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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 >> The Mother & Anor v Shropshire Council & Anor [2024] EWHC 344 (Fam) (19 February 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2024/344.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 344 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE MOTHER | ||
THE FATHER | Applicants | |
and | ||
SHROPSHIRE COUNCIL | First Respondent | |
and | ||
(a child, acting by her Children's Guardian) | Second Respondent | |
and | ||
F | Intervener |
____________________
Ms Elizabeth McGrath KC and Ms Louise Higgins (instructed by Shropshire Council) for the First Respondent
Ms Kirsty Gallacher (instructed by Talbots Law) for the Second Respondent
Mr Dorian Day and Mr Andrew Duncan (instructed by the Official Solicitor) for the Intervener
Hearing dates: 30 January – 2 February 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Lieven DBE :
Fact finding
The issues
The evidence
The Law
Conclusions
Part Two – best interests
"3.16 I asked [G] if she could draw what was OK / not OK and during this exercise [G] drew a picture of 3 stick children. I asked [G] to put xxx on parts of her body her brothers hurt and made her scared. She drew xxx on the areas of the body where she was touched, indicating her genital area and explained what was happening in the picture also using the 'bendy family figures' to show the inappropriate touch was [F] and [E] and that she was being touched in her genital area. Initially [G] stated, 'no one hurts me'. [G] used the drawing of the stick figures to put an x on the genital areas of her brothers and she stated, 'they show me their willies in the woods.' When I asked if she had told anyone she initially said, 'yes mum' and then changed it to 'no one'. … [G] stated, 'they hurt me all the time, hit and kick me'."
"12. Previously there have been significant concerns about the parents' capacity to change, their ability to protect, some non-compliance with advice and guidance, disguised compliance, a lack of insight regarding the risk to [H] and their ability to manage [F's] behaviours around [H]. This is not detracting from [the Father and the Mother's] great progress, but they will need to be mindful of the risks their older children have been exposed to, the outcomes from their children's life experiences and how their style of parenting and exposure to risk could affect [H] and their being able to care for her in the long term.
…
34. Whilst I support the local authority's final care plan there are support needs that have not yet been fully explored including how Dr Hutchinson's recommendations can be implemented, consideration of the work necessary to address Dr Gregory's concerns, the family engaging with the Lucy Faithfull Foundation, work needs to be completed around risk with Tracey Carboni and work supporting mother and improving her socialisation and support network.
…
36. In making my recommendations to the Court, I have considered the relevant case law including Re B-S (2013) EWCA Civ 1146 and [H's] right to be brought up by her birth family unless overriding requirements do not make this possible."
The Law
"35. While this process is being carried out, the child should remain at home under the care order, unless his safety and welfare requires that he be removed immediately. This is the appropriate test when deciding whether the child should be removed under an interim care order, pending determination of an application under s.31 of the Children Act : Re L-A (Children) [2009] EWCA Civ 822 The same test should also apply when a local authority's decision to remove a child placed at home under a care order has led to an application by the parents to discharge the order and the court has to decide whether the child should be removed pending determination of the discharge application. As set out above, under s.33(4) of the 1989, the local authority may not exercise its powers under a care order to determine how a parent may exercise his or her parental responsibility for the child unless satisfied it is necessary to do so to safeguard or promote the child's welfare. For a local authority to remove a child in circumstances where its welfare did not require it would be manifestly unlawful and an unjustifiable interference with the family's Article 8 rights.
…
49. To avoid the problems that have arisen in this case, the following measures should be taken in future cases.
(1) In every case where a care order is made on the basis of a care plan providing that a child should live at home with his or her parents, it should be a term of the care plan, and a recital in the care order, that the local authority agrees to give not less than fourteen days notice of a removal of the child, save in an emergency. I consider that fourteen days is an appropriate period, on the one hand to avoid unnecessary delay but, on the other hand, to allow the parents an opportunity to obtain legal advice.
