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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Y (A Child), Re [2019] EWCA Civ 2209 (Rev 1) (12 December 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/2209.html Cite as: [2019] EWCA Civ 2209 (Rev 1) |
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ON APPEAL FROM LEEDS COMBINED COURT CENTRE
Deputy Circuit Judge Hunt
LS19C00551
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE KING
and
MR JUSTICE LAVENDER
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Y (A CHILD) |
____________________
Sally Bradley (instructed by Brighton & Hove City Council) for the Respondent
Alex Taylor (instructed by King Street Solicitors) for the Child (written submissions only)
Hearing date: 28th November 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice King:
"In my opinion 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 and not of discretion."
"The other aspect of the purpose to be served which I highlighted in the judgment of Thorpe L.J. at [18] above is that the sections must provide a simple mechanism to determine a question of administration. The enquiry outlined above is simple enough. The budgets of the Social Services departments are already stretched enough by meeting the cost of care that they should not be further depleted by squabbles of this kind: better remember that there are swings and roundabouts and you may win one today but you will certainly lose another tomorrow."
Background
"[the mother] has fled from Brighton to Bolton to Dublin to avoid social services intervention. Currently [the mother] is at large in the UK with [Y] and is indecisive as to whether she will return to Belfast or remain in the UK."
"AND UPON the court being satisfied that the mother did attempt to contact Belfast HSCT and notify them of her whereabouts in Wakefield on 6 August and is concerned that Belfast HSCT did not communicate that to Brighton and Hove Council City(sic)prior to the issue of the extension application."
Designation of local authorities
"8. 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 a local authority, the authority within whose area any circumstances arose in consequence of which the order is being made."
"I am convinced that section 31(8) was never intended to be a gateway to extensive judicial investigation of a number of relevant facts and circumstances as the prelude to the exercise of some discretionary choice. It was surely intended to be a simple test to enable the court to make a rapid designation of the authority upon which is to fall the administrative, professional and financial responsibility for implementing the care order and the care plan. 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.
"The circumstances to which the judge should have regard are the primary circumstances that carry the case over the section 31 threshold. That may be a positive act or series of acts, such as sexual or physical abuse. If there has been extensive abuse there will usually be an ultimate or an outstanding episode that triggered local authority intervention. The judge will have no difficulty in locating that event. In other cases the foundation for the care order may be negative conduct such as neglect, consistently poor parenting or a failure to provide emotional support. Even in chronic cases without any acute episode it will usually be simple enough for the judge to discern the place or, if more than one, the principal place at which the failure occurred. In my opinion 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 and not of discretion."
"19. If one asks which local authority is to bear the burden of responsibility for implementing the care order and care plan, it seems to me that the answer is fairly obvious. For the section 31 threshold to be crossed the child must be suffering, or be likely to suffer, significant harm at the time the local authority initiated the procedure for the protection of the child concerned. Where the child is ordinarily living, or where the relevant threshold events take place, is the relevant locus which provides the best identification of a practical, temporal and physical connection between local authority and child. The burden of the eventual responsibility for implementing the care order should then fall on the local authority having that connection. The designation of the appropriate local authority under section 31(8) seeks to do just that.
20. As I see it, sections 31(8)(a) and (b) are in harmony. Take section 31(8)(b) first. When the child – and this must mean the child who is the subject of the care order – does not reside (perhaps does not ordinarily reside per Northamptonshire CC) in the area of a local authority, the authority to be designated in the order is the authority within whose area any circumstance arose in consequence of which the order is being made. The temporal focus is on the time leading up to the issue of the proceedings. The factual focus is on the primary circumstances that carry the case over the section 31 threshold. The local authority where these events happen has the responsibility to take action and should be charged with the responsibility of providing the care that follows."
The Judgment
"30. Accordingly, for those reasons, my judgment is that the place where the case was carried over the relevant threshold… was Wakefield – the place from which the child was at risk of being removed if her mother was to flee again. That was the basis of Judge Bartfield finding that the threshold justifying immediate removal was crossed."
Wakefield's Case
i) That the mother had had a previous child removed by BHCC. This, said Mr Davies, was an important feature showing a long-term connection by BHCC with the mother which was resumed when she came to Brighton in July 2019;
ii) That the welfare visit carried out by BHCC on 18 July 2019 should have showed BHCC unequivocally that the mother could not provide adequate care for Y and BHCC, in fulfilling their statutory duties towards Y, should then have taken immediate action. Had they done so, Mr Davies submitted, the mother would not have been able to move to Wakefield;
iii) This, says Mr Davies, ties in with, what he says, is a generally accepted premise: Mr Davies submits that where a person ("P") is subject to the involvement of a local authority ("Local Authority A") and moves to a different local authority ("Local Authority B") as a consequence of some action (or here, it is suggested, inaction) on the part of Local Authority A, Local Authority A remains responsible for any costs which arise in Local Authority B's area in relation to P. Local Authority A cannot, Mr Davies says, seek to transfer the responsibility for costs referable to P which arise as a result of the move to Local Authority B. In support of this submission, Mr Davies relies upon R on the application of the London Borough of Greenwich v Secretary of State for Health and the London Borough of Bexley [2006] EWHC 2576 ("Greenwich") to which I will return in due course;
iv) That the 'flight risk' crystallised on 24 July 2019 when the mother did not return to Northern Ireland on her return ticket. That, submits Mr Davies, is the date upon which "circumstances arose in consequence of which the order is being made" and at that time the mother was still in Brighton.
Discussion
"14. I have no doubt that with the proceedings underway as of today she does present a flight risk. That would mean that this child would yet again be at risk of the self-same factors identified in Belfast earlier this year…"
"28. What I have taken from all this and the chronology as a whole is that it is difficult to ascribe the crossing of a threshold to a particular fact or set of facts…
"29. I agree entirely with Judge Bartfield that the factor which justified his determination that the threshold for removal was crossed was the risk of further flight, and the avoidance of proper monitoring and assessment of [Y]'s safety, and the deliberate avoidance of proceedings".
Conclusion
Mr Justice Lavender:
Sir Terence Etherton MR: