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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> S (A Child) [2017] EWCA Civ 2695 (31 August 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/2695.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Civ 2695 |
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CIVIL DIVISION
Royal Courts of Justice Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LADY JUSTICE GLOSTER
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IN THE MATTER OF: | ||
S (A CHILD) |
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MR M KINGERLEY appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
If this Transcript is to be reported or published, there is a requirement to ensure that no reporting restriction will be breached. This is particularly important in relation to any case involving a sexual offence, where the victim is guaranteed lifetime anonymity (Sexual Offences (Amendment) Act 1992), or where an order has been made in relation to a young person
Lady Justice King:
Background
The Law
"The local authority designated in a care order must be-
(a) the authority within whose area the child is ordinarily resident; or
(b) where the child does not reside in the area of the local authority, the authority within whose area any circumstances arose in consequence of which the order is being made."
a) by reference to ordinary residence; or
b) by reference to the precipitating circumstances giving rise to the order being made.
"In determining the 'ordinary residence' of a child for any purpose of this Act, there shall be disregarded any period in which he lives in any place-
(a) which is a school or other institution;
(b) in accordance with the requirements of a supervision order under this Act;
(ba) in accordance with the requirements of a youth rehabilitation order under Part 1 of the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008; or
(c) while he is being provided with accommodation by or on behalf of a local authority."
i) The Judge's function is to carry out a rapid and not over-sophisticated review of the history to make a purely factual determination, it is a question of fact not discretion;
ii) The subsection should be given the construction that achieves the result for which it is designed, namely a simple mechanism to determine the question of administration;
iii) The subsection has to be read as a straight forward test to be operated by the court in what should be, in the unlikely event of a dispute, to determine which local authority is to be responsible for the care plan and its implementation.
"The underlying purpose of the decision of this court in Northamptonshire County Council and Islington Borough Council, as I see it, was to bring an end to disputes as to the statutory responsibility for a child between local authorities, let alone disputes between a parent and a local authority. Following that decision, those issues should no longer be litigated."
"In C (A Child) v Plymouth County Council [2000] 1 FLR 875 Thorpe LJ re-emphasised the basis of the Northampton decision which, he said, was to put an end to litigation of this kind between local authorities (see, for example at 878 and per Swinton Thomas LJ at 880). Thorpe LJ agreed with the first instance court that it was a reasonable inference of fact in the circumstances of that case that a new born baby would be unlikely to have an ordinary residence apart from her primary career and that for a child of such a tender age, the child's ordinary residence would usually follow that of her carer."
"Where the child has connections with more than one area ordinary residence determines on the basis that almost every child will have an ordinary residence, if not a presence, in some local authority area. In the rare case where a child lacks an ordinary residence in a local authority area the court designates the area in which occurred the events that carried the application over the section 31 threshold".
Habitual Residence and Ordinary Residence
"61. There is no doubt that "ordinary residence" and "habitual residence" are close relatives. The phrases have been treated as equated one with the other, indeed they have been described as synonymous; see V v B [1991] 1 FLR 266, Gateshead Metropolitan Council v L [1996] 2 FLR 179, and Re V (A Minor) Abduction: Habitual Residence [1995] 2 FLR 992. In Nessa v Chief Adjudicating Officer [1999] 2 FLR 1116, Lord Slynn described an "overlap" between the meaning of "ordinary" and "habitual" residence, recognising that one is sometimes defined in terms of the other. In Nessa the House of Lords recognised that there is "a common core of meaning" between the two phrases (see also, for completeness, Barnet London Borough Council v Shah [1983] 2 AC 309 at 342, [1983] 1 All ER 226 at 234).
62. That 'ordinary residence' and 'habitual residence' are broadly synonymous was a proposition accepted by all parties in these proceedings."
