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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 >> SL (A Child) (Adoption : Home In Jurisdiction) [2004] EWHC 1283 (Fam) (28 May 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2004/1283.html Cite as: [2005] 1 FLR 118, [2004] EWHC 1283 (Fam), [2004] Fam Law 860 |
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FAMILY DIVISION PRINCIPAL REGISTRY
(In Private)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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In the matter of SL (a child) | ||
And in the matter of the ADOPTION ACT 1976 |
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Mr Michael Sherwin (of White & Sherwin) for the child SL
Hearing date : 24 May 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Munby :
i) Does the English court have jurisdiction to make an adoption order?
ii) Are the requirements of section 13 of the Adoption Act 1976 satisfied?
"(2) … an adoption order shall not be made unless the child is at least 12 months old and at all times during the preceding 12 months had his home with the applicants or one of them.
(3) An adoption order shall not be made unless the court is satisfied that sufficient opportunities to see the child with the applicant … in the home environment have been afforded – …
(b) … to the local authority within whose area the home is."
"(1) An adoption order shall not be made in respect of a child who was not placed with the applicant by an adoption agency unless the applicant has, at least 3 months before the date of the order, given notice to the local authority within whose area he has his home of his intention to apply for the adoption order.
(1A) An application for such an adoption order shall not be made unless the person wishing to make the application has, within the period of two years preceding the making of the application, given notice as mentioned in subsection (1).
(1B) In subsections (1) and (1A) the references to the area in which the applicant or person has his home are references to the area in which he has his home at the time of giving the notice.
(2) On receipt of such a notice the local authority shall investigate the matter and submit to the court a report of their investigation."
It is to be noted that sub-sections (1A) and (1B) contain provisions that were not to be found in the predecessor legislation, the Children Act 1975.
"in my judgment, there can be no doubt that the local authority, for the purposes of these provisions, must be a local authority in England or Wales – a local authority over which Parliament has authority and the English courts have jurisdiction."
That is plainly right. So the "local authority" referred to in section 13(3)(b) must be a local authority in England or Wales, from which it follows that the "home" referred to in section 13(3)(b) must also be a "home" in England or Wales.
i) Does the "home" referred to in section 13(2) have to be the same as the "home" referred to in section 13(3)(b)?
ii) Granted that, for the reasons given by Sheldon J, the "home" referred to in section 13(3)(b) has to be in England or Wales, does the "home" referred to in section 13(2) likewise have to be in England or Wales?
It will be appreciated that if the answer to either of these questions is 'Yes' then the present application must necessarily fail.
"That being so, it follows that even though an applicant … may be domiciled here, an adoption order cannot now be made unless:
(a) when giving notice of his intention to adopt (which must be at least 3 months before the date of the order) he had a 'home' here in the area of the local authority to which, by s. [22(1)], such notice had to be given; and
(b) at all times during the alternative periods … referred to in s. [13], he also provided a 'home' for the child in the area of the local authority required by that section to see all parties together in their 'home environment'."
i) The applicant must have a "home" within the jurisdiction at the time she gives notice in accordance with section 22(1). That "home" will be the "home" for the purposes of section 13(3)(b).
ii) But the "home" referred to in section 13(2):
a) does not have to be the same as the "home" referred to in section 13(3)(b); and
b) does not have to be in England or Wales.
i) SL has had his "home" with Ms H ever since 24 August 2001: until 25 October 2001 that "home" was in Hong Kong, from then until 11 December 2003 it was in London, and since then it has been in Scotland. Each of these, in my judgment, qualifies during the relevant portion of the overall period from 24 August 2001 until 24 May 2004 (the date of the hearing when I made the adoption order) as a "home" for the purposes of section 13(2).
ii) The relevant local authority – the London borough council – has had more than sufficient opportunities to see SL in his "home environment" in London.
i) The word "home" is not defined in the Act as referring only to a "home" which is in England or Wales. It is only the reference in section 13(3)(b) to the "local authority" which has the effect that the "home" referred to in section 13(3)(b) must be a "home" in England or Wales. There is nothing corresponding to this in section 13(2), which refers simply and without further qualification or elaboration to the applicant's "home".
ii) There is nothing in either the language or the structure of section 13 to indicate that the "home" referred to in section 13(2) has to be the same as the "home" – or "home environment" – referred to in section 13(3)(b). On the contrary, section 13(3)(b) identifies the "home environment" by reference to "the local authority within whose area the home is", and not, as it were, by reference back to the "home" referred to in section 13(2).
iii) The time period which qualifies the concept of "home" in section 13(2) is different from that which qualifies the concept of the "home environment" in section 13(3)(b). The "home" in section 13(2) is defined by reference to a fixed period – 12 months; the "home environment" in section 13(3)(b) is defined by reference to a less determinate period – the period during which "sufficient opportunities to see the child … have been afforded". There is no necessary connection between these two different periods.
"The requirement that the applicant or applicants must have a 'home' within the jurisdiction for the period specified, however, does not also import an obligation that they or the child should be living or residing there at or for any particular time or length of time. Of course, the less time that any of them spend there, the more difficult is it likely to be to persuade the court that it is a 'home'; but the only statutory obligation in this connection would seem to be that they spend sufficient time there to enable the local authority concerned to see all parties together in their 'home environment' as provided by s. [13(3)(b)] and properly to investigate the circumstances as required by s. [22]. What that will involve in terms of residence will be a question to be decided in the light of the facts of each case.
… in my opinion, the only extent to which the physical presence in this country of the applicant or applicants or the child is required by statute, from the date upon which notice of the adoption application is given to the local authority, is that it should be sufficient to enable the latter to see them all together in their home environment here and to prepare the report required by s. [22]."
I entirely agree. It is to be noted that Sheldon J went on at p 160 to reject in terms the contention of the local authority in that case that it was necessary for one applicant to have been in the country for at least three months, and the other for at least one month, if it was to be said that there had been "sufficient opportunities" within the meaning of what is now section 13(3)(b).
i) The first purpose is to test the strength of the applicant's commitment to the child, and whether the "match" between the child and the applicant is secure, those matters being assessed empirically by the need to demonstrate that the child's placement with the applicant in her "home" has survived at least 12 months.
ii) The second purpose is to maximise the usefulness and reliability of the report submitted to the court by the local authority in accordance with section 22(2) by ensuring that the reporting authority has been afforded "sufficient opportunities to see the child with the applicant … in the home environment".