(2) Where a care order has been granted on the basis of a care plan providing that the child should remain at home, a local authority considering changing the plan and removing the child permanently from the family must have regard to the fact that permanent placement outside the family is to be preferred only as a last resort where nothing else will do and must rigorously analyse all the realistic options, considering the arguments for and against each option. Furthermore, it must involve the parents properly in the decision-making process.
(3) In every case where a parent decides to apply to discharge a care order in circumstances where the local authority has given notice of intention to remove a child placed at home under a care order, the parent should consider whether to apply in addition for an injunction under s.8 of the HRA to prevent the local authority from removing the child pending the determination of the discharge application. If the parent decides to apply for an injunction, that application should be issued at the same time as the discharge application.
(4) When a local authority, having given notice of its intention to remove a child placed at home under a care order, is given notice of an application for discharge of the care, the local authority must consider whether the child's welfare requires his immediate removal. Furthermore, the authority must keep a written record demonstrating that it has considered this question and recording the reasons for its decision. In reaching its decision on this point, the local authority must again inter alia consult with the parents. Any removal of a child in circumstances where the child's welfare does not require immediate removal, or without proper consideration and consultation, is likely to be an unlawful interference with the Article 8 rights of the parent and child.
(5) On receipt of an application to discharge a care order, where the child has been living at home, the allocation gatekeeper at the designated family centre should check whether it is accompanied by an application under s.8 of HRA and, if not, whether the circumstances might give rise to such an application. This check is needed because, as discussed below, automatic legal aid is not at present available for such applications to discharge a care order, and it is therefore likely that such applications may be made by parents acting in person. In cases where the discharge application is accompanied by an application for an order under s.8 HRA, or the allocation gatekeeper considers that the circumstances might give rise to such an application, he or she should allocate the case as soon as possible to a circuit judge for case management. Any application for an injunction in these circumstances must be listed for an early hearing.
(6) On hearing an application for an injunction under s.8 HRA to restrain a local authority removing a child living at home under a care order pending determination of an application to discharge the care order, the court should normally grant the injunction unless the child's welfare requires his immediate removal from the family home."
"29. Of those various submissions, in my view the only one that has some weight and relevance in this context is the fact that the starting point is that there is a care order, and a court has already accepted that there is a demonstrated high level of concern about a child justifying intervention at care order level. But that is not the issue in the case, in my view. The issue is the approach a local authority should take to changing the care plan under the care order and, whilst the established level of concern and background established by the care order is there, the previously proportionate plan of having a child at home, if it is to be changed, has to be changed after a proper consideration and assessment of all of the available evidence and in a way that meets the child and the mother's human rights as described in the earlier decisions.
30. In my view, the quality of decision-making and the consequences of it in the context of a case such as this are just as important and have consequences which are just as likely to be long term as is the case under an EPO. In fact, given the existence of the emergency protection order procedure and, in contrast, the limited options available to a parent in a case such as this, the human rights considerations require that the quality of the process should be at least as high, if not higher, than in an emergency protection order case. It is not the function of this court to lay down strictures as to the sort of assessment work that should be put in place before a radical change of care plan such as this, but it does seem that some form of formal assessment, whether it is called a core assessment or otherwise which draws together all of the evidence in a considered way rather than simply at LAC meetings or other professional gatherings, and gives the parent a chance to contribute to that process, and then takes stock of all of that material in the way that a core assessment would do, is the level of intervention and planning that should be brought to bear before a change of care plan as draconian as this takes place."
"24. In these circumstances, close attention needed to be paid to the nature and extent of the risks. As foreshadowed at the start of this judgment, there must be (to borrow a phrase from a different context) an intense focus on the type of risk that is involved, how likely it is to happen, and what the likely consequences might then be. Only by carrying out this exercise is it possible to know what weight to give to the risks before setting them alongside other relevant factors. So, for example, the risk of further physical harm to a child who has been severely injured by a denying parent is likely to be a factor of predominant weight. By contrast, to borrow from the evidence in this case, where a mother who untruthfully denies drinking goes to a park at night to drink alone, leaving her baby with its grandmother, the court will view that risk with a sense of proportion.