"It is clearly artificial as a matter of ordinary language to say that a child is habitually resident at birth in a country to which it has never been. As the cases recognise, residence denotes and involves a physical presence. Where the parents or parent have established a place of habitual residence in a particular country it will usually require no more than a moment's presence in that jurisdiction for a newly born child to acquire the same status. The child's integration into the family and social life of his parents already centered in that location will be completed by his physical presence there.…"
And at [61]:
"One could construct a rule by which a newly born child was presumed to take on birth the habitual residence of its parents or custodial parent. But the rule would be a legal construct divorced from actual fact which is what the court in B.v H. [(Habitual Residence: Wardship) [2002] 1 FLR 388] said that it was anxious to avoid and which has been rejected in all the earlier decisions of this court."
"So which approach accords most closely with the factual situation of the child – an approach which holds that presence is a necessary pre-cursor to residence and thus to habitual residence or an approach which focusses on the relationship between the child and his primary carer? In my view, it is the former. It is one thing to say that a child's integration in the place where he is at present depends upon the degree of integration of his primary carer. It is another thing to say that he can be integrated in a place to which his primary carer has never taken him. It is one thing to say that a person can remain habitually resident in a country from which he is temporarily absent. It is another thing to say that a person can acquire a habitual residence without ever setting foot in a country. It is one thing to say that a child is integrated in the family environment of his primary carer and siblings. It is another thing to say that he is also integrated into the social environment of a country where he has never been"
"The decision of the Court of Appeal in this case involves a rule or general proposition because it necessarily excludes habitual residence without some past physical presence. The contrary approach, which to my mind is correct, involves no rule or generality at all, save for the advice to look, in the case of an infant, at the position of the family unit of which he is part. This does not involve a rule for dependent habitual residence. It merely asserts the possibility that habitual residence may exist in a State which is the home of the family unit of which the infant is part, and is where he would be but for force majeure."
And at [92]:
"If current physical presence is not essential, then so also can habitual residence exist without any physical presence yet having occurred, at least if it has only been prevented by some kind of unexpected force majeure."
"Thus, the determination of a child's habitual residence in a given Member State requires at least that the child has been physically present in that Member State."
"… is physical presence a necessary and self-evident prerequisite, in all circumstances, for establishing the habitual residence of a person, and in particular a new-born child?"
"81.…it is not inconceivable that there may be wholly exceptional circumstances in which it might be appropriate to disregard the criterion of physical presence. However, the present case, dealt with under the urgent procedure, does not lend itself to an in-depth examination of that question of principle. Given the circumstances of this case, an answer to such a question is not needed in order to provide a helpful answer to the question submitted by the referring court.
82. However, it seems timely to observe that, in such circumstances, and taking into consideration, in particular, that habitual residence is a question of fact, it is necessary that a tangible connection be established with a country other than that where the child is in fact living.
83. Such a connection would have to be based, in the best interests of the child, on concrete and substantial evidence that could thus take precedence over the physical presence of the child. Plainly, there would not be a sufficient connection if there were some prospect that a particular Member State might become, on an indefinite future date, the place where the child would be habitually resident, unless that prospect were reinforced by other tangible links of such a kind that the prerequisite of the child's physical presence could be set aside."
"According to that case law, the habitual residence of a child corresponds to the place which reflects some degree of integration by the child in a social and family environment. That place must be established by the national courts taking into account all the circumstances of facts specific to each individual case… To that end, in addition to the physical presence of a child in a member state, other factors must also make it clear that presence is in not any way temporary or intermittent and that the child's residence corresponds to the place which reflects such integration in a social and family environment."
Discussion and Conclusion
"Whilst I note the observations put forward on behalf of Leicestershire County Council with regards to the point arising out of A v A, I find the case of A v A, which is persuasive only, does not of itself exclude that finding, indeed it recognises that whilst not an absolute fixed position, it will be a frequent if not unusual position. I am driven to conclude that on that basis, and with my own judgment in the context of circumstances of this case, S's ordinary residence sits with his mother and sits with Leicestershire County Council who are on that basis the designated local authority. It would seem from the Judge's judgment he had at the front of his mind the observation of Ryder LJ set out above, namely that 'it would be unlikely to have an ordinary residence apart from the primary carer, and that for a child at such a tender age, the child's ordinary residence will look usually to follow that of her carer."
LADY JUSTICE GLOSTER: