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England and Wales Family Court Decisions (other Judges) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (other Judges) >> Jamie (Special Guardianship Order), Re [2024] EWFC 268 (B) (22 August 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/OJ/2024/268.html Cite as: [2024] EWFC 268 (B) |
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This judgment was delivered in private. The judge has given leave for this version of the judgment to be published on condition that (irrespective of what is contained in the judgment) in any published version of the judgment the anonymity of the children and members of their family must be strictly preserved. All persons, including representatives of the media and legal bloggers, must ensure that this condition is strictly complied with. Failure to do so may be a contempt of court.
Neutral Citation Number: [2024] EWFC 268 (B)
IN THE FAMILY COURT AT OXFORD
IN THE MATTER OF THE CHILDREN ACT 1989 AND IN THE MATTER OF [JAMIE]
Date: 22 August 2024
Before: HHJ Vincent
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Between:
OXFORDSHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL
Local authority
and
M
Mother
and
F
Father
and
JAMIE
(acting by his children's guardian MARIA KIRNIG)
Child
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Kelly Wise instructed by Oxfordshire County Council
Anne Davies of Reeds solicitors for the mother
Elisabeth Hudson instructed by Wilsons Solicitors, for the father
Mary Ann Edwards, of TV Edwards, solicitors, for the guardian
Hearing dates: 19, 20 and 22 August 2024
Approved Judgment
Jamie is a happy, healthy baby, with a big smile. He loves music and having cuddles.
M and F
M and F love Jamie. They would love him to come home to them. They want to look after him.
It was hard for M and F to leave home and go to [residential placement]. They did it for Jamie. They were brave to go there. They wanted to learn how to take good care of Jamie. They listened to the staff. They did their best.
Babies need someone to be checking on them all the time. Babies need to be held gently. A person caring for a baby needs to learn all the different signs the baby makes. Sometimes a baby might cry because they are hungry, or make a different cry and wriggle if they need their nappy changed. A baby might rub their eyes if they are tired. The carer needs to learn the different signs so they can give their baby what they need.
A carer also needs to plan ahead. This means thinking about what their baby needs before the baby has started crying or showing other signs to say what they need. If the carers have planned ahead, they can give their baby what he needs straight away.
F and M tried hard, but they were not able to look after Jamie by themselves. They were not always able to pay him attention when he needed it. They did not find it easy to work out what he needed. Sometimes they did not hold him gently.
This is why the time at [residential placement] came to an end after three weeks.
M and F have showed their love for Jamie by going to all the contact sessions. They have learned a lot about how to take care of him, like how to play with him, how to settle him to sleep, and how to change his nappies.
But M and F still need adults to tell them how to take care of Jamie. They need adults with them to remind them about the things they have learned and to make sure that Jamie is safe. They have not learned how to plan ahead for Jamie. That means thinking about what Jamie might need, even if he doesn't show them a sign. If they could plan ahead they would bring food to contact, or toys for Jamie to play with.
Planning ahead also means thinking about the plan for Jamie. Like if Jamie came home, where would he sleep? Or who would look after Jamie when M and F are at college?
M and F are both doing really well at college. It would be hard to go to college and also have the responsibility of looking after a baby.
These are the reasons that M and F are not able to look after Jamie by themselves.
MGM and PGF
MGM and PGF love M and F. They love Jamie. They want to help F and M. They would like Jamie to come and live with them.
MGM and PGF have F, M, [and their children A, B and C] to look after. PGF has a job with [redacted]. These are the main reasons that MGM and PGF cannot give M and F the help they need to look after Jamie.
I have decided that Jamie cannot go and live with M and F at MGM and PGF's home.
[Jamie's foster carers]
[Jamie's foster carers] love Jamie. They can keep him safe and look after him. Jamie is happy and settled living with [his foster carers]. They would like him to stay with them and be a part of their family.
It is best for Jamie if he stays with [his foster carers].
Although Jamie will be living with [his foster carers], M and F will always be Jamie's mum and dad. They will love him for his whole life.
[Jamie's foster carers] will arrange Facetime calls every month. F and M will see Jamie five times a year. [Jamie's foster carers] will let them know if something important happens to Jamie. They will send photos of Jamie to M and F.