25. Similarly, close attention must be paid to the true significance of lies and lack of insight in the context of assessing welfare. Lies, however deplorable, are significant only to the extent that they affect the welfare of the child, and in particular to the extent that they undermine systems of protection designed to keep the child safe. However, as noted by Macur LJ in Re Y (A Child) [2013] EWCA Civ 1337 , they cannot be allowed to hijack the case. See also Sir James Munby P in Re A (A Child) [2015] EWFC 11 at [12]:
"The second fundamentally important point is the need to link the facts relied upon by the local authority with its case on threshold, the need to demonstrate why, as the local authority asserts, facts A + B + C justify the conclusion that the child has suffered, or is at risk of suffering, significant harm of types X, Y or Z. Sometimes the linkage will be obvious, as where the facts proved establish physical harm. But the linkage may be very much less obvious where the allegation is only that the child is at risk of suffering emotional harm or, as in the present case, at risk of suffering neglect. In the present case, as we shall see, an important element of the local authority's case was that the father "lacks honesty with professionals", "minimises matters of importance" and "is immature and lacks insight of issues of importance". Maybe. But how does this feed through into a conclusion that A is at risk of neglect? The conclusion does not follow naturally from the premise. The local authority's evidence and submissions must set out the argument and explain explicitly why it is said that, in the particular case, the conclusion indeed follows from the facts."
Although these observations about lies and lack of insight are directed to proof of the threshold, they can equally be applied to the welfare evaluation.""
"50. What about the Court's approach, in the light of all that, to the issue of significant harm? In order to understand this concept and the range of harm that it's intended to encompass, it is right to begin with issues of policy. Basically it is the tradition of the United Kingdom, recognised in law, that children are best brought up within natural families. Lord Templeman, in Re: KD (a minor ward) (termination of access) [1988] 1AC806, at page 812 said this:
"The best person to bring up a child is the natural parent. It matters not whether the parent is wise or foolish, rich or poor, educated or illiterate, provided the child's moral and physical health are not in danger. Public authorities cannot improve on nature."
There are those who may regard that last sentence as controversial but undoubtedly it represents the present state of the law in determining the starting point. It follows inexorably from that, that society must be willing to tolerate very diverse standards of parenting, including the eccentric, the barely adequate and the inconsistent. It follows too that children will inevitably have both very different experiences of parenting and very unequal consequences flowing from it. It means that some children will experience disadvantage and
harm, whilst others flourish in atmospheres of loving security and emotional stability. These are the consequences of our fallible humanity and it is not the provenance of the State to spare children all the consequences of defective parenting. In any event, it simply could not be done."
"66. The PLWG recommendations and guidance can be reduced to the following short points:
a) a care order should not be used solely as a vehicle to achieve the provision of support and services after the conclusion of proceedings;
b) a care order on the basis that the child will be living at home should only be made when there are exceptional reasons for doing so. It should be rare in the extreme that the risks of significant harm to a child are judged to be sufficient to merit the making of a care order but, nevertheless, as risks that can be managed with the child remaining in the care of parents;
c) unless, in an exceptional case, a care order is necessary for the protection of the child, some other means of providing support and services must be used;
d) where a child is to be placed at home, the making of a supervision order to support reunification may be proportionate;
e) where a supervision order is being considered, the best practice guidance in the PLWG April 2023 report must be applied. In particular the court should require the local authority to have a Supervision Support Plan in place."
"42. In Re D (A Child)(No.3) [2016] EWFC 1, [2017] 1 FLR 237 , the obligation on the state to provide such support as will enable a child to remain with her parents was identified as an aspect of the State's positive obligation under Article 8 of ECHR. In addition, there is a statutory duty under domestic law. Under s.17(1) of the Children Act,
"It shall be the general duty of every local authority …
(a) to safeguard and promote the welfare of children within their area who are in need; and
(b) so far as is consistent with that duty, to promote the upbringing of such children by their families,
by providing a range and level of services appropriate to their needs."
A child of disabled parents is likely to need a range and level of services of a broader range and higher level to ensure that he or she can continue to be brought up by their family."
Conclusions