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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> D (Contact and PR: Lesbian mothers and known father) No.2, Re [2006] EWHC 2 (Fam) (12 January 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2006/2.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 2 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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B |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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A |
1ST Respondent |
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- and - |
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C |
2nd Respondent |
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-and - |
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D (acting by her Guardian) |
3rd Respondent |
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Applicant
Mr Alan Inglis and Ms Haema Sundram (instructed by Lynch & Co) for the 1st and 2nd
Respondents
Ms Tahera Ladak (instructed by Edwards Duthie) for the 3rd Respondent acting by her
Guardian
Hearing dates: 28 November 2 December 2005
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This decision may be reported in anonymised form together with the decision in 2001, similarly in anonymised form. They will be known respectively as:-
Re D (Contact and PR: Lesbian mothers and known father) No.2
Re D (Contact and PR: Lesbian mothers and known father) No.1
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Black :
i) phoning excessively in an attempt to resolve things about D,
ii) sending frequent postcards lamenting his lack of contact and blaming Ms A and Ms C,
iii) indicating that when he came to court and got parental responsibility, Ms C would be out,
iv) trying to trace Ms A's mother by writing to all the people in the vicinity with Ms A's surname so that he could try to get her to mediate over contact and so that he could introduce himself to Ms A's family as D's father.
"Mr Weir anticipates that D, her mother and Ms C will face some discrimination at school. It seems to me that it may be more difficult for them than for heterosexual couples to establish themselves as a family, as the family which is providing the primary parenting for D. This difficulty may be in establishing their status to outsiders who they meet day to day in their lives, but there will also be work to be done with regard to Mr B's perception of them as a family and I think with regard to D's too. Not least D will have some extra questions about her background which children of heterosexual relationships do not. Ms A also spoke of the vulnerability that they feel because they are a lesbian couple with a considerable age difference between them."
Parental responsibility
" .all the rights, duties, powers, responsibilities and authority which by law a parent of a child has in relation to the child and his property."
"Parental responsibility is a question of status and is different in concept from the orders which may be made under s 8 in Part II of the Children Act. The grant of the application declares the status of the applicant as the father of that child. It has important implications for a father whose child might for example be the subject of an adoption application or a Hague Convention application. In each of those examples, a father with parental responsibility would have the right to be heard on the application. He would have the right to be consulted on schooling, serious medical problems, and other important occurrences in a child's life."
The need for expert evidence
"I have taken legal advice from CAFCASS legal office. I am told that this appears to be a case where parental responsibility should be granted. Mr B clearly has a positive relationship with the child, he has demonstrated commitment and given the length of time of his involvement, he is not a threat to Ms A and Ms C's relationship."
Changing social and legal climate
"The reason PR is such a loaded issue in this case relates to the potential implications of the decision on society and its perceptions: in their microcosm, this is precisely why Ms A and Ms C oppose it."
The problem is compounded, as Dr Sturge identifies, by the shortcomings of language which does not yet have the terms to deal with the new ways of living that are evolving.
Developments for this family since 2001
"From my last meeting with [Ms A and Ms C] I got the impression that they have very grave concerns about the treatment D is getting in the . Hospital. [Ms C] mentioned that she would be asking you to refer them to a London Hospital or to a private clinic. [Ms C] did talk about the ARA test results and the concerns that this might affect D's eyesight.
This does raise concerns with me that this reaction by them to something that might pass and never trouble D again might lead to the insistence on extra tests that in themselves might lead to the creation of a condition that did not exist prior to the tests i.e. an allergic reaction to an anaesthetic or an infection arising out of explorative surgery as an example.
What I have said so far is based on 2 pieces of information. D has JRA in her right knee and she has an elevated ANA reading in her last blood test.
I feel the approach of wait and see what will develop with D is appropriate at the moment. There is no immediate need for a second opinion or the need to refer her to a London Hospital at the moment. I have total confidence in the care provided by you and the . Hospital and that D will receive the best possible care under your guidance."
Mr B goes on to complain that lines of communication are strained with D's mother and her partner and that they are refusing to allow him any part in D's care and have only given him minimal information. He says that he would like to attend her next medical appointment as D's father but feels that her mother and partner will object to this. He asks to be briefed on any diagnosis there may be and the course of treatment recommended.
Issues raised by Dr Sturge
"8) To me, one central issue is a societal one. Is society going to recognise a lesbian partnership with children as a family?
9) The second central point is how the biological father is treated in such a situation. There is no exact analogy. For me the nearest is surrogacy, where the woman bearing the child gives up all her rights as a parent despite her role in bringing the child into the world (whether or not she is the biolo gical parent). A lesbian couple could be seen as similar to an infertile couple, let us say for the sake of argument married, and as when it is the man who is infertile, seeking fertilisation through IVF or sexual intercourse. No one would in that case be promoting the "donor father" having PR. The big difference in the latter case is that the "secret" could be withheld from the child. In the case of two lesbian parents, at some stage, that a man was involved in their conception, will become apparent to the child and others will raise this. "
" just how deep rooted concepts and language are in relation to families and that the law, in a sense, pre-empts ways of understanding new family structures."