HHJ Vincent
22 August 2024
Family Court, Oxford
1. The local authority has applied to the Court for a care order for Jamie, who is one year and five months old.
2. Jamie's mum is M. M was 19 in February. Jamie's dad is F. He has just turned 17. M has been assessed to be in the extremely low range of cognitive functioning. F also has been assessed to have low cognitive ability. They have both been helped by intermediaries at Court.
3. M and F have been living in the same house since September 2016 because F's dad PGF is in a relationship with M's mum MGM. Another of PGF's sons, [child A], 15, also lives in the household, as do the two children that PGF and MGM have together, [child B] (7), and [child C] (5).
4. F and M were having a relationship in secret for three or four years. The relationship became sexual. This led to M becoming pregnant with Jamie. When Jamie was born, M had turned 18 the previous month. F was still 15.
5. The local authority issued its application on 26 March 2023. M, F and Jamie moved to [residential placement]. They were supposed to stay there for twelve weeks so that they could receive intensive support to learn how to care for Jamie, and at the same time an assessment of their parenting capacity would be carried out.
6. In the event, the placement came to an end after three weeks. This was because the staff at [residential placement] reported that M and F were not able to meet Jamie's basic needs on their own. Both M and F were finding it difficult to be away from home. The staff asked F to leave because sometimes he was getting angry. Even after that short time, it was clear that there was no prospect of the assessment being positive.
7. I was the judge who ordered (on 2 May 2023) that the assessment at [residential placement] should stop. Jamie went to live with his foster carers [names redacted], and M and F returned home.
8. It has taken a further fifteen months for these proceedings to end. There were delays in the assessment of PGF and MGM due to the assessor going on maternity leave and a new social worker being assigned. It was ordered that family members abroad should be assessed as potential carers. The family members who were assessed were F's grandparents who live in [Country B], and a paternal cousin, [name redacted], who lived in [Country A]. These assessments took a very long time to conclude. In the end, [paternal cousin] withdrew from the process. F's grandparents were negatively assessed, and did not seek to challenge that assessment. Finally, in January, F's mother [name redacted] was assessed, but this also resulted in a negative conclusion. She lives in [Country B]. She has not seen her sons [F] and [child A] since they moved to England with their father in November 2015.
9. The local authority was going to ADM to consider a care plan for adoption. However, in February 2024, having heard this, [Jamie's foster carers] told the local authority that they would like to care for Jamie in the long-term. There was a further delay while the local authority carried out an assessment of them as prospective special guardians for Jamie. That assessment was positive.
10. So it is that the local authority asks the Court to endorse a plan for Jamie to remain in the care of his foster carers, [names redacted], and for them to be appointed to be his special guardians.
11. M and F love Jamie and want him to come home. They say they can look after him, with the support of PGF and MGM. They say they have not been given a fair chance to prove that they could look after Jamie, and that they have grown up and learned a lot over the past year about how to look after him.
12. If Jamie cannot live with them, then M and F would like him to stay with [his foster carers]. They would like to see him as often as they can.
13. Jamie's guardian Maria Kirnig supports the local authority's care plan.
'Intervention in the family must be proportionate, but the aim should be to reunite the family where the circumstances enable that, and the effort should be devoted towards that end. Cutting off all contact and ending the relationship between the child and their family is only justified by the overriding necessity of the interests of the child.'
19. At the final hearing I heard brief evidence from the social work team manager, from the authors of some of the various initial viability and parenting assessments, then from F, his dad PGF and the guardian. I have read all the documents in the bundle which include statements from all parties, reports and assessments and the contact records.
20. M had filed a witness statement. Following discussion, it was agreed that she would not give oral evidence.
'What we have evidenced, is that [M] and [F] are able to provide gentle care for Jamie when they are fully focused on his care as a priority, however when they lose focus or become distracted by each other or their own needs, they require staff intervention and guidance to refocus their attention.'
'I am unclear if M and F can provide good enough care for Jamie either by themselves or supported by their parents. Whilst all these concerns remain, I am unsure whether any meaningful change could happen in timescales that would be in Jamie's best interests. This alone may cause stress, worry and potential harm, both physically and emotionally to Jamie whilst their abilities to provide good enough care to him with or without their family's support is tried and assessed.'
- PGF and MGM have a long history of local authority involvement that has resulted in all the children in the household being subject to child protection planning. There have been some improvements, but some fundamental concerns remain;
- It is of concern that MGM and PGF did not know that M and F were having a sexual relationship. PGF and MGM have not shown any insight into the concerns professionals have about how this relationship was allowed to happen, nor into the difficulties that M and F would be certain to experience as parents to Jamie;
- There have been consistent worries about the tidiness and hygiene of the property. The home conditions have repeatedly been described as cluttered and unclean including the presence of cat faeces and urine in the home. There are improvements, but these improvements are not always sustained. There have been concerns about neglect of the children's basic needs;
- In 2012 M reported that her maternal grandfather had sexually abused her. Safety plans were put in place but MGM later allowed M to stay with her grandfather, and even now, he remains someone who visits the house regularly and who she relies upon heavily for support with childcare. MGM was not able to see how M may have been affected by the decisions she made about this;
- Issues over PGF using a belt to chastise F and [child A], and continuing to do so even after having been spoken to about this by social services;
- MGM suffering episodes of poor mental health over the years which have at times led to her being physically or verbally abusive to PGF in the presence of the children. [child A] and F said that on another occasion MGM attacked the boys, and that [child B and child C] were there. MGM denies this happened;
- Failure to identify M's vulnerabilities to exploitation and to take steps to protect her;
- Failure to protect others from risk of harm from M. There is a report of M holding a knife to [child C's] throat in January 2022. A safety plan for M to be supervised around her younger siblings was proposed but MGM felt judged and said she could not monitor M all day long. On another occasion, M accidentally killed a kitten by squeezing it too hard;
- Poor supervision of the children. There was an incident in October 2022 when three-year-old [child C] left the house and was found running in a main road having taken sweets from a Tesco. He was returned home by a member of the public. MGM did not notice that he had gone missing.
47. I have had regard to all the evidence I have heard and read.
48. Ms P has been the social work team manager throughout proceedings and it was she who prepared the final statement and gave evidence in Court. The local authority has exhaustively explored all options for Jamie and carried out full and thorough assessments.
51. The overwhelming weight of the evidence shows that, sadly, M and F would not be able to keep Jamie safe and meet his daily needs, either now or throughout his childhood. MGM and PGF are not in a position to provide the support that M and F would need.
Her Honour Judge Joanna Vincent
Family Court at Oxford
22 August 2024
Annex 1: agreed threshold document
IN THE FAMILY COURT SITTING AT OXFORD
CASE NUMBER: OX23C50019
IN THE MATTER OF S.31 OF THE CHILDREN ACT 1989
AND
IN THE MATTER OF JAMIE
BETWEEN:
OXFORDSHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL
Applicant
-and-
M
1st Respondent
-and-
F
2nd Respondent
-and-
JAMIE
(through his Child's Guardian)
3rd Respondent
________________________________
AGREED FINAL THRESHOLD DOCUMENT
The Local Authority contends that as at the relevant date, namely 24th March 2023, the child, Jamie, was suffering or was likely to suffer significant harm; and that the harm, or the likelihood of harm, was attributable to the care given to him, or likely to be given to him if the Order were not made, not being what it would be reasonable to expect a parent to give to him.
The Local Authority asserts that the harm suffered, or likely to be suffered, by the child is in the categories of physical harm, emotional harm and neglect. In satisfaction of the threshold test the Local Authority rely on the following evidence to establish its case:
1. M has ASD and ADHD and needs help to understand things. She cannot always remember what she has been told, for example when she was told by the Family Nurse not to let a baby sleep with her because it was dangerous (C6). Although M cannot help not being able to understand or being able to follow advice, it is likely that M will find it difficult to remember how to do things for Jamie (A39; C266).
2. M and F are young and need a lot of support to care for Jamie. At the relevant date, M and on occasions, F were not able to stay focused on a task and got distracted from Jamie's needs (C79; C168; C218; C256; C391; F180).
3. When M and on occasions, F became sad or upset, they were not able to deal with these feelings well and on those occasions, this impacted on their care of Jamie (C78-79).
4. M and F live at home with their parents. The home has at times been messy and unclean (C29; C79).
5. In February 2022 M put a knife to her then 4 year old sibling's throat. If something like this happened when Jamie was present, it would be dangerous for him and he could get hurt (C3).
Oxfordshire County Council
Dated: 20 August 2024