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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 >> H (Interim Care: Scottish Residential Placement) [2020] EWHC 2780 (Fam) (20 October 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2020/2780.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 2780 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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SOUTH TYNESIDE COUNCIL |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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MT |
Respondent |
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FT |
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HT (By his Children's Guardian) |
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Re H (Interim Care: Scottish Residential Placement) |
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Anne Spratling (instructed by Duncan Lewis) for the Mother
Lindsay Webster (instructed by PGS Law LLP) for the Father
Andrew Wraith (of Prism Family Law) for the Child
Hearing dates: 8 September 2020;
Further written submissions: 15 September 2020 and 12 October 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Cobb:
Introduction
"Scotland and England & Wales share a common commitment to the rule of law and to the principle that the welfare of the child is the paramount consideration when his or her needs or rights are being considered by the courts"[5].
However, beyond that sound and familiar statement of principle, there is no easy answer.
"… a "gap" in the legislative framework similar to the situation that previously existed in respect of secure accommodation".
It will be seen that I too, particularly in answering the second and third questions below ([8](ii)/(iii)), confirm lacunae or gaps in the intra-jurisdictional legal framework for the placing of an English child subject to an interim care order in Scotland, and the lack of any coherent mechanism for recognition and enforcement in Scotland of the same.
i) Did the Local Authority have the power to place Henry in a placement in Scotland when he was an accommodated child under section 20 CA 1989 ('the first question')?
ii) Does the English Family Court need specifically to give permission for the temporary placement in residential care in Scotland of a young person such as Henry who is in the interim care of an English local authority under section 38 CA 1989? And if so, what is the jurisdictional route for the English court to take in giving such approval ('the second question')?
iii) Is an English interim care order recognised and/or capable of enforcement in Scotland? Does the English interim care order give the English local authority any power to take any steps in relation to Henry (or a similar child) in Scotland? Does the English order give those providing the placement any authority over the child? These questions (which I shall take together as 'the third question') must be answered in the main by reference to the law of Scotland.
iv) Is Henry currently being deprived of his liberty at Ossian House? If so, is this a case in which the court ought to give its authorisation to deprive him of his liberty? How, if at all, can this be formalised in Scotland? ('the fourth question').
Position of the Parties
i) if there was no statutory route to achieve a placement of an English child in Scotland under the CA 1989, the inherent jurisdiction of the English High Court could, and should, be deployed;
ii) the interim care order would not, on any view, be recognised or enforceable in Scotland.
Background facts
"[Henry] said he would like to go back home to dad, "but only when the time is right". He agreed that it wouldn't be helpful to rush back home and for things to go wrong again. It was apparent from our discussions, in the presence of his keyworker, that [Henry] is very happy and content with the life that he can enjoy is in his current placement. He clearly finds the staff helpful and supportive".
Did the Local Authority have the power to place Henry in a placement in Scotland when he was an accommodated child under section 20 CA 1989?
i) safeguarding and promoting Henry's welfare[10];
ii) so far as is reasonably practicable, ascertaining Henry's wishes and feelings regarding the provision of accommodation[11], and giving due consideration to those wishes and feelings;
and
iii) placing Henry "in the placement which is, in their opinion, the most appropriate placement available"[12] which must be in the local authority's area and close to his home[13] unless this is not reasonably practicable[14].
i) While the Local Authority obtained Henry's father's consent to his accommodation, it failed to notify, let alone consult with, Henry's mother about this arrangement. Although the mother did not have the statutory right of objection (as mentioned above, Henry's father had the benefit of a section 8 CA 1989 order and had agreed to the accommodation: see section 20(9) CA 1989), the Local Authority knew how to contact her and was obliged "so far as is reasonably practicable" to ascertain her wishes and feelings[15]. The fact that Henry's mother had not seen him for several years did not in my judgment absolve the authority of the responsibility of satisfying the important statutory requirement to establish whether she was, for example, "willing and able" to "provide accommodation" for him or "arrange for accommodation to be provided" for him; nor could the Local Authority say that it had complied with its obligation under section 22C(2)-(4) CA 1989, namely the requirement to make arrangements for Henry to live with a parent, except where it would not be consistent with his welfare. The statute is clear enough; the guidance reinforces it: "A local authority cannot restrict a person's exercise of their PR, including their decisions about delegation, unless there is a care order or an emergency protection order in place." (The Children Act 1989 Guidance and Regulations, Volume 2: Care Planning, Placement and Case Review, para 3.197 (DfE, 2015);
ii) Henry was accommodated for nearly one year before this Local Authority applied for a statutory order under Part IV CA 1989. This was, in my judgment, far too long. In this period, Henry did not have the benefit of an independent children's guardian to represent and safeguard his interests at a crucial stage of his life. Further, the court was deprived of the opportunity to consider and/or control the planning for Henry and to prevent or reduce unnecessary and avoidable delay in resolving these important jurisdictional and welfare issues. It transpires that the decision to apply for a care order was in fact made in February 2020, but the application was not issued for four more months. Miss C, social worker, accepted that the application was not issued in a "timely way", a considerable understatement, and commented:
"Whilst unusual for a child of [Henry's] age to be looked after for such a period of time without court oversight, it is acknowledged that [Henry's] situation was unusual and complex and the aim of the LA was not to delay court oversight, but rather to request it with more understanding of [Henry's] needs to allow more informed care planning".
I am unable to accept this explanation for the delay in issuing proceedings. The blunt criticisms of the relevant local authority laid bare in the judgment of Sir James Munby P in Re A (Application for Care and Placement Orders: Local Authority Failings) [2015] EWFC 11; [2016] 1 FLR 1 at [99]-[101] concerning the misuse of section 20 are not specifically reproduced at this point in this judgment, but in spite of the explanations offered by Miss C in this case (above), I felt that they could legitimately have been. On this issue, I agree entirely with Mr Wraith when he submitted to me that:
"As soon as a care plan was formulated for [Henry] that recommended his placement to a care home in Scotland, consideration should have been immediately given to the issuing of care proceedings to have the Court scrutinise the care plan and to allow for a guardian to be allocated to the case".
