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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 >> Salford CC v W & Ors (Religion and Declaration of Looked After Status) [2021] EWHC 61 (Fam) (19 January 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2021/61.html Cite as: [2021] 4 WLR 21, [2021] WLR(D) 50, [2021] EWHC 61 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
B e f o r e :
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Salford City Council |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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W -and- X -and- Y and Z -and- B, C, D, E and F (Children acting through their Children's Guardian) |
First Respondent Second Respondent Third and Fourth Respondents Fifth to Ninth Respondents |
____________________
Ms Lorraine Cavanagh QC and Ms Niamh Ross (instructed by Fosters Solicitors) for the First Respondent
The Second Respondent did not appear and was not represented
Ms Elizabeth Isaacs QC and Ms Yvonne Healing (instructed by Kenneth Bush Solicitors) for the Third and Fourth Respondents
Ms Caroline Leggeat (instructed by Alfred Newton Solicitors) for the Fifth to Ninth Respondents
Hearing dates: 18 December 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice MacDonald:
INTRODUCTION
i) Is it in each of the children's best interests for the court to make a prohibited steps order pursuant to s. 8 of the Children Act 1989 prior to, or upon the making of a special guardianship order pursuant to s.14 of the Children Act 1989 prohibiting Mrs Z from allowing the children to take the Roman Catholic initiation sacraments of Baptism (the sacrament of initiation into the faith signifying freedom from original sin), Confirmation (the sacrament of initiation serving to confirm and strengthen a baptised person in their faith), Holy Communion or Eucharist (the sacrament of initiation signifying partaking of Christ's sacrifice on the cross) and the healing sacrament of Reconciliation (also known as Confession or Penance) until they are aged 16 years old and may decide for themselves their religious preferences?ii) In the context of issues arising in this case with respect to the payment of financial support following the making of a special guardianship order, does the court have jurisdiction to make a freestanding declaration that the children were 'looked after' by one or more local authorities that have been engaged with the family within the meaning of Part III of the Children Act 1989 and, if so, should this court exercise that jurisdiction in preference to that issue being determined in the Administrative Court, that question having been left open by the Court of Appeal in Re B [2013] EWCA Civ 964?
BACKGROUND
i) B, D and C stated that, by reason of the current COVID-19 restrictions, they go on FaceTime and pray together for about an hour each Sunday. B stated that they all take it in turns on the video to do their prayers.ii) B, D and C explained their understanding of what happens during a baptism and also during Holy Communion. B described baptism as receiving holy water on your forehead and that's when you become one of God's children.
iii) The children are already aware of how they are perceived differently in the Roman Catholic church to their aunt and other relatives. They cannot receive the Holy Communion during the church service. They do receive a blessing from the Priest, but they stand in a separate line from their extended family and cross their arms to show that they are not baptised.
iv) The children have each expressed to the social worker and to Ms Parker a desire to be baptised. Ms Parker is confident from her discussions with the children and the reports filed in these proceedings that the children understand what this entails and what will change for them as a result of baptism. The children also spoke positively about their pilgrimage to Lourdes with Ms Z.
"I recommend that the children continue to practice the Roman Catholic Faith and no restriction by way of a Specific Issue Order (sic) is made to prevent this. Exclusion from this faith or prevention from progressing through the identified rites of passage in my opinion would create exclusion and segregation from their family and community. Any restrictions placed on their current and future religious practices could lead to a detrimental impact on the children's emotional wellbeing. Any restriction could undermine the care arrangements given their carers are devout Catholics and the relationships surrounding them. Should the children not be baptised into the Roman Catholic Faith they will not be able to participate in mass as they would not take the sacrament of communion."
"I respectfully recommend that the children are able to continue with their religious beliefs without restriction as the children are otherwise likely to experience segregation and exclusion within a faith that they proudly identify as belonging to."
SUBMISSIONS
Application for a Prohibited Steps Order
i) In circumstances where the children do not currently attend Roman Catholic schools, their current peer group will not move on to Roman Catholic schools and thus the failure to attend such a school will be unlikely to cause disruption for the children in terms of their peer group friendships in the future.ii) The mother has no objection to the children attending church, taking part in Roman Catholic religious festivals and attending a Catholic school. The children will thereby be enabled to participate in the life and cultural practices of their family and community without any risk of them being alienated from either.
iii) There is no evidence that the failure of the children to receive the Roman Catholic sacraments to date has inhibited their enjoyment of family life or participation in the family's religious practices. There is likewise no evidence before the court to demonstrate that not receiving the Roman Catholic sacraments will cause the children emotional harm. The assertion that the children "might" suffer such harm is not sufficient.
iv) Within the context of Mr Y describing himself as a "Christian following a Protestant religion", there is no evidence that Mr Y's choice of religion has inhibited or disrupted family life or family relationships within what is in reality already an inter-denominational household. Within this context, Ms Cavanagh and Ms Ross submit that this demonstrates that Mr Y and Mrs Z can accommodate differing religious views. They further point to the fact that the impetus for the children to take the sacraments of the Roman Catholic faith is coming from Mrs Z rather than Mr Y, the children's biological relative.
i) The Special Guardianship Regulations 2005 evidence a particular focus on the cultural and religious heritage of children, requiring a Special Guardianship Assessment Report to address (a) the child's religious persuasion (including details of baptism and confirmation), (b) the religious persuasion of the child's parents, (c) the wishes of the child regarding their religious and cultural upbringing, (d) the wishes of the parent regarding the child's religious and cultural upbringing, (e) the extent to which the putative special guardian is willing to follow the wishes of the child or his or her parents in respect of religious and cultural upbringing. A special guardianship order seeks, by contrast to an adoption order, to ensure that a child is raised in the context of a parents' views and beliefs.
ii) Within this context, decisions regarding the religious upbringing of a child are fundamental in nature. The participation in the sacraments of the Roman Catholic faith will have the effect, potentially, of constructing a lifelong philosophical narrative for each of the children. In any event, the effect of taking the sacraments is profound and permanent, with excommunication from the Roman Catholic church being the only mechanism by which the children could subsequently leave the Roman Catholic faith if they so choose.
iii) Within this context, the court must consider the welfare of the children now, throughout the remainder of their minority and into and through adulthood. The receipt of the Roman Catholic sacraments will initiate the children into a particular faith and thereby set a directive and prescriptive path inherently incompatible with allowing the children to make their own choices regarding the nature and extent of their religious observance as they mature and thus premature. A decision to permit the children to choose their own religion in due course would reflect a mainstream view and would be to act as a "judicial reasonable parent".
iv) The receipt of the Roman Catholic sacraments will initiate the children into a particular faith not shared by either of their parents and introduce an element of philosophical difference between the parents and the children. The mother will, under a special guardianship order, remain a parent of the children with an important role in the children's lives and her Pentecostal faith will remain a part of their religious and cultural heritage.
v) Within this context, in this case the court must bear in mind that the children have a mixed cultural heritage, will maintain a relationship with their mother and that the mother will continue to practise her religion.
vi) With respect to the wishes and feelings of the children regarding their religious upbringing, decisions of the gravity with which the court is concerned in this case "are not routinely hung on the peg of the wishes and feeling of the older children nor treating them as a homogenous group". The children are each too young to make fundamental decisions about their future spiritual lives.
i) Under the orders agreed by all parties, Mr Y and Mrs Z will be caring for the children not as private foster carers but as special guardians, with the concomitant exclusive parental responsibility with respect of the children in their care. Parents and carers with parental responsibility are entrusted with the welfare decisions concerning the children in their care and this extends to deciding the nature and extent of a child's religious observance without interference from the State.ii) It is the impact on the children of the making or not making of a prohibited steps order and not the impact on the mother or her beliefs that is important. Within this context, the practical and psychological implications for each of the children of any restriction on Roman Catholic sacraments of initiation would be detrimental to their welfare.
iii) With respect to practical implications, in the absence of the Roman Catholic sacraments of initiation, one or more of the children may not be admitted to a Catholic school where a school had more Catholic applicants than available spaces (the evidence before the court being that the Roman Catholic school to which B sought admission requires a Baptismal Certificate for five of the nine criteria applied when places are oversubscribed).
iv) With respect to the psychological implications, in circumstances where the sacrament of Baptism is the rite of admission to the Roman Catholic faith (see Catechism of the Catholic Church, 2nd ed. Vatican: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2012, 1233-1234 and 1253), Confirmation is the rite completing initiation into the Catholic Church (see Catechism of the Catholic Church, 2nd ed. Vatican: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2012, 1285, 1302-1303 1306) and Holy Communion is the rite by which a person fully enjoys the holistic, fulfilling and universally recognised experience of the Catholic faith (see Catechism of the Catholic Church, 2nd ed. Vatican: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2012, 1244), there is a very real potential for the children to become alienated from their local community if they are unable to receive the sacraments.
v) Within this context, it is highly likely that the children would be treated differently, and would feel differently, from other children in their community, at school and at Sunday School as a direct consequence. The children would also not be able to participate fully in events with the immediate family that cares for them and would be excluded from benefiting from ceremonies that are a fundamental part of the history and culture of the family that cares for them, including the sacrament of marriage in a Roman Catholic church.
vi) In the foregoing circumstances, to restrict the children from participating in the crucially important rites of passage into the Roman Catholic faith is likely to cause emotional and psychological harm to the children now and in the future by reason of them perceiving that they are different to, or in part excluded from the family that is caring for them.
vii) In addition, to restrict the children from participating in the crucially important rites of passage into the Roman Catholic faith would render the mother's consent to the children attending church, taking part in Roman Catholic religious festivals and attending a Catholic school meaningless.
viii) The process of initiation into the Catholic Church contains well-defined and universally understood steps to ensure that no child commits to a life of faith without understanding, awareness and knowledge. A child is not able to take Holy Communion without first having been Baptised and the common age for a child to take their first Holy Communion is between the ages of 7 and 9 years old. Within this context, the preparation for the taking of Holy Communion will ensures that the children are able to understand the importance and relevance of the sacrament.
ix) Within the foregoing context, there is a high responsibility on the Court not to impose such the restriction sought by the mother without good cause.
i) It is a course that accords with the clearly expressed wishes and feelings given by the children, based on their experience over the course of the past two and a half years in the care of Mrs Z and Mr L.ii) To prohibit the children from taking the Roman Catholic sacraments could lead to the children being excluded from full involvement of the activities of their immediate family with whom they reside and from the wider community which follows the same religious practices.
iii) The children have attended the Roman Catholic church throughout the time they have lived with Mr Y and Mrs Z. Were the children not to be permitted to continue this practice, this would represent a significant change in each of the children's lives.
iv) Should the children not be permitted to progress in the Roman Catholic faith they will be unable to consistently practise and develop the religion and religious practises they have become familiar with and have no carer who actively practises any alternative religion.
Jurisdiction to grant Declaration as to Looked After status
"[6] What should have happened is that the grandparents should have challenged [the local authority's] refusal to pay them a fostering allowance in the Administrative Court by way of judicial review proceedings. An alternative possibility, although we did not hear argument about whether this route would have been appropriate, may have been for an application to be made in the High Court under its inherent jurisdiction for a declaration that K is a looked after child."
THE LAW
Application for a Prohibited Steps Order
"Evaluating a child's best interests involves a welfare appraisal in the widest sense, taking into account, where appropriate, a wide range of ethical, social, moral, religious, cultural, emotional and welfare considerations. Everything that conduces to a child's welfare and happiness or relates to the child's development and present and future life as a human being, including the child's familial, educational and social environment, and the child's social, cultural, ethnic and religious community, is potentially relevant and has, where appropriate, to be taken into account. The judge must adopt a holistic approach. As Thorpe LJ once remarked In re S (Adult Patient: Sterilisation) [2001] Fam 15, 30), 'it would be undesirable and probably impossible to set bounds to what is relevant to a welfare determination.'"
"[15] A prohibited steps order is a statutory restriction on a parents exercise of their parental responsibility for a child. It can have profound consequences. On the facts of this case, without commenting on the wisdom of any step that either parent took or intended to take when they were already in dispute, and in the absence of an order of the court, the father had the same parental responsibility as mother in relation to his son. Once the order was made, he lost the ability to exercise part of his responsibility and could not regain it without the consent of the court. That is because a prohibited steps order is not a reflection of any power in one parent to restrict the other (which power does not exist) it is a court order which has to be based on objective evidence. Once made, the terms of section 8 of the Children Act 1989 do not allow the parents to relax the prohibition by agreement. It can only be relaxed by the court. There is accordingly a high responsibility not to impose such a restriction without good cause and the reason must be given. Furthermore, where a prohibition is appropriate, consideration should always be given to the duration of that prohibition."
