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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 >> F v J & Ors [2024] EWHC 2802 (Fam) (24 October 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2024/2802.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 2802 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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F |
Applicant |
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- and- |
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J |
First Respondent |
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B |
Second Respondent |
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L (via his Cafcass rule 16.4 Guardian, Allison Baker) |
Third Respondent |
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Mehvish Chaudhry (instructed by Mills & Reeve) for the First and Second Respondent
Siobhan F. Kelly (instructed by Cafcass Legal) for the Third Respondent
Hearing dates: 15 to 18 October 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Trowell:
a. Should F have Parental Responsibility for L;
b. What contact should F have with L.
a. At first, at a frequency of every 8 weeks, contact for 1 hour, then 2 hours, then 3 hours, then 4 hours.
b. Then after 10 or 12 months (so the 5th or 6th session) shifting the frequency to every 4 weeks.
c. Then, when L becomes 3 ½, the duration should extend to 6 to 8 hours.
d. She described this as a base line and thought there should be further and other contact as can be agreed.
a. Any settled intention to move L out of the jurisdiction;
b. Any settled intention to cause L's name to be changed;
c. Any settled intention to cause L to be adopted;
d. Any significant issue as to L's health;
e. Any legal proceedings involving L.
Summary History
Proceedings
a. That F needed permission to bring his application for a child arrangements order. He has twice been refused permission to bring a 'lives with order' and so I am only considering a 'spends time with' or other contact order, and a Parental Responsibility Order.
b. The Guardian proposed some interim contact. J and B resisted that on the basis that they could not cope with it. Dr Pettle was instructed to report on a 'global assessment' basis of all three adults and L. She did, and as a consequence of her expert opinion and a subsequent hearing 4 sessions of contact were arranged with a duration increasing from 30 minutes to 45 minutes. These took place in B's presence. Two of these were observed by the Guardian.
The Evidence
33. I have considered the likely welfare benefit and the welfare detriment implicit in each of the parties' respective, incompatible positions. This is not a harm-neutral exercise. J and B have stressed that for L's sake, to a large extent they are currently coping on a surface level, which belies the deep distress and turbulence they are experiencing and if I have understood them correctly, they feel their coping exterior has been misinterpreted and served against them. They struggled with my early recommendation in support of interim arrangements, with Dr Pettle's assessment findings and as outlined earlier in this report, they continue to struggle with the prospect of arrangements not taking place in line with their proposals. I consider that there is a real risk that their ability to parent L to the best of their ability may be compromised if they are required to make him available for the extensive periods of time proposed by F, which would be to L's detriment. I consider (with mind to Dr Pettle's conclusions) that that risk is likely to reduce if the burden on them of promoting direct arrangements is reduced through a lower frequency of spending time visits.
…
35. My considered opinion is that spending time arrangements between L and F should continue to take place, but not at the frequency either he or J and B propose. [Note here that at the time the report was written the proposal from J and B was for less contact. They increased what they proposed on receipt of the report, to align with the report.] I recognise that all three parties will find my position emotionally difficult and upsetting. In holding my position, I necessarily seek to prioritise L's immediate-to-longer term welfare needs. These include him having the opportunity to develop a relationship with F during his minority, as distinct from such opportunity being pushed into the distant future; but also mitigating the risk that, requiring J and B to promote arrangements will compromise their ability to parent L to the best of their ability.
Arguments and analysis.
a. Degree of commitment shown by the applicant to the child
b. Degree of attachment to the child
c. Reasons for the application.
a. Ms Chaudhry made the point that though J said in evidence that her fear was F would take L away from her, J is also concerned that negotiations over the details of contact, and more generally any debate in relation to L's upbringing, will be disruptive. When considering the order I shall make I do bear that in mind.
b. F does not abandon his argument for 4/14 days and nights contact. Mr Powell rightly recognises that this will not prevail in the face of the evidence of Dr Pettle and Ms Baker that J and B will not be able to cope with it. He tells me that F pursues this argument so that he can say to L and to himself that he tried. I do bear in mind that F has conceded that there should be a 'lives with' order to J and B, but I do ask F to consider going forward that gesture-based litigation will not help J relax about his intentions in relation to L. He is likelier to spend more time with L if J is calm about contact.
a. There is reason to believe that there is a bit of 'over-egging' in relation to J's account of her return to work referred to above. That 'over-egging' occurred in a statement in which she set out how stressed she was in relation to the interim contact application. It is not however anywhere near enough to cause Ms Baker to change her professional view as to J's resilience. I consider that it is not sufficient to alter my view either.
b. For the reasons set out by Ms Baker (and implicit in Dr Pettle's reference to an addendum report), namely that she had the opportunity to consider J and B's state of mind after the interim contact had occurred, I prefer Ms Baker's recommendation to that of Dr Pettle.
c. Mr Powell urges on me that if contact is to be of any use for L it must be once every 4 weeks – otherwise L will simply forget F. Ms Chaudhry urges on me that contact should remain at every 8 weeks because otherwise I am assuming that J and B's resilience will increase when there is no inevitability that it will. Mr Powell's argument fails because I need to balance L's memory with J and B's resilience. Ms Chaudry's argument fails because I am balancing changing risks: Ms Baker is well within the scope of her professional expertise to predict that after a period of time and after repetition of contact the stress associated with contact will reduce.
Conclusion
Mr Justice Trowell
21 October 2024