Re J (Child): CA 25 Nov 1999

The father appealed against refusal of an order requiring his child to be circumcised.

Citations:

[1999] EWCA Civ 3022, (2000) 52 BMLR 82, [2000] 1 FCR 307, [2000] Fam Law 246, [2000] 1 FLR 571

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Children

Updated: 15 July 2022; Ref: scu.268841

B-Q (A Child): CA 30 Apr 2008

Father’s appeal against residence order – possible mistake by CAFCASS and by judge in power to attach power of arrest to injunction.

Judges:

Thorpe LJ, Charles J

Citations:

[2008] EWCA Civ 586

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Children, Family

Updated: 15 July 2022; Ref: scu.268704

In re K (a Child) (Adoption: Permission to advertise): FD 16 Mar 2007

The council wanted to advertise the child for adoption.
Held: Until the adoption panel had decided that adoption was to be recommended, and the appropriate officer also had so decided, the authority could not advertise the child for adoption.

Judges:

McFarlane J

Citations:

Times 13-Apr-2007

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Children

Updated: 15 July 2022; Ref: scu.260309

Cannon v Cannon: CA 19 Oct 2004

The mother had brought the child to the UK wrongfully. She had hidden their identity for more than a year. Upon discovering her, the father came to England and began proceedings for the child’s return to the US.
Held: Because the child’s identity had been hidden, that period could not be counted as settled existence under the Act. The section must be given a broad and purposive construction. Despite the passing of the year, the court retained its discretion to order the return of the child to the US. In exercising its discretion, each case was dependent upon its own facts. ‘Concealment or subterfuge in themselves have many guises and degrees of turpitude. Abduction is itself a wrongful act, in that it breaches rights of custody, but the degree of wrong will vary from case to case. Furthermore abduction may also be a criminal offence in the jurisdiction where it occurred. The abductor may have been prosecuted, convicted, and even sentenced in absentia. There may be an international arrest warrant passed to Interpol to execute either in respect of a conviction and sentence. The abductor may have entered the jurisdiction of flight without right of entry or special leave. The abductor may therefore be, or may rapidly become, an illegal immigrant. ‘ and ‘The fugitive from justice is always alert for any sign that the pursuers are closing in and equally in a state of mental and physical readiness to move on before the approaching arrest. ‘ Such a period should not count.
Thorpe LJ said: ‘For the exercise of a discretion under the Hague Convention requires the court to have due regard to the [overriding] objectives of the Convention whilst acknowledging the importance of the child’s welfare (particularly in a case where the court has found settlement), whereas the consideration of the welfare of the child is paramount if the discretion is exercised in the context of our domestic law.’

Judges:

Thorpe LJ

Citations:

Times 28-Oct-2004, [2004] EWCA Civ 1330, [2005] 1 FLR 169, [2005] 1 WLR 32

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Child Abduction and Custody Act 1985

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedRe N (Minors) (Abduction) FD 2-Jan-1991
The court considered the degree of settlement that had to be proved under the Act: ‘The second question which has arisen is: what is the degree of settlement which has to be demonstrated? There is some force, I find, in the argument that legal . .
Appeal fromRe C (Abduction: Settlement) FD 28-May-2004
The mother had unlawfully and against the father’s wishes, brought the child to the UK from the US. She hid their identity and whereabouts for a year, and resisted the father’s request for his return to the US, saying the child was settled here.
CitedRe M (Abduction: Acquiescence) FD 1996
After referring to the decisions in Re S and in Re N on the issue of whether a child had a settled residence: ‘It seems to me that any survey of the degree of settlement of the child must give weight to emotional and psychological settlement, as . .
CitedM v M FD 8-Oct-1990
. .
CitedRe C (Abduction: Interim Directions: Accommodation by Local Authority) FD 2004
The court delivered a judgment settling the extent of the court’s power to remove a child subject to an abduction application into Local Authority accommodation as an interim measure. . .
CitedRe H, H v H (Child Abduction: Acquiescence) HL 10-Apr-1997
The mother and father were orthodox Jews. The mother brought the children to England from Israel against the father’s wishes. She said that he had acquiesced in their staying here by asking for them to be returned to Israel temporarily. The father . .
CitedRe L (Abduction: Pending Criminal Proceedings) FD 1999
In a child abduction case, the court considered whether a child was settled within the UK if his whereabouts had been hidden: ‘The mother might or might not have demonstrated that the children were now settled in their new environment. The . .
CitedRe H (Abduction: Child of Sixteen) FD 2000
The court considered the position as to whether a child was to be deemed to be settled after having been within the UK for a period of more than one year: ‘It is the case, looking at the relative dates, that these proceedings were commenced after . .
CitedSoucie v Soucie 1995
After noting the approval of In re N in Perrin the court added: ‘Furthermore the question of settlement had to be considered in the context of the spirit of the Convention whereby the fundamental duty of the court is to order a return of the child . .
CitedPerrin v Perrin IHCS 1994
. .
CitedPuttick v Attorney General etc FD 1980
P, a former member of the Baader-Meinhof gang absconded while awaiting trial in Germany. She entered the UK using a passport which she had bought in the name of S, and married P under that name. The German authorities discovered her true identity . .

Cited by:

CitedAF v M B-F FD 22-Feb-2008
The father sought the return of the two children to Poland after they had been brought to England by the mother. She said that she had come to seek work as a dentist, and had been unable to support the family in Poland. She said that her Polish . .
CitedIn re O (Children) CA 16-Feb-2011
The family had Nigerian nationality, but the father also had US nationality. After the split, M wanted to live with the children in Nigeria, and F wanted them with him in the US. On M’s visit to the UK from Nigeria with the children, the father . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Children, International

Updated: 15 July 2022; Ref: scu.216636

In re G (A Child) (Custody Rights: Unmarried Father): FD 28 Oct 2002

The parents were unmarried, living together in England. After the separation, the mother returned to Ireland with the child without informing the father who had continued direct involvement in the child’s care. He now sought an order under the Convention.
Held: In the absence of a parental responsibility order an unmarried father could not acquire sufficient standing to apply under the convention, despite his involvement in the care. Each case however is to be decided on its own facts.

Judges:

Munby J

Citations:

Gazette 12-Dec-2002

Statutes:

Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction 15

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Children

Updated: 15 July 2022; Ref: scu.178435

C and Another v Bury Metropolitan Borough Council: FD 18 Jul 2002

Where a children case involving a challenge to a care plan or the placement of children in care would raise issues under the Human Rights legislation, the case should normally be heard before a High Court judge of the Family Division. If possible it should be listed before a judge with experience also of administrative law. Such cases now involved a broader and more investigative approach than hitherto. The courts have a wide discretion when looking at such matters which also placed greater responsibility on a court.

Judges:

Dame Elizabeth Butler-Sloss

Citations:

Times 25-Jul-2002

Statutes:

European Convention on Human Rights 8

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedRegina (P) v Secretary of State for the Home Department, Regina (Q) v Same QBD 1-Jun-2001
The Prison Service’s policy of refusing to allow children over the age of eighteen months to stay with their mother in prison was lawful. The impairment of family life was an inevitable and inherent part of the imposition of a sentence of . .
CitedRegina (P) v Secretary of State for the Home Department, Regina (Q) v Same QBD 1-Jun-2001
The Prison Service’s policy of refusing to allow children over the age of eighteen months to stay with their mother in prison was lawful. The impairment of family life was an inevitable and inherent part of the imposition of a sentence of . .
CitedIn re M (Care: Challenging decisions by local authority) 2001
. .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Children, Human Rights

Updated: 15 July 2022; Ref: scu.174416

In re L (A child) (Abduction: Jurisdiction): FD 9 Sep 2002

The mother had brought the child from France to England. That removal was wrongful. The father, having begun proceedings in France, sought his return.
Held: The father had not co-operated readily with the UK courts in bringing his application, causing excess delay. The return of the child was discretionary. In this case the child was old enough to be listened to, and to have regard to his views. There was nothing in the Brussels II to give it priority over the defences in the 1980 Hague convention, and the court could hear the application.

