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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 >> J (Child) [2013] EWCA Civ 1685 (18 December 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/1685.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 1685 |
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ON APPEAL FROM TAUNTON DISTRICT REGISTRY
HIS HONOUR JUDGE BROMILOW
UH12C0006
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE RAFFERTY
and
LORD JUSTICE FLOYD
____________________
J (Child) |
____________________
Mr Christopher Naish (instructed by Somerset County Council Legal Services) for the
1st Respondent
Miss Susan Campbell QC (instructed by Gareth Webb & Co) for the 2nd Respondent
Hearing date: 21st November 2013
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
BLACK LJ:
"we established Common Law Jurisdiction prior to the hearing and Mr Bromilow confirmed he was on his Oath before the hearing began. Therefore, as a Court de Jure was in effect, no consent means Mr Bromilow had no authority"
Another feature was that M treated the name by which she would normally be known as her "legal fiction" and insisted that she be addressed by a rather differently formulated version of it. Furthermore, she and IM did not consider they were bound by orders to which they did not consent.
i) Whether the judge had taken a correct approach to the role of IM as McKenzie friend or lay representative;ii) Whether K should have been represented by his own solicitor;
iii) Whether the judge's decisions about the witnesses who were to be called were open to criticism;
iv) Whether a further assessment of M should have been ordered rather than the judge proceeding to make a final care order.
i) Whether the judge had made adequate findings in relation to the threshold criteria;ii) Whether the judge's decision to grant a care order was sufficiently reasoned.
History
i) the incident on 14 August 2012 which was described as an attempt by M to commit suicide;ii) K having been allowed out unsupervised and, in particular, having been seen out unsupervised on 13 August 2012; it was said that M was also seen in a local pub without K;
iii) K having broken into the school on 4 August 2012;
iv) M having slapped K in the face in March 2012.
The hearing of 20 March 2013 and the judge's judgment
"2.0.1 [M] experienced significant trauma in childhood and adolescence. This affected her to the extent that she manifest [sic] conduct problems and later, in early adult life, personality characteristics consistent with an emotionally unstable personality of the borderline type. As time has passed these characteristics became less salient but are manifest when she is subject to stress. The symptoms of this condition are known to overlap with post traumatic stress disorder. This has been termed complex PTSD. Alcohol dependence arose as a secondary phenomenon.
2.0.2 This problem has affected the manner in which she relates to her children and has limited her capacity to respond appropriately to K's needs.
2.0.3 She is likely to slowly continue to adjust to her past but remains vulnerable to stressors which cause her to rapidly decompensate, as occurred last August. Specific psychotherapy may be helpful but will take many months to complete. The prescription of diazepam requires review."
"….if [K] went home to live with [M] and [IM] now or in the very near future he would be exposed to a real risk of suffering from significant harm, namely, emotional harm. There is a real risk of yet further upheaval, of unsatisfactory and neglectful parenting."
The grounds of appeal: witnesses
Grounds of appeal: further assessment of M
Grounds of appeal: the threshold criteria
Grounds of appeal: the judge's reasoning for making the care order
Grounds of appeal: access to the documentation
Conclusion
RAFFERTY LJ:
FLOYD LJ: