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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 >> A, B & C (Children: Adoption), Re [2020] EWHC 2335 (Fam) (10 August 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2020/2335.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 2335 (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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Re A, B & C (Children: Adoption) A LOCAL AUTHORITY |
Applicant |
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- and – |
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MOTHER |
1st Respondent |
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-and- |
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FATHER |
2nd Respondent |
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-and- |
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A, B AND C (Children through their Children's Guardian) |
3rd – 5th Respondents |
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Ms W Frempong (instructed by Living Spring Solicitors) for the 1st Respondent
Mr S Roy (instructed by Mould Haruna Solicitors ) for the 2nd Respondent
Ms K Taylor (instructed by Anthony Collins Solicitors) for the 3rd - 5th Respondents
Hearing dates: 5th - 7th August
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon Mr Justice Keehan :
Introduction
The Law
"One highly important aspect of the Lucas direction, and indeed the approach to lies generally in the criminal jurisdiction, needs to be borne fully in mind by family judges. It is this: in the criminal jurisdiction, the 'lie' is never taken, of itself, as direct proof of guilt. As is plain from the passage quoted from Lord Lane's judgment in Lucas, where the relevant conditions are satisfied, the lie is 'capable of amounting to a corroboration'. In recent times the point has been most clearly made in the Court of Appeal Criminal Division in the case of R v Middleton [2001] Crim.L.R.251, where it was said, 'In my view there should be no distinction between the approach taken by the criminal court on the issues of lies, to that adopted in the family court. Judges should therefore take care to ensure they do not rely upon a conclusion that an individual has lied on a material issue as direct proof of guilt'".
i) s.1(1) of the Children Act 1989, namely the welfare of each child is the court's paramount consideration;ii) s.1(3) of the 1989 Act, the welfare checklist;
iii) s.31(2) of the 1989 Act, the threshold criteria for making public law orders;
iv) s.1(2) of the Adoption and Children Act 2002 ('the 2002 Act'), the paramount consideration of the court is the child's welfare throughout his life,
v) s.1(4) of the 2002 Act, the welfare checklist,
vi) s.52(1)(b) of the 2002 Act, the welfare of the child requires the consent of the mother and/or the father to be dispensed with; and
vii) the Article 6 and 8 rights of each child and of both parents but noting that if there is tension between the Article 8 rights of a child, on one hand, and a parent, on the other, the rights of the child prevail: Yousef v The Netherlands [2003] 1 FLR 210.
Background
Findings of Fact made on 29th March 2019
i) about the evidence and the events of 6th May 2017;ii) that there was no bruise or injury on A on 6th May 2017; and
iii) about the fact that a letter and messages had not been left by the local authority at the family home.
i) that there were no problems in the marriage between him and the mother;ii) about the events of 6th May 2017;
iii) when he asserted that he had placed A on a cot, so-called, on a sofa; and
iv) when he denied that the mother had grabbed him around the throat and/or had intended to strike him with the iron.
Subsequent Events
i) HMPO confirming that the mother had applied for a replacement passport in breach of paragraph 4 of the Order dated the 22nd October 2019; andii) her breach of an order to attend this hearing, a warrant was issued for the mother's arrest.
The father's application for permission to travel to Ghana for his father's funeral on 24th July 2019 for one week was granted.
i) he had fully understood what had been said in court at this hearing;ii) he understood that the court had found him to have lied to the court in the past;
iii) he understood that the court had found that he had not engaged openly and honestly with professionals;
iv) he understood that the court was of the view that there had been times in the past when he had allowed himself to be ruled by the mother, although the father did not think he had;
v) he understood that this was his final opportunity to prove that he was able to separate from the mother and to work openly and honestly with the local authority;
vi) he understood that the timescales for the children and the need for final decisions to be made for their future could not be delayed any further;
vii) he understood that it was a condition that from today he did not have any contact with the mother whatsoever, including direct or indirect communication including by telephone, text, email or social media or via a third party;
viii) he understood that if the court found there was any communication between him and the mother, the assessment period would come to an end;
ix) he understood that this was his final opportunity to put his children first and promised the court that he would do so;
x) he understood that if he sought the support of the local authority for assistance with housing, then he must be open and honest with the local authority in terms of financial disclosure; and
xi) he understood that he must contact the police and local authority promptly in the event that the mother made contact with him or attended at the family home.
i) to suspend the rehabilitation plan in respect of the boys; andii) for an interim care order in respect of C.
