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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> A, R (on the application of) v Coventry City Council [2009] EWHC 34 (Admin) (22 January 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2009/34.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 34 (Admin), [2009] 1 FCR 501, [2009] 1 FLR 1202, [2009] Fam Law 289, [2009] BLGR 486 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court
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THE QUEEN on the application of A |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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COVENTRY CITY COUNCIL |
Defendant |
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Mr Bryan McGuire (instructed by Coventry City Council) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 10 December 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Antony Edwards-Stuart QC :
Introduction
The claim
The background to the claims and findings
"During the first visit . . . on 21 June 2007 [Ms Casey] was clearly told that this was a private fostering situation and the department were [sic] not responsible for funding the young person's placement."
If this is correct, then it is a little odd that a month later (as recorded in the following paragraph of the report) Ms Casey is said to have asked the Council why she was not receiving the full fostering allowance.
"[Ms Casey] has made it clear that if she does not get some support from social care then Terry will have to return to live with his father or go into care.
Terry is very clear about not returning to live with his father and wishes to stop with Ms Casey."
"My conclusion is that this may be a private fostering placement which should be supported financially by Terry's father. However, as he is not able to support this due to debts of his own, this could effect the placement with Terry coming up into care. Therefore I would recommend that social care support Elizabeth until Terry is 16 in which case he could claim housing benefit to pay [Ms Casey]." (My emphasis)
If, as the Council claims, it had been made clear to Ms Casey all along that there was no question of funding being provided by the Council, then this conclusion is, to say the least, most inappropriately worded.
"[The father's] lack of interaction and contributing in terms of information, authorisation and funding raise the question as to whether he has appropriately exercised his parental responsibility or whether he has abandoned Terry."
I observe that this is wholly inconsistent with the existence of any agreement by Terry's father to fund a private fostering arrangement.
i) Terry was being looked after by Ms Casey because he had turned up on her doorstep seeking shelter and she had generously taken him in. There was no prior arrangement of any sort (apart from the telephone conversation between Terry and his brother, Matthew, which had taken place very shortly beforehand).ii) At the initial visit on 21 June 2007 Ms Casey told the social workers that she could not continue to look after Terry without financial assistance from the Council, failing which Terry would have either to go back to his father or be taken into care.
iii) Terry told the social workers that he wanted to stay with Ms Casey and was not prepared to be returned to his father and that, if he was, he would run away.
iv) From the time that Terry left his father's home, his father had taken no steps to make contact with Terry or to involve himself in any arrangements for Terry's care, apart from agreeing to hand over the child benefit book to Ms Casey when she called on him in early April 2007.
v) The Children & Family Worker identified the appropriate response to the needs identified - at least so far as she was concerned – to be the provision of financial support to Ms Casey so that she could continue to care for Terry.
vi) Ms Casey was reassured, or at least given the clear impression, on 21 June 2007 that a way would be found to provide her with financial assistance so that she could continue to care for Terry. She was not told that this was a private fostering situation with the result that the Council would not be accepting responsibility for funding Terry's placement (it may well be that the expression "private fostering" was used at some point or another, but I am quite satisfied that, contrary to the position adopted subsequently by the Council, the financial implications of this for which it contends were never explained to Ms Casey).
The legislative framework
"(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) . . .
(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."
