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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> N (Children: Revocation of Placement Orders) [2023] EWCA Civ 1352 (17 November 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2023/1352.html Cite as: [2023] EWCA Civ 1352 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE FAMILY COURT AT MILTON KEYNES
Recorder Newport
MK11/2023
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BAKER
and
LADY JUSTICE ANDREWS
____________________
N (Children: Revocation of Placement Orders) |
____________________
for the Appellant Mother
Nick Goodwin KC and Alex Perry (instructed by Milton Keynes City Council)
for the Respondent Local Authority
The Respondent Father represented himself
Rex Howling KC and Clarissa Wigoder (instructed by Sills & Betteridge Solicitors)
for the Respondent Children by their Children's Guardian
Hearing date: 8 November 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Peter Jackson:
Overview
The legal framework
"At the same time, the boys, who urgently need a permanent family that can give them skilled parenting, have been kept waiting for what now amounts to 2½ years. They had said goodbye to their birth family and been prepared for adoption. That plan could only sensibly be sacrificed in favour of a plan for rehabilitation if the evidence showed that success could be predicted with a high degree of confidence."
In the following paragraph I listed the sequence of events that would have to occur before a return to parental care could be achieved, and then said this at paragraph 47:
"The amount of delay and uncertainty inherent in this programme is so obvious that the judge was bound to confront it squarely before preferring it to a plan for adoption that could be put into effect immediately. The boys' situation is a glaring example of the general principle, enshrined in section 1(3) of the Adoption and Children Act 2002, that any delay in determining a question with respect to the upbringing of a child is likely to prejudice the welfare of the child."
These observations were made in the context of a parent who faced even greater challenges than this mother, but whose case was that the children could be returned in six months' time. In the present case, the mother did not argue that the court could definitively approve the return of the children at a future date, but rather that this might be possible and that her proposal deserved further assessment.
The revocation proceedings
" - An assessment of the Mother's current circumstances; details of the changes the Mother has made, if any, since the making of the Placement Order; whether the changes are sufficient to address the concerns/risks determined by the Court at conclusion of the previous Care and Placement Order proceedings; the current risks and nature of harm to the children now posed by their parents; the likelihood of risk/harm arising in the light of those changes; any support that could be put in place by the Local Authority to mitigate any identified risks.
- The children's circumstances including any change since making of the Placement Orders.
- The children's welfare in the context of the application.
- An analysis of the impact on the children of each potential outcome of the substantive application.
- An update as to any work that has been undertaken with the children; an update from the children's schools and any professional with whom they are working; an update as to the …[v]isits that have taken place and future visits; and an update as to the prospective adopters' position."
The judgment
"She seeks the revocation of the placement orders that are in place or an adjournment of the application itself for further assessment, the latter of which became her primary position, as such, as the hearing developed. The mother accepts, as she did in oral evidence, that in the event of a revocation the children would not return to her care now and that an application to discharge the care order which is also in place would be needed."
"166 As the mother's primary case is that the court does not have sufficient evidence before it to make a decision, I must first consider that issue. Miss Julien initially made the submission on the basis of Re B and the requirement upon the local authority and guardian to provide proper evidence which addresses all the options which are realistically possible, and which contains an analysis of the arguments for and against each option. I have already set out the updated position at the end of submissions.
167 In para.23 of Re C Baker LJ endorses the principles set out by HHJ Sharpe, who drew those principles from case law, and in particular the case of Re B. The principles contain the requirement upon the court to consider all the competing options. As Mr Perry reminds the court, these are not care proceedings. His submission is that any gap is in the May order, and not in the evidence itself.
168 Miss Julien makes a powerful submission in respect of Mr B's role and whether he should have been the report's author. Having listened carefully to his evidence, I am satisfied that he is passionate about his work and invested in the outcome, but I did not detect a closed mindset from him. He has undertaken his task diligently. He accepted, quite fairly, that the time constraints meant that his report was somewhat rushed, and he would have liked more time but that does not mean that there are gaps in his evidence or that his report is flawed.
