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England and Wales Family Court Decisions (other Judges) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (other Judges) >> S (Care and Placement Orders) [2019] EWFC B40 (15 May 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/OJ/2019/B40.html Cite as: [2019] EWFC B40 |
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MISS RECORDER HENLEY
This judgment was delivered in private. The judge has given leave for this version of the judgment to be published on condition that (irrespective of what is contained in the judgment) in any published version of the judgment the anonymity of the children and members of their family must be strictly preserved. All persons, including representatives of the media, must ensure that this condition is strictly complied with. Failure to do so will be a contempt of court.
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Before:
MISS RECORDER HENLEY |
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IN THE FAMILY COURT
SITTING AT NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE
CASE NO. NE18C006555
BETWEEN
LA
Applicant
M
First Respondent
and
F
Second Respondent
and
E (DOB: FEBRUARY 2018)
(By his Children’s Guardian, ALISON CLOUGH)
Third Respondent
__________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
__________________________________________________________
Representation
Applicant – Miss Reay
Respondent Mother – Miss Miller
Respondent Father – Not present or represented
Respondent Child – Miss Peel
Introduction
Background
Threshold Criteria
15. The Mother accepts that the threshold criteria for the making of public law orders pursuant to s.31 Children Act 1989 is crossed.
16. The Father makes no concessions, but is aware that findings and final orders may be made in his absence.
17. The Mother makes the following factual concessions:
a. The mother has failed to maintain safe and hygienic home conditions.
b. The mother failed to ensure that E was properly fed, resulting in him losing 4oz and becoming underweight for his age.
c. The mother has failed to prioritise E’s needs above her own, for example:
i. The mother spent backdated benefits on trips to the cinema and on gifts for her boyfriend, despite her home not being fully furnished or carpeted.
ii. The mother failed to prioritise paying rent and spent available money.
iii. The mother has prioritised her relationship and has continued to allow him into the home with E despite advice from professionals that this should not happen due to his behaviour around E and other children, including exposing himself to a child and being drunk and disorderly.
iv. The mother allowed a family from Homeless accommodation to move into her property, including the mother’s partner who she was aware had been involved in a violent crime. The mother provided this family with financial assistance despite being in debt and having rent arrears.
d. The mother has failed to meet E’s health needs in that the mother was slow in treating significant nappy rash and ran out of prescription medication.
e. The mother has failed to work openly and honestly with professionals and has breached numerous written agreements that have been put in place to protect E.
f. The mother is at risk or eviction and homelessness due to accruing £300 of arrears on a property despite only moving there in June 2018.
g. E has suffered physical harm in the care of the mother, including:
h. The mother dropped a frozen pizza on E’s head on 24 April 2018
i. E’s head was bumped on a fire door on 7 June 2018. E was taken to hospital due to vomiting after this incident.
j. The father has poor mental health and is unable to address his own health needs.
k. The father has a fascination with knives and has been observed playing with a pen knife or keeping a knife next to him during visits.
l. The father is prone to outbursts of violent aggression and has problems controlling his anger. He has presented in an increasingly threatening and violent manner towards professionals and has not engaged in any support to address this.
m. The father has had no contact with E since he was born and appears to show no emotional warmth towards him.
18. Having considered all of the papers in this matter, I am satisfied that these concessions are borne out by the unchallenged written evidence and I make these findings of fact on the balance of probabilities.
19. As a consequence of these findings I am satisfied that the threshold criteria for the purposes of making final public law orders is crossed and that E has suffered and is at risk of suffering significant harm in the form of neglect, physical harm and emotional harm attributable to the care of his parents.
Evidence
Care Plan
Legal Framework in respect of welfare decisions
24. When considering which orders if any are in the best interests of E I start very clearly from the position that, wherever possible, children should be brought up by their natural parents and if not by other members of their family. The state should not interfere in family life so as to separate children from their families unless it has been demonstrated to be both necessary and proportionate and that no other less radical form of order would achieve the essential aim of promoting their welfare. In Re B [2013] UKSC 33 the Supreme Court emphasised this, reminding us such orders are "very extreme", and should only be made when "necessary" for the protection of the child's interests, "when nothing else will do". The court "must never lose sight of the fact that (the child's) interests include being brought up by her natural family, ideally her parents, or at least one of them".