Judges:

Ward J

Citations:

Times 14-Oct-2002, Gazette 17-Oct-2002

Statutes:

Council Regulation (EC) No 1347/2000 on Jurisdiction and th Recognition of Judgments in Matrimonial Matters etc, 1980 Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of Child Abduction

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Children

Updated: 15 July 2022; Ref: scu.177413

MH, SB, MB v Local Authority (Supplemental Judgement): FD 3 Aug 2001

The effect of section 12(5)(b) of the Criminal Justice and Court Services Act 2000 was to continue the appointment of a child’s guardian ad litem after the making of a supervision order until the order expired or the guardian’s appointment was terminated by the court. His functions should be carefully defined to provide a specific and identified role and there should be no duplication or confusion between the role of the local authority and that of the guardian.

Judges:

Mr Justice Wall

Citations:

Times 15-Nov-2001, FPC 178/00162/163 and FPC 96 OO/8899

Statutes:

Criminal Justice and Court Services Act 2000 12(5)(b), Children Act 1989

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Family, Children

Updated: 15 July 2022; Ref: scu.166189

Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council v Grant: FD 17 Sep 2001

The council cancelled the respondent’s registration as a child minder. The respondent appealed to the Magistrates, and succeeded, the court finding that the process undertaken by the council had infringed his rights. On appeal the council succeeded. The magistrates should have looked beyond procedural issues. The appeal to them required a hearing de novo. The matter was remitted to be heard before a different bench. Though the case should have been heard by magistrates who were members of the family panel, that was not sufficient itself to vitiate the decision.

Judges:

Wall J

Citations:

Gazette 25-Oct-2001

Statutes:

Magistrates Courts Act 1980, Children Act 1989 77(6), Human Rights Act 1998

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Licensing, Children, Magistrates

Updated: 15 July 2022; Ref: scu.166696

In re N (A Child): FD 6 Aug 2009

Judges:

Munby J

Citations:

[2009] EWHC 2096 (Fam)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

See AlsoN (A Child), Re; A v G (Family Proceedings: Disclosure) FD 8-Jul-2009
Application in respect of the proposed disclosure to the General Medical Council (GMC) of an expert report produced in the course of and for the purposes of proceedings in relation to a child. . .
See AlsoIn re N (A Child); A v G FD 17-Jul-2009
The unmarried parents fought bitterly over residence contact with the child. . .
CitedLondon Borough of Sutton v Davis (Costs) (No 2) 1994
In cases involving children costs awarded against one parent or another are exceptional since the court is anxious to avoid the situation where a parent may feel ‘punished’ by the other parent which will reduce co-operation between them. This will . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Children, Costs

Updated: 15 July 2022; Ref: scu.372700

NS-H v Kingston Upon Hull City Council and Another: CA 14 May 2008

It will occasionally be proper for the court to grant a parent leave to apply to revoke a placement order under section 24(2)(a) of the 2002 Act 2002 notwithstanding the absence at present of any real prospect that a court would find it to be in the interests of the child to return to live with the parent. The test was whether, in all the circumstances, including the parents’ prospects of securing revocation and the child’s interests, leave should be given.

Citations:

[2008] EWCA Civ 493, Times 28-May-2008

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Adoption and Children Act 2002 24(2)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Children

Updated: 14 July 2022; Ref: scu.267655

RP v Nottingham City Council (Includes Official Solicitor Statement): CA 8 May 2008

The court looked at the role of the official solicitor in Part IV proceedings when giving his consent to act and when acting for a parent when that parent is alleged to lack litigation capacity and is said to be a ‘protected party’ within the meaning of the court rules.
Held: There had not been an infringement of the mother’s human rights. Though the official solicitor had conceded the case that was proper in the face of overwhelming evidence.

Judges:

Wall LJ

Citations:

[2008] EWCA Civ 462, Times 10-Jun-2008

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Children Act 1989

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Children, Litigation Practice

Updated: 14 July 2022; Ref: scu.267557

E v E: FD 20 Feb 2007

The father came to England and met the mother. They had a family, moving to Australia after the birth of the first child and moved back to England. AFter they flew back to Australia, the mother again returned to England with the children. The father now sought their return.
Held: Before leaving for Australia on the last occasion, the mother had made it clear that it was not her intention to stay there.

Judges:

Sir Mark Potter P

Citations:

[2007] EWHC 276 (Fam), [2007] 1 FLR 1977, [2007] Fam Law 480

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Child Abduction and Custody Act 1985

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Children

Updated: 14 July 2022; Ref: scu.267147

Grunkin and Paul v Grunkin-Paul and Standesamt Stadt Niebull: ECJ 24 Apr 2008

ECJ (European Citizenship) Opinion Citizenship of the Union – Prohibition of discrimination on grounds of nationality Freedom of movement and residence – Personal names – Conflict of laws – Surname determined and subsequently changed in accordance with the law of the Member State of birth and habitual residence – Non-recognition by the Member State of nationality.

Judges:

Sharpston AG

Citations:

C-353/06, [2008] EUECJ C-353/06 – O

Links:

Bailii

Cited by:

OpinionGrunkin and Paul v Grunkin-Paul and Standesamt Stadt Niebull ECJ 14-Oct-2008
ECJ Judgment – Right to move and reside freely within the territory of the Member States – Private international law relating to surnames Applicable law determined by nationality alone – Minor child born and . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

European, Children

Updated: 14 July 2022; Ref: scu.267103

C v Crown Prosecution Service: Admn 8 Feb 2008

The court considered the practice of hearing submissions from the media in relation to reporting restrictions.
Held: Thomas LJ rejected the submission that, in conducting the Re S balancing exercise the Court should have regard to the public profile of the appellant: ‘That is because it is fundamental that all persons are equal before the law of England and Wales, as embodied in our common law, our legislation and the Conventions to which this party (sic) has subscribed . . No person in this country can enjoy a different status because he holds a public position. It is important to stress that.’

Judges:

Brooke LJ, Thomas LJ

Citations:

[2008] EWHC 854 (Admin)

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2008/854.html 39(5)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

See AlsoCrawford v Crown Prosecution Service Admn 4-Feb-2008
. .

Cited by:

CitedMohamed, Regina (on the Application of) v Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs (No 4) Admn 4-Feb-2009
In an earlier judgment, redactions had been made relating to reports by the US government of its treatment of the claimant when held by them at Guantanamo bay. The claimant said he had been tortured and sought the documents to support his defence of . .
CitedChild X (Residence and Contact- Rights of Media Attendance) (Rev 2) FD 14-Jul-2009
The father applied to the court to have the media excluded from the hearing into the residence and contact claims relating to his daughter.
Held: It was for the party seeking such an order to justify it. In deciding whether or not to exclude . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Magistrates, Children, Media

Updated: 14 July 2022; Ref: scu.267080

B v London Borough of Lewisham and Another: Admn 17 Apr 2008

Judges:

Black J

Citations:

[2008] EWHC 738 (Admin)

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Special Guardianship Regulations 2005, National Assistance Act 1948 21 24, Adoption and Children Act 2002

Cited by:

CitedBarrett v Kirklees Metropolitan Council Admn 12-Mar-2010
The claimant challenged the policy of the defendant to pay support to special guardians appointed under the 2002 Act at two thirds only of the rate it paid in fostering allowance.
Held: The policy was a substantial and insufficiently justified . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Children, Local Government

Updated: 14 July 2022; Ref: scu.266962

T (A Child) v Wakefield Metropolitan District Council: CA 19 Mar 2008

A supervision order had been made for twelve months. There was a concern at contact with the mother’s mother’s partner. The father appealed refusal of an order extending the period to three years.
Held: Such an order was permissible.

Judges:

Lord Justice Thorpe, Lady Justice Arden and Lord Justice Hughes

Citations:

[2008] EWCA Civ 199, Times 14-Apr-2008

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Children Act 1989 31 Sch3 6

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

AppliedIn Re A (A Minor) (Supervision Order: Extension) CA 11-Nov-1994
Justices do not have the power to make an interim care order pending a later hearing on the extension of an existing supervision order. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Children

Updated: 14 July 2022; Ref: scu.266392

Uhd v Mckay: FD 15 May 2019

Application under the Child Abduction and Custody Act 1985 for an order pursuant to Art 12 of the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction (hereafter the 1980 Convention) directing the summary return of Ruby Margaret McKay-Uhd, born in December 2015 and now aged 3 years old, to the jurisdiction of Australia. The application is brought by the father of Ruby, Peter Stewart Uhd (hereafter ‘the father’). The father also applies under the 1996 Hague Convention to enforce certain orders he secured following Ruby’s abduction in ongoing children proceedings in the jurisdiction of Australia, requiring the return of Ruby to that jurisdiction (the father making clear he does not seek to enforce a concurrent order requiring Ruby to be placed in his care on return).
Held: M had repeatedly misrepresented the proceedings in Australia. Order for return.

Judges:

Justice MacDonald

Citations:

[2019] EWHC 1239 (Fam)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Children, International

Updated: 14 July 2022; Ref: scu.639757

RJ v Tigipko and Others: FD 4 Jun 2019

‘application before me is for positive orders against the paternal grandfather (as I shall call him) and Slava (as I shall call him) in circumstances where I had assumed that there would today be in being a valid, effective, extant application in the Ukraine for recognition and enforcement pursuant to the 1996 Hague Convention. It was implicit in my agreement to this application being listed for today that it would be supplemental or ancillary to such a valid, effective, albeit as yet unadjudicated, application. However, it now appears that there is in fact today no such valid application in being.’

Judges:

Mostyn J

Citations:

[2019] EWHC 1579 (Fam)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Children, International

Updated: 14 July 2022; Ref: scu.639766

SN, PN and CN, Regina (on The Application of) v London Borough of Enfield London Borough of Haringey: Admn 29 Mar 2019

Challenge to the First Defendant’s decision to cease providing the claimants with accommodation and subsistence under section 17 of the Children Act 1989 following an assessment of their needs.

Judges:

Anne Whyte QC

Citations:

[2019] EWHC 793 (Admin)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Local Government, Children

Updated: 14 July 2022; Ref: scu.639685

Scott v Scott: HL 5 May 1913

Presumption in Favour of Open Proceedings

There had been an unauthorised dissemination by the petitioner to third parties of the official shorthand writer’s notes of a nullity suit which had been heard in camera. An application was made for a committal for contempt.
Held: The House equated the contempt to a breach of an injunction and held that the Court had jurisdiction to make a punitive order.
The House emphasised the need in general for the openness in court proceedings, leading to a presumption in favour of publication. There was however an exception for cases involving children. Because matrimonial proceedings ‘affect status’, the public has a general interest which the parties cannot exclude.
Lord Shaw of Dunfermline explained the reasons for privacy in wardship proceedings: ‘Upon this head it is true that to the application of the general rule of publicity there are three well recognized exceptions which arise out of the nature of the proceedings themselves.
The three exceptions which are acknowledged to the application of the rule prescribing the publicity of courts of justice are first in suits affecting wards; secondly in lunacy proceedings; and thirdly where secrecy . . is of the essence of the cause. The first two of these cases, my Lords, depend upon the familiar principle that the jurisdiction over wards and lunatics is exercised by the judges representing His Majesty as parens patriae. The affairs are truly private affairs; the transactions are transactions truly intra familiam; and it has long been recognised that an appeal for the protection of the court in the case of such persons does not involve the consequence of placing in the light of publicity their truly domestic affairs . . But I desire to add this further observation with regard to all these cases, my Lords, that, when respect has thus been paid to the object of the suit, the rule of publicity may be resumed. I know of no principle which would entitle a court to compel a ward to remain silent for life in regard to judicial proceedings which occurred during his tutelage’ and
‘There is no greater danger of usurpation than that which proceeds little by little, under cover of rules of procedure and at the instance of judges themselves.’ and ‘The policy of widening the area of secrecy is always a serious one; but this is for Parliament, and those to whom the subject has been consigned by Parliament, to consider.’
Lord Shaw of Dunfermline also observed: ‘It is needless to quote authority on this topic from legal, philosophical, or historical writers. It moves Bentham over and over again. ‘In the darkness of secrecy, sinister interest and evil in every shape have full swing. Only in proportion as publicity has place can any of the checks applicable to judicial injustice operate. Where there is no publicity there is no justice’. ‘Publicity is the very soul of justice. It is the keenest spur to exertion and the surest of all guards against improbity. It keeps the judge himself while trying under trial’. ‘The security of securities is publicity’. But amongst historians the grave and enlightened verdict of Hallam, in which he ranks the publicity of judicial proceedings even higher than the rights of Parliament as a guarantee of public security, is not likely to be forgotten: ‘Civil liberty in this kingdom has two direct guarantees; the open administration of justice according to known laws truly interpreted, and fair constructions of evidence; and the right of Parliament, without let or interruption, to inquire into, and obtain redress of, public grievances. Of these, the first is by far the most indispensable; nor can the subjects of any State be reckoned to enjoy a real freedom, where this condition is not found both in its judicial institutions and in their constant exercise.’ I myself should be very slow indeed (I shall speak of the exceptions hereafter) to throw any doubt upon this topic. The right of the citizen and the working of the Constitution in the sense which I have described have upon the whole since the fall of the Stuart dynasty received from the judiciary – and they appear to me still to demand of it – a constant and most watchful respect. There is no greater danger of usurpation than that which proceeds little by little, under cover of rules of procedure, and at the instance of judges themselves. I must say frankly that I think these encroachments have taken place by way of judicial procedure in such a way as, insensibly at first, but now culminating in this decision most sensibly, to impair the rights, safety, and freedom of the citizen and the open administration of the law.’
Earl Loreburn said: ‘In all cases where the public has been excluded with admitted propriety the underlying principle, as it seems to me, is that the administration of justice would be rendered impracticable by their presence, whether because the case could not be effectively tried, or the parties entitled to justice would be reasonably deterred from seeking it at the hands of the Court.’ and ‘the Divorce Court is bound by the general rule of publicity applicable to the High Court and subject to the same exception.’
Viscount Haldane LC said: ‘As to the proposition that the Divorce Court has inherited the power to hear in camera of the Ecclesiastical Courts, I am of opinion that, since the Divorce Act of 1857, it has been untrue of every class of case, and not merely of suits for divorce strictly so called. I am in accord with the reasoning of Bramwell B, in the case I have already referred to [H (Falsely Called C) v C (1859) 29 LJ (PandM) 29], which led him to the conclusion that the Court which the statute constituted is a new Court governed by the same principles, so far as publicity is concerned, as govern other Courts’ and ”While the broad principle is that the Courts of this country must, as between parties, administer justice in public, this principle is subject to apparent exceptions, such as those to which I have referred. But the exceptions are themselves the outcome of a yet more fundamental principle that the chief object of courts of justice must be to secure that justice is done. As the paramount object must always be to do justice, the general rule as to publicity, after all only the means to an end, must accordingly yield. But the burden lies on those seeking to displace its application in a particular case to make out that the ordinary rule must as of necessity be superseded by this paramount consideration. I think that to justify an order for hearing in camera it must be shown that the paramount object of securing that justice is done would really be rendered doubtful of attainment if the order were not made. ‘
and ‘in all cases where the public has been excluded with admitted propriety the underlying principle, as it seems to me, is that the administration of justice would be rendered impracticable by their presence, whether because the case could not be effectively tried, or the parties entitled to justice would be reasonably deterred from seeking it at the hands of the Court.’
Lord Atkinson said: ‘The hearing of a case in public may be, and often is, no doubt, painful, humiliating, or deterrent both to parties and witnesses, and in many cases, especially those of a criminal nature, the details may be so indecent as to tend to injure public morals, but all this is tolerated and endured, because it is felt that in public trial is to found, on the whole, the best security for the pure, impartial, and efficient administration of justice, the best means for winning for it public confidence and respect.’

Judges:

Lord Shaw of Dunfermline, Viscount Haldane LC, Lord Loreburn, Lord Atkinson

Citations:

[1912] P 241, [1913] AC 417, 29 TLR 520, [1911-13] All ER 1, [1913] UKHL 2

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Divorce Act 1857 45

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedRex v Clement CEC 1821
After the trial for high treason of those involved in the Cato Street Conspiracy in 1820, Clement, the editor of a newspaper was punished for contempt. There had been a series of trials, but the judge said they had to be treated as one set of . .
CitedSkipworth’s Case, Onslow v Skipworth; Regina v Castro 1873
The Attorney-General proceeded against the respondent for contempt, at the request of the Court, and ‘as the representative of the profession’. A contempt may be severe where an insult is offered in court to the judge who presides, or where a . .

Cited by:

CitedAllan v Clibbery (1) CA 30-Jan-2002
Save in cases involving children and ancillary and other situations requiring it, cases in the family division were not inherently private. The appellant failed to obtain an order that details of an action under the section should not be disclosed . .
CitedAttorney-General v Leveller Magazine Ltd HL 1-Feb-1979
The appellants were magazines and journalists who published, after committal proceedings, the name of a witness, a member of the security services, who had been referred to as Colonel B during the hearing. An order had been made for his name not to . .
CitedRe S (A Child) CA 10-Jul-2003
The mother of the child on behalf of whom the application was made, was to face trial for murder. The child was in care and an order was sought to restrain publiction of material which might reveal his identity, including matters arising during the . .
CitedMoscow City Council v Bankers Trust Company and Another QBD 5-Jun-2003
Proceedings before an arbitrator were governed by rule 62.10, which provided its own entire code, and imposed a presumption in favour of privacy. The principles of Scott v Scott need not apply. Scott would now be decided under analogous reasonings . .
CitedKent County Council v The Mother, The Father, B (By Her Children’s Guardian); Re B (A Child) (Disclosure) FD 19-Mar-2004
The council had taken the applicant’s children into care alleging that the mother had harmed them. In the light of the subsequent cases casting doubt on such findings, the mother sought the return of her children. She applied now that the hearings . .
CitedIndependent Publishing Company Limited v The Attorney General of Trinidad and Tobago, The Director of Public Prosecutions PC 8-Jun-2004
PC (Trinidad and Tobago) The newspapers had been accused of contempt of court having reported matters in breach of court orders, and the editors committed to prison after a summary hearing: ‘In deciding whether . .
CitedPelling v Bruce-Williams, Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs intervening CA 5-Jul-2004
The applicant sought an order that his application for a joint residence order should be held in public.
Held: Though there was some attractiveness in the applicant’s arguments, the issue had been fully canvassed by the ECHR. The time had come . .
CitedRegina v Legal Aid Board ex parte Kaim Todner (a Firm of Solicitors) CA 10-Jun-1998
Limitation on Making of Anonymity Orders
A firm of solicitors sought an order for anonymity in their proceedings against the LAB, saying that being named would damage their interests irrespective of the outcome.
Held: The legal professions have no special part in the law as a party . .
CitedRegina v Westminster City Council Ex Parte Castelli QBD 14-Aug-1995
An applicant, who was HIV positive, wished his identity to be concealed.
Held: Some publicity had already occurred A Contempt of Court anonymity order was not to be used to protect a litigant’s privacy. . .
CitedIn re S (a Child) (Identification: Restrictions on Publication) HL 28-Oct-2004
Inherent High Court power may restrain Publicity
The claimant child’s mother was to be tried for the murder of his brother by poisoning with salt. It was feared that the publicity which would normally attend a trial, would be damaging to S, and an application was made for reporting restrictions to . .
CitedIn re F (otherwise A ) (A Minor) (Publication of Information) CA 1977
An allegation of contempt was made in proceedings related to the publication by a newspaper of extracts from a report by a social worker and a report by the Official Solicitor, both prepared after the commencement and for the purpose of the wardship . .
CitedBennett v Officers A and B and Commissioner of Police for the Metropolis CA 2-Nov-2004
Police Officers had been involved in a shooting in which a man died. They were granted anonymity before the coroner’s court, on evidence suggesting they might be at risk. The family of the deceased appealed.
Held: The coroner misdirected . .
CitedHome Office v Hariette Harman HL 11-Feb-1982
The defendant had permitted a journalist to see documents revealed to her as in her capacity as a solicitor in the course of proceedings.
Held: The documents were disclosed under an obligation to use them for the instant case only. That rule . .
DiscussedRegina v Chief Registrar Friendly Societies, ex parte Newcross Building Society 1984
. .
CitedThree Rivers District Council and others v The Bank of England CA 14-Jul-2005
A long hearing was to be interrupted by the long vacation. The Bank sought an order to restrict publication of the part evidence given by one witness until his evidence had been concluded.
Held: Though the witness was only such and not a . .
CitedA Local Authority v W L W T and R; In re W (Children) (Identification: Restrictions on Publication) FD 14-Jul-2005
An application was made by a local authority to restrict publication of the name of a defendant in criminal proceedings in order to protect children in their care. The mother was accused of having assaulted the second respondent by knowingly . .
CitedBritish Broadcasting Company v Rochdale Metropolitan Borough Council and X and Y FD 24-Nov-2005
Application was made by the claimant for orders discharging an order made in 1991 to protect the identity of children and social workers embroiled in allegations of satanic sex abuse. The defendant opposed disclosure of the names of two social . .
CitedClayton v Clayton CA 27-Jun-2006
The family had been through protracted family law proceedings and had been subject to orders restricting identification. The father now wanted to discuss his experiences and to campaign. He could not do so without his child being identified.
CitedNorfolk County Council v Webster and others FD 1-Nov-2006
The claimants wished to claim that they were victims of a miscarriage of justice in the way the Council had dealt with care proceedings. They sought that the proceedings should be reported without the children being identified.
Held: A judge . .
CitedRe X (Disclosure of Information) FD 2001
There cannot be an expectation that expert evidence given in a children’s court will always stay confidential. The various aspects of confidentiality will have greater or lesser weight on the facts of each case. Munby J: ‘Wrapped up in this concept . .
CitedLord Browne of Madingley v Associated Newspapers Ltd CA 3-Apr-2007
The appellant sought to restrict publication by the defendants in the Mail on Sunday of matters which he said were a breach of confidence. He had lied to a court in giving evidence, whilst at the same time being ready to trash the reputation of his . .
CitedAziz v Aziz and others CA 11-Jul-2007
The claimant sought return of recordings and of money paid to the defendant through an alleged fraud or threats. She was the former wife of the Sultan of Brunei and head of state, who now sought an order requiring the court to protect his identity . .
CitedLM, Re (Reporting Restrictions; Coroner’s Inquest) FD 1-Aug-2007
A child had died. In earlier civil proceedings, the court had laid responsibility with the mother. Restrictions had been placed on the information which would effectively prevent the coroner conducting his inquest. The coroner sought a lifting of . .
CitedRegina v Davis HL 18-Jun-2008
The defendant had been tried for the murder of two men by shooting them at a party. He was identified as the murderer by three witnesses who had been permitted to give evidence anonymously, from behind screens, because they had refused, out of fear, . .
CitedMurungaru v Secretary of State for the Home Department and others CA 12-Sep-2008
The claimant was a former Kenyan minister. He had been visiting the UK for medical treatment. His visas were cancelled on the basis that his presence was not conducive to the public good. Public Interest Immunity certificates had been issued to . .