169 Although the wider principles are relevant, the evidence required in this type of case and directed by the court is different to care proceedings. As Mr Perry acknowledges, the local authority would fall short if these were care proceedings. Mr B and Ms F both gave detailed oral evidence and were subject to rigorous cross-examination from counsel for the parents. They have been able to speak to reports that they have not seen prior to their statements and able to incorporate that into their oral evidence. Any gaps in their written evidence, such as they may be, have been adequately accounted for in the witness box.
170 Being guided by Re C, I am satisfied that I have sufficient evidence to allow me to carry out the exercise approved by the Court of Appeal. I accept Mr Perry's submission that the court has ordered what is necessary and proportionate. No parenting assessment was ordered, and a previous court has refused the instruction of an independent social worker. That cannot have been deemed necessary as of 5 July 2023 and the decision was not appealed.
171 I remind myself that I must consider all the evidence and not compartmentalise it. In addition to the local authority and guardian's evidence, I have considerable evidence from the mother herself, and the relevant papers and judgments from 2021. I have heard extensive oral evidence; the local authority witnesses and the guardian have all given evidence after hearing several hours of evidence from the mother.
172 When considering the mother's application to adjourn, I must also consider the issue of delay and the scope of the evidence that the court might get. There is no new Part 25 application before the court, but I can consider the application as filed and updated in submissions. Updated timescales have been provided and they are essentially eight weeks at the earliest. A key issue will remain the mother's learning and its application to the children. She has already filed a full statement and given extensive oral evidence. It is difficult to see what else an ISW, who would be somebody entirely new to this case, would bring to the table at this late stage.
173 I accept the submissions about the likely impact of delay on the children. They need a decision now, whatever that decision might be. Given the nature of the assessments I have, and detailed evidence I have heard, I am not satisfied that further assessment is necessary. I therefore refuse the application to adjourn."
"220 Placement with mother can only be described as a possibility at this stage. I have already set out the advantages and disadvantages of that. The mother would have to complete each and every stage before she gets there. That would build in significant delay, confusion for the children and uncertainty. In circumstances where I am satisfied that after all the very impressive work undertaken mother is not able to meet the children's emotional needs, I accept Mr Littlewood's submission that we cannot predict a positive outcome if placement is revoked.
221 There is also considerable risk, as expanded upon by the local authority and guardian, of what the impact would be on the children if adoption is taken off the table only for the mother then to fail further assessment. They would lose out on adopters they are invested in and then have the knowledge that they might return to mother and all the emotions that that would bring, which could be positive as well as negative, only then to be told that that is no longer an option. In my judgment, the risk of emotional harm compounding the trauma already suffered is simply too great with the option of return to the mother, the prospective option of return to the mother or long-term foster care.
222 I am satisfied that these are exceptional circumstances that justify the permanent severing of ties between the children and the parents. Such action is motivated by the overriding requirements pertaining to the children's welfare and I am not satisfied that placement within family is realistic for the reasons I have set out."
The appeal
1. The Judge was wrong in law to determine that there is a difference between the quality of the local authority evidence required to support an application for care and placement orders and the quality of the evidence required to resist an application to revoke a placement order once leave has been granted. The Judge should have applied the same 'proper evidence' test.
2. The Judge was wrong to conclude that the deficits in the local authority evidence could be corrected by the social worker's oral evidence and that there were no gaps in the assessment evidence.
3. The Judge was wrong to accept the Guardian's conclusions when her analysis was flawed and/or based on the flawed assessment of the local authority.
4. The Judge was wrong not to adjourn the proceedings for a fair and proper assessment to be obtained. Such evidence was necessary for the just and fair determination of the proceedings.
"204 However, I am not satisfied that the mother is able to relate her extensive learning to her children. She gave many textbook answers to questions from Mr Perry and Mr Littlewood. She needed redirection at times to link those questions or her answers to the children. Several of her answers began or were qualified with a link to her work, as several references in the guardian's report also show.
