" as "a person under twenty-one years of age". The pursuer was therefore not under twenty-one years of age when the adoption order was made. On that basis it is claimed that the order was incompetently granted. Secondly, a form of consent bearing to have been signed by the pursuer, signing "A Cameron McIntyre", was produced in the adoption proceedings in Fort William Sheriff Court. The form bears to have been signed on 18 December 1950, in Fort William. The pursuer avers that the form of consent was not signed by him, and that on the date stated on the form he was living in Slough. In support of the averments that the form of consent was not signed by the pursuer, reference is made to the opinion of a consultant forensic document examiner. Paragraph 12 of the petition in Fort William Sheriff Court contained a statement that consent had been obtained from the pursuer. On 15 January 1951 the Sheriff Substitute dispensed with intimation on the walls of court and made no order for intimation on the pursuer. In these circumstances the pursuer avers that the petition proceeded upon the false basis that the pursuer had consented to the making of the adoption order. [4] The defender has tabled pleas-in-law to the competency of the remedy sought and to the relevancy of the pursuer's averments, and at the procedure roll discussion that was held before me his counsel argued that those pleas should be upheld. In relation to the competency of the remedy sought, she submitted that the remedy sought was unprecedented; no authority existed in support of the contention that the Court of Session had inherent power to reduce an adoption order. Moreover, the nature of an adoption order was such as to suggest that it should be final for all purposes. Once such a order was granted, it had lifelong consequences. It has been held that an adoption order is sui generis; consequently the inherent power of the Court of Session to reduce decrees in absence and in foro should not apply: J and J v C's Tutor, 1948 SC 636. Reference was also made to Skinner v Carter, [1948] Ch 387, and Re B (adoption; setting aside), [1995] 1 Fam L R 1; [1995] 2 Fam L R 1. Counsel thereafter submitted that the revocation of adoption orders was dealt with by specific limited statutory provisions, now contained in sections 46 and 47 of the Adoption Act 1978. On the basis of these sections, she submitted that it could be inferred that Parliament intended that these should be the only grounds for revocation of an adoption order. Finally, counsel submitted that there were strong public policy arguments against permitting the reduction of an adoption order. Such orders were permanent, and generally irrevocable. Under the law currently in force, they affect all aspects of the status and property of the person adopted. Moreover, if decree of reduction is to be granted, restitutio in integrum must normally be possible. Following adoption, however, it was likely that the adoptive parents had alimented the child, presumably on the faith of the adoption order. In practice, therefore, restitutio in integrum would be impossible, and it would not normally be appropriate to grant reduction. In relation to the relevancy of the pursuer's averments, counsel submitted that, if reduction of an adoption order was competent, the test for such reduction should be no less stringent than that for a decree in foro. It would accordingly be necessary to have a proof to investigate the factual basis for the grounds on which the pursuer sought reduction. [5] In reply, counsel for the pursuer submitted that adoption orders might be reduced in three categories of case. In the first, the order was bad on its face, and was therefore a nullity and effectively void. In the second, the order was good on its face, but there existed a defect of a fundamental nature in the making of the order. In such a case the order was void, or possibly voidable, and should be reduced. In the third category, the order was good on its face, and competently and regularly granted, but the circumstances were such that the Court should not permit it to stand. The present case was not concerned with the third category, but only with the first two. With the second category, it was necessary to ensure that the position of the child was safeguarded, and also to consider whether the persons requesting reduction were seeking to rely on their own failings. Reference was made to Re F, [1977] Fam 165, S v M, 1999 SC 388, Re RA (Minors), (1974) Fam Law 182, and R v Leeds City Justices, ex p Gilmartin, [1951] C. L. Y. 1629, and also to certain of the cases cited on behalf of the defender. The first ground on which reduction was sought related to the age of the pursuer at the time when the adoption order was made. Counsel submitted that this was an error that was tantamount to an error appearing on the face of the order, because both the pursuer's date of birth and the date of the order appeared there; at the very least, a question arose from the terms of the order. On this basis, counsel submitted that the pursuer's age was a fundamental defect which rendered the order incompetent. The second ground, relating to the consent form, involved fraud. That fell into the second category, but it was a defect that justified reduction. At this point I should make one general comment about the approach taken by counsel. While the analysis that she suggested may have some support from English cases, I am bound to say that I did not find it helpful in the context of the Scottish remedy of reduction. In particular, I have difficulty in understanding why it is relevant that an error appears on the face of a decree or other order; even if an error does not appear in that way it is still an error, and should be dealt with accordingly. It is possible that this distinction depends historically on the requirements of the English prerogative writ of certiorari, and if that is so it has no place in the Scots law of reduction. [6] In 1951 the statute governing adoption was the Adoption Act 1950. Section 1(1) of that Act was in the following terms:
"Subject to the provisions of this Act, the Court may, upon an application made in the prescribed manner by a person domiciled in England or Scotland, make an order (in this Act referred to as an adoption order) authorising the applicant to adopt an infant".