27. When considering whether to make a placement order, it is trite law that I must be satisfied that any orders I make are a lawful, necessary, proportionate and a reasonable response to the child’s predicament. The granting of a placement order represents the most drastic curtailment of the right of these parents and of the child under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, which can only be justified by pressing concerns for his welfare. However, in construing both the Convention and domestic law, I have the assistance of the decision of the Supreme Court in Re B (A Child) [2013] UKSC 33 followed by the decisions of the Court of Appeal in Re P [2013] EWCA 963 and Re G [2013] EWCA 965 . Those cases firmly re emphasise that a placement for adoption is a "very extreme thing" and "a last resort to be approved only when nothing else will do". Both domestic and Convention law do require a high degree of justification before adoption can be endorsed as "necessary", the term in the Convention or "required", the term in the Adoption and Children Act.
28. I must apply the welfare checklist found in section 1(4) of the Adoption and Children Act 2002, and I must be satisfied that the making of a placement order accords with the child’s welfare throughout his life.
29. If I conclude that the child’s welfare throughout his life demands that such an order is made then the law requires me to dispense with the consent of the parents to the making of a placement order in circumstances in which they oppose the applications.
Positions of the parties
Welfare analysis
34. In so far as realistic placement options are concerned, there are no realistic potential family or kinship placement options for E. Negative viability assessments have been concluded and not challenged. The only two options before the Court are a placement with the Mother and adoption.
35. I have no doubt that the Mother loves E and that he loves her. The Mother has suffered much adversity in her life which has sadly left her ill equipped to care for E. She has tried her very best to care for him but has an overwhelming unmet need for therapeutic intervention. The timescales for the work that she requires are beyond those that are acceptable for E, which she bravely accepts.
36. The Mother has had a number of assessments in these proceedings, these have taken place before E was born, whilst E was in her care and after his removal. She has had a PAMS based assessment and a psychological assessment during these proceedings. I am satisfied that she has been fully and fairly assessed and I accept the conclusions of those assessments.
37. The Mother has had a cognitive assessment by Dr Stephanie Hill. Dr Hill confirms that the mother has no significant deficits or difficulties in her cognition and straddles the high borderline learning disability and low average ranges. Dr Hill also confirms that the work carried out with the Mother during these proceedings to support her and try to assist her to improve her parenting ability has been done in a way consistent with her cognitive abilities.
38. Dr Hill’s psychological assessment of the Mother concludes that she has psychological/psychiatric difficulties such that she will find it difficult to learn and will struggle to maintain consistent levels of care for E because her own difficulties are, at times, overwhelming for her. The Mother requires urgent input from a mental health team and treatment for PTSD and dissociation. Once her mental health is more stable, she can begin to address wider issues and the timescales for psychological and therapeutic intervention from a secondary care mental health service are estimated between 6-12 months. This time estimate does not include the waiting time to identify an appropriate service and begin therapy. There can be no guarantees that the outcome of the work once started will be successful. I am satisfied that on the basis of this expert assessment, the Mother is sadly unable to care for E within a reasonable timescale for him. E is 14 months old and has been in local authority foster care for almost 10 months. I am satisfied that decisions need to be taken without any further delay for E and that he needs a settled and permanent placement now. These proceedings have already been unacceptably lengthy from his perspective and it is not in his best interests for there to be any further delays.
39. Adoption provides the greatest sense of legal stability and permanence for a child who cannot be placed within the birth family. It is a placement of last resort because it results in the total severance of a child’s ties with their family of origin, save for, usually, limited indirect contact via the post box system. The child is given a new family, and as a result there is a loss of previous identity and usually a loss of all direct contact with the birth family, as is proposed here.
40. Adoption offers E the opportunity of a secure placement not only during his minority but also for the rest of his life, if the Court concludes that he cannot be safely cared for in his family of origin. Adoption allows him to live his life free from the state intervention that long-term foster care would bring for him and would allow him to be permanently and securely claimed by a family.
Discussion and conclusion