BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Family Court Decisions (other Judges) |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (other Judges) >> B (a child: adoption process), Re [2015] EWFC B182 (22 July 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/OJ/2015/B182.html Cite as: [2015] EWFC B182 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
Victoria Street, Blackburn |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
Mr and Mrs X |
Applicant |
|
- and - |
||
Lancashire County Council |
Respondent |
____________________
The Applicants were neither in attendance nor represented
Hearing date: 15 July 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Booth:
The background
Contingent Placements
"[The placement] with carers who are both approved prospective adopters and approved foster carers is a fostering placement under the Act and one which may lead to adoption by those foster carers".
"It is possible that a section 22C(9B(c) placement may not lead to adoption for example because the child's plan changes where rehabilitation with the birth family is successful, because suitable family or friends come forward or because the court does not agree to make a placement order. This may mean that the child returns home or is moved to another permanence arrangements. But, for the vast majority of children who are in a section 22C(9B)(c) placement, progression towards adoption will be the anticipated outcome".
The impact of Care and Placement Orders on the foster placement
"A placement order is an order made by the court authorising a local authority to place a child for adoption with any prospective adopters who may be chosen by the authority".
When was B placed for adoption?
(a) place a child for adoption with prospective adopters, or
(b) where it has placed a child with any persons (whether under this Part or not), leave the child with them as prospective adopters.
An adoption agency may only place a child for adoption with prospective adopters if the agency is satisfied that the child ought to be placed for adoption.
References in this Act (apart from this section) to an adoption agency placing a child for adoption –
(a) are to its placing a child for adoption with prospective adopters, and
(b) include, where it has placed a child with any persons (whether under this Act or not), leaving the child with them as prospective adopters;
and references in this Act (apart from this section) to a child who is placed for adoption by an adoption agency are to be interpreted accordingly.
"[8] The reality is that L, on and after 14 July 2007, was placed with the carer under the fostering regulations and not under the placement regulations, the adoption regulations. In those circumstances, the local authority had sole parental responsibility for L. Had he been placed under the placement regulations, then parental responsibility would have been shared between the local authority and the carer. As my Lord, Hedley J, has analysed in argument, there are three necessary stages to the statutory placement of a child. The first question that has to be asked by the panel is whether adoption is in the best interests of the child. If the answer to that is in the affirmative, then there is an obligation on the local authority to apply for a placement order. Once the placement order has been granted, it is the responsibility of the panel to consider whether specific individuals – say, Mr and Mrs X – are in principle approved as adopters. If that question is answered in the affirmative, then the third stage for the panel's consideration is whether the child in question is matched to Mr and Mrs X, and therefore to be placed with them.
[9] As my Lord has observed, the construction of ss 24 and 18 must be considered within that framework, and I fully share his view that a child is not deemed to be placed for the purposes of s 24 until all three stages have been accomplished. Here the only stage accomplished was the first; the current carers had not been approved in principle, nor had L been matched to be placed with them. As the judge himself saw, at the highest the current foster carer had no more than the potential to emerge at a later stage as a prospective adopter with whom L had not been placed, but whose placement might, under s 18(5)(b), be enlarged from foster to adoptive placement."
"… that a child is not 'placed' for adoption until he begins to live with the proposed adopters or, if he is already living with them in their capacity as foster carers, when the adoption agency formally allows him to continue to live with them in their fresh capacity as prospective adopters. In my view such is the natural construction of the verb 'place', which the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary defines as 'put or set in a particular place, position or situation'. It is thus a construction which, in the usual case in which the child is not already living with the proposed adopters, requires straightforward reference to a readily discernible fact, namely whether he has begun to live with them".
"Section 22C(9B)(c) placements are foster placements: the carers must be approved foster carers as well as approved prospective adopters before the child can be placed with them. The carers are entitled to the fostering allowances that the fostering provider would normally pay. When the local authority receives a placement order or parental consent and the ADM has approved the adoptive placement, the section 22C(9B)(c) placement will become an adoptive placement. At that point the carers will become eligible for adoption pay and leave and the fostering allowance ceases".
The adoption application
"If —
(a) the child was placed for adoption with the applicant or applicants by an adoption agency or in pursuance of an order of the High Court, or
(b) the applicant is a parent of the child
the condition is that the child must have had his home with the applicant or, in the case of an application by a couple, with one or both of them at all times during the period of ten weeks preceding the application."
"I am entirely in agreement with Sheldon J that it is a question of fact in any particular case whether or not a home has been established here within the meaning of the 2002 Act".
"The section … is concerned to ensure that the child has spent sufficient time living with the applicant in a home environment to enable the Court to be satisfied they are sufficiently well-matched for the adoption to be likely to be successful".
Conclusion