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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Oxfordshire County Council v X & Ors [2010] EWCA Civ 581 (27 May 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/581.html Cite as: [2010] 3 WLR 1746, [2011] 1 FLR 272, [2010] PTSR 1996, [2010] 2 FCR 355, [2010] EWCA Civ 581, [2011] 1 Fam 31, [2011] Fam 31, [2010] Fam Law 790 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE OXFORD COUNTY COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE CORRIE
17/2008 (Oxford County Court)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MOSES
and
LORD JUSTICE MUNBY
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OXFORDSHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) X (by the Official Solicitor as her guardian ad litem) (2) Y (3) J (by her children's guardian) |
Respondent |
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Mr John Vater (instructed by Oxford Law Group) for the First Respondent (the natural mother)
Mr Nicholas Davies (instructed by Whetter Duckworth Fowler) for the Second Respondent (the natural father)
Mr Michael Trueman (of Truemans) for the Third Respondent (the child)
Hearing date: 7 May 2010.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Neuberger of Abbotsbury MR :
"The making of an adoption order operates to extinguish … the parental responsibility which any person other than the adopters … has for the adopted child immediately before the making of the order."
Section 67 of the 2002 Act relates to the 'Status conferred by adoption'. Section 67(1) provides, so far as material for present purposes, that:
"An adopted person is to be treated in law as if born as the child of the adopters …"
Section 67(3)(b) provides so far as material that:
"An adopted person … is to be treated in law … as not being the child of any person other than the adopters …"
And it is important to remember that this is not just some legal fiction. As Thorpe LJ said in In re J (Adoption: Non-patrial) [1998] INLR 424 at page 429, the result of adoption is "the creation of the psychological relationship of parent and child with all its far-reaching manifestations and consequences."
"No doubt the court will not, except in the most exceptional case, impose terms or conditions as to access to members of the child's natural family to which the adopting parents do not agree."
He explained:
"To do so would be to create a potentially frictional situation which would be hardly likely to safeguard or promote the welfare of the child. Where no agreement is forthcoming the court will, with very rare exceptions, have to choose between making an adoption order without terms or conditions as to access, or to refuse to make such an order and seek to safeguard access through some other machinery, such as wardship. To do otherwise would be merely inviting future and almost immediate litigation."
"The judges who hear family cases are well aware of the stresses and strains to which adopters … are subject and a simple explanation of their reasons in non-legal terms would usually be all that is necessary."
"the jurisprudence I think is clear. The imposition on prospective adopters of orders for contact with which they are not in agreement is extremely, and remains extremely, unusual."
"The parents have considered the birth father's application for contact and take the view that it would not be appropriate for either him or the birth mother to keep photos of the child. As J's parents they do not agree to this. This is a fundamental issue and a right which they assert as J's parents. Further, they are concerned about the child's whereabouts being discovered by the parents. In particular, they are concerned that due to the child's ethnic background, they are potentially easier to identify should, for example, either of the birth parents put the pictures on the internet.
… the parents feel that they have complied with and accepted the birth parents' requests and not contested them until now. They feel they have been particularly understanding of the birth mother's issues and as a consequence have not sought to accelerate the pace of these adoption proceedings, which have been lengthy. Having said that, the parents are concerned to note that it does not appear that either of the birth parents have engaged with the post-adoption services or that, in particular, the birth mother is addressing her mental health problems constructively. The parents also note that the birth parents have not taken all the opportunities for contact that have been offered to them in the past.
Over and above that, the parents feel that now that the Adoption Order has been made, as those with sole parental responsibility in respect of J, it should be for them to determine what is in her best interests. The parents have not ruled out the possibility of letting the birth parents have photographs in the future but would first need to be sure it is J's best interest. Notably, they would want reassurances that the birth parents have engaged with the services mentioned above and completed any courses or therapy recommended by them. Put shortly, the Applicants wish their status as the parents of J to be respected and seen to be inviolable in order to give the very best chance for the adoption to be successful."