She says:
"I believe if the Court can find appropriate terms to refer to the parties in this case, the issue will be solved."
This is an interesting proposition and one with which to an extent I agree, resisting the temptation to enter into a debate on the role of language in social change and human relationships. The difficulty is in identifying or devising the words. Although Dr Sturge lists a number of terms which might be used, it is clear that she has struggled to make a suggestion with which she was happy. She comments, rightly, that a role title for the second woman, Ms C in this case, is particularly difficult to find which explains why Ms C (as many women in this situation) feels and is so particularly vulnerable. She poses a question in the introductory section of her report that is in part linguistic and in part much more fundamental:
"12) . can a father who shows interest and commitment be a father and not a parent?"
"14) From D's perspective, the situation is very much outside of the societal norm. She cannot as yet grasp the significance of a father but knows which one of the three fathers is hers and which two E's.
15) If one were to draw a family relationship tree, then D's situation is complex: a father who is a bisexual and is married to a bisexual; a mother who is a Lesbian and lives with a second mother to D who has no biological relationship to her (D). Two other fathers both gay, one of whom is and one of whom is not the biological father of E. E is her half-sister and shares the same biological mother.
16) The situation is very different from and in most ways more complex than any of the analogies."
120) Another, related issue but one more specifically relevant from the child's perspective, is how obvious the family anomaly is to others. In this sense D will face sexuality and gender issues at a young (and I would say inappropriately young) age. Those around her, particularly her peers, will realise D speaking of Ma and Mummy indicates two mothers and this will arouse much curiosity. This will raise questions like can two women create a child? Do they ha ve sex? Is there a father and, if so, how does he fit in? The facts of life themselves will be challenged as D and her peers try to come to terms with the mysterious and puzzling business of sexual relationships and making babies. Children in step-families do not face these problems in the same way: until they choose to explain other children will assume the step-parent is the other, natural parent. There is no glaring anomaly. With single mothers, other children simply assume there is a daddy "somewhere". It does not challenge their understanding of families and mummies and daddies.
.
122) There is, of course, the issue of prejudice, teasing, bullying etc. Research would suggest children deal with this relatively well. If D continues to feel really secure she will have the resilience to deal with this with the support of her carers."
"154) D may at times feel "abnormal" because of the difference between her family and that of other children, because of comments and because she has to think about sexuality issues in a more head on way than most children.
...
161) D is likely to meet prejudice. Her school mates will soon identify she is in an anomalous family and make comments. If confident and resilient, she will be able to weather these and other children will simply lose their curiosity and drop the subject.
162) D will no doubt refer to the fact that she has a father who lives elsewhere (she already does and it is healthy). She might feel she has to exp lain more if she is teased about not having one.
163) And society as a whole? Again, they will see D's situation as unusual and probably as "abnormal". There is likely to be gossip. There are likely to be embarrassments that other children would not have to face."
"139) The central difference from the examples above is that the couple are lesbian and because of that there is the glaring fact that both cannot be the child's biological parents. It is far more difficult for this family to be seen within society as a "family". There is an inherent prejudice in society in how it regards "normal" versus gay families. This is not surprising as the idea of gay families challenges the very basis of biology determining reproduction.
140) But to some extent the same principles apply to the other situations. I have on a number of occasions been involved with small children who have a "father" who is involved daily in their lives and is their source of security and support (in fact a substitute parent). But then there is another "outside father" (in fact the biological parent) who, for reasons unknown to the child of a young age, considers himself as or more important than the man providing parental care.
141) It is very difficult to try and help the child make sense of this. And when older and aware of the implications there is still the tension between who is who and who is more important the parenting father or the biological father.
142) One could see the adjustment of society to homosexuality as a staged process. The existence of homosexuality and the right of individuals to express their individual sexual orientation is beginning to be accepted and respected. The second stage is the acceptance of gay partnerships which many find difficult and indeed many gay couples still try to keep this information from others. The third stage is the acceptance of gay families and whether or not such families can be complete and "stand alone", even without one of the biological parents. I think society, as this case illustrates, has hardly begun to give this due consideration. Finally, society needs to get its head round the issues of insemination by anonymous sperm donors or known sperm donors and their part in the child's life. With homosexual men, the situation is even more complex a family can only be formed through fostering or adoption (or surrogacy).
143) Parental responsibility to a third, outside the family individual, in any situation, potentially undermines the completeness of the nuclear family unit. It is a signal of anomaly.
144) Central to all the issues referred to above is how the extending of the acceptance and rights of lesbian and gay homosexual couples, including those of reproduction, responsibility for children's care and forming families is understood.