Those criticisms must be noted by the Local Authority but do not, as it happens, impact on my answer to the first question to which I now return.
"Regulation 9: Placement Plan:
(1) Subject to paragraphs (2) and (4), before making arrangements in accordance with section 22C for C[16]'s placement, the responsible authority must—
(a) prepare a plan for the placement ("the placement plan") which—(i) sets out how the placement will contribute to meeting C's needs, and(ii) includes all the matters specified in Schedule 2 as are applicable, having regard to the type of the placement, and(b) ensure that—(i) C's wishes and feelings have been ascertained and given due consideration, and(ii) the IRO has been informed.(2) If it is not reasonably practicable to prepare the placement plan before making the placement, the placement plan must be prepared [as soon as is reasonably practicable after] the start of the placement.(3) The placement plan must be agreed with, and signed by, the appropriate person[17].(4) Where the arrangements for C's placement were made before 1st April 2011, the responsible authority must prepare the placement plan as soon as reasonably practicable."
"Regulation 11: Placement out of area: Placement decision
(1) Subject to paragraphs (2) to (4), a decision to place C outside the area of the responsible authority (including a placement outside England)—
(a) must not be put into effect until it has been approved by a nominated officer, or
(b) in the case of a proposed placement which is also at a distance, must not be put into effect until it has been approved by the director of children's services.
(2) Before approving a decision under paragraph (1), the nominated officer [or, as the case may be, the director of children's services] must be satisfied that—(a) the requirements of regulation 9(1)(b)(i) have been complied with,(b) the placement is the most appropriate placement available for C and consistent with C's care plan,(c) C's relatives have been consulted, where appropriate,[(d) in the case of a decision falling within—(i) paragraph (1)(a), the area authority have been notified, or(ii) paragraph (1)(b), the area authority have been consulted and have been provided with a copy of C's care plan, and](e) the IRO has been consulted.(3) In the case of a placement made in an emergency, paragraph (2) does not apply and before approving a decision under paragraph (1) the nominated officer must—(a) be satisfied that regulation 9(1)(b)(i) and the requirements of sub-paragraph (2)(b) have been complied with, and(b) take steps to ensure that regulation 9(1)(b)(ii) and the requirements set out in sub-paragraphs (2)(c) and (d) are complied with by the responsible authority within five working days of approval of the decision under paragraph (1).(4) Paragraphs (1) and (2) do not apply to a decision to place C outside the area of the responsible authority with—[(a) F[18] who is a person with whom a placement is made under regulation 24, or](b) F who is approved as a local authority foster parent by the responsible authority.[(5) In this regulation "at a distance" means outside the area of the responsible authority and not within the area of any adjoining local authority.]"
i) The 2010 Regulations, which apply only in England[19], explicitly contemplate the possibility of placement of a child by a local authority outside of the area of that local authority, and (importantly) outside England;
ii) It is acknowledged that the child's placement could be "at a distance" from where he or she lives (i.e. not in the area of the authority or an adjoining authority);
iii) Where the placement is "at a distance", the local authority of the receiving area needs to have been consulted;
iv) The placement (whether at a distance or not) needs to have been authorised by the appropriate officer within the placing authority. The further away the placement, the more senior must the local authority officer be to give his/her approval;
v) In any given situation, the child's wishes and feelings must be ascertained and given due consideration[20].
i) The decision to place Henry in Scotland was approved by the director of children's services[24];
ii) A signed placement plan was in place before the placement[25];
iii) Written notification was given to, and consultation[26] undertaken with, South Lanarkshire (the local authority in whose area Henry was to be placed), before the placement was made, including details of the assessment of Henry's needs, the reason why the placement was the most suitable one in response to Henry's needs, and a copy of Henry's care plan;
iv) The Independent Reviewing officer was consulted[27].
"… in principle, a judge in exercise of the inherent jurisdiction can make an order directing the placement of a child in secure accommodation in Scotland. So too, in principle, a judge in exercise of the inherent jurisdiction can make an order directing the placement of a child in non-secure accommodation in Scotland." (emphasis by underlining added).
Does the English Family Court need specifically to give permission for the temporary placement in residential care in Scotland of a young person such as Henry who is in the interim care of an English local authority under section 38 CA 1989? And if so, what is the jurisdictional route for the English court to take in giving such approval?
"… unless it is satisfied that there are reasonable grounds for believing that the circumstances with respect to the child are as mentioned in section 31(2)".
This subsection references the 'threshold criteria' in section 31 (i.e. proof of harm or likelihood of harm, attributable to the care given to him if the order were not made).
""a care order" means (subject to section 105(1)[29]) an order under subsection (1)(a) and (except where express provision to the contrary is made) includes an interim care order made under section 38" (emphasis by underlining added).
"(7) While a care order is in force with respect to a child, no person may –
(a) cause the child to be known by a new surname; or
(b) remove him from the United Kingdom,
without either the written consent of every person who has parental responsibility for the child or the leave of the court.
(8) Subsection (7)(b) does not -
(a) prevent the removal of such a child, for a period of less than one month, by the authority in whose care he is; or
(b) apply to arrangements for such a child to live outside England and Wales (which are governed by paragraph 19 of Schedule 2 [in England….])." (emphasis by underlining added).
"Regulation 12: Placements outside England and Wales
(1) This regulation applies if—
(a) C is in the care of the responsible authority, and
(b) the responsible authority make arrangements to place C outside England and Wales in accordance with the provisions of paragraph 19 of Schedule 2 to the 1989 Act (placement of a child in care outside England and Wales).
(2) The responsible authority must take steps to ensure that, so far as is reasonably practicable, requirements corresponding with the requirements which would have applied under these Regulations had C been placed in England, are complied with.