"There is no evidence at all to support the concern that X would take any steps to disrupt the adoptive placement … This is a placement that is supported by X … there is clear evidence over a number of years that X has taken no steps to locate the children …
Any additional theoretical risk to the placement caused by retaining rather than viewing a photograph is minimal. X has already met the adopters … If X met the adopters and children by chance, she would recognise them in any event whether or not she had been allowed to retain photographs.
The concern appears to be that X would use the photographs to trace J using the internet. There is no evidence to support this concern. X has explained to the Guardian the genuine reasons why she wishes to receive photographs. X wishes to have the photographs to keep in a photograph album that she has made of her … children. X wishes to have further photographs of J to add to this album. She finds it reassuring to look at this album from time to time. She likes to be able show these photographs to her two elder children … who live with their father and with whom she has contact …
X … feels no hostility towards the adopters of J. She is pleased that they are able to care for J … X does, however, continue to feel extremely distressed by the actions taken by the social worker. X would find it unnecessarily intrusive to be watched by a social worker when viewing photographs of J. The Official Solicitor is concerned that this is a mechanism that would further distress X.
Concern had been expressed by the social worker about the unpredictable behaviour of X. Attached to this position statement is a letter from … X's current CPN, indicating his view that the provision of photographs may help X to adjust to her loss …
In relation to treatment, X has co-operated with the recommended treatment for some time now, at least for the past two years. X takes the medication that she is prescribed; she sees her CPN and consultant psychiatrist regularly … Insofar as co-operation with treatment should reasonably be a requirement for X to receive photographs, that requirement is already met.
So far as the Official Solicitor is aware, the natural father has always complied with his treatment …
The Official Solicitor considers it a great shame that the Adopters have been given such a negative view of X. J … was removed from X because she is ill. She has never done anything to deliberately harm any of the children and yet the Local Authority appears to have an unnecessarily harsh view of her.
The Official Solicitor submits that the refusal to retain an annual photograph of J is a disproportionate response by the Local Authority to any theoretical future risk."
"The Guardian's position is that whilst she believes the risk of the birth parents retaining photographs to be lower than originally thought, she is extremely concerned by the effect on J's adoptive parents who of course are the only people who now have parental responsibility for J. The court, on making the adoption order, was satisfied that the adoptive parents could meet the needs of the child and make decisions as to what was in her best interests. They have indicated their position as to what they believe to be in J's best interests in so far as contact is concerned The Guardian's main concern is that J needs to be in a secure home where there is no risk of disruption. If the Adoptive parents are subject to stress and anxiety there is a real possibility this could affect J."
"The Adoption and Children Act 2002 sets out in section 1 the criteria to be applied, and I have firmly in mind the paramountcy throughout this child's life of its interests and the vital, and I paraphrase, the vital importance that the security of the placement is neither threatened nor impinged. Included within that has to be the attitude and response of the adopters whose peace of mind and own stability and safety are of course central to that of the child or children, while bearing in mind that risks have to be assessed objectively. So that when Mr Cameron initially submitted that it was not a question of proving likelihood, he did not quite mean that there was no need for an assessment of the risk that the parents, either or both of them, might seek to contact the adoptive family, and clearly some sort of risk assessment has to be carried out. Again when he submitted that the adopters' wish must prevail I did not take him to mean that so much as that the adopters' wishes and their apprehensions and concerns must be scrutinised and given appropriate and, he submitted, considerable weight. What they say is that there should not be an order at all. If anything a preamble which would have the effect of an annual photograph being distributed to the parents, but only if the adopters were satisfied as to certain specific criteria including that the parents had taken a proper part in the letter box contact and that their mental health was stable and their compliance with medication and treatment full. I am quite prepared to accept their concerns and their perceptions are genuine. There is no reason to think otherwise."
We emphasise the last two sentences.
"The parents have an Article 8 right to family life. They have by their own inability to look after the children been lawfully deprived of exercising those rights in full, as have the children been deprived of their right or what would otherwise be their right to a family life with their natural family. So the state has justifiably and proportionately intervened in making care and subsequent orders which have severely truncated if not in legal terms and as a matter of law obliterated the parents' rights. But it is difficult to see that the right has been completely obliterated. It has been severely truncated and parental responsibility and the rights and duties of parenthood have gone to others."
