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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 >> K (Children: Placement Orders), Re [2020] EWCA (Civ) 1503 (12 November 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/1503.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA (Civ) 1503 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE (FAMILY DIVISION)
Mr Justice Keehan
WW17C00664, WV18C00394
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Vice-President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division))
LORD JUSTICE PETER JACKSON
and
LADY JUSTICE SIMLER
____________________
K (Children: Placement Orders) |
____________________
Kemi Ojutiku (instructed by Mould Haruna Solicitors Ltd) for the Respondent Father
Laura O'Malley (instructed by Sandwell MBC) for the Respondent Local Authority
Kathryn Taylor (instructed by Anthony Collins Solicitors LLP) for the Respondent Children by their Children's Guardian (by written submissions only)
Hearing date: 5 November 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Peter Jackson:
The facts
The judgment
"100. At the hearing on 18th December 2019 I had carefully explained to the father that:
i) I did not want to find myself forced to place his children for adoption;
ii) I wanted to give the children the chance to be cared for by a capable and loving father; and
iii) I required him to promise he would not have any further contact with the mother.
I warned him, however, that if he breached my requirement for him not to have any further contact with the mother, it would be likely that I would be compelled and left with no choice but to place his children for adoption. I called him into the witness box, with his interpreter, to explain these matters to him and to ask him if he understood. He said he did.
101. Nevertheless, as the parents phone records reveal, within moments of the father leaving court he breached his assurances to me and he contacted the mother by her mobile telephone. He then repeatedly breached his assurances to me by repeatedly contacting the mother. He demonstrated an utter and complete disregard for everything I had said and he had said on oath at that hearing.
102. I am bound to conclude, on the totality of the evidence that I have heard, that I cannot trust a single word said by either of these parents.
103. … The mother, like the father, does not regret any of her past actions during the course of these proceedings: she does not regret fleeing with R to the USA, later joined by the father, to give birth to J and she does not regret concealing the birth of Q. She, like the father, does regret and resents the involvement of the local authority in her life and these court proceedings. She, like the father, does not even begin to understand or accept the significant harm the children have suffered in their care and the significant harm they would each be at risk of suffering if they were returned to the parents' care in the future. I consider the prospects of the mother making any positive changes for the better are remote, whether in the short, medium or long term.
104. These observations and comments apply with equal force to the father.
105. If any of the children were returned to the care of either or both the parents they would immediately be removed from this jurisdiction and/or would not made available to the local authority or the children's guardian."
"107. In relation to the children, I make the following findings of fact, on the balance of probabilities:
i) in her efforts to conceal her pregnancy with Q, the mother absented herself from most contact visits with R and J between June and January 2020, which inevitably caused both boys emotional harm;
ii) in her efforts to conceal her pregnancy with Q, the mother failed to provide her unborn child with appropriate antenatal care and, save in the immediate days after her birth, appropriate post-natal care, putting Q at risk of suffering physical harm;
iii) the parents' failure to engage with the local authority or with any professionals with whom they have had contact is wholly irrational and is not founded on any objectively reasonable grounds;
iv) there has been no change in the approach of the parents towards professionals over the course of the last three years and there is no basis for concluding there will be any change in the foreseeable; not least because, in truth, they discern no reason to change;
v) accordingly, if the children were returned to the care of the parents and any professional, most especially a social worker, was to seek subsequently to involve themselves with the family, the parents' instinctive and immediate response would be, at least, to refuse to engage and co-operate and, most likely, to flee irrespective of the welfare best interests of the children;
vi) therefore, the children would be at a real risk of suffering significant emotional and psychological harm from the stability of their lives being disrupted and abruptly changed over the years to come; and
vii) moreover, in light of the events of 6th May 2017 and 26th November 2019, which the parents have consistently downplayed and minimised, the children would be at a real risk of suffering significant physical, emotional and psychological harm if they were returned to the care of the parents."
"Analysis: Welfare
109. I have expressed the clear view on numerous occasions in the history of this case, especially at the hearing on 18th December 2019, that I did not want to find myself contemplating the placement of R and J, and now Q, for adoption.
110. The parents deeply love their children and the children love them. There is no question, and never has been, that the parents are more than able to meet the basic care needs of the children.
111. The stumbling block is the parents' irrational and extreme over-reaction to the involvement of professionals in their lives and those of their children, most especially social workers.
112. In closing submissions made on behalf of the mother and of the father it was submitted that the facts of this case did not warrant the making of orders which would separate the children from their parents for the remainder of their lives or, at least, for the remainder of their respective childhoods. It was submitted that if the local authority had desisted and/or would desist in the future from involvement in the lives of the parents and the children, all would be fine and the children would be well cared for by their parents.
113. These submissions completely ignore the history of this case and the findings of fact that I made in March 2019. The local authority has constantly sought to work in partnership with these parents and to support them in their care of the children. At each turn their efforts to work with the parents have been rebuffed and/or apparent co-operation has subsequently been found to be based on lies and deceit.
114. The only long-term future options for the children are:
i) a return to the care of the parents;
ii) placement in long term foster care; or
iii) placement for adoption.
No other alternative or familial placements have been advanced by any party.
115. On the basis of my findings of fact set out at 26-36 and [106 & 107] above, there is no prospect of any real or significant change being made by the parents, and most certainly not within the timescales of the children. Accordingly, a return to the care of the parents would place the children at a high risk of suffering significant harm in the future and throughout their respective minorities.
116. Given their very young ages, it would be wholly inimical to the welfare best interests of all three children to be placed in long term foster care. There is the ever-present risk of the placement breaking down or of the children having to move to new placements because of a change in the circumstances of the foster family. A social worker would always be involved in their lives with the usual periodic reviews of their care and placement.