CitedTimes Newspapers Ltd and others v Regina and others CMAC 24-Oct-2008
Anonymity not to be by secret trial
The newspaper appealed against an order for the defendant soldiers’ trial to be held in camera.
Held: Section 94(2) could not be used to provide anonymity. The court relied on its common law powers under which: ‘for us to be entitled to make . .
CitedTimes Newspapers Ltd and others v Soldier B CACD 24-Oct-2008
(Court’s Martial Appeal Court) The newspaper appealed against an order under section 94 of the 1955 Act restricting the identification of the defendants. The judge had said there would be a threat to both the safety of the defendants and as to the . .
CitedMohamed, Regina (on the Application of) v Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs (No 4) Admn 4-Feb-2009
In an earlier judgment, redactions had been made relating to reports by the US government of its treatment of the claimant when held by them at Guantanamo bay. The claimant said he had been tortured and sought the documents to support his defence of . .
CitedChild X (Residence and Contact- Rights of Media Attendance) (Rev 2) FD 14-Jul-2009
The father applied to the court to have the media excluded from the hearing into the residence and contact claims relating to his daughter.
Held: It was for the party seeking such an order to justify it. In deciding whether or not to exclude . .
CitedAl Rawi and Others v The Security Service and Others QBD 18-Nov-2009
The claimants sought damages from the defendants saying that they had been held and ill treated at various detention centres by foreign authorities, but with the involvement of the defendants. The defendants sought to bring evidence before the court . .
CitedDoctor A and Others v Ward and Another FD 8-Jan-2010
Parents wished to publicise the way care proceedings had been handled, naming the doctors, social workers and experts some of whom had been criticised. Their names had been shown as initials so far, and interim contra mundum orders had been made . .
CitedAl Rawi and Others v The Security Service and Others CA 4-May-2010
Each claimant had been captured and mistreated by the US government, and claimed the involvement in and responsibility for that mistreatment by the respondents. The court was asked whether a court in England and Wales, in the absence of statutory . .
CitedHarper and Another, Regina (on The Application of) v Aldershot Magistrates Court Admn 8-Jun-2010
Police defendants not to have addresses withheld
The defendants, senior police officers were accused of misconduct in public office, being said to have sought improperly to interfere in prosecutions for speeding. They appealed against refusal by the magistrates to have their addresses protected. . .
CitedJIH v News Group Newspapers Ltd CA 31-Jan-2011
Principles on Request for Anonymity Order
The defendant appealed against an order granting the anonymisation of the proceeedings.
Held: The critical question is whether there is sufficient general public interest in publishing a report of proceedings which identifies a party by name, . .
CitedAl Rawi and Others v The Security Service and Others SC 13-Jul-2011
The claimant pursued a civil claim for damages, alleging complicity of the respondent in his torture whilst in the custody of foreign powers. The respondent sought that certain materials be available to the court alone and not to the claimant or the . .
CitedGuardian News and Media Ltd, Regina (on The Application of) v City of Westminster Magistrates’ Court CA 3-Apr-2012
The newspaper applied for leave to access documents referred to but not released during the course of extradition proceedings in open court.
Held: The application was to be allowed. Though extradition proceedings were not governed by the Civil . .
CitedPressdram Ltd v Whyte ChD 30-May-2012
The respondent had been involved in company director disqualification proceedings some 12 years earlier. The claimant, publisher of Private Eye sought disclosure of the associated court papers.
Held: The applicant had provided appropriate . .
CitedChan v Alvis Vehicles Ltd and Another ChD 8-Dec-2004
The parties had had a part trial, and settled. The Gardian Newspaper now applied for disclosure of various documents to support a proposed news story. The parties had disputed payment to the claimant of commissions on the sales of military vehicles . .
CitedABC Ltd v Y ChD 6-Dec-2010
There had been proceedings as to the misuse of confidential information. X, a non-party, now sought disclosure of papers used in that case. The case had been settled by means of a Tomlin Schedule, and that, subject to further order, non-parties . .
CitedMX v Dartford and Gravesham NHS Trust and Others CA 17-Feb-2015
Application was made for approval of a compromise of a claim for damages for personal injury for the child. The court now considered whether an order should be made to protect the identity of the six year old claimant.
Held: An order should . .
CitedH v A (No2) FD 17-Sep-2015
The court had previously published and then withdrawn its judgment after third parties had been able to identify those involved by pulling together media and internet reports with the judgment.
Held: The judgment case should be published in . .
CitedA v British Broadcasting Corporation (Scotland) SC 8-May-2014
Anonymised Party to Proceedings
The BBC challenged an order made by the Court of Session in judicial review proceedings, permitting the applicant review to delete his name and address and substituting letters of the alphabet, in the exercise (or, as the BBC argues, purported . .
CitedPNM v Times Newspapers Ltd and Others SC 19-Jul-2017
No anonymity for investigation suspect
The claimant had been investigated on an allegation of historic sexual abuse. He had never been charged, but the investigation had continued with others being convicted in a high profile case. He appealed from refusal of orders restricting . .
CitedRegina (on the application of C) v Secretary of State for Justice SC 27-Jan-2016
The applicant was a convicted murderer who had been held in a high security mental hospital. His application for unescorted leave had been refused, and he wished to challenge the decisions. Anonymity in the subsequent proceedings had been refused to . .
CitedSarker, Regina v CACD 13-Jun-2018
The defendant was to face trial under the 2006 Act. He applied for an order under section 4(2) of the 1981 Act postponing the reporting of the proceedings on the grounds that knowledge by the jury of the inquiry and police investigation would be . .
CitedStorer v British Gas plc CA 25-Feb-2000
An industrial tribunal hearing conducted behind the locked doors of the chairman’s office was not held in public, even if, in fact, no member of the public was prevented from attending. The obligation to sit in public was fundamental, and the . .
CitedMiller, Regina (on the Application of) v The Prime Minister; Cherry QC v Lord Advocate SC 24-Sep-2019
Prerogative act of prorogation was justiciable.
The Prime Minister had prorogued Parliament for a period of five weeks, leaving only a short time for Parliament to debate and act the forthcoming termination of the membership by the UK of the EU. The Scottish Court had decided (Cherry) that the . .
CitedXXX v Camden London Borough Council CA 11-Nov-2020
Anonymity in Court Proceedings – No two stage test
XXX appealed against the refusal to make orders anonymising her name and redacting certain details from published judgments. The appeal raised a point about the proper approach to applications for anonymisation under CPR 39.2. She brought . .
CitedImam, Regina (on The Application of) v The London Borough of Croydon (Anonymity request) Admn 26-Mar-2021
Anonymity Not Necessary under CPR 3.92.
Judgment on the Claimant’s application for an order under CPR 39.2(4) that her name be anonymised in these proceedings by the use of a cipher and that restrictions should be imposed on the reporting of her identity. She said that publication of her . .
CitedGallagher v Gallagher (No 1) (Reporting Restrictions) FC 13-Jun-2022
Private Hearings are Not in Secret
H sought an order restricting reporting of the divorce financial remedy proceedings, or an anonymity order.
Held: The application was refused save as to identification of the children, and certain tax matters. The hearing was listed as in . .
CitedLu v Solicitors Regulation Authority Admn 6-Jul-2022
No Unmnecessary Anoniymity
The appellant, having been acquitted of misconduct, complained of the anonymisation of various partied by the SDT.
Held: The court was critical of the approach taken by the Tribunal. ‘I see no good reason why Ms Pearson, Ms Stone, Mr Ewing and . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Media, Administrative, Children, Contempt of Court, Constitutional

