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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> S-C (Children), Re [2012] EWCA Civ 1800 (22 November 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1800.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 1800 |
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ON APPEAL FROM OXFORD COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE CURRIE)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
and
MRS JUSTICE BARON
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IN THE MATTER OF S-C (CHILDREN) |
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Ms Louise Potter and Mr Leo Curran (instructed by Oxfordshire County Council) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Baron:
"This matter has been discussed in the preceding sections of the report, as have the implications for the children's well-being if [D] and [P] maintain their currently poor patterns of parenting. Specifically, for each parent, their psychological vulnerabilities undermine their ability to recognise either the harm their children may suffer, or the role that the parent has in causing such harm. This lack of insight may remit to a degree following successful completion of the treatments described for the parents below. In the interim however, although the parents may pay lip service to the advice and recommendations of professionals, their inability to grasp the need for this advice will undermine their ability to make use of it…
Considering first [D's] treatment needs, she has suffered an appallingly abusive childhood which has given rise to a chronic pattern of emotional and personality vulnerabilities, together with significant anger management problems and a normalised perception of conflict and turbulence within the home."
His conclusion was that even if she had therapy for a period of eighteen months she should not be able to care for her children or even have unsupervised contact to them. In the light of this and all the other evidence care orders were made in respect of all seven children.
"then subsection (f), which relates to the relationship of a child which the child has with relatives or any other person, is not material for these purposes."
The respondents to this appeal accept that this latter expression contained an unfortunate use of language, but they submit, this should be read in the context of the judgment as a whole with the result that this ground is unsustainable. The fourth ground of appeal is more specific and asserts that the care plans for the adoption of E and M does not provide for similar treatment to their older siblings and therefore the decision to grant placement orders was plainly wrong.
"The judge can only dispense with parental consent if the welfare of the child requires it, and the paramount consideration is the child's welfare throughout their life."
"Section 52(1) is concerned with adoption – the making of either a placement order or an adoption order – and what therefore has to be shown is that the child's welfare "requires" adoption as opposed to something short of adoption. A child's circumstances may "require" statutory intervention, perhaps may even "require" the indefinite or long-term removal of the child from the family and his or her placement with strangers, but that is not to say that the same circumstances will necessarily "require" that the child be adopted. They may or they may not. The question, at the end of the day, is whether what is "required" is adoption."
We have been referred specifically to other passages in Re P. In particular:
"125. This is the context in which the critical word "requires" is used in section 52(1)(b). It is a word which was plainly chosen as best conveying, as in our judgment it does, the essence of the Strasbourg jurisprudence. And viewed from that perspective "requires" does indeed have the connotation of the imperative, what is demanded rather than what is merely optional or reasonable or desirable.
[…]
132. The need for care, sensitivity and intellectual rigour on the part of judges hearing applications for placement orders is, we think, reinforced by the fact that applications for placement orders will, regularly, be heard and will need to be determined immediately after the court has made a care order in relation to the same child: - see Re P-B referred to in paragraph 34 above, and the unreported decision of this court in Re EN (a child) KN [2007] EWCA Civ 264. It is not so long ago that the grant of only a short adjournment between the making of a care order and the application to free a child for adoption (albeit in the context of a litigant acting in person) was held by the European Court of Human Rights to be a breach of ECHR Article 6: - see P, C and S v United Kingdom [2002] 2 FLR 631. Whilst is it highly unlikely that any parents having to face the prospect of immediately sequential care and placement order will be unrepresented, the likely juxtaposition of the two applications is, in our judgment, an additional reason for the court to examine the cases with particular care."
"So far as the likely effect on each child of any change of circumstances, there is of course none in the case of the three oldest children. In the case of the four youngest, this will be dramatic and painful in the short term. But, given the context of a probable continuing and serious deficiencies in the parenting which they have received and will probably continue to receive, a change is necessary. On the evidence laid before the Court, the Court has no doubt that in the medium and longer term, the change in the care plan will be entirely beneficial. Even if an adoptive placement cannot be found [in respect of the two youngest children] quickly it cannot be said, and the Court does not accept, that that task is an impossible one. I accept the evidence of the Guardian that it is difficult to place two girls of this age together. The difficulties will increase with time, but the only solution to the problem is, or appears to be, that advanced of the twin tracking in [E's] case if no joint placement is to be found after six months. The potential for what Ms Hylton described as a 'limbo' is of course considerable, but the alternative, as starkly set out by Dr Murphy in a passage to which I have referred earlier (the 'brutal' experience) is, on balance, far worse than the disadvantages inherent in the course proposed by the local authority and endorsed by the Guardian.
71. Accordingly, in linking with that the children's ability to adapt to the change, the Court is as confident as it is possible to be in these circumstances that the children will adapt to the new circumstances, in the case of the two older of the younger quartet, to good foster homes. In the case of the two younger ones, the plan is adoption."
It is clear from that passage in the judgment that the judge considered and appreciated that the orders that he was going to make were draconian and that there was a difference in the distinction between an order for long-term fostering under a care order and a placement order in terms of a prospective adoption.
Lord Justice Thorpe:
Lord Justice Rimer:
Order: Appeal dismissed