(3) The responsible authority must include in the care plan details of the arrangements made by the responsible authority to supervise C's placement.
i) is outside of the UK (section 33(7)(b)); or
ii) reflects an arrangement for the child to leave England and Wales to 'live' abroad (section 33(8)(b)),
is there a requirement for written consent of all those with parental responsibility (albeit that this can be dispensed with in the context of (ii) above under paragraph 19 of Schedule 2) and/or leave of the English court. In my judgment it is highly relevant to the second question that in the public law context, when a child is under a care order (and, given the terms of section 31(11), interim care order) the child may be removed (without the written consent of the parties with parental responsibility or leave of the court) to a place outside of England and Wales, possibly "at a distance"[30] from his/her home, provided that he/she is not removed from the United Kingdom; that is to say, this provides a statutory route to remove the child under an interim care order to Scotland or Northern Ireland.
"Turning to the question of what is meant by "live with a suitable person", the Interpretation Act 1978 ("the 1978 Act") provides that the word person "includes a body of persons corporate or unincorporated". As is made clear in Bennion on Statutory Interpretation, 7th Edition, the definitions in this Act "apply to Acts in general", paragraph 19.1(1). Specifically, in respect of the definition of the word "person", Bennion states that this definition "does not apply if the contrary intention appears, whether expressly or by implication"; a number of cases are then cited as examples to support this proposition, paragraph 19.5. Reference could also be made to the ejusdem generis principle of construction, which is dealt with in Bennion in Chapter 23".
The Court of Appeal in Re C concluded that the word 'person' in paragraph 19 of Schedule 2 did not refer to a local authority as a body corporate. In my judgment this ruling was specific to the context in which the word 'person' was there being considered:
"[40]… while a child can live in a residential home which might be owned by a company it would be difficult to argue that, as a result, the child was living with a person. Further, when this is added to the fact that the words "other suitable person" follow a list comprising natural persons, I do not consider it is possible to interpret this provision as meaning other than that it is confined, as decided by Sir James Munby P, to natural persons."
This reference in the last cited sentence above is to [29][31] of Re X & Y where Sir James Munby P said:
""Person" here does not, in my judgment, extend to a corporate or other organisation or body. It means a natural person."
I have underlined the word 'here' in this extract to emphasise again that Sir James Munby P was specifically referring to the context in which the word appears, namely in paragraph 19 of Schedule 2.
"Arrangements to assist children to live abroad
(1) A local authority may only arrange for, or assist in arranging for, any child in their care to live outside England and Wales with the approval of the court.
(2) A local authority may, with the approval of every person who has parental responsibility for the child arrange for, or assist in arranging for, any other child looked after by them to live outside England and Wales.
(3) The court shall not give its approval under sub-paragraph (1) unless it is satisfied that –
(a) living outside England and Wales would be in the child's best interests;
(b) suitable arrangements have been, or will be, made for his reception and welfare in the country in which he will live;
(c) the child has consented to living in that country; and
(d) every person who has parental responsibility for the child has consented to his living in that country.
(4) Where the court is satisfied that the child does not have sufficient understanding to give or withhold his consent, it may disregard sub-paragraph (3)(c) and give its approval if the child is to live in the country concerned with a parent, guardian, special guardian or other suitable person.
(5) Where a person whose consent is required by sub-paragraph (3)(d) fails to give his consent, the court may disregard that provision and give its approval if it is satisfied that that person –
(a) cannot be found;
(b) is incapable of consenting; or
(c) is withholding his consent unreasonably.
(6) Section 85 of the Adoption and Children Act 2002 (which imposes restrictions on taking children out of the United Kingdom) shall not apply in the case of any child who is to live outside England and Wales with the approval of the court given under this paragraph.
(7) Where a court decides to give its approval under this paragraph it may order that its decision is not to have effect during the appeal period.
(8) In sub-paragraph (7) 'the appeal period' means –
(a) where an appeal is made against the decision, the period between the making of the decision and the determination of the appeal; and
(b) otherwise, the period during which an appeal may be made against the decision.
(9) This paragraph does not apply –
(a) to a local authority placing a child in secure accommodation in Scotland under section 25, or
(b) to a local authority placing a child for adoption with prospective adopters".
"It is difficult to see how the requirements of paragraph 19 of Schedule 2 to the 1989 Act will ever be satisfied where the child is to be sent out of the jurisdiction for the purpose of being placed in secure accommodation; and in the present cases they certainly are not. In the first place, unless dispensed with in accordance with paragraph 19(5), the consent of every person with parental responsibility is required. Secondly, unless dispensed with in accordance with paragraph 19(4), the consent of the child is required, and the child's consent cannot be dispensed with unless "the court is satisfied that the child does not have sufficient understanding to give or withhold his consent," and even then only if the child is to live "with a parent, guardian, special guardian, or other suitable person" – wording which, in my judgment, and notwithstanding Mr Rowbotham's[32] submissions to the contrary, cannot include being placed in an institution such as a secure accommodation unit. "Person" here does not, in my judgment, extend to a corporate or other organisation or body. It means a natural person." [29].
He added (at [30]), materially:
"Ms Cheetham[33] also suggests that the words "arrange for … [a] child in their care to live outside England and Wales" in paragraph 19(1) connote a permanent or at least long term arrangement, in contrast to a short-term placement in, for example, a secure unit. Ms Grocott[34] makes the same submission. Mr Rowbotham begged to differ. There is no need for me to decide the point, which potentially has very wide ramifications, and I prefer not to" (emphasis by underlining added).
"[12] It is unnecessary for me to decide whether Schedule 2 paragraph 19 was ever the appropriate horse on which to run this particular application. Judge Moir thought it was. I, for my part, raise a question over whether or not a placement such as this represents an arrangement for a child 'to live' outside England and Wales, as when one looks more carefully in the language of Schedule 2 paragraph 19, there is a clear inference to be drawn that the giving of consent is a once and for all event. 'Has consented' is the phrase used, not 'does consent', an enduring state of affairs; the phrase used is more pertinent to a permanent arrangement 'to live' outside England than a temporary one for interim placement, in this particular instance, in a school for children with challenging behaviours.
[13] In the decision of Re X and Y [2016] 3 WLR 1718, the President of the Family Division considered whether Schedule 2 paragraph 19 would be the appropriate horse on which to run an application of this kind, but declined to make a decision or to even express a view. Similarly, I do not for my part need to conclude whether Judge Moir was wrong or that she was right, but I would say that had the application come before me, I would have been far more circumspect about reliance on this statutory provision."
"… as the Local Authority recognised, C should not have been placed in Scotland without the Local Authority having first sought and obtained the court's approval to the proposed placement. This was not merely a technical failing; it was a substantive failing. I would expect this Local Authority and, indeed, all Local Authorities to be aware of this obligation."
i) The operative verb in paragraph 19 of Schedule 2 is to 'live'. To my mind, this suggests a long-term arrangement for the child's upbringing, importing a degree of permanence, particularly when it is used as here in the context of expatriation: that is to say, the place where the child will have his or her home. The notion of a main 'home' is how the word 'live' is used in section 8 CA 1989. This is to be contrasted with the language of 'place' and 'placement' found elsewhere in the CA 1989 to denote a more temporary arrangement (see for example, paragraph 12C of Schedule 2 which refers to 'placements out of area' and "provided with accommodation at a place outside the area of the authority").
ii) Moreover, when a child such as Henry is placed for a period (whether in or out of England and Wales) in a "school or other institution", such period would be disregarded in determining his/her 'ordinary residence' (section 105(6) CA 1989); a move across the border to a placement in a school or institution would therefore be inconsistent with the notion that he/she has moved abroad to 'live';
iii) The obtaining of the child's 'consent' in paragraph 19(3)(c) of Schedule 2 reads (in the present perfect tense: the child "has consented") as a once-and-for-all, or evanescent, event; the sub-paragraph does not give of any scope for considering an enduring, active or ongoing consent (i.e. the paragraph is not drafted as "consents" or "does consent"). There are, interestingly, very few provisions of the CA 1989 which call for the consent of the child, and this is the only place in the Act where the present perfect tense is used. Insofar as any comparison can be made to other provisions, it is illuminating (and in my judgment material) to compare the language of paragraph 19 of Schedule 2 (an evanescent consent) with paragraph 4(4)/5(5) of Schedule 3 for example which contemplates the requirement of an enduring, active or ongoing 'consent' of the child ("where the child has sufficient understanding to make an informed decision") to a psychiatric or medical examination and treatment under a supervision order[37];
iv) Materially, there is no mechanism in paragraph 19 of Schedule 2 for a child to withdraw his/her consent once given; this underlines the significance of the consent itself, and highlights how important it is for the consent to be given in a fully informed way, with the child having available to him/her all the relevant facts. Quite apart from any other consideration, temporary placements, such as Ossian House in Scotland, are often required to provide emergency accommodation where there is no suitable alternative in England – a mobile home, static caravan, or staffed holiday home. It may well be that the local authority itself knows relatively little about the residential care provision in question at the time at which it seeks the child's view. The social worker will therefore not be in a good position to advise the child in any detail about what lies in store for him/her, share all the facts and inform the child what he is being asked to 'consent' to. In my judgment, the child cannot be expected to give an irrevocable consent to a temporary placement where there may be such a high level of ignorance on all sides about what is on offer;
v) The consent of the child in paragraph 19(3)(c) of Schedule 2 is consent "to living in that country" (emphasis added); this is different to consent to a particular placement. To my mind, this language contemplates the much wider context for the child of the consequences of expatriation – to a different culture / society / system of education or training (not to mention the losses he/she will suffer by leaving this jurisdiction), about which he/she could reasonably expect to be fully advised before considering whether to consent;
vi) It is revealing to consider, by way of specific illustration on the facts of this case, the circumstances in which Henry's views were taken (see [18] above). On the evidence before me, it appears that he had no real idea what he was being asked to agree to. Although he said he was "fine" about moving to the placement in Scotland, he had not visited it, and he knew little about it. In my judgment, the Local Authority should be cautious before placing much, if any, reliance on a young person declaring that they are 'fine' with a proposal; it is well-recognised that 'fine' is often used as a means of deflection, to avoid engagement on real feelings. If someone declares that they are 'fine', this may be a clue, I suggest, that the very opposite is true. In any event, it is reasonable to assume that almost any option offered by the Local Authority would have compared favourably with the situation in which he then found himself – placed as a sole young person in a caravan, supported by 2 staff members. Tested another way, what if the erroneous view that he was going to a 'bad boys' home had prevailed, and he had therefore objected to going? On the basis of the decision in Re C, it would not have been possible to progress with the placement:
"… when a child does not consent, and regardless of whether they do or do not have sufficient understanding, the court is not permitted to approve their placement in Scotland other than with a natural person" ([41]).
It cannot, in my judgment, be expected that this is the right context for collecting a crucial 'consent' (or conversely establishing a right of veto) of a child, where the temporary placement is in fact (as has proved to be the case) greatly in his interests;
vii) Were the 'consent' provisions in paragraph 19(3)(c) of Schedule 2 to apply to temporary placements, it would mean that the child would paradoxically have a stronger right of veto over a temporary placement in residential care in a southern county of Scotland (which may be close, even very close, to his home in the North East of England) than he/she would (through his articulated wishes and feelings) over a temporary placement which may be many hundreds of miles away in a southern county of England;
viii) In line with the point in (ii) above, paragraph 19 of Schedule 2 specifically excludes a placement under the secure accommodation regime, which is also by definition a temporary arrangement.
"Effect of care orders in England and Wales
"3 (1) This regulation applies where—
(a) a child is subject to a care order made under section 31(1)(a) of the 1989 Act;
(b) the court has given approval under paragraph 19(1) of Schedule 2 to the 1989 Act to the local authority ("the home local authority") to arrange, or assist in arranging, for the child to live in Scotland;
(c) the local authority for the area in which the child is to reside, or has moved to, in Scotland ("the receiving local authority") has, through the Principal Reporter, notified the court in writing that it agrees to take over the care of the child; and
(d) the home local authority has notified the court that it agrees to the receiving local authority taking over the care of the child.