I granted both applications. On the application of the mother, the injunction made against her on 18th December was discharged. I made police disclosure orders in respect of the West Midlands Police and the Sussex Police.
The Evidence
i) there are no domestic violence support services in Ghana;ii) family members intervene to resolve marital and familial problems;
iii) the attitude towards domestic violence in Ghana is similar to approach in this country but we are more aware of the extent and impact of domestic violence, although the position in Ghana is changing;
iv) the family would advise and encourage parents to work with social workers;
v) there were no cultural reasons for these parents not engaging with or not working co-operatively with the local authority;
vi) the decision of the parents not to engage or work co-operatively with the local authority was a matter of their personal choice; and
vii) some parents choose to not engage or work co-operatively for a wide variety of reasons and when they do so there is very little a social worker can do.
i) first, it was not her counsel who had asked her if the contents of her statements were true, I had asked the question;ii) second, I did not use any legal terminology; and
iii) third, at the beginning of her oral evidence she said she had understood my question and she had understood that she was simply being asked if what she had set out in her statements was true.
The explanation given in this statement was blatantly false and was made to mislead the court and the other parties. It was an extremely stark beginning to the mother's evidence. Sadly, matters then went from bad to worse.
i) there is no reference to this account in any of the mother's statements;ii) the only matter which is referred to in her penultimate witness statement about these events, is a complete denial of any knowledge as to how the hospital came to be given a false name; and
iii) at a consultant paediatrician's appointment for C in the Republic of Ireland on 9th October 2019, the mother signed certain documentation in the given false name.
i) she had not told the father about the birth of the child because she knew he would tell the social worker; andii) she had left C with a nanny in London.
i) that the mother had gone to Ireland to have the child, she returned and we looked after the child together; and thenii) she supported me and the child.
It was suggested by counsel for the mother that what the father had said and meant was that the mother had supported the father and the boys in contact. The father readily agreed. This 'corrected' account may have explained point (ii) above, it does not, however, begin to explain point (i).
Analysis: The Factual Matrix
i) his separation from the mother;ii) his commitment to maintain that separation and not to have any contact with the mother; and
iii) his commitment to put caring for A and B to the fore, which led me to require the local authority to pursue a rehabilitation plan for the boys to live with the father, which was contrary to the local authority's care plan and contrary to the recommendation of the children's guardian.
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 Twi interpreter, to explain these matters to him and to ask him if he understood. He said he did.
Findings of Fact
i) neither the mother nor the father accept my findings of fact given in my judgment of 29th March 2019 but, in particular, that A sustained an injury on 6th May 2017 during the course of domestic abuse incident involving both parents;ii) the mother lied to a midwife on 15th May 2019 when she told her that she had received antenatal care in Ghana in respect of her pregnancy with C;
iii) it was the father and the mother who were stopped by officers of the Police Service of Scotland on 21st September 2019;
iv) the father was driving his motor car to take the mother to the ferry terminal at Stranraer;
v) the father knew the mother was pregnant, knew she wished to conceal her pregnancy and colluded with her to do so;
vi) the mother travelled to the Republic of Ireland to give birth to C at a hospital in Drogheda;
vii) she gave a false name and a false address to the hospital professionals in order to avoid the birth of C being made known to the local authority and to the court;
viii) thereafter the parents colluded with each other to conceal the birth of C and her presence in the jurisdiction;
ix) in truth the father was never separated from the mother whether between September 2019 and January 2020 or at all;
x) the father never had any intention of being a sole carer for A and B to the exclusion of the mother;
xi) there was a domestic abuse incident between the mother and the father on 26th November 2019 which led to the parents telephoning the police;
xii) the father had seen C prior to on or around 21st January 2020;
xiii) the parents were stopped by officers from the Metropolitan Police in the evening of 21st January near Gatwick Airport.;
xiv) the parents' intention had been to flee the jurisdiction on a flight from Gatwick either the mother alone with C, the most likely, or together with the father, the least likely; and
xv) if the father's car had not been stopped by the police, the parents would have carried out their joint plan.
i) in her efforts to conceal her pregnancy with C, the mother absented herself from most contact visits with A and B between June and January 2020, which inevitably caused both boys emotional harm;ii) in her efforts to conceal her pregnancy with C, 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 C 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.
Threshold Criteria
Analysis: Welfare
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.
Conclusions