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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 >> M & Anor (Children) [2008] EWHC 2281 (Fam) (06 October 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2008/2281.html Cite as: [2008] Fam Law 1192, [2008] EWHC 2281 (Fam), [2008] 2 FLR 2030 |
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FAMILY DIVISION
(In Public)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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In the matter of M and N (Children) |
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Munby :
The facts – M's case
"[35] In order to comply with its statutory obligation, the family court is obliged, where an order is opposed, to have regard to the accommodation available to both parents at the time the s 8 order is under consideration. Accordingly, in order to have regard to the capability of a parent to meet the needs of a child in circumstances where that parent has no available accommodation in which the child could reside, in the statutory sense of 'living' with that parent, the court is obliged to consider the likelihood of such accommodation becoming available. To satisfy that inquiry it seems to me that a family court is bound to inquire of the relevant local housing authority as to what accommodation is currently available and what is likely to become available in the future. In answering such a necessary inquiry, a local housing authority may take the opportunity to place before the family court those matters relevant to the local housing authority's own consideration in pursuance of its statutory obligation under s 193 of the 1996 Act.
[36] Thus, where a s 8 order is opposed, it will not be sufficient for a parent merely to assert that he or she wants a child to come, for at least part of the time, to live with him, that parent must expect to be faced with the local housing authority's own representations on the issue."
The facts – N's case
i) The family solicitors took no adequate steps when communicating the terms of Roderic Wood J's order to the immigration solicitors to ensure that they (the immigration solicitors) clearly and specifically drew to the attention of the Home Office (a) the terms of the letter from the Home Office dated 30 January 2008, (b) the date of the hearing fixed by Roderic Wood J and (c) the need for a decision in time for that hearing.
ii) The family solicitors took no adequate steps to monitor the immigration solicitors' correspondence with the Home Office. (I infer from the fact that the letter from the immigration solicitors dated 30 May 2008 enclosed the documents I have referred to that that they had not previously been sent by the immigration solicitors to the family solicitors.) In consequence, the family solicitors were, until it was too late to do anything effective in time for the hearing before me, unaware of the fact that the immigration solicitors had failed to bring those two vital matters to the attention of the Home Office and unaware of the fact that the Home Office was most unlikely to produce a decision in time for the hearing.
The President's Protocol
Discussion
Summary
i) Practitioners acting for the parent in the family proceedings have an ongoing duty to remain au courant with what is going on elsewhere even if the other matter is being handled by other professionals.ii) The parents, as part of their ongoing obligation to be frank and open with the court, are under a duty to instruct those advising them in any other relevant matter to keep their family solicitors informed of what is going on. And it is the duty of those advising them in the other matter, having received such authority, to keep the family solicitors informed accordingly.
iii) Practitioners involved in family proceedings have a duty to take adequate steps before each hearing to find out, from the solicitors or other professional advisers acting for their client in any other relevant matter, what has been going on, where the other matters have got to and, in cases where some formal decision is anticipated, when that decision is likely to be given.
iv) With a view to minimising the room for uncertainty or misunderstanding, it is preferable to obtain copies of the correspondence and other documents on the other solicitors' files rather than attempting to find out what is going on by means of questions and answers in correspondence which may, through lack of understanding, miss the point or be misunderstood.
v) If the practitioners acting for the parent in the family proceedings are finding it difficult to obtain the relevant information from the solicitors or other professional advisers acting for their client in the other matter, then prompt consideration needs to be given – and at the earliest possible stage – to approaching the court with a view to inviting the court either to make a peremptory order that the other advisers deliver a complete copy of their file to the solicitors acting in the family proceedings or to make an order pursuant to the Protocol. Such applications should not be left to the next directions or other hearing which has already been fixed if waiting until then may generate inappropriate delay.
vi) Where the outcome in the family proceedings is dependent upon or likely to be affected by the decision of some third party, consideration should be given – at the earliest possible stage in the proceedings – as to whether and if so how that third party decision maker should be brought into some appropriate form of direct engagement with the family proceedings.