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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 >> A (Relinquished Baby: Risk of Domestic Abuse) [2018] EWHC 1981 (Fam) (27 July 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2018/1981.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 1981 (Fam) |
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[full number omitted to preserve confidentiality] |
FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Re A (Relinquished baby: Risk of domestic abuse) |
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The Mother was neither present nor represented, but submitted written representations.
Mr Simon Wilkinson (instructed by the Child's solicitor) for the Children's Guardian
Hearing dates: 24 July 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Cobb:
Background
The mother's case
"My decision has been the hardest decision I have had to make… I ask, I beg, please do not bring [F] into me and those children's life. He is violent, he had no paternal instinct, he is not allowed to see his children by his first girlfriend and has continued to bully, threaten and harass many women with children as he sees no wrong. I left the relationship as I saw signs of violence. I did not want that… I saw something that scared me into calling an end to the relationship… I am a mother only and feel from the bottom of my heart this is the best thing for us all to have a future protected from [F]… I know [A] will be safe. I know he will be loved; he will have a lifetime journey made by me to look at how much he was and still is loved… I agree to let someone love him for me…".
Putative Father's history: assessment of risk
Legal considerations
i) Each case is fact-sensitive (Re RA at [31]);
ii) The outcome contended for here is "exceptional" (A Local Authority v the mother at [1]/[7])
iii) The paramount consideration is the welfare of A; section 1(2) Adoption and Children Act 2002 ('ACA 2002')
iv) The court must have regard to the welfare checklist in section 1(4) ACA 2002;
v) It is a further requirement of statute (section 1(4)(f)(iii) ACA 2002) that the court has regard to the wishes and feelings of the child's relatives;
vi) Respect can and indeed must be afforded to the mother's wish for a confidential and discreet arrangement for the adoption of her child, although the mother's wishes must be critically examined and not just accepted at face value; overall the mother's wishes carry "significant weight" albeit that they are not decisive (Re JL and AO at [47], [48] and [50], and see also Re RA at [43(vi)]);
vii) Article 8 rights are engaged in this decision; however, in a case where a natural parent wishes to relinquish a baby, the degree of interference with the Article 8 rights is likely to be less than where the parent/child relationship is to be severed against the will of the parent (Re TJ at [26]];
viii) Adoption of any kind still represents a significant interference with family life, and can only be ordered by the court if it is necessary and proportionate (Re RA at [32]);
ix) A high level of justification is still required before the court can sanction adoption as the outcome, and a thorough 'analysis' of the options is necessary (Re JL & AO at [32]); 'analysis' is different from 'assessment' – a sufficient 'analysis' may be performed even though the natural family are unaware of the process (Re RA at [34]). As I said in Re RA at [38]:
"in order to weigh up all of the relevant considerations in determining a relinquished baby case it may be possible (it may in some cases be necessary) and/or proportionate to perform the analysis without full assessment of third parties, or even their knowledge of the existence of the baby. The court will consider the available information in relation to the individual child and make a judgment about whether, and if so what, further information is needed".
. Discussion and conclusion