"'Special guardianship'
5.8 Adoption is not always appropriate for children who cannot return to their birth parents. Some older children do not wish to be legally separated from their birth families. Adoption may not be best for some children being cared for on a permanent basis by members of their wider birth family. Some minority ethnic communities have religious and cultural difficulties with adoption as it is set out in law. Unaccompanied asylum-seeking children may also need secure, permanent homes, but have strong attachments to their families abroad. All these children deserve the same chance as any other to enjoy the benefits of a legally secure, stable permanent placement that promotes a supportive, lifelong relationship with their carers, where the court decides that is in their best interests."
i) Schedule 1 Paragraph 1(e) of the 2005 Regulations as amended requires the report to detail the child's religious persuasion, including details of baptism, confirmation, or equivalent ceremonies.ii) Schedule 1 Paragraph 2(j)(ii) of the 2005 Regulations as amended requires the report to identify each parent's religious persuasion.
iii) Schedule 1 Paragraph 3(a)(iii) of the Regulations as amended requires the report to detail the wishes and feelings of the children with respect to their religious and cultural upbringing.
iv) Schedule 1 Paragraph 3(b)(ii) of the Regulations as amended requires the report to detail the wishes and feelings of the parents with respect to the religious and cultural upbringing of the children.
v) Schedule 1 Paragraph 4(w) of the 2005 as amended requires the report to deal with whether the prospective special guardian is willing to follow any wishes of the child or his parents in respect of the child's religious and cultural upbringing.
"14C Special guardianship orders: effect
(1) The effect of a special guardianship order is that while the order remains in force—
(a) a special guardian appointed by the order has parental responsibility for the child in respect of whom it is made; and
(b) subject to any other order in force with respect to the child under this Act, a special guardian is entitled to exercise parental responsibility to the exclusion of any other person with parental responsibility for the child (apart from another special guardian).
(2) Subsection (1) does not affect—
(a) the operation of any enactment or rule of law which requires the consent of more than one person with parental responsibility in a matter affecting the child; or
(b) any rights which a parent of the child has in relation to the child's adoption or placement for adoption.
(3) While a special guardianship 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.
(4) Subsection (3)(b) does not prevent the removal of a child, for a period of less than three months, by a special guardian of his.
(5) If the child with respect to whom a special guardianship order is in force dies, his special guardian must take reasonable steps to give notice of that fact to—
(a) each parent of the child with parental responsibility; and
(b) each guardian of the child,
but if the child has more than one special guardian, and one of them has taken such steps in relation to a particular parent or guardian, any other special guardian need not do so as respects that parent or guardian.
(6) This section is subject to section 29(7) of the Adoption and Children Act 2002."
"It is apparent to me that the special guardian can trump the exercise of parental responsibility by a parent. The Local Authority have no parental authority and never have had in this case. Often a SGO will replace an existing care order and then by virtue of s. 91(5A) of the Children Act 1989 the SGO discharges the care order. All of this sits comfortably with the philosophy which lies behind the introduction of this new form of order. It is intended to promote and secure stability for the child cemented into this new family relationship. Links with the natural family are not severed as in adoption but the purpose undoubtedly is to give freedom to the special guardians to exercise parental responsibility in the best interests of the child. That, however, does not mean that the special guardians are free from the exercise of judicial oversight."
"[35] Religion – whatever the particular believer's faith – is not the business of government or of the secular courts, though the courts will, of course, pay every respect to the individual's or family's religious principles. Article 9 of the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, after all, demands no less. The starting point of the common law is thus respect for an individual's religious principles, coupled with an essentially neutral view of religious beliefs and a benevolent tolerance of cultural and religious diversity.
[36] It is not for a judge to weigh one religion against another. The court recognises no religious distinctions and generally speaking passes no judgment on religious beliefs or on the tenets, doctrines or rules of any particular section of society. All are entitled to equal respect, so long as they are "legally and socially acceptable" (Purchas LJ in Re R (A Minor) (Residence: Religion) [1993] 2 FLR 163, 171) and not "immoral or socially obnoxious" (Scarman LJ in Re T (Minors) (Custody: Religious Upbringing) (1981) 2 FLR 239, 244) or "pernicious" (Latey J in Re B and G (Minors) (Custody) [1985] FLR 134, 157, referring to scientology).
[37] The Strasbourg jurisprudence is to the same effect. Article 9 of the European Convention provides as follows:
"1. Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief and freedom, either alone or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief, in worship, teaching, practice and observance.
