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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 >> P (A Child), Re [2015] EWCA Civ 777 (22 July 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/777.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 777 |
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ON APPEAL FROM Manchester County Court & Family Court
His Honour Judge Hernandez
MA26414
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BEATSON
and
LADY JUSTICE KING
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Re P (a child) |
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Karl Rowley QC (instructed by Manchester City Council Legal Services) for the 1st Respondent
Gordon Semple (instructed by AFG Law) for the 2nd Respondent
Hearing date: Thursday 16th July 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice King :
Background
"Any change will take time to evaluate and there would need to be confidence that she would not regress from any progress that she has made. She would have to demonstrate that any change was sustainable. This will take time."
"In my judgment, F cannot wait for the mother to demonstrate that she is in a position to care for him. The timescales of that assessment are too uncertain, as are the prospects of success. Whilst she may at some time in the future be able to demonstrate an ability to care for R it is, in my judgment, unlikely that she could demonstrate that she could care for F as well, a child who has no attachment to her and who is attached to his current carer. In my judgment she would be bound to fail."
Analysis
e) The parent of guardian may not oppose the making of an adoption order …. …..without the court's leave….
f) ….
g) The court cannot give leave under subsection 3 or 5 unless satisfied that there has been a change in circumstances since the consent of the parent or guardian was given or as the case may be the placement order was made.
i) She submits that the judge was wrong in concluding that there had not been a change of circumstances as of January 2015. The programme of work advocated by Dr Hellin was by then she said, 'embedded', the trajectory she said, was positive and a way had been found to work with the mother. This should have satisfied the gateway in s47(7) and allowed the judge to move to the second stage of the test.
ii) The mother should have been given permission to oppose the making of the adoption order given that F was living with his former foster carer. Children regularly, she reminded the court, move from a foster placement where they are settled to an adoptive placement. Miss Obi-Ezekpazu seeks to suggest that in such a situation there are no concerns and no adverse effects on the child. To suggest therefore that there may be emotional harm to a child by such a move for F from his foster mother to his natural mother, does not, she says, sit comfortably with established adoption practice.
iii) The mother in her written material upon which Miss Obi-Ezekpazu relies says that it is a "contradiction" to have two different outcomes for two children of the same mother within a matter of months.
"[47] At the beginning of this judgment I indicated that the appeal, in part, raises the question of the relative weight that is to be attached to the issues of 'status quo' and 'family' when they appear to be in opposition to each other in proceedings relating to a child. In recent times the importance of a local authority and the court giving full weight to the importance of a 'family' placement, unless this is established to be so contrary to a child's welfare that a long-term placement in public care or adoption is necessary, has been stressed in a range of decisions, of which Re B and Re B-S are the most prominent. Less has been said in the recently reported cases about the weight to be afforded to the bundle of factors that family lawyers have historically referred to as 'the status quo argument'. That this is so may, in part, be a consequence of the status quo simply not being a factor in many public law cases where, at the time of the final hearing, the child is, on any view, in a home that is temporary; the dispute is normally about the home to which the child is to move (be that in the family or with strangers) with no option to stay where he is.
"[58] ….the legal imperative is plain that the decision for B must be made with B's welfare as the paramount consideration and the decision for E must be made with her welfare as the paramount consideration."
The local authority has done just that; F & R each have the same social worker, Ms Keating, who was clearly open to this mother caring for a child notwithstanding her history and that she had had four children already removed; ultimately however, each child's unique circumstances and welfare needs led her to recommending a different outcome for each of them.
The Appeal
Lord Justice Beatson :
Lord Justice Richards :