Harrison Engler reports on a recent case invoking an unusual application of s.1(3)(f) Children Act proceedings.

I recently acted for the mother in Children Act proceedings concerning the two youngest of her five children. The mother and children all had additional needs, including a genetic learning disability. The mother had also made allegations of abuse against the children’s father.

Background to the applications

The mother had been in an on-off relationship with the children’s father from 2003 to October 2022.

Proceedings had been ongoing since July 2023, when the mother applied for a prohibited steps order and child arrangements orders.


(The local authority had been involved with the family due to their additional needs).

The mother's allegations of abuse against the father included that he had:


Proceedings

I represented the mother in a 3-day fact finding and welfare hearing relating to her allegations and the contact arrangements for the two youngest children.

At the hearing, all the mother’s allegations were proven. A local authority social worker, who had written a section 7 report, gave evidence which included the mother’s positive efforts to address past issues. The social worker recommended direct, supervised contact between the youngest child and the father.

The mother’s witness statement supported the child having indirect contact with the father, but at the outset of the hearing she explained that she could neither read nor write and that this part of her statement was incorrect. The mother instead sought no order for any contact with the father, even indirect.

Court’s decision

The mother described the father during cross-examination as a ‘distraction from her responsibilities as a mother’. I argued on her behalf that:

Following my submissions, HHJ Reardon found the mother to be a credible witness. The court found all the mother’s allegations proved including that the father had said that “disability was a curse” and the children had “inherited [her] stupidity”.

The court:

Section 1(3)(f) of the Children Act 1989

This decision was an unusual application of section 1(3)(f) of the Children Act 1989, because the court considered that the mother’s limited capability under that section was a reason to agree with her application that there should be no contact with the father.

By ordering no contact with him, the court thereby departed from the social worker’s recommendations.

The judge noted that the section 7 report had “not given enough weight to risks arising out of domestic abuse in this case”.

Harrison Engler is a barrister at Field Court Chambers.