(2) The care order has effect as if it were a compulsory supervision order.
(3) In this regulation "court" means the court which has given the approval in terms of paragraph 19(1) of Schedule 2 to the 1989 Act."
It is notable that the 'transfer' arrangements apply in Scotland only where a child is subject to a final care order in England and Wales under section 31(1)(a) and not an interim order under section 38. Under these regulations the receiving authority in Scotland "takes over" the care of the child, and the care order "has effect as if it were a compulsory supervision order". Under paragraph 15 of the Children's Hearings (Scotland) Act 2011 (Consequential and Transitional Provisions and Savings) Order 2013 "the care order, supervision order or education supervision order ceases to have effect for the purposes of the law of England and Wales"[38].
"(4) The court may only grant leave if it is satisfied that:
(a) the result which the authority wish to achieve could not be achieved through the making of any order of a kind to which subsection (5) applies; and
(b) there is reasonable cause to believe that if the court's inherent jurisdiction is not exercised with respect to the child he is likely to suffer significant harm.
(5) This subsection applies to any order –
(a) made otherwise than in the exercise of the court's inherent jurisdiction; and
(b) which the local authority is entitled to apply for (assuming, in the case of any application which may only be made with leave, that leave is granted)."
Is an English interim care order recognised and/or capable of enforcement in Scotland? Does the English interim care order give the English local authority any power to take any steps in relation to the child in Scotland? Does the English order give those providing the placement any authority over the child?
"… a court would clearly need to establish who would have parental responsibility or, in broader terms, legal responsibility, for a child before that child could be placed outside England and Wales".
In my judgment, the answer to each of the questions posed above is 'No'.
i) An interim care order is not an order "that extends to Scotland" (section 108(11) CA 1989);
ii) The Family Law Act 1986 ('FLA 1986') does not provide any intra-jurisdictional framework for public law children cases. An interim care order is not an order made under Part 1 of the FLA 1986, therefore not capable of automatic recognition in Scotland under that legislation (see in particular Chapter V: Recognition and Enforcement);
iii) The Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982 does not apply; section 18(5)(d) excludes (in relation to enforcement) any judgment which is a provisional (including protective) measure (which would include, in my judgment, an interim care order);
iv) Council Regulation 2201/2003 (BIIR) is generally understood to have no application to issues arising between territorial units within the same member state of the European Union. The Regulation is of no assistance in relation to the recognition and enforcement of an English judgment in Scotland, or a Scottish decision in England and Wales;
v) As a matter of Scots law, and/or private international law, the expert evidence offered to Sir James Munby P in Re X & Y[41] is that the English interim care order would not be recognised in Scotland, see [68]:
"There is no mechanism in Scottish law for the recognition and enforcement of interim care orders".
None of the research undertaken and advice offered in this case offers any contrary view.
"The language of regulation 3(1)(a) is very precise and very clear. In my judgment it applies only where there is a 'full' care order made under section 31(1) of the 1989 Act. It does not apply to an interim care order made under section 38 of the 1989 Act".
i) A witness statement from Mrs S, the Area Manager for the care agency which runs Ossian House, filed by the Local Authority, dated 7 September 2020;
ii) An expert opinion prepared on the joint instructions of the parties, by Mr Jonathan Mitchell QC of the Faculty of Advocates in Edinburgh, dated 24 September 2020.
I discuss each in turn.
"We have sought legal advice … and the advice states:
a) We can place an English young person in Scotland as long as we have (1) a copy of the court order giving permission to place in Scotland and (2) a copy of the care order;
b) We can place young people in Scotland with DOLs orders as long as we have (1) a copy of court order listing approved restrictions (2) Confirmation that the Local Authority is applying to the Scottish Court .
To confirm, we are now in a position to accept young people placed with a DOLS order in Scotland, as long as the placing authority has applied to the Scottish Courts for an order under the nobile officium, which our legal counsel has confirmed are not being opposed by any party. Our commissioning team will oversee this process and work with the Local Authority to ensure everything is in place before a placement is confirmed".
"Regarding placements from England and Wales, this is what we have been advised:
According to English law:
- a young person subject to a care order from England or Wales may only be placed in a care home service outwith England or Wales following a judgement that authorises this placement from an English or Welsh Court.
- The young person must also consent for this to happen, but the Court can dispense with consent in certain circumstances, such as where the child cannot consent or withholds consent unreasonably.
We expect services to always, and only, accept the admission of a young person where the placing authority's decision is legally compliant in the jurisdiction in which the placing authority operates.
We therefore expect care home services looking after a young person subject of a care order from England or Wales to have written evidence of both:
- The court judgement that authorises a placement outwith England or Wales.
- The young person's consent, or the Court's judgement dispensing the need for this consent.
We will therefore be checking at inspections whether young people on a care order placed from England or Wales are being cared for in the service. If they are we will expect managers to be able to explain how they or yourselves as a provider satisfied yourselves, prior to admission, that the child/young person was being lawfully placed by the placing authority. ( As per bullet points above)
If providers cannot evidence that the placing authority's decision is legally compliant in the jurisdiction in which the placing authority operates this will be seen as an indicator of poor management and leadership and we will automatically assess Quality Indicator 2.3, "Leaders collaborate to support children and young people" as an additional QI. This is also likely to contribute to a Requirement being made resulting in a maximum grade of 3 and, if we were to find this is still a problem in subsequent inspections of any of your services, it would be likely to result in a weak grade for management and leadership". (emphasis in the original).