Leading Case

Updated: 14 July 2022; Ref: scu.182846

In re KH (A Child): FD 5 Oct 2012

Application by an NHS Trust for declarations in relation to the best interests of a boy known in the proceedings as KH. The Trust seeks approval of a medical treatment plan which comes before the court because there are some matters that are not agreed and because the treatment plan involves the withholding of life-sustaining treatment in the event of a serious deterioration in KH’s condition.

Judges:

Peter Jackson J

Citations:

[2012] EWHC B18 (Fam), [2013] Med LR 70, [2013] Fam Law 34

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Children, Health, Human Rights

Updated: 13 July 2022; Ref: scu.464868

AS (Somalia) and Another v Entry Clearance Officer, Addis Ababa and Another: CA 29 Feb 2008

When considering an appeal against the refusal of entry clearance, the court must consider only the circumstances as applied at the date of the refusal.

Citations:

[2008] EWCA Civ 149, Times 14-Apr-2008

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Nationality, Asylum and Immigration Act 2002 82(1)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedMK (Somalia) and others v Entry Clearance Officer and Another CA 19-Dec-2008
The appellants’ mother had been thrown into a well after resisting attempts to rape her. They had then been cared for by another family member who had, along with her natural children been granted asylum here. They appealed refusal of asylum. They . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Immigration, Children

Updated: 13 July 2022; Ref: scu.266013

M, Regina (on the Application of) v London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham: HL 27 Feb 2008

M, a girl aged 16 had become estranged from her mother, and sought housing assistance. She was not referred to the authority’s children’s services, and was not housed. The House examined the duties of local authorities under the section towards children aged 16 and 17 without support from their families. The 1989 Act referred to ‘a child who is looked after by a local authority’.
Held: ‘there is all the difference in the world between the services which an eligible, relevant or former relevant child can expect from her local children’s services authority, to make up for the lack of proper parental support and guidance within the family, and the sort of help which a young homeless person, even if in priority need, can expect from her local housing authority. ‘ Whilst her claim might have better been referred to the childrens serbices department by the Housing department to whom she applied, but they did not. ‘The claim is for the extra help and support available to former relevant children, even after they reach the age of 18, under section 23C of the 1989 Act. To be a relevant child, one must first have been an eligible child: section 23A(1). To be an eligible child one must have been ‘looked after’ by a local authority for the requisite period of time.’ Without having come to the attention of the Children’s Services department, the authority had not provided her with care sufficient for her to become a ‘relevant child’ within section 20.

Judges:

Lord Hoffmann, Lord Scott of Foscote, Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe, Baroness Hale of Richmond, Lord Brown of Eaton-under-Heywood

Citations:

[2008] UKHL 14, [2008] Fam Law 515, (2008) 11 CCL Rep 302, [2008] BLGR 159, [2008] 4 All ER 271, [2008] 1 WLR 535, [2008] 3 FCR 688, [2008] 1 FLR 1384

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Children Act 1989 22(1), Housing Act 1996 Part VII

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appeal fromM, Regina (on the Application of) v Hammersmith and Fulham CA 5-Jul-2006
The court examined ‘a short but important point on the inter-relationship between the provisions of Part III of the Children Act 1989, headed ‘Local Authority Support for Children and Families’, and the homelessness provisions of Part VII of the . .
CitedRegina v London Borough of Barnet ex parte G; Regina v London Borough of Lambeth ex parte W; Regina v London Borough of Lambeth ex parte A HL 23-Oct-2003
The applicants sought to oblige the local authority, in compliance with its duties under the 1989 Act, to provide a home for children, and where necessary an accompanying adult.
Held: There were four hurdles for the applicants to cross. They . .
CitedSouthwark, London Borough of v D CA 7-Mar-2007
The social worker arranged for D, unable to live with her father because he was violent towards her, to live with his fomer partner. The court was asked whether the local authority had simply facilitated a private fostering arrangement, in which . .
CitedH and others v London Borough of Wandsworth and others Admn 23-Apr-2007
In three linked cases, unaccompanied asylum-seeking children had had assistance with housing from the local social services authorities. They claimed entitlement to support as former relevant children under section 20. The local authorities argued . .
CitedS, Regina (on the Application of) v London Borough of Sutton CA 26-Jul-2007
The local authority owed the section 20(1) duty towards a 17 year old girl who was about to be released from a Secure Training Centre. It argued however that the duty no longer applied because she had agreed to go to a hostel for homeless women . .
CitedL, Regina (on the Application of) v Nottinghamshire County Council Admn 26-Sep-2007
A social worker arranged for L, a seriously troubled young person who had been evicted from her mother’s home, to live for a few days in an hotel.
Held: As she had previously been looked after by the local authority for some time, this would . .

Cited by:

CitedG, Regina (on the Application of) v London Borough Of Southwark HL 20-May-2009
The House was asked whether when a child of 16 or 17 who was ejected from home and presents himself to a local children’s services authority and asks to be accommodated by them under section 20 of the Children Act 1989, it is open to that authority . .
CitedA, Regina (on the Application of) v London Borough of Croydon SC 26-Nov-2009
The applicants sought asylum, and, saying that they were children under eighteen, sought also the assistance of the local authority. Social workers judged them to be over eighteen and assistance was declined.
Held: The claimants’ appeals . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Children, Housing

Updated: 13 July 2022; Ref: scu.265968

In re C (a Child) (Care proceedings: Care plan); Regina (C) v Waltham Forest London Borough Council: Admn 28 Mar 2002

An application was made to put a child in care. The local authority created a care plan involving placing the child for adoption with a Jewish family. The mother wanted to have the child placed with long term foster parents, with some continuing contact. The guardian also had reservations about the scheme, because of the different religious background of the proposed adopters. An application for judicial review of the authority’s plan was presented.
Held: The correct procedure to challenge the care plan, was to make application within the care proceedings. The application for judicial review had added a six month delay. The proposed plan would be approved. The proposed adopters were committed to the child being brought up respectful of her origins.