The authorities
"48. We turn to the substance of appeal. Was Southwark ever under a section 20(1) duty to provide accommodation for S? As we have said, before this Court, Southwark accepted not only that S was a child in need but also that her father, who had been caring for her, was, for the foreseeable future, prevented from providing such care. Southwark contended that its section 20(1) duty was on the verge of arising but never crystallised, because it did not appear to the authority that S required accommodation; ED was willing to provide it. "
49. We are prepared to accept that, in some circumstances, a private fostering arrangement might become available in such a way as to permit a local authority, which is on the verge of having to provide accommodation for a child, to 'side-step' that duty by helping to make a private fostering arrangement. However, it will be a question of fact as to whether that happens in any particular case. Usually, a private fostering arrangement will come about as the result of discussions between the proposed foster parent and either the child's parent(s) or a person with parental responsibility. But we accept that there might be occasions when a private arrangement is made without such direct contact. We accept that there might be cases in which the local authority plays a part in bringing about such an arrangement. However, where a local authority takes a major role in making arrangements for a child to be fostered, it is more likely to be concluded that, in doing so, it is exercising its powers and duties as a public authority pursuant to sections 20 and 23. If an authority wishes to play some role in making a private arrangement, it must make the nature of the arrangement plain to those involved. If the authority is facilitating a private arrangement, it must make it plain to the proposed foster parent that s/he must look to the parents or person with parental responsibility for financial support. The authority must explain that any financial assistance from public funds would be entirely a matter for the discretion of the local authority for the area in which the foster parent is living. Only on receipt of such information could the foster parent give informed consent to acceptance of the child under a private fostering agreement. If such matters are left unclear, there is a danger that the foster parent (and subsequently the court) will conclude that the local authority was acting under its statutory powers and duties and that the arrangement was not a private one at all.
50. In the present case, the local authority took a central role in making the arrangements for S to live with ED. It directed the school that the father must not be allowed to take S away. It arranged a meeting attended by all the relevant parties. The father was told that he must have no contact with S. Those factors are far more consistent with the exercise of statutory powers by Southwark than the facilitating of a private arrangement. The father consented to the proposed arrangement with ED. S was consulted as to her wishes. Mr Dallas contacted ED to ask her if she would take S in. Mr Dallas delivered S to ED's home and checked that the arrangements were satisfactory. Those factors were equally consistent with an exercise of statutory powers as with the making of a private arrangement. However, there was no contact between ED and either parent. Mr Dallas said nothing to ED, either on the telephone or the following day at his office, about the arrangement being a private one, in which she would have to look to the parents for financial support or to Lambeth for section 17 discretionary assistance. Far from it, he gave her to understand that Southwark would arrange financial support. In our judgment, the judge was quite right to conclude that this was not a private fostering arrangement. Indeed, it is hard to see how he could have come to any other conclusion." (My emphasis)
"The amendment to Section 17 did not affect the duties and powers of local authorities to provide accommodation for lone children under Section 20 of the Children Act 1989, or under a care order. Accordingly, the power to provide accommodation under Section 17 will almost always concern children needing to be accommodated with their families. However, there may be cases where a lone child who needs help with accommodation, but does not need to be looked after, might appropriately be assisted under Section 17."
"21. None of this is, in my judgment, contrary to the statutory wording. It is true that section 20 does not expressly draw a distinction between a child who 'requires accommodation' and in child who 'requires help with accommodation'. But the fact that section 17(6) empowers a local authority to provide accommodation as part of its general duty to safeguard and promote the welfare of children within their area must presuppose that not every child (or even every child in need who satisfies the three criteria in section 20(1) of the 1989 Act) must require accommodation under section 20; otherwise there would be no room for the evaluative judgment which everyone agrees the local authority must make pursuant to the statutory phrase 'who appears to them to require accommodation'.
22. The most that, as it seems to me, can be said against the circular is that it may be it is not clear enough that a decision that a child requires 'help with accommodation' (as opposed to the actual provision of accommodation under section 20) should not be driven by the consideration that expensive consequences will result from any decision to accommodate him under section 20. But it is, of course, the case that it should not be so driven. The decision, whether a child requires accommodation or only help with accommodation, is to be a free-standing decision based on the needs of the child without regard to the financial consequences of the decision. I am, however, satisfied that the dichotomy between requiring accommodation and requiring help with accommodation is lawful."
"It is, of course, important, as has been said in some of the cases, that the local authority should not side-step its section 20 obligations by deciding that accommodation or help with accommodation can be provided under section 17. But there is no evidence that that has happened here unless it can be said, as Mr Wise does say, that the decision letter is not properly based on the assessment or that, on its true reading, the decision letter itself accepts that accommodation is required under section 20."
"The decision is, of course, based on the assessment and points out that there is no identified need for social services support. It also points out that G will be treated by the Housing Department as being in priority need and concludes that G's needs (for accommodation and other matters) can be satisfactorily met through the provision of housing and referrals to other support agencies, saying that he simply requires help with accommodation. I do not read the phrase 'provision of housing' as accepting that G requires accommodation for the purpose of section 20. The Decision Letter comes to the opposite conclusion and is, in my opinion, entitled to do so."
