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Page 1 ⇓
THE HIGH COURT
SPECIAL CARE
[2019] IEHC 917
[2019 No. 378 MCA]
BETWEEN
CHILD AND FAMILY AGENCY
APPLICANT
AND
M.O’L. AND BILL HAMILL
RESPONDENTS
JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Richard Humphreys delivered on the 27th day of December,
2019
1. On the 20th December, 2019, the Child and Family Agency moved on foot of an ex parte
docket headed “Originating Motion Ex Parte” seeking an interim special care order under
s. 23(l) of the Child Care Act 1991, as amended. As in the judicial review context, such
ex parte dockets are not filed in the Central Office but are lodged with the registrar, a
procedure that is envisaged specifically in this context by O. 65A r. 3(3) of the Rules of
the Superior Courts, as inserted by the Rules of the Superior Courts (Special Care of
Children) 2018.
2. On the same date the Agency also filed an affidavit of Sinéad Murphy, which was given a
record number by the Central Office, being the record number listed above in these
proceedings. On foot of these papers, the Agency obtained the requested ex parte
Interim Special Care Order from Jordan J. under s. 23L of the 1991 Act.
3. Following Jordan J.’s order on 20th December, 2019, the Agency filed an “originating
notice of motion” for an Interim Special Care Order on notice under s. 23L, also entitled in
the existing proceedings. On 23rd December, 2019, Owens J. made that order.
4. Immediately after that order the Agency served on the first-named respondent an unfiled
originating notice of motion for a “full” (that is, of 3 month duration) Special Care Order
under s. 23H of the 1991 Act. That unfiled document had a blank record number.
5. That “originating” notice of motion was formally filed the following day 24th December,
2019, but in the same proceedings (so not in that sense “originating”). The motion as so
filed was returnable for 27th December, 2019, and that is what the court is concerned
with in the present application.
6. I have received helpful submissions from Mr. Cormac Hynes B.L. for the Agency and from
Ms. Bernadette Kirby B.L. for the guardian ad litem, the second-named respondent.
There was no appearance by the first-named respondent.
7. The aspect of the application that is of interest from a procedural point of view is whether
it was correct to describe the motion at this stage of the proceedings as being an
“originating” notice of motion.
8. On the one hand, O.65A r. 3(2) says that: “An application for a Special Care Order or an
application made on notice for an interim Special Care Order, shall be made by originating
Page 2 ⇓
motion on notice”. Rule 3(3) says that: “An application for an Interim Special Care Order
made ex parte shall be made by originating motion ex parte …”
9. The question that arises here is whether, there having already been an earlier originating
notice of motion for the interim special care order, there then needs to be a subsequent
“originating” notice of motion in relation to the care of the same child. What I am told
has been a practice in some cases, as illustrated by the way that this matter has
proceeded in the present series of applications, is that what has been described as an
“originating notice of motion” has been issued for the full care order notwithstanding that
there has already been an “originating notice of motion” for the interim order on notice.
10. However, that is problematic for a number of reasons, of which I will identify the ones
that seem most pertinent here:
(i). if the second “originating” motion is issued in the same proceedings under the
same record number then it is by definition not an “originating” notice of motion,
and it is a misuse of language as well as being simply confusing to call it
“originating”;
(ii). alternatively if the second “originating” notice of motion is given a different record
number there is then an unhelpful and indeed one might dare say unnecessary
proliferation of record numbers to no tangible benefit; that again lays the ground
for confusion;
(iii). the present motion assumes that the “proceedings” instituted by the earlier
“originating” notice of motion have run their course and asks for an order striking
out those proceedings; however this is incorrect if we are talking about the same
proceedings, and unnecessarily duplicative and confusing if we are not;
(iv). likewise the present motion seeks the appointment of the (existing) guardian ad
litem for the purposes of the present proceedings – however he has already been
appointed in these proceedings, so again if we are talking about the same
proceedings this is illogical and duplicative, if different proceedings it is
unnecessarily complex and confusing. At best an order continuing the
appointment of the existing guardian could be made for the avoidance of doubt but
even that may be stating the obvious.