Judges:

Justice Wilson

Citations:

Times 18-Apr-2002

Statutes:

Local Authority Social Services Act 1970

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Children, Judicial Review, Adoption

Updated: 13 July 2022; Ref: scu.169836

Just for Kids Law, Regina (on The Application of) v Secretary of State for The Home Department: Admn 8 Jul 2019

The claimant organisation challenged the procedures applying to protect children when used as covert intelligence sources.

Judges:

Supperstone J

Citations:

[2019] EWHC 1772 (Admin), [2019] WLR(D) 386

Links:

Bailii, WLRD

Statutes:

Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Human Rights, Children, Police

Updated: 13 July 2022; Ref: scu.639696

In re D (A Child), (Abduction: Rights of Custody) (no 2); AD v CD v AD: CA 12 Dec 2007

The father sought the return of his daughter to Romania, saying she had been taken to the UK in breach of a court order.
Held: The relevant court order pre-dated the accession of Romania to the Convention. Enforceability flowed from eth date of the original order, and not from a later issue of a notice of appeal. Brussels II revised made clear distnctions between a judgment and an enforceable judgment. The order in this case was not enforceable by the father in the UK.

Judges:

Thorpe LJ, Wall LJ, Collins LJ

Citations:

Times 09-Jan-2008, [2007] EWCA Civ 1277

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Child Abduction and Custody Act 1985, Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of Internatinal Child Abduction 1980

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Children

Updated: 12 July 2022; Ref: scu.263529

Re T (A Child): FD 10 May 2001

Application for an order that blood tests including DNA tests be used to ascertain whether such tests show that he is, or is not, excluded from being the father of T. It is an application made as a preliminary to his actual, or intended, application for parental responsibility and contact. He strongly believes, and claims, that he is the father.

Judges:

Bodey J

Citations:

[2001] EWHC Fam 10

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Children

Updated: 12 July 2022; Ref: scu.263382

Irene M Scott v The United Kingdom: ECHR 8 Feb 2000

(Admissibility) The court was asked whether the mother’s Article 8 rights had been breached by a local authority who had applied to free her child for adoption, the court once again stated that ‘the best interests of the child is always of crucial importance’.

Citations:

34745/97, [2000] ECHR 698, 2000 Fam LR 102, [2000] 1 FLR 958, [2000] Fam Law 538, [2000] 2 FCR 560

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

European Convention on Human Rights 8

Jurisdiction:

Human Rights

Cited by:

CitedPayne v Payne; P v P CA 13-Feb-2001
No presumption for Mother on Relocation
The mother applied for leave to return to New Zealand taking with the parties’ daughter aged four. The father opposed the move, saying that allowing the move would infringe his and the child’s right to family life. He had been refused residence.
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Human Rights, Children

Updated: 12 July 2022; Ref: scu.263016

Gough (an Infant) v Thorns: CA 1 Jul 1966

The plaintiff child was injured in a road traffic accident. She appealed from a finding that she had been contributorily negligent.
Held: The appeal succeeded.
Lord Denning MR said: ‘A very young child cannot be guilty of contributory negligence. An older child may be. But it depends on the circumstances. A judge should only find a child guilty of contributory negligence if he or she is of such an age as to be expected to take precautions for his or her own safety: and then he or she is only to be found guilty if blame should be attached to him or her. A child has not the road sense or the experience of his or her elders. He or she is not to be found guilty unless he or she is blameworthy.’

Judges:

Lord Denning MR, Danckwerts, Salmon LJJ

Citations:

[1966] EWCA Civ 5, [1966] 1 WLR 1387, [1966] 3 All ER 398

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Negligence, Children

Updated: 12 July 2022; Ref: scu.262790

Re M (Minors): CA 17 Jan 1991

The appeal concerns an application to enforce in this jurisdiction an order for interim custody of three children made by the Scottish High Court under the provisions of the Family Law Act 1986.

Citations:

[1991] EWCA Civ 14, [1992] 1 FCR 201, [1992] 2 FLR 382

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Family Law Act 1986 29 30

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Children, Scotland

Updated: 12 July 2022; Ref: scu.262629

Rudi, Regina (on the Application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department: CA 14 Dec 2007

Carnwath LJ said of the ‘near-miss’ argument: ‘This argument is, in my view, based on a misconception. The Secretary of State is of course entitled to have a policy. The promulgation of the policy normally creates a legitimate expectation that it will be applied to those falling within its scope unless there is good reason for making an exception. So much is trite law. It is also trite law that the existence of the policy does not excuse the decision-maker from due consideration of cases falling outside it. However, the law knows no ‘near-miss’ principle. There is no presumption that those falling just outside the policy should be treated as though they were within it, or given special consideration for that reason.’

Judges:

Carnwath, Wall LJJ, Sir Peter Gibson

Citations:

[2007] EWCA Civ 1326

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

Appeal fromAL (Serbia) v Secretary of State for the Home Department; Rudi v Same HL 25-Jun-2008
Each claimant had arrived here with their parents, and stayed for several years. They were excluded from the scheme allowing families who had been here more than three years to stay here, because they had attained 18 and were no longer dependant on . .
CitedPatel and Others v Secretary of State for The Home Department SC 20-Nov-2013
The court was asked as to the respective duties of the Secretary of State and the First-tier Tribunal, on an appeal against refusal of an application to vary leave to enter or remain under the Immigration Act 1971, and more particularly as to the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Immigration, Children

Updated: 12 July 2022; Ref: scu.262162

Re M (Children): CA 19 Oct 2007

Judges:

Wilson LJ

Citations:

[2007] EWCA Civ 1292

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedPayne v Payne; P v P CA 13-Feb-2001
No presumption for Mother on Relocation
The mother applied for leave to return to New Zealand taking with the parties’ daughter aged four. The father opposed the move, saying that allowing the move would infringe his and the child’s right to family life. He had been refused residence.
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Children

Updated: 12 July 2022; Ref: scu.261950

Kent County Council v G and others: HL 24 Nov 2005

A residential assessment order had been made under the 1989 Act in care proceedings. When the centre recommended a second extension of the assessment, the council refused, saying that the true purpose was not the assessment of the child but the treatment of the mother.
Held: The appeal succeeded: ‘the main purpose of the proposed programme was therapy for the mother in order to give her the opportunity of change so as to become a safe and acceptable carer for Ellie. This purpose, in my opinion, does not come within section 38(6) notwithstanding that the results of the programme would be valuable and influential in enabling the court to decide whether a care order in respect of Ellie should be made and that if the purpose were to be achieved it would very greatly benefit Ellie.’and ‘The question, in my opinion, was not whether what was proposed could be described as an assessment but whether it could properly be described as an assessment of Ellie. The distinction between treatment and assessment may, as Dr Kennedy had said, be an unreal one in the context of a programme of continuing treatment and assessment. But the distinction between treatment of the mother and an assessment of the progress of that treatment on the one hand and an assessment of Ellie on the other hand is a real one.’ (Lord Scott of Foscote)
Baroness Hale of Richmond: ‘the purpose of section 38(6) cannot be to ensure the provision of services either for the child or his family. There is nothing in the 1989 Act which empowers the court hearing care proceedings to order the provision of specific services for anyone.’ and ‘Where the threshold is found or conceded but the proper order is in issue, the welfare checklist is likewise focussed on the present, for example, in section 1(3)(f): ‘how capable each of his parents . . . is of meeting his needs’. The capacity to change, to learn and to develop may well be part of that. But it is still the present capacity with which the court is concerned. It cannot be a proper use of the court’s powers under section 38(6) to seek to bring about change. ‘ and ‘In short, what is directed under section 38(6) must clearly be an examination or assessment of the child, including where appropriate her relationship with her parents, the risk that her parents may present to her, and the ways in which those risks may be avoided or managed, all with a view to enabling the court to make the decisions which it has to make under the Act with the minimum of delay. Any services which are provided for the child and his family must be ancillary to that end. They must not be an end in themselves. ‘