145) I am interpreting this to mean that empowering homosexual couples to form families is one of the underlying intentions and, therefore, by extension that the law and society should act to support the formation of such families and should act to protect their integrity. "
"there are times when I look to the future and think I will grow to be an embarrassment to the girls - I have no one except [Ms A], the fathers have the world with them - and that it would be more dignified if I would bow out. On occasions, I have concluded that and then [Ms A] persuaded me out of it."
" He is highly maternal and D will experience from him an unusual, but perhaps in many ways more nurturing, relationship than from many fathers .He is by nature someone who is anxious and emotional, maternal and nurturing in his need for involvement with D. This means his interest and concern in her medical complaints and in the details of her daily life is greater and more emotionally important to Mr B than to many fathers. This is likely to drive him to be intrusive on the family at times. And D does not only have the issues of three potential parents but three potential mothers."
"All three are the most remarkable people and only D is more remarkable. She has lots of benefits."
With that, I entirely agree.
"130) The research literature tells us that D is likely to thrive, is not more likely than other children to be lesbian and is likely to be able to deal with discrimination. It also tells us that D is going to thrive even in the absence of a father having a role in her life. It does not tell us whether the absence or presence of a biological father is an additional help or hindrance nor, in particular, the effect of greater involvement in a "visible" sense by a father when this is so vehemently opposed by the central couple."
"109) The brief answer [to the questions put to her] is that per se the question of PR, whether granted or withheld, will have little or no direct impact on D. The concept will have no meaning for D (in the same way it does not for the general public, here the Children Act has failed because this idea of parental responsibility is not recognised) until someone tells her about it and explains. If no-one did, she might remain permanently in ignorance although her studies may lead her into an area that makes her aware of this issue. So, she may, in adolescence if not told or sooner if told, realise there is such a thing legally that does have relevance to her father's role in her life.
110) In terms of the importance of her father and the quality of her relationship with him, this will largely depend on the amount and quality of contact. What Mr B says, and my assessment supports this statement, is that his commitment to D will be unaffected by PR."
111) What will be different for D if her father were to be granted parental responsibility is his visibility: his involvement in decision making, his presence at important events (doctor's appointments, school open evening and events and other things that he becomes aware of). This will affect peoples' awareness of the importance of D's father and, in this sense, give him recognition and some authority.
112) I shall refer to this role, endowed by PR, as "visibility" for brevity's sake.
113) Unfortunately, it may be that D's main awareness of this visibility is:
- When there are disagreements, particularly in relation to decisions, between Mr B and the "parents" with whom she lives;
- A consciousness of the resentment from Ma and Mummy when Mr B, in their eyes, intrudes on events pertinent to D;
- Increased reference to her father outside of home and noting that others see him as important in her life and in decisions about her.
114) There is a risk that she will be required to keep certain things secret so as to exclude Mr B."
"152) If he has PR, he will be more of a presence in her life and she will be more aware of him as someone who, like Ma and Mummy, makes decisions and comes to important events in her life at school or when she is unwell.
153) If he does not have PR, D will view him as more peripheral and see Ma, Mummy and E as constituting her family and the people who take all responsibility for her."
"178) I do believe the couple's fear that Mr B will want to be very involved to be correct; he talks as if he wants to be part of D's every moment and everything she has to face. So it is likely that he will try to be at all medical appointments, school events and such like. This would very clearly signify that the "family unit" was not in itself mandated to take such decisions. As a reason for my view see: Letter to Dr M5
179) This would have an effect on D's overall sense of security. "
"164) But will the issue of PR affect all this? Not directly but there will be a tendency for everyone D comes into contact with (or the family as a whole) to "look for the father". This could indeed by very undermining to her sense that she has a proper family acceptable as such to society at large. This could make her very insecure.
165) The more her father is in evidence, the less clear D will be about what constitutes her family and how viable the unit within which she lives is.
166) The more her father is around, the more likely that others will treat the "central" family as incomplete and seek to include the father e.g. in school decisions, medical treatment."
"A third parent (and I use the word advisedly) will be confusing for D. Her sense of security will be strongest if she is clear that responsibility for her lies within her "nuclear" family."
"182) What would solve this would be if the father could receive official recognition in some way but not be allowed to involve himself in the nitty gritty of D's life the parenting couple having rights above his in his area as is, for example, seen in special guardianship."
My conclusions
i) that Mr B will not visit or contact D's school for any purpose without the prior written consent of Ms A or Ms C
ii) that Mr B will not contact any health professional involved in D's care without the prior written consent of Ms A or Ms C.
I considered whether it would be better to deal with these matters by way of the recital of what are in effect conditions or by way of an undertaking from Mr B. It seemed to me that it would better reflect the fundamental nature of these restrictions on Mr B's parental responsibility if the order set out that it was made in reliance upon them. It might also be said that this course recognises rather more clearly than an undertaking that if the conditions were not to be observed, the court might be invited to reconsider the whole question of parental responsibility. In contrast, the complication of a committal application, the natural sequel to the breach of an undertaking, would not be likely to assist in this case.
21 December 2005