i) Unhelpfully, when discussing 'care orders' neither Mrs S nor Mr T (or those advising them) appear to distinguish between final and interim care orders, when under Scots law they are treated differently (see [55] above, and regulation 3 of the Transfer Regulations 2013);
ii) Mrs S appears to draw (see [58] above) in part on paragraph 19 of Schedule 2 when she refers to the need for the English authority to obtain the court's prior approval for placement in Scotland, but she omits any reference to the requirement under that same statutory provision to the requirement to obtain the child's consent and/or the consent of persons with parental responsibility to the child living in her country, let alone the requirement for the arrangement to be in the child's best interests; it is therefore not clear whether Mrs S is indeed referencing paragraph 19 of Schedule 2 at all;
iii) The advice offered by Mr T (see [59] above) appears to draw more fully, but not completely, from paragraph 19 of Schedule 2; the requirement to obtain the court's permission and child's consent are mentioned, but the need to obtain (or dispense with) the consent of those with parental responsibility, and the welfare test, are not. Again, it is not clear whether Mr T is indeed referencing paragraph 19 of Schedule 2. Moreover, Mr T's advice is incorrect when it is suggested that an English court can dispense with a child's consent to being placed in a residential home outside England and Wales: see Re C (and [38] above).
It appears that Mrs S and Mr T may have both proceeded on the understandable, but in my judgment erroneous, premise that paragraph 19 of Schedule 2 applies to all placements of English children outside England and Wales whether temporary or permanent. Their apparent willingness to contemplate receiving an English child into a Scottish residential unit and caring for him/her, provided the formalities of the English court are in place, is nonetheless noted and is of course most welcome.
"… a 'looked after' child in Scots law, for the purposes of the 1995 Act, the Looked After Children (Scotland) Regulations 2009, SSI 2009/210, and the Children and Young People (Scotland) Act 2014, because it is an element of the definition that the child is looked after by a 'local authority' which means a Scottish authority constituted under section 2 of the Local Government (Scotland) Act 1994: see Children (Scotland) Act 1995 section 93. Certainly the child appears to remain a 'looked after' child in English law in terms of the Children Act 1989, and parts of the nexus of rights and duties which would flow from that status may well remain relevant (for example, to any question whether the local authority was in breach of its common law duty of care to the child)".
"If its purpose is legal tidiness, to achieve a result in which the interim care order which regulates matters in England is replicated in Scotland, then certainly there is a lacuna and that problem could not be solved without a petition to the nobile officium, although I have to say that even then I am not at all clear what order might usefully be sought, as all that seems to be contemplated is a bare declaratory order that the interim care order was to be recognised in Scotland. But if its purpose is to protect [Henry's] best interests and his rights, there is no apparent lacuna, any more than there was between August 2019 and July 2020. And section 11 (7) of the [Children (Scotland) Act 1995] does make clear in my opinion that the focus, and thus the purpose of legal regulation, must be on his best interests. In Cumbria and Salford and their lookalike cases which have been brought since 2016, the core order sought in the Court of Session was one authorising the deprivation of liberty which was perceived as necessary to protect not only the local authority but also care homes and their staff; that took matters beyond a classic best interests consideration, and the court was prepared in each case to accept that the child's best interest was to be deprived of their liberty."
"… it is neither necessary nor appropriate for any application to be made to any Scottish court at this time. That is not because the orders made by the English court are entitled to be recognised in Scotland, they are not; it is because the parents parental rights and responsibilities are so entitled and there is at present no issue as to their exercise and in particular there is no issue as to deprivation of the child's liberty. Nor is there any issue as to the powers of the managers of [Ossian House], who appear to be simply exercising their ordinary functions as providers of a residential care home under Scots law".
He added later
"… there is nothing happening in Scotland which could be complained of as an interference with [Henry's] rights or indeed anyone else's rights. The unenforceability of the interim care order in Scotland would only matter if somebody wished to 'enforce' it in this country against somebody else's wishes. But nobody does. It would be easier, I think, if that order were simply ignored for present purposes as an unnecessary complication: apply Occam's razor. Without it, we have the simple position that the parents still have parental rights and responsibilities which Scots law will recognise in terms of sections 1 and 2 of the [Children (Scotland) Act 1995], because the only basis upon which it might be said that they have lost these is the interim care order".
"There is an inherent power in the Court of Session to exercise its nobile officium, as parens patriae jurisdiction over all children within the realm, and an application by anyone able to demonstrate an interest may bring a petition to the nobile officium if the interest of a child is involved or threatened."
"It is equitable in nature, and to that extent the court enjoys a substantial element of discretion in its application…. the nobile officium is most commonly used in practice to deal with unforeseen circumstances, or circumstances that have not been adequately foreseen, rather than circumstances that can be described as "highly special" ". [20]
i) It is no bar to the application of the nobile officium that no precedent exists, but the court will consider whether there has been "an analogous application in the past … and if there has that will support the exercise of the jurisdiction" ([21]). On these facts (relating to Henry), the parties could probably point to Cumbria CC & Others itself as offering an analogous situation; after all:
"the application of the nobile officium in cases such as the present is also justified by the parens patriae jurisdiction. Under that jurisdiction the Court of Session has a duty to safeguard the interests and welfare of any child in Scotland. In the present cases children have been placed in secure accommodation in Scotland by the High Court in England in order to ensure their welfare, for reasons that are explained at length in the decisions of the High Court and accompanying papers. In order to make those decisions effective, and thus secure the welfare of the children, it appears to us to be imperative that the Court of Session should make use of the parens patriae jurisdiction to ensure that the children are properly looked after, in secure accommodation, and to provide proper legal authority to achieve that end." [31]
ii) It is also acknowledged that the nobile officium will be appropriately invoked "to safeguard the welfare of children" ([23]); this is developed thus:
"The jurisdiction may apply to a wide range of cases, in greatly varied circumstances. The critical objective is to ensure the welfare of the child concerned, in the particular circumstances which have arisen. This requires a practical approach, so that procedural niceties are not allowed to stand in the way of the fundamental policy that underlies the jurisdiction."[26]
"[79] … whilst the English court has power to make [an order authorising the deprivation of the child's liberty made pursuant to inherent jurisdiction of the English High Court]…, unless the Inner House of the Court of Session in Scotland agrees to invoke the nobile officium in respect of such a course of action, such placement may be without legal authority in Scotland.