Judges:

Lord Scott of Foscote, Lord Clyde, Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe, Baroness Hale of Richmond, Lord Mance

Citations:

[2005] UKHL 68, Times 25-Nov-2005, [2005] 3 FCR 621, [2006] 1 All ER 706, [2006] 1 AC 576, [2006] 1 FLR 601, [2006] Fam Law 91, [2005] 3 WLR 1166

Links:

Bailii, House of Lords

Statutes:

Children Act 1989 38(6)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appeal fromIn re G (a Child) (Interim Care order: Residential assessment) CA 27-Jan-2004
An elder child had died, and the local authority felt unable to exculpate either the father or the mother. On the birth of this child all three had been brought in for a residential assessment. First one then another extension was sought. The court . .
CitedIn Re C (A Minor) (Interim Care Order: Residential Assessment) HL 29-Nov-1996
The parents were suspected of causing the child non-accidental injury. The court wanted a residential assessment of the family, but the local authority refused, saying it would be too expensive, and would expose the child to continuing risk. The . .
CitedIn the Matter of B (Minors) CA 22-Jul-1998
The court had directed that the parents of the child be offered therapeutic treatment which, it was hoped, would enable their child to be entrusted to their care. The local authority appealed.
Held: The appeal succeeded. Thorpe LJ said that . .
CitedIn Re M (Residential Assessment Directions) FD 23-Sep-1998
When ordering a local authority to pay the costs of residential assessment of mother and child, the court should allow for these factors. It must be assessment not treatment, in long term interests of the child, to enable court to decide and not . .
CitedRe D (Jurisdiction: Programme of Assessment or Therapy) CA 12-May-1999
The parents were dependent on drugs. The guardian ad litem proposed that the authority should fund treatment of the parents and child in a residential unit with assessment. The authority proposed a detoxification programme. The authority appealed an . .
CitedIn re B (Interim care order: Directions) CA 14-Jan-2002
The local authority applied for an interim care order immediately the child, B, was born. A proposal was made for the mother and child to move from the maternity hospital to a residential placement a mother and baby home which provided help in . .
CitedLambeth London Borough Council v S and C and V and J and Legal Services Commission FD 3-May-2005
The council brought care proceedings. A residential assessment was to be ordered. The Council sought an order for the respondent mother who was legally aided to bear a portion of the cost of the assessment. The Legal Services Commission intervened . .
See AlsoIn re G (A Child) CA 20-Jun-2000
G had died. It was then discovered that he had suffered serious abuse before his death (though not actually causing it). M, wanting the return of her other child, now appealed from a fact finding judgment which had failed to identify which of them . .
CitedIn re G (A Child) CA 29-Nov-2000
. .
CitedC (Children), Re (Residential Assessment) CA 4-Jul-2001
. .
CitedC v Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council FD 1993
The court allowed a limited period of ‘planned and purposeful delay’ before making a care order. Ward J: ‘We have heard much, as we have prepared for the implementation of the Children Act 1989, about partnership. One of those partnerships is the . .
CitedB County Council v L and Others FD 2002
Whilst under assessment before consideration of a final order, the mother said she had hurt her older child. The hospital was unable to provide 24 hour supervision, and the assessment was terminated. The parents sought an order for an assessment at . .
CitedIn Re J (A Minor) (Child in Care: Medical Treatment) CA 26-Aug-1992
. .
CitedRegina v London Borough of Barnet ex parte G; Regina v London Borough of Lambeth ex parte W; Regina v London Borough of Lambeth ex parte A HL 23-Oct-2003
The applicants sought to oblige the local authority, in compliance with its duties under the 1989 Act, to provide a home for children, and where necessary an accompanying adult.
Held: There were four hurdles for the applicants to cross. They . .

Cited by:

CitedAD and OH (A Child) v Bury Metropolitan Borough Council CA 17-Jan-2006
The claimants, mother and son, sought damages from the respondent after they had commenced care proceedings resulting in the son being taken into temporary care. The authority had wrongly suspected abuse. The boy was later found to suffer brittle . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Children

Updated: 12 July 2022; Ref: scu.235290

Re F (A Child) (Fact-Finding Appeal): CA 16 Jul 2019

The father appeals from a fact-finding judgment given by Her Honour Judge Hudson on 27th February 2019 in the course of care proceedings. The judge determined that petechial haemorrhages sustained by his child, F, when she was aged 6 months, were inflicted injuries caused by the father.

Citations:

[2019] EWCA Civ 1244

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Children

Updated: 12 July 2022; Ref: scu.639660

Holmes-Moorhouse v London Borough of Richmond-Upon-Thames: CA 10 Oct 2007

The court considered the duties of a local authority to provide housing where a a court made a shared residence order.
Held: The making of an order for shared residence between a mother and father living apart was not itself determinative to give the father a right to be rehoused through the need to care for the child. However, once a court had decided in contested proceedings that residence should be shared, the housing authority could not deny that the children might reasonably be expected to reside with the father for the purposes of the 1996 Act.

Judges:

Moses LJ

Citations:

[2007] EWCA Civ 970, Times 19-Nov-2007, [2008] 1 WLR 1289

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Housing Act 1996 189(1)(b)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

Appeal fromHolmes-Moorhouse v Richmond Upon Thames HL 4-Feb-2009
The father had been awarded shared residence for three children. He asked the local authority to provide appropriate housing.
Held: The authority’s appeal succeeded.
‘When any family court decides with whom the children of separated . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Housing, Children

Updated: 12 July 2022; Ref: scu.259765

MM v VM (Also VRM): FD 26 Jul 2007

Judges:

Roderic Wood J

Citations:

[2007] EWHC 1820 (Fam)

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Child Abduction and Custody Act 1985, Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

Appeal fromRe M (Children) CA 12-Sep-2007
. .
At first instanceRe M and another (Children) (Abduction; Rights of Custody) HL 5-Dec-2007
Three children had been brought from Zimbabwe by their mother against the wishes of the father and in breach of his rights there. The mother appealed an order for their return.
Held: The mother’s appeal was allowed. The House had to consider . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Children

Updated: 11 July 2022; Ref: scu.258669

In re H (A Child) (Interim Care Order): CA 12 Dec 2002

Once the threshhold criteria for a care order have been met, the court must still enquire on an application for an interim care order, as to whether there is an imminent risk of really serious harm to the child, whether the risk to the child’s safety requires the immediate separation requested.

Judges:

Thorpe LJ, Lawrence Collins J

Citations:

[2002] EWCA Civ 1932, [2003] 1 FCR 350

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Children Act 1989

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedIn re L (A Child) FD 19-Apr-2008
Both the Local authority and the child’s Guardian ad litem argued for the child to be removed from the mother before the final hearing to protect from the harm which the presence of the mother’s partner undubitably risked. The mother responded by . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Children

Updated: 11 July 2022; Ref: scu.258658