"Infant" is defined in section 45 as a person under twenty-one years of age. The effects of an adoption order at that time are set out in sections 10-16 of the 1950 Act. The primary effect is that stated in section 10(1):
"Upon an adoption order being made, all rights, duties, obligations and liabilities of the parents or guardians of the infant in relation to the future custody, maintenance and education of the infant, including all rights to appoint a guardian..., shall be extinguished, and all such rights, duties, obligations and liabilities shall vest in and be exercisable by and enforceable against the adopter as if the infant were a child born to the adopter in lawful wedlock; and in respect of the matters aforesaid (and, in Scotland, in respect of the liability of a child to maintain his parents) the infant shall stand to the adopter exclusively in the position of a child born to the adopter in lawful wedlock".
Thus the effect of an adoption order was to cut off all of the natural parents' rights as to custody, maintenance and education, and to vest those rights exclusively in the adopter. At that time a Scottish adoption order did not affect rights of succession, including legal rights; that was provided expressly in section 15 of the Act. Consequently an adopted child retained rights of succession in the estate of his natural parents and their family. The law in this respect has changed subsequently, and now section 39 of the Adoption (Scotland) Act 1978 provides that a child who has been adopted is to be treated in law as if he had been born the legitimate child of the adopters and were not the child of any other person. Section 38 of the 1978 Act gives section 39 retrospective effect. The result is that, if the adoption order made on 26 February 1951 stands, the pursuer will have no rights of succession in the estate of his natural brother. If, however, that order is reduced, the pursuer's rights of succession in the estate of his natural brother will revive.
[7] The nature of an adoption order was considered in J and J v C's Tutor, supra. In that case adoptive parents attempted to reduce an adoption order on two grounds. First, they claimed that they had adopted the child under essential error induced by innocent misrepresentations made by those acting for the natural mother; it was averred by the pursuers that they had been assured that a satisfactory medical report existed in relation to the child, whereas in fact the child had suffered brain injury at birth. Secondly, the pursuers contended that certain statutory prerequisites of adoption had not been carried out; in particular, the adoption petition was presented less than three months from the date when the child was placed in the care of the adoptive parents, contrary to the Act. Lord President Cooper began his analysis of the law by stating that the Adoption of Children (Scotland) Act 1930 "made a serious invasion upon the common law by introducing a novel institution which cannot easily be fitted into its setting". In relation to custody, maintenance and education, the Act transferred from the natural parent to the adopter the whole of the rights and obligations that flow from parenthood. It was plain that an adoption order affected status, because the question of custody was clearly a question of status; moreover, the child's personal liberty and even his name were affected. The opinion continues (at 1948 SC 642-643):"From all this I conclude that adoption proceedings are sui generis, uniquely devised to effectuate a new statutory institution, and incapable of being forcibly compressed into any of our pre-existing categories of forms of action....
I do not consider that an adoption order is either a decree in foro or a decree in absence... It stands in a class apart. The suggestion that every adoption order is liable to be reopened at any time for 20 years after it is made would make havoc of the whole purpose underlying the introduction of legal adoption, viz, to exclude the factor of instability... by virtue of which de facto adoptions could be terminated by the natural parents at pleasure, contract or no contract".
The court held that essential error was not a valid ground for reduction of an adoption order. The Lord President stated (at 644):
"The statute, which made such anxious provision for effectuating adoptions, nowhere makes any provision for their suspension or cancellation.... In section 7 of the [Adoption of Children (Scotland) Act 1930] provision is made whereby an adopted child can be got rid of by the adoptive parents by a second adoption; and section 7(6) of the [Adoption of Children (Regulation) Act 1939] enables an adopted child in very special circumstances to be removed from its adopter to a 'place of safety.' But no facilities are offered to the adopter or natural parent who, for good reasons or bad, rues his bargain, or for the adopter who adopts under error, essential or otherwise. It may well be that in relation to such a transaction, involving in most cases unpredictable risks as to the development of an infant child, Parliament deliberately adopted the principle of vestigia nulla retrorsum. I reserve the case (probably theoretical) of mistaken identity as to the adopted child; and I deliberately abstain from generalising more widely than is necessary for the decision of this case. I am prepared to hold that this action, in so far as directed to [the case of essential error], is incompetent as laid, and is not supported by relevant averments".
The pursuers' argument based on failure to comply with statutory requirements was likewise rejected, on the ground that they were themselves responsible for the error in question.
[7] The nature of an adoption order was also considered by the Court of Appeal in England in Skinner v Carter, supra. Adoption is, of course, a statutory creation in the United Kingdom, and the legislation in Scotland uses similar terms and concepts to that in England. Consequently the views of the English courts on the meaning and legal significance of the adoption legislation are of persuasive authority in Scotland. In Skinner, Lord Greene MR stated (at [1948] Ch 391) that an adoption order alters the status of the child concerned, who is the person primarily affected and interested. Consequently, in any proceedings for the revocation or annulment of an adoption order, the child must be represented. The court did not, however, pronounce on the remedies that might be available to achieve that result, nor on the grounds on which those remedies might be granted: see page 394. A further comment on the nature of an adoption order is found in D v Grampian Regional Council, 1995 SC (HL) 1, where Lord Jauncey stated (at p 5H-I):"The Act of 1978 provides a comprehensive code for adoption and it is perfectly clear that the whole procedure is intended to produce a permanent result for the adopted child. An adoption order once made is irrevocable only in circumstances which will have no practical effect upon the child's day to day life in contradistinction to an order for custody or access which is always reviewable by the court when circumstances demand"".