"[80] … where there is demonstrated a prima facie /case that the nobile officium might apply to a particular type of order made under the inherent jurisdiction of the English High Court, and the balance of convenience favours an interim order pending full argument, the Court of Session is able, in an appropriate case, to grant interim orders under the nobile officium."
"These rights can be sued for in the ordinary courts of Scotland in terms of section 11. If a dispute arose, for example if [Henry] refused to have contact with a parent who insisted on it, that would generate a dispute as to his immediate protection. In the ordinary way given [Henry's] age, his clearly-expressed views would normally trump his parent's wishes in terms of section 6, but in principle the litmus test is his welfare; section 11 (7). English law, as the law of his habitual residence, would be the proper law for permanent questions, but not for questions of immediate protection in terms of section 14(3)."
"It is unlikely that the Principal Reporter would conclude pursuant to s.66(2) of the Children's Hearings (Scotland) Act 2011 that it is necessary for a compulsory supervision order to be made in respect of M where she is already protected by an English interim care order."
Is Henry currently being deprived of his liberty at Ossian House? If so, is this a case in which the court ought to give its authorisation to deprive him of his liberty? How, if at all, can this be formalised in Scotland?
"… to find and declare that the measures ordered by the High Court in respect of [the child] should be recognised and enforceable in Scotland as if they had been made by the Court of Session" (see Cumbria CC & Ors at [35]).
It is well-known that there is no method by which a child's liberty can be lawfully deprived in the jurisdiction of Scotland in a placement which is not approved by the Scottish Ministers (see Salford CC at [17]).
"What amounts to actionable confinement in (i) above has generated much jurisprudence both domestic and European. The considerable body of case law can be helpfully pared down for present purposes to 'the acid test' (the phrase used at [48]/[54]/[105] of Cheshire West) of whether a person is under the "complete supervision and control of those caring for her, and is not free to leave the place where she lives." The origin of this acid test has been extensively rehearsed in the authorities on this point[47], and requires no reiteration here."
"...whether a state of affairs which satisfies the "acid test" amounts to a "confinement" for the Storck component … has to be determined by comparing the restrictions to which the child in question is subject with the restrictions that would apply to a child of the same "age", "station", "familial background" and "relative maturity" who is "free from disability"".
i) Henry resides in a 4-bed, rurally located, care home; he is one of three young people currently in the home where he is looked after by a minimum of four staff on shift;
ii) Henry has total freedom of movement around Ossian House;
iii) Henry is able to spend time in his room alone, and although he has a lock on his door, this is for privacy;
iv) Henry is on a 2:1 staffing ratio outside of his room and/or the placement, for support and protection rather than control;
v) Henry is not actively prevented from leaving the placement beyond that which might normally be expected for a child of his age and situation; as Henry has not attempted to leave, it has not been necessary to address efforts necessary to return him;
vi) Although it was necessary on occasion in the early days of his placement to utilise 'safe-holds' on Henry, again for his own safety, the frequency of these reduced during the initial months and they have not been used at all during 2020. Behaviour management is now addressed by distraction and de-escalation techniques; the only form of 'restrictive' behaviour management is the use of 'time outs' in Henry's room. These are used on an infrequent basis and for limited duration. This does not differ from the rules/sanctions within other age appropriate settings.
"All children are (or should be) subject to some level of restraint. This adjusts with their maturation and change in circumstances."
The level of restriction here is, as I found in Re RD[48], no more "intense or overt than a parent's watchfulness over young adolescent people in a domestic setting, in similar circumstances".
Summary
i) There is nothing in the primary or secondary legislation which prevented South Tyneside Council from placing Henry in the summer of 2019 (as a child which it was 'looking after' under section 20 CA 1989) in Scotland at Ossian House. The Local Authority would need, if required, to be able to demonstrate that it had complied with its multiple duties under Part III CA 1989 (specifically section 22), was satisfied that this is the most appropriate placement for him, and has complied with the detailed provisions of Regulation 9 and 11 of the 2010 Regulations; (see in particular [26]-[30] and [62] above);
ii) South Tyneside Council could place Henry, a child who is the subject of an interim care order (section 38 CA 1989), anywhere in the United Kingdom without seeking a specific free-standing order of the English court giving its formal approval. It was, and is, entitled to do so by reliance on the provisions of section 33(7)/(8). However, before making any interim care order, a court would need – as it would in any public law case – to scrutinise the care plan. In a case such as this, the court will want to ensure very specific compliance (inter alia) with the requirements of the 2010 Regulations. If satisfied with such compliance, and of the view that the plan for placement in residential care in Scotland meets the needs of the child, it would be appropriate for the order placing the child in the interim care of the authority to be endorsed with the explicit acknowledgement and approval of the plan to place the child across the border in Scotland; (see in particular [35], [37], [49], and [51] above);
iii) The current interim care order in respect of Henry is not recognised and is not capable of enforcement in Scotland. Happily, at present no party seeks its enforcement, and there appears to be no reason in Scots law for taking any step towards recognition other than for 'legal tidiness'. If any party (particularly the Local Authority) seeks recognition or enforcement, it would be appropriate for that party to petition to the nobile officium of the Inner House of the Court of Session for an order in that court; I suggest that the success of such an application would depend on a range of factors including the specific facts, and the nature of the relief sought; (see in particular [54], and [63]-[72] above). While it appears possible for the parents to litigate in Scotland in relation to Henry on matters strictly limited to his immediate protection (see [70]/[71] above), it is reasonable to assume that, through judicial liaison under the 2018 Judicial Protocol, steps would be taken to avoid concurrent proceedings being held in the two jurisdictions;
iv) Henry is not, as a matter of fact, currently deprived of his liberty at Ossian House. If I were to have found that he was/is deprived of his liberty, I would have had to consider whether to make a declaration of lawfulness. Had I done so, the Local Authority would currently be obliged to petition to the nobile officium of the Inner House of the Court of Session as in the case of Salford CC (see in particular [81]-[83] above).