2. Freedom to manifest one's religion or beliefs shall be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of public safety, for the protection of public order, health or morals, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others."
The protection of Article 9 is qualified in two ways. In the first place, the Convention protects only religions and philosophies which are "worthy of respect in a 'democratic society' and are not incompatible with human dignity": see Campbell and Cosans v United Kingdom (No 2) (1982) 4 EHRR 293, [36]. I mention the point only for completeness; it plainly does not arise in this case, because the parents' beliefs are in each case clearly worthy of respect. Secondly, whilst religious belief and thought are (subject to that overriding qualification) given absolute protection by Article 9(1), the "manifestation" of one's religion in "worship, teaching, practice and observance" is subject to the qualifications referred to in Article 9(2).
[38] The important point for present purposes is that the Convention forbids the State to determine the validity of religious beliefs and in that respect imposes on the State a duty of what the Strasbourg court has called neutrality and impartiality: see, for example, Moscow Branch of the Salvation Army v Russia (2006) 44 EHRR 912, [58], where the court said that:
"The State's duty of neutrality and impartiality … is incompatible with any power on the State's part to assess the legitimacy of religious beliefs."
[39] Within limits the law – our family law – will tolerate things which society as a whole may find undesirable. A child's best interests have to be assessed by reference to general community standards, making due allowance for the entitlement of people, within the limits of what is permissible in accordance with those standards, to entertain very divergent views about the religious, moral, social and secular objectives they wish to pursue for themselves and for their children. We have moreover to have regard to the realities of the human condition, described by Hedley J in Re L (Care: Threshold Criteria) [2007] 1 FLR 2050, [50]:
"… society must be willing to tolerate very diverse standards of parenting, including the eccentric, the barely adequate and the inconsistent. It follows too that children will inevitably have both very different experiences of parenting and very unequal consequences flowing from it. It means that some children will experience disadvantage and harm, while others flourish in atmospheres of loving security and emotional stability. These are the consequences of our fallible humanity and it is not the provenance of the state to spare children all the consequences of defective parenting. In any event, it simply could not be done."
[40] Where precisely the limits are to be drawn is often a matter of controversy. There is no 'bright-line' test that the law can set. The infinite variety of the human condition precludes arbitrary definition.
[41] Some things are nevertheless beyond the pale: forced marriages (always to be distinguished of course from arranged marriages to which the parties consent), female genital mutilation and so-called, if grotesquely misnamed, 'honour-based' domestic violence. Plainly, as I wish to emphasise, we are not here in that territory.
[42] Some aspects of even mainstream religious belief may fall foul of public policy. A recent striking example is Westminster City Council v C and others [2008] EWCA Civ 198, [2009] Fam 11, where this court held on grounds of public policy that a 'marriage' valid under both Sharia law and the lex loci celebrationis, despite the manifest incapacity of one of the parties, was not entitled to recognition in English law. Again, I emphasise, we are not here in that territory.
[43] Some manifestations of religious practice may be regulated if contrary to a child's welfare. Although a parent's views and wishes as to the child's religious upbringing are of great importance, and will always be seriously regarded by the court, just as the court will always pay great attention to the wishes of a child old enough to be able to express sensible views on the subject of religion, even if not old enough to take a mature decision, they will be given effect to by the court only if and so far as and in such manner as is in accordance with the child's best interests. In matters of religion, as in all other aspects of a child's upbringing, the interests of the child are the paramount consideration."
"[I]n ruling on a child's best interests, a court is not putting religion on trial nor its exercise by a parent for himself or herself, but is merely examining the way in which the exercise of a given religion by a parent throughout his or her right to access affects the child's best interests."
"It seems to me that when one has, as in this case, such a conflict, all that the court can do is to look at the detail of the whole circumstances of the parents and determine where lies the true interest of the children."
Jurisdiction of the High Court to grant Declaration as to Looked After status
"[6] What should have happened is that the grandparents should have challenged [the local authority's] refusal to pay them a fostering allowance in the Administrative Court by way of judicial review proceedings. An alternative possibility, although we did not hear argument about whether this route would have been appropriate, may have been for an application to be made in the High Court under its inherent jurisdiction for a declaration that K is a looked after child."
"[18] The parties, the CPS, the Secretary of State and the advocate to the court are, correctly, agreed that I have jurisdiction. Mr Hames submits that I do not, but his argument, which I do not find convincing, assumes that the inherent jurisdiction in play in relation to this aspect of the matter is the inherent jurisdiction in respect of children whereas it is, in my judgment, the inherent declaratory jurisdiction which is here in issue.