117. On the other hand, a placement in foster care would leave open the option of the children possibly returning to the care of the parents at some unspecified and ill-defined point in the future.
118. The parents do not even begin to accept my previous findings of fact. I have no hope they will ever accept those findings of fact or the findings of fact that I have made in this judgment. The prospects of the parents' changing their irrational and baseless views of social workers are remote. Accordingly, if the children were to return to the care of the parents they would, throughout their respective minorities, be subject to the risks of harm I have set out in paragraph 105 above.
119. On the other hand, they would be cared for by their biological and loving parents and the importance of this cannot be underestimated.
120. Placing all three children for adoption would sever their respective legal ties with their biological parents for the whole of their lives. It would entail the risk that, whatever the current best intentions of the local authority, they may ultimately be placed separately for adoption which would be wholly contrary to the welfare best interests of all three children.
121. The cessation of contact and of a relationship with the parents is bound to have an adverse impact on the children, most especially R. I note, however, that all three children have settled well into their foster homes. R and J missed seeing their mother in contact last year when she was in Ireland and/or in London with Q but neither of them was unduly upset. I must balance the adverse impact of a cessation of contact and of a relationship with the parents against the potential life-long benefits of an adoptive placement in a loving, safe and secure home. I am satisfied the balance falls decisively in favour of an adoptive placement for all three children.
122. Standing back and considering the three options in the round and against the background of the totality of the evidence, it is with a heavy heart and with great reluctance that I conclude that the only option which will meet the welfare best interests of each of the children throughout the whole of their respective lives, is a placement for adoption. It is the proportionate, indeed the only, course the court can adopt to secure the future welfare of all three children.
123. I place huge importance and emphasis on the need to place all of the children together for adoption. I cannot require the local authority to do so. It would, however, be my clear expectation that if the local authority, despite their best endeavours, could not place all three children together for adoption that they would restore this matter to court. Because, if this position were reached it may be, I would have come to a different conclusion on the placement for the children which was in their welfare best interests.
124. In all of the circumstances I am satisfied that the welfare of each child requires me to dispense with the consent of both parents to the adoption of each child and I so dispense with their consent.
Conclusions
125. On the totality of the evidence and for the reasons set out in this judgment I am satisfied and find the threshold criteria of s.31(2) of the 1989 Act to be met in respect of each child.
126. I am satisfied that the care plan for each child of placement for adoption is in the welfare best interests of each child and I make a care order in respect of each of them.
127. I have dispensed with the consent of the parents to the adoption of R, J and Q. I am satisfied that the placement of each child for adoption, but all placed together, is in the welfare best interests of each child. Accordingly, I make a placement order in respect of each of them."
The appeal
(1) The injury to R in a domestic abuse incident between the parents.
(2) Emotional harm to R and J caused by the mother absenting herself from significant periods of their lives and denying the children contact with each other.
(3) The denial of antenatal care for Q as a result of the mother fleeing the jurisdiction in an attempt to avoid detection of the pregnancy.
The risk of future harm could be summarised as being the risk of repetition of the past physical harm, and of emotional/ psychological harm arising from repeated instability caused by the parents' irrational response to any future attempt at intervention or monitoring. The Judge described this as a high risk of significant harm. He then conducted a comparative evaluation of the advantages and disadvantages of each option. His analysis was not unduly focused on the parents' lying, as seen from the attempt to implement a rehabilitation plan despite their known levels of dishonesty. Special consideration was given to the cultural background through appointing a Ghanaian social worker to assess any cultural reasons for the parents not engaging with professionals; there were none. The parents continued to argue that the local authority have caused their difficulties, making change unlikely.
Analysis and Conclusion
"(4) The court or adoption agency must have regard to the following matters (among others)—
(a) the child's ascertainable wishes and feelings regarding the decision (considered in the light of the child's age and understanding),
(b) the child's particular needs,
(c) the likely effect on the child (throughout his life) of having ceased to be a member of the original family and become an adopted person,
(d) the child's age, sex, background and any of the child's characteristics which the court or agency considers relevant,
(e) any harm (within the meaning of the Children Act 1989 (c. 41)) which the child has suffered or is at risk of suffering,
(f) the relationship which the child has with relatives, … including—
(i) the likelihood of any such relationship continuing and the value to the child of its doing so,
(ii) the ability and willingness of any of the child's relatives, … to provide the child with a secure environment in which the child can develop, and otherwise to meet the child's needs,
(iii) the wishes and feelings of any of the child's relatives, … regarding the child."
This list provides structure for decisions and ensures that all welfare elements are taken into account. So in the present case the children's particular needs under (b) include the need to stay together if at all possible, while their background under (d) includes their Ghanaian/black British heritage. In issue were the questions of harm and risk of harm under (e) and the ability of the parents to provide a secure environment and otherwise meet their needs under (f)(ii).
"… I consider the case appears to have been hijacked by the issue of the mother's dishonesty. Much of the local authority's evidence is devoted to it. The Children's Guardian adopts much the same perspective. It cannot be the sole issue in a case devoid of context. There was very little attention given to context in this case. No analysis appears to have been made by any of the professionals as to why the mother's particular lies created the likelihood of significant harm to these children and what weight should reasonably be afforded to the fact of her deceit in the overall balance."
(1) What is the type of harm that might arise?
(2) What is the likelihood of it arising?
(3) What consequences would there be for the child if it arose?
(4) What steps could be taken to reduce the likelihood of harm arising or to mitigate the effects on the child if it did?
The answers are then placed alongside other factors in the welfare equation so that the court can ask itself:
(5) How do the overall welfare advantages and disadvantages of the realistic options compare, one with another?
(6) Ultimately, is adoption necessary and proportionate – are the risks bad enough to justify the remedy?
Lady Justice Simler
Lord Justice Underhill