Conclusion
"…what now stand revealed are serious lacunae in the law which, I suggested, need urgent attention. If that is so, and I entirely recognise that others may take a different view, then the question rises as to how the problem should be addressed. On one view, it is the kind of problem which is admirably suited for consideration by a Law Commission – perhaps, given the subject matter, jointly by the Law Commission of England and Wales and the Scottish Law Commission. That is one possibility. No doubt there are others. But it seems to me that something really does need to be done".
Note 1 Henry is not his real name. At the hearing, I offered him the opportunity to choose the name by which he was to be known in the judgment; Henry is his choice. [Back] Note 3 ‘Ossian House’ is not its real name. [Back] Note 5 Joint Protocol Regulating Direct Judicial Communications Between Scotland, And England & Wales, In Children’s Cases (Lord Carloway, Sir James Munby P): July 2018 [Back] Note 6 Amendments to Section 25 CA 1989 were effected by the Children and Social Work Act 2017 (by section 10 andschedule 1) (the reciprocal secure accommodation provisions) to fill the lacuna identified by Munby P inRe X & Y. [Back] Note 8 This was effected either under section 20(1)(c) CA 1989 or undersection 20(4) CA 1989; it matters little which statutory provision for present purposes. [Back] Note 9 See for a discussion of these issues, beyond the scope of this judgment, Williams & Anor v Hackney LBC [2019] 1 FLR 310. [Back] Note 10 See section 22(3)(a) CA 1989 [Back] Note 11 See section 20(6) and section 22(5) CA 1989 [Back] Note 12 See section 22C(5) CA 1989 [Back] Note 13 See section 22C(8)(a) CA 1989 [Back] Note 14 See section 22C(7)(b)&(c) CA 1989 [Back] Note 15 See section 22(4) CA 1989 [Back] Note 16 Seeregulation 2(1): ““C” means a child who is looked after by the responsible authority”. [Back] Note 17 As defined inregulation 2. [Back] Note 18 Per regulation 2: “F” means a person who is approved as a local authority foster parent and with whom it is proposed to place C or, as the case may be, with whom C is placed”. [Back] Note 19 These regulations apply in England only: seeregulation 1. [Back] Note 20 Regulation 9(1)(b)(i) and Regulation 11(2)(a) of the 2010 Regulations [Back] Note 21 Regulation 11(2)(b) 2010 Regulations [Back] Note 22 With the child, relatives and IRO [Back] Note 23 By a nominated officer, or in this case, because the placement was outside England, the director of children’s services [Back] Note 24 See Regulation 11(1)(b) of the 2010 Regulations
[Back] Note 25 See Regulation 9(2) & 9(3) of the 2010 Regulations [Back] Note 26 See Regulation 11(2)(d)(ii) and regulation 13(4) of the2010 Regulations. [Back] Note 27 See Regulation 11(2)(e) of the2010 Regulations. [Back] Note 28 Re E (Wardship Order: Child in Voluntary Accommodation) [2012] EWCA Civ 1773 per Thorpe LJ
at [12] and [13]; and Re A (Wardship: 17-Year Old: Section 20 Accommodation) [2018] EWHC 1121 (Fam) per Williams J [Back] Note 29 There is nothing in section 105(1) (Interpretation section) which is relevant to the issues here. [Back] Note 30 See Regulation 11(1)(b) of the2010 Regulations. [Back] Note 31 I cite the fuller passage in which this quote appears at [41] below. [Back] Note 32 For X’s Guardian [Back] Note 33 For the two Local Authorities [Back] Note 34 For X and for Y’s Guardian [Back] Note 35 Different considerations apply in Wales: section 124 Social Services and Well-Being (Wales) Act 2014 [Back] Note 36 In this context, my reference to a ‘child’ is to a child who is habitually resident in England & Wales [Back] Note 37 Para.4(4), Schedule 3: “where the child has sufficient understanding to make an informed decision, he consents to its inclusion”
[Back] Note 38 See also Practice Direction 27 on Cross Border Issues, Scottish Children’s Reporter Administration (2015) [2.4]. [Back] Note 39 FS v RS [2020] EWFC 63 at [100]/[113]; FS v RS is a judgment handed down while this judgment was in preparation. [Back] Note 40 While also highlighting the “regrettable failure to address at an early stage of the process the legal issues which require to be resolved to enable such a placement to take place in a manner which safeguards the child's best interests”: referencing, inter alia, Re K, T and U (Placement of Children with Kinship Carers Abroad) [2019] EWFC 59 [Back] Note 41 Re X & Y is an example of a situation (now superseded, in this particular regard, by statutory reform) in which the English court had power to make an order placing a child in secure or non-secure accommodation in Scotland, but that order was without legal authority in Scotland unless the Inner House of the Court of Session applied thenobile officium. [Back] Note 42 See article 7, 8 and 9 of the 2013 Order [Back] Note 43 See article 3 of the of the 2013 Order [Back] Note 44 Cumbria CC & Others at [20] [Back] Note 45 See footnote 5 above [Back] Note 46 At the time of drafting this judgment it is known that the judgment of the Court of Appeal in Re T is to be heard on appeal to the Supreme Court within a matter of days. [Back] Note 47 This was the language of Storck see [74]: “She had been under continuous supervision and control of the clinic personnel and had not been free to leave the clinic during her entire stay there of some 20 months”, deriving essentially from the decision of the HL v United Kingdom (2004) 40 EHRR 761, at [91] [Back] Note 49 Re C [45]: “This may be a "gap" in the legislative framework similar to the situation that previously existed in respect of secure accommodation. I, therefore, propose that this issue be brought to the attention of the President of the Family Division for his consideration” [Back] Note 50 Notably, over four years ago…. 12 September 2016 [Back]