11. The Rules Committee has anticipated this problem by the provisions of O. 65A r. 3(9)
which says that: “Save where otherwise provided by this Order or directed by the Court,
all subsequent applications to the Court in relation to the care of the child who is the
subject of the originating notice of motion shall be brought by motion in the proceedings
commenced by the originating notice of motion, on notice to all other parties to the
special care proceedings.” Thus, what would otherwise be an “originating notice of
motion” under r. 3(2) becomes simply a “motion in the proceedings” under r. 3(9) if there
has already been an originating motion. To put it even more simply, the system
envisaged by Order 65A r. 3 is that there should only be one “originating” notice of
Page 3 ⇓
motion in relation to the care of any particular child. Once that is issued, any subsequent
motions, for example for a full special care order, should be a “motion in the
proceedings”, as envisaged by r. 3(9) and not an “originating” notice of motion.
12. So if (as here) there has already been an originating notice of motion for an interim
special care order, a further motion for a full care order should be a notice of motion in
the same proceedings, not an originating notice of motion (as the present motion was
incorrectly headed). What is to happen if there is an ex parte application first before the
filing of any notice of motion? That happened here also. Should the next motion issued
(in the present case, one for an interim special care order on notice) be headed
“originating” notice of motion or just “notice of motion”? Admittedly the wording of r.
3(9) does not expressly answer that, and when giving the ex tempore ruling in this case I
couldn’t quite see why. But having reflected on it further for the purposes of the present
written version of the ruling I think that possibly some confusion in terminology has
entered into the picture, because instead of calling the document lodged with the registrar
an “ex parte docket”, which is what it is, r. 3(3) calls it an “originating motion ex parte”.
But it isn’t a motion in any meaningful sense and it isn’t filed in the Central Office but
simply lodged with the registrar. The analogy is with judicial review, where filing the
papers (no notice of motion involved) gets you a record number, the ex parte docket is
then lodged with the registrar and not filed, and if leave is granted, a notice of motion,
which is the document that initiates the claim for substantive relief, is subsequently
issued under the same record number. Maybe in some kind of theoretician’s universe the
ex parte docket whether in the judicial review or care order context should be given an IA
(Intended Action) record number with a record number proper granted only later when
the originating pleading is filed. Thankfully strict logic is tempered by practical
convenience, and the same record number should be used throughout. On such a
reading, a motion seeking an interim special care order on notice after the making of an
interim order ex parte can properly be called an “originating” notice of motion, even
though it uses the same record number as the ex parte application. This is because that
notice of motion is filed in the Central Office whereas the ex parte docket (the so-called
motion ex parte) is not. But a motion issued after a first “originating” motion should not
be called originating. Perhaps it is worth recording my view that there may be merit in
the rules committee considering using the term “ex parte docket” rather than “motion ex
parte” to make this distinction clearer.
13. Leaving that semantic quibble aside, the intention of the rules is that whatever record
number is assigned at the ex parte stage should continue to be used thereafter. The first
formal filed Notice of Motion thereafter should be headed “Originating Notice of Motion”,
but any subsequent motion should simply be headed “Notice of Motion” rather than
“Originating Notice of Motion”. That has, as I say, the advantages implicit in what I have
said above, namely;
(i). it avoids the illogicality and indeed incorrectness of describing something as
originating when it is not originating and when it is issued under the same record
number as existing proceedings;
Page 4 ⇓
(ii). it avoids the alternative approach of a multiplicity of record numbers;
(iii). it avoids the cumbersome and questionable practice of asking to strike out previous
proceedings; and
(iv). it avoids having to ask to “appoint” a guardian ad litem who has already been
appointed.
Order
14. The appropriate order is:
(i). an order to correct a minor typo in the wording of the perfected order of 23rd
December, 2019 of Owens J., which referred to a notice of motion of 20th
November, 2019, which should have been 20th December, 2019;
(ii). an order restricting the reporting of information tending to identify non-professional
persons concerned in the proceedings;
(iii). an order deeming the service actually affected good (in the context where the
service on the first-named respondent was of an unfiled motion with a blank record
number as opposed to the formal filed version which was otherwise identical);
(iv). an order allowing the application by counsel for the applicant to amend the notice
of motion by deleting the word “originating” from the notice of motion and
dispensing with the need for formal service of an amended motion paper;
(v). an order granting the reliefs sought in the current notice of motion (as so
amended) at paras. 1, 2 and 4, namely, the full care order under s. 23H of the
1991 Act and related directions and review dates;
(vi). the order that the appointment of the guardian ad litem should continue for the
duration of the Special Care Order; and
(vii). an order reserving costs.
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