[19] The more problematic question is whether I should exercise the jurisdiction, not least bearing in mind, first, that neither the CPS nor the Secretary of State is a party and that, accordingly, neither will be bound by any declaration I may make and, secondly. that the court is traditionally, and for good reason, slow to grant declaratory relief in relation to the criminal law. I am, none the less, persuaded, having regard to the principles set out by Aikens LJ in Rolls-Royce plc v Unite the Union [2009] EWCA Civ 387; [2010] 1 WLR 318, para 120, that I should exercise the jurisdiction. Given the stance being adopted by Mr Hames on behalf of the father, I have the benefit of rigorously adversarial argument. And, at the end of the day, and despite the scepticism expressed both by the advocate to the court and by Mr Hames, I can see advantage, as indeed do both the Crown Prosecution Service and the Home Office, in the court which has determined the question of contempt also deciding whether the contempt is civil or criminal. As Ms Patel put it in her skeleton argument for the hearing before Newton J on 10 March 2016, the mother can properly seek to invoke the adjudicatory powers of the convicting court to clarify whether any of the contempts in question were criminal rather than civil in nature. Mr Summers went even further, submitting that "only the convicting court is able to determine the issue." Ms White expressed scepticism, which I share, as to whether this latter point can be right, and I make clear that this is not the basis of my decision to proceed."
"[120] For the purposes of the present case, I think that the principles in the cases can be summarised as follows.
(1) The power of the court to grant declaratory relief is discretionary.
(2) There must, in general, be a real and present dispute between the parties before the court as to the existence or extent of a legal right between them. However, the claimant does not need to have a present cause of action against the defendant.
(3) Each party must, in general, be affected by the court's determination of the issues concerning the legal right in question.
(4) The fact that the claimant is not a party to the relevant contract in respect of which a declaration is sought is not fatal to an application for a declaration, provided that it is directly affected by the issue.
(5) The court will be prepared to give declaratory relief in respect of a "friendly action" or where there is an "academic question" if all parties so wish, even on "private law" issues. This may particularly be so if it is a "test case", or it may affect a significant number of other cases, and it is in the public interest to decide the issue concerned.
(6) However, the court must be satisfied that all sides of the argument will be fully and properly put. It must therefore ensure that all those affected are either before it or will have their arguments put before the court.
(7) In all cases, assuming that the other tests are satisfied, the court must ask: is this the most effective way of resolving the issues raised? In answering that question it must consider the other options of resolving this issue."
"14F Special guardianship support services
(1) Each local authority must make arrangements for the provision within their area of special guardianship support services, which means—
(a) counselling, advice and information; and
(b) such other services as are prescribed,
in relation to special guardianship.
(2) The power to make regulations under subsection (1)(b) is to be exercised so as to secure that local authorities provide financial support.
(3) At the request of any of the following persons—
(a) a child with respect to whom a special guardianship order is in force;
(b) a special guardian;
(c) a parent;
(d) any other person who falls within a prescribed description,
a local authority may carry out an assessment of that person's needs for special guardianship support services (but, if the Secretary of State so provides in regulations, they must do so if he is a person of a prescribed description, or if his case falls within a prescribed description, or if both he and his case fall within prescribed descriptions).
(4) A local authority may, at the request of any other person, carry out an assessment of that person's needs for special guardianship support services.
(5) Where, as a result of an assessment, a local authority decide that a person has needs for special guardianship support services, they must then decide whether to provide any such services to that person.
(6) If—
(a) a local authority decide to provide any special guardianship support services to a person, and
(b) the circumstances fall within a prescribed description,
the local authority must prepare a plan in accordance with which special guardianship support services are to be provided to him, and keep the plan under review.
(7) The Secretary of State may by regulations make provision about assessments, preparing and reviewing plans, the provision of special guardianship support services in accordance with plans and reviewing the provision of special guardianship support services.