"Reliance on the mother's defection with her young son many years ago in support of the risk about which the local authority, the guardian and the adopters are concerned seems to the court understandable but rather farfetched, and there is a clear picture here, reading the documents, of the local authority in perfectly good faith having played a part in inculcating in the adopters' minds the very fears which have been so helpfully articulated today by counsel. But really looking at the picture overall it seems to me that an essentially minor point has been allowed to assume far more significance than it really merits and fears have multiplied on themselves in a way which was not justified objectively as I have earlier indicated. In the absence of any indication that a preamble sanctioning an annual photograph for the parents to take away and add to the album, which is so clearly valuable to the mother, then there was no option but to seek an order. Considering not only section 1 of the Adoption Act 2002 but also by way of checking it the same section of the 1989 Act, I have identified the interest of the child in the natural parents maintaining an interest of which the child can be told when she is old enough. I have found that the risk on the evidence I have seen of the natural parents acting in the way which it is feared they might is a very small one, and it seems to the court that the parents do have some more than residual Article 8 rights which entitle them to something which, I repeat I am content to accept from the Official Solicitor, is a commonplace order and in practice an order is seldom necessary, and it is widespread for good reason.
It seems to me therefore that in these particular circumstances where an order sought an order should be made."
i) First, Mr Cameron complains that, although he was referred to Re R, Judge Corrie failed to give sufficient weight to the wishes of the adoptive parents and accordingly failed to give proper consideration to the effect on J's welfare of making an order contrary to the adoptive parents' wishes. He makes the powerful point that, in making the order, the judge gave the adoptive parents the message, on the first occasion that their judgment in relation to J was required, that they were not supported.ii) Second, and this is really the corollary of the first point, he complains that the judge attached too much weight to the wishes and welfare of the natural parents.
iii) Third, he complains that the judge improperly concluded that the provision of photographs to natural parents by adoptive parents was a standard practice, giving too much weight to the view of the Official Solicitor to this effect and insufficient weight to the views of the local authority and the children's guardian (who in the nature of things, he suggests, are likely to have greater experience than the Official Solicitor) that this was not standard practice.
iv) Fourth, he complains that the judge failed to give proper consideration to the paramountcy of J's welfare. Wrapped up in his submissions in support of this proposition are complaints that the judge failed to give proper consideration to a number of factors including:
a) the risk that the natural parents would seek to identify the placement;b) the risk that, if the natural parents did seek to identify the placement, the opportunity to do so would be "drastically increased" by the provision to them of a photograph; according to Mr Cameron the judge virtually ignored what he says is the vast potential for disseminating and gathering information afforded by digitising a photograph and publishing it on the internet, given the ubiquity of social networking sites, chatrooms, forums and blogs on the internet and the ease of uploading and downloading pictures;c) the risk that if the placement was identified then the security of the placement would be threatened and undermined.Complaint in this respect is also made that the judge was wrong to conclude that J would benefit from the provision of photographs to her natural parents and, moreover, that he failed to consider that if there was any such benefit it would equally accrue from the natural parents being able to view the photographs at the local authority's offices.
i) First, that Judge Corrie did not remind himself that – for obvious reasons – it is unusual to saddle adoptive parents with an order contrary to their wishes.ii) Second, that the modern facility to place a photograph on the internet transforms its utility as a vehicle for tracing a child.
iii) Third, that irrespective of the objective level of risk of discovery, the disturbing effect of the order on the adoptive parents and the consequential risk of emotional destabilisation in their household clearly outweighs the, query debateable, value to J of the natural parents having, rather than seeing, her annual photograph.
"should be read on the assumption that, unless he has demonstrated the contrary, the judge knew how he should perform his functions and which matters he should take into account … An appellate court should resist the temptation to subvert the principle that they should not substitute their own discretion for that of the judge by a narrow textual analysis which enables them to claim that he misdirected himself."