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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 >> W (A Child), Re [2013] EWCA Civ 335 (20 February 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/335.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 335 |
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ON APPEAL FROM TRURO COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE VINCENT)
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE McFARLANE
and
LORD JUSTICE DAVIS
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IN THE MATTER OF W (A CHILD) |
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Ms Gina Small (instructed by Gill Akaster Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Respondent mother.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Thorpe:
"The court must accept the evidence and recommendations of the CAFCASS Officer unless there are cogent reasons to depart from the recommendations. For the reasons outlined the court finds there are not the grounds to depart from Ms Beer's recommendations."
Ergo, there followed an order limited to cards and gifts twice a year, birthday and Christmas, and in reverse order an order for the mother to send school reports at the end of each term. The mother's obligation was misunderstood, in the sense that clearly the Justices thought that there would be term reports whereas it transpires that there is simply an annual report at the end of each summer term.
"The court has considered the case law provided by Counsel in relation to this application. The Court has considered the welfare checklist and the paramoncy principle.
The Court has not granted an Order for PR [parental responsibility] because it has been established that this mother has such a real fear of father playing any role in her child's life. If father were to exercise the inherent powers of PR we are satisfied that this would significantly adversely affect Rhys's future stability and wellbeing."
"I just want to go back to the parental responsibility. They dismissed the application not actually for the wrong reason, they dismissed it because they were alert to the danger that an exercise of parental responsibility by the father would be likely to occasion the same type of harm to Rhys as would direct contact. But the central reason that they could have relied upon was that he had no existing or sufficient relationship with Rhys beyond the biological connection, and had sadly, this is not his fault, the opportunity to demonstrate a commitment to the child in any meaningful sense. There can be no criticism of the decision on parental responsibility. They were plainly right about that."
"I will give permission to appeal the parental responsibility order. The contact order is much more difficult. This was a finding of fact made by the Justices but because it is getting close to Christmas and not much will be added by dealing with contact, I will for that compelling reason allow the appeal on contact to proceed."
So it can be said that the view that I would take on the contact appeal chimes with the initial assessment of Ward LJ.
"These are wholly separate applications and it should be understood by now that a parental responsibility order is one designed not to do more than confer on the natural father the status of fatherhood which a father would have when married to the mother. There is also a sad failure fully to appreciate, when looking at the best interests of the child (which are paramount in this application, as elsewhere) that a child needs for its self-esteem to grow up, wherever it can, having a favourable positive image of an absent parent; and it is important that, wherever possible, the law should confer on a concerned father that stamp of approval because he has shown himself willing and anxious to pick up the responsibility of fatherhood and not to deny or avoid it."
Had that citation been large in the mind of the Justices, I very much doubt that they would have refused the father simply on the speculative anxiety that, were he to exercise the powers of parental responsibility, that would significantly and adversely affect Rhys's future stability. I surmise that HHJ Vincent did not have much confidence in the adequacy of that reasoning, and that is why in the paragraph that I have cited he introduces an alternative support for the refusal, which he expresses as the absence of no existing or sufficient relationship beyond the biological connection. HHJ Vincent was not investigating fact or finding fact, as he himself very plainly stated, and Ms Wills-Goldingham has pointed out that it is not a fair characterisation that the father had nothing beyond a biological connection. The connections beyond the purely biological I have already recorded. So if HHJ Vincent was endeavouring to rescue the Justices from the consequences of rather shaky rationalisation, I am not persuaded that he has done so or was entitled to do so in the passage that I have cited.
Lord Justice McFarlane:
"Where there are significant difficulties in the way of establishing safe and beneficial contact, the parents share the primary responsibility of addressing those difficulties so that, in time, and maybe with outside help, the child can benefit from being in a full relationship with each parent."
And then 78:
"Parents, both those who have primary care and those who seek to spend time with their child, have a responsibility to do their best to meet their child's needs in relation to the provision of contact, just as they do in every other regard. It is not, at face value, acceptable for a parent to shirk that responsibility and simply to say 'no' to reasonable strategies designed to improve the situation in this regard."
Lord Justice Davis:
Order: Appeal allowed