"How is it then that Southwark is able to put forward a case that it did not appear to it that G required accommodation? The reasoning, as it has been advocated, has varied, but it is essentially, I think, because Southwark says that it is entitled to take the position that, in circumstances where its housing department would be obliged to provide accommodation under the Housing Act, it can conclude that there is no need for it to provide, and therefore G does not require, accommodation for the purposes of section 20(1) of the Children Act. In my judgment, that only has to be stated to be seen to be a non sequitur; but, as I shall seek to show, it is also inconsistent with the primacy which, in a case within section 20(1), must be accorded to the Children Act regime over the Housing Act regime."
"It may be observed that, even though the underlying concept of the "looked after" child concerns children who are not only "in need" but also require the assistance of the local authority in some other respect, such as accommodation or the safeguarding of welfare, nevertheless where section 20(1) is concerned, the extra test is the need for accommodation (as a result of certain defined causes the general effect of which is that the child is alone) not a more general test of the need for the intervention of social services. That is in my judgment plain on the wording of the section, and has been acknowledged in the course of argument by Mr Bryan McGuire, who has appeared on behalf of Southwark. In this respect the need for accommodation as a result of the defined causes is itself the test for the incidence of the more general duties of looking after which the Children Act regime applies. That is subject, however, to the relevance of the child's wishes and feelings. It may be that an older child will make it plain that he does not want or require the provision of accommodation under section 20. It may be that accommodation is not "required" under section 20 because, for example, a private fostering relationship is available (see Southwark London Borough Council v. D [2007] EWCA Civ 182, [2007] 1 FLR 2181 at paras 49/50). In such a case, it may be that provision of accommodation by the local authority is not required, even in a case otherwise within section 20(1). As Baroness Hale of Richmond said in R(M) v. Hammersmith and Fulham London Borough Council [2008] UKHL 14, [2008] 1 WLR 535 at para 43:
'On the other hand, as will be obvious from what has gone before, I have reservations about the narrow approach of Stanley Burnton J in the Sutton case [R(S) v. Sutton London Borough Council [2007] EWHC 1196 (Admin), [2007] 2 FLR 849, [2007] EWCA Civ 790, 10 CCLR 615] to the significance of the child's wishes under section 20(6), on which the Court of Appeal declined to express a concluded view. It seems to me that there may well be cases in which there is a choice between section 17 and section 20, where the wishes of the child, at least of an older child who is fully informed of the consequences of the choices before her, may determine the matter. It is most unlikely that section 20 was intended to operate compulsorily against a child who is competent to decide for herself. The whole object of the 1989 Act was to draw a clear distinction between voluntary and compulsory powers and to require that compulsion could only be used after due process of law." (My emphasis)
"I agree with Longmore LJ's reasoning at paragraph 21. Not every young person who satisfies the other criteria in section 20(1) must be held to require accommodation within the meaning of the section. The local authority are entitled to conclude, in the case of some young people, that they are sufficiently capable and resourceful, or in such social circumstances, that they can find their own accommodation, if necessary with help provided by the local authority under other statutory powers."
The issues
i) What did the Council actually do or, more pertinently, what (if anything) is the Council to be taken to have done, between March and September 2007 about providing Terry with accommodation under section 20 of the 1989 Act?ii) If the answer to (1) is nothing, was the Council's decision as reflected in its letter of 23 October 2007 not to provide Terry with accommodation under section 20 of the 1989 Act a decision that was reasonably open to it? This question obviously requires the application of a test of perversity according to the well established principles.
The first question - what did the Council do?
The second question – was the Council's decision one that it could properly have taken?
Conclusions
i) a declaration that with effect from 21 June 2007 he was a child looked after by the Defendant within the meaning of section 22 of the Children Act 1989, andii) an order requiring the Defendant to pay the appropriate weekly allowance to Ms Casey from that date until the Claimant's 18th birthday (for these purposes sums waived or remitted by the Defendant in relation to Ms Casey's rent or Council Tax are to be treated as payments made on account of such allowance).