(8) The regulations may in particular make provision—
(a) about the type of assessment which is to be carried out, or the way in which an assessment is to be carried out;
(b) about the way in which a plan is to be prepared;
(c) about the way in which, and the time at which, a plan or the provision of special guardianship support services is to be reviewed;
(d) about the considerations to which a local authority are to have regard in carrying out an assessment or review or preparing a plan;
(e) as to the circumstances in which a local authority may provide special guardianship support services subject to conditions (including conditions as to payment for the support or the repayment of financial support);
(f) as to the consequences of conditions imposed by virtue of paragraph (e) not being met (including the recovery of any financial support provided);
(g) as to the circumstances in which this section may apply to a local authority in respect of persons who are outside that local authority's area;
(h) as to the circumstances in which a local authority may recover from another local authority the expenses of providing special guardianship support services to any person.
(9) A local authority may provide special guardianship support services (or any part of them) by securing their provision by—
(a) another local authority; or
(b) a person within a description prescribed in regulations of persons who may provide special guardianship support services,
and may also arrange with any such authority or person for that other authority or that person to carry out the local authority's functions in relation to assessments under this section.
(10) A local authority may carry out an assessment of the needs of any person for the purposes of this section at the same time as an assessment of his needs is made under any other provision of this Act or under any other enactment.
(11) Section 27 (co-operation between authorities) applies in relation to the exercise of functions of a local authority in England under this section as it applies in relation to the exercise of functions of a local authority under Part 3 and see sections 164 and 164A of the Social Services and Well-being (Wales) Act 2014 for provision about co-operation between local authorities in Wales and other bodies."
"7.— Remuneration for former foster parents
(1) Financial support under this Chapter may include an element of remuneration but only where the decision to include it is taken before the special guardianship order is made and the local authority consider it to be necessary in order to facilitate arrangements for a person to become a special guardian in a case where–
(a) the special guardian or prospective special guardian has been a local authority foster parent in respect of the child; and
(b) an element of remuneration was included in the payments made by the local authority to that person in relation to his fostering the child.
(2) But that element of remuneration ceases to be payable after the expiry of the period of two years from the making of the special guardianship order unless the local authority consider its continuation to be necessary having regard to the exceptional needs of the child or any other exceptional circumstances."
"[29] The law both prescribes the incidence of responsibility and provides for a high degree of flexibility. If a child is a looked-after child then responsibility lies with that authority; if not, it lies with the authority in whose area the child resides. It is therefore of critical importance when a child is placed out of area to have regard as to whether a child should or will remain looked after (i.e. under an interim care order or accommodated) or not (i.e. under a residence order). At the same time the local authorities involved should co-operate from the earliest stage in deciding who will in fact execute the statutory duties that arise and who will fund that work. Local authorities have powers to make sensible arrangements between themselves wherever primary legal responsibility may in fact lie.
[30] The role of the court should also be carefully considered. Section 14F imposes duties on a local authority but it does not empower the family court to direct how or (in some aspects) even whether such duties are to be performed. Moreover the statute gives the court no power to make directions as to payment of money or provision of services. Of course judges may properly express views to local authorities and are entitled no doubt to expect that they will receive serious consideration (just as judges can and do express views about adoption and care plans) and of course it is only the judge who in the end can make the special guardianship order."
DISCUSSION
Application for a Prohibited Steps Order
Jurisdiction to Grant Declaration as to Looked After status
i) When considering whether to grant a declaration or not, the court should take into account justice to the applicant, justice to the respondent, whether the declaration would serve a useful purpose, and whether there are any other special reasons why or why not the court should grant the declaration (Financial Services Authority v Rourke [2002] CPRep 14).ii) A declaration may be refused if it would prejudice the fairness of future proceedings (Amstrad Consumer Electronics Plc v The British Phonographic Industry Ltd [1986] FSR 159).
iii) When considering whether to determine an application for a declaration without a claim for any other remedy in the proceedings in which the declaration (a) the power of the court to grant declaratory relief is discretionary, (b) there must, in general, be a real and present dispute between the parties before the court as to the existence or extent of a legal right between them, although the applicant does not need to have a present cause of action against the respondent, (c) each party must, in general, be affected by the court's determination of the issues concerning the legal right in question, (d) the court must be satisfied that all sides of the argument will be fully and properly put and must therefore ensure that all those affected are either before it or will have their arguments put before the court and (e) in all cases, assuming that the other tests are satisfied, the court must ask: is this the most effective way of resolving the issues raised and, in answering that question, it must consider the other options of resolving this issue (Rolls-Royce Plc v Unite the Union [2010] 1 WLR 318 and Egeneonu v Egeneonu [2017] 4 WLR 100).
CONCLUSION