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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 >> QX (Parental Consent for Deprivation of liberty: Children under 16) [2025] EWHC 745 (Fam) (31 March 2025) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2025/745.html Cite as: [2025] EWHC 745 (Fam) |
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PR25C50035 |
& THE FAMILY COURT
Lancaster Road, PRESTON |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a High Court Judge (pursuant to s. 9(1) SCA'1981)
and as a Judge of the Family Court
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BLACKBURN WITH DARWEN BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Applicant |
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-and- |
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(1) BM -and- (2) BF -and- (3) DM -and- (4) DF -and- (5) QX (a child) (by his children's guardian, Jade Waters) |
Respondents |
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RE: QX (Parental Consent for Deprivation of liberty: Children under 16) |
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Richard Hunt (instructed by Donald Race & Newton) for BM
Mark Blackburn (instructed by Cartwright King) for BF
Michael Jones, K.C., & Kathryn Korol (instructed by Farleys ) for DM
Bansa Singh Hayer (instructed by Watson Ramsbottom) for DF
Peter Rothery (instructed by Roland Robinson & Fentons) for QX by the children's guardian.
Hearing date: 24 March 2025
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Crown Copyright ©
HIS HONOUR JUDGE BURROWS:
INTRODUCTION & SUMMARY
FACTS AND BACKGROUND
A NOTE ON PARENTAL RESPONSIBILITY
Provision of accommodation for children: general.
(1) Every local authority shall provide accommodation for any child in need within their area who appears to them to require accommodation as a result of—
(a) there being no person who has parental responsibility for him;
(b) his being lost or having been abandoned; or
(c) the person who has been caring for him being prevented (whether or not permanently, and for whatever reason) from providing him with suitable accommodation or care.
(6) Before providing accommodation under this section, a local authority shall, so far as is reasonably practicable and consistent with the child's welfare—
(a)ascertain the child's wishes and feelings regarding the provision of accommodation; and
(b)give due consideration (having regard to his age and understanding) to such wishes and feelings of the child as they have been able to ascertain.
(7) A local authority may not provide accommodation under this section for any child if any person who—
(a)has parental responsibility for him; and
(b)is willing and able to—
(i)provide accommodation for him; or
(ii)arrange for accommodation to be provided for him,
objects.
(8) Any person who has parental responsibility for a child may at any time remove the child from accommodation provided by or on behalf of the local authority under this section.
CARE ORDER?
25. The second point concerns a trilogy of cases concerning whether, for a care order to be made on the grounds that the child is beyond parental control there needs to be some failure on the part of the parent for the order to be made.
26. As argued before me, in Re P (Permission to Withdraw Care Proceedings) [2016] WL 212893, HHJ Redgrave (sitting as a judge of the Family Court), the Court determined that for threshold to be reached there must be some failure on the part of the care giver (the parent). In Re K (Post Adoption placement breakdown) [2012] EWHC 4148 (Fam) HHJ Bellamy, sitting as a High Court Judge, and Re T (A Child)(Care Order: Beyond Parental Control: Deprivation of Liberty: Authority to Administer Medication) [2018] 1 WLUK 14, [2018] EWFC B1, Darren Howe, Q.C. sitting as a deputy High Court Judge, it was said there need be no such failure.
27. It seems to me that the starting point has to be the meaning of the plain words of the statute. The term "attributable to" "connotes a causal connection between the harm or likelihood of harm on the one hand and the care or likely care or the child's being beyond parental control on the other" (see Lancashire County Council v B [2000] 1 FLR 583, Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead). In his skeleton argument, Mr Jones points out that whereas s. 31(1)(b)(i) specifies the reasonably expected level of parenting as being relevant, s. 31(1)(b)(ii) does not. If Parliament had intended the level of parenting to be relevant to both, the same language would have been used for both.
28. HHJ Bellamy put the matter this way:
[75] In my judgment it is clear from [LCC v B] that even if a child is likely to suffer significant harm as a direct result of a disorder which affects that child's behaviour, if the consequent behaviour is such that a parent is unable to control the child then the child's being beyond parental control is, at the very least, a contributory cause of the likelihood of future harm"
29. Darren Howe, Q.C. agrees and puts it this way, on the very difficult facts of his case:
. [90] In my judgment it is immaterial whether a child is beyond parental control due to illness, impairment or for any other reason. The court simply has to consider if, on the facts, the child is beyond the control of the parent or carer. If that condition is satisfied, the court then has to determine if the child is suffering or is likely to suffer significant harm as a result of being beyond the control of the parent. If the answer to that 2nd question is 'yes', then section 31(2)(b)(ii) threshold is, in my judgment satisfied.
30. These two High Court decisions bind a Family Court Judge at Circuit Level. Even a judge sitting in the High Court has to be mindful of the principle of stare decisis. I am extremely uneasy about morally and practically blameless parents being made the subject of care proceedings and potentially losing exclusive parental responsibility as a result. I am also far from satisfied that the parents of disabled children, should be at risk of their child being placed under care orders where there is nothing about the quality of the care they have given that can be criticised, and the only difference between them and other parents is the disability of their child.
31. All that having been said, I feel compelled to follow the clear wording of the statute and the interpretation given to it by HHJ Bellamy and Howe, Q.C.
32. However, that is not the end of the matter. I see great force in Mr Rothery's first point. Many cases of the sort considered above, and this case, involve difficulties experienced by parents struggling to manage the issues raised by their children's condition. Sometimes there is a disagreement or dispute between the parents and the authorities precipitating the involvement of the State. However, in this case, there is no dispute. The parents recognised the need for their son to be cared for by a professional team of carers in a setting dedicated to his needs. At that point they called upon the local authority to provide that care and to meet his needs. That is what has happened, and PX is now doing well.
33. In my judgment, in the circumstances of this case, where parents not only recognise that they are unable to manage their child due to his disabilities but call upon the local authority to meet his needs, it is impossible to see how the threshold is met. I am reminded of Leicester City Council v AB [2018] EWHC 1960 (Fam), where a mother developed an illness that prevented her from providing care for her child. As Keehan, J. said the threshold was not met where she had done "what any reasonable parent would do" and arranged for the local authority to care for the child. Although the factual scenario is different in this case, I cannot help but describe what these parents have done as what any reasonable parent would do.
34. Furthermore, if the relevant date for threshold is the date of issue, namely 6 July 2022, it cannot possibly be made out. PX is under the care of the local authority. If he is at risk of suffering significant harm at the present time (and he is not), that cannot be due to him being beyond his parents' control.
35. I am further fortified in my view by the actual reason care proceedings were commenced. I am satisfied that proceedings were brought because the local authority believed it was unlawful for the child to be accommodated pursuant to s. 20 of the Act for the long term. That is not only an improper reason for bringing care proceedings, but also an inaccurate interpretation of the law. As Ms Harvey for the local authority accepted, there is no time limit for the use of s. 20, and there was no need for care proceedings to be issued in this case in any event: see Baroness Hale in Williams v Hackney LBC [2019] 1 FLR 310.
36. If I am entirely wrong on that, and the threshold may have been met in these proceedings, I would not have made a care order in this case in any event. It seems clear to me that where a child is being accommodated under s. 20 in agreement with the parents, the parents have a child focused approach to the care plan and work well with the local authority there is no need for an order at all. It certainly is not in the child's welfare interests for there to be one.
37. For all those reasons, I indicated to the local authority that I had no intention of making a care order and I granted them permission to withdraw their application, which they did.
DEPRIVATION OF LIBERTY
On a conceptual level it is difficult to see how one can be deprived of something that one is incapable of doing. Equally, how can one be deprived of a right that one is incapable of exercising, not through the actions of the State or any third party, but by reason of ones own insuperable inabilities.
"Mostyn J purported to apply the test required by Cheshire West, although it is clear from para 19 of the first judgment that he did not agree with it. He said at para 17 that it was impossible to see how the protective measures in place for KW could linguistically be characterised as a "deprivation of liberty". Quoting from JS Mill, he said that the protected person was "merely in a state to require being taken care of by others, [and] must be protected against their own actions as well as external injury". At para 25, he said that he found that KW was not "in any realistic way being constrained from exercising the freedom to leave, in the required sense, for the essential reason that she does not have the physical or mental ability to exercise that freedom".
PARENTAL RESPONSIBILITY AND CONSENT
[54] I wish to pay tribute to D's parents who have throughout acted in what they considered to be in the best interests of their elder son. They have, at all times, paid the closest interest in his care at the hospital and they have worked in co-operation with the clinicians, staff and carers at the unit. They have attended, or at least one of them has attended, the periodic reviews held at the hospital.
[55] When considering the exercise of parental responsibility in this case and whether a decision falls within the zone of parental responsibility, it is inevitable and necessary that I take into account D's autism and his other diagnosed conditions. I do so because they are important and fundamental factors to take into account when considering his maturity and his ability to make decisions about his day to day life.
[56] An appropriate exercise of parental responsibility in respect of a 5 year old child will differ very considerably from what is or is not an appropriate exercise of parental responsibility in respect of a 15 year old young person.
[57] The decisions which might be said to come within the zone of parental responsibility for a 15 year old who did not suffer from the conditions with which D has been diagnosed will be of a wholly different order from those decisions which have to be taken by parents whose 15 year old son suffers with D's disabilities. Thus a decision
to keep such a 15 year old boy under constant supervision and control would undoubtedly be considered an inappropriate exercise of parental responsibility and would probably amount to ill treatment. The decision to keep an autistic 15 year old boy who has erratic, challenging and potentially harmful behaviours under constant supervision and control is a quite different matter; to do otherwise would be neglectful. In such a case I consider the decision to keep this young person under constant supervision and control is the proper exercise of parental responsibility.
APPLICATION TO THIS CASE
CONCERNS