205 Miss Julien is right to say and right to have challenged Mr B about the examples that the mother provided to him but in my judgment, and despite her admirable journey, I am not satisfied that the mother would be able to relate that learning to the children and meet their emotional needs. That is the core issue in this case.
206 I also keep in mind that these are not just traumatised children but by the time that they would come to the mother, if that was to happen, there would not only be considerable further delay, but the emotional harm suffered by the children is likely to be greater. The children would have to be told that they are not going to live with the prospective adopters. That will take work and likely lead to trust issues with the social worker and foster carers. They will then have to face the possibility that they might live with the mother. These would all be additional emotional issues that the mother would have to face. She would also have to contend, as a single parent, with not being the family life that [the older child] might expect."
"192 … The children have undergone several significant changes in their young lives and are undoubtedly damaged and traumatised. They have witnessed events in the home, been removed from home, placed with foster carers (that, of course, has brought some stability) and then they have begun the process of working towards being adopted. The guardian sees a clear risk due to the emotional complexity of these changes and huge demands they will place on the children's emotional and behavioural functioning. They have suffered instability of primary care and are likely to be sensitive to change…
195 The guardian and local authority say that there is no amelioration or support that could be put in place to allow the mother to safely care for the children. The mother and the local authority agree that the father still poses a significant risk to the children. I agree. It is correct to say that the mother has positively acted to protect herself from the father and I have no reason to doubt that such measures would benefit the children if they were to live with her. She has moved to an unknown location. Her phone number and car have changed. Her actions in October speak for themselves. The question of risk is wider than that.
196 In my judgment the father remains a significant risk. Despite completing a 32-week DAPP course, he took it upon himself to track the mother down. He did so using covert methods and when he found her in October he was abusive and sat on her car for the 17-minute drive to the police station. That shows his determination, emotional state and his willingness to lie was apparent from the body-worn footage that we have seen. Credit must be given to the father for his progress since. He has pleaded guilty, and he has complied with the restraining order.
197 The court remains troubled by the fact that even in May 2023 he was trying to contact people known to the mother. Whether that is restricted to a single Facebook message or not, the risk is apparent. Father candidly told the court of his future intentions. One day he would like contact with the children. The position is entirely understandable. He also said he would like to sit down with the mother to discuss co-parenting. That tells me that despite everything that has happened, the father is likely to seek the mother and the children out."
Once again, it seems to me that the recorder squarely identified the nature of the risk from the father and the probability that it would arise if the children were with her. I can see no basis on which this court could depart from that assessment. Ground 1 therefore fails.
"164 Miss Julien described Mr B as an honest witness and Mr Littlewood said that we would not find a more focused or dedicated social worker. I agree. Mr B's oral evidence was entirely consistent with how counsel describe him. He is plainly an experienced social worker who has gone above and beyond when the children require it. His oral evidence was given to the court after the mother had given evidence, so he had the benefit of hearing her answers after having read the documents that he had accepted not having seen at the time of their discussions. I accept his evidence.
165 I found the guardian to be a clear and compelling witness. I accept her reasoning for not seeing the children at such a delicate stage of proceedings. I was assisted by her evidence about the risks of trauma that may come with each option and how even now the guardian has given clear thought to what else the mother could or would need to do if there is delay. Her hope to hear the mother give child-focused answers, even until Wednesday, suggests that her mind has been kept open. I accept her evidence."
The recorder also found the current social worker to be careful, measured and child-focused. These are all plainly assessments that could not be, and are not, challenged.
"170 … No parenting assessment was ordered, and a previous court has refused the instruction of an independent social worker. That cannot have been deemed necessary as of 5 July 2023 and the decision was not appealed."
Again, this is a point without substance. The recorder was correct in what he said, but in fact he looked squarely at the possibility of adjourning for further evidence and rejected it for the full reasons cited at paragraph 20 above. He made a decision on the merits.
Lord Justice Baker:
Lady Justice Andrews: