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Keeping Children and Parents in Contact since 1974
The Children Act 1989
Associated pages: Parental
Responsibility
Availability of the statute text
The intention behind the Children
Act 1989 (The Act) was to update and then consolidate all the various laws
governing children that had been developed piecemeal over the years. The
following link will provide you with the text of the Children
Act 1989 which came into force in October 1991. Over the following (nearly 20) years various
significant pieces of legislation affecting the Children Act 1989 have been
passed; for example the Adoption and
Children Act 2002 (affecting parental responsibility), the Children and
Adoption Act 2006 (addressing enforcement of contact and family assistance
orders). These statutes resulted in quite
significant sections being inserted and removed from The Act so that the
Children Act 1989 in order that it remains the core piece of legislation. Commercial publishers produce consolidated,
bang up-to-date copies of The Act but the best that can be had by those who
find the cost of purchasing these prohibitive can be found on the government
statute law database website which currently has The
Act containing all the amendments up to the end of 2006. Quite a few
commercial texts contain the up-to-date consolidated version of the Children
Act 1989 and possibly the best source will be the annually updated Herschman
& McFarlane Children Act Handbook 2008/09 (listed alphabetically under ‘H’ for Herschman)
from Jordan publishers which also contains other basic references such as the
Family Proceedings Rules 1991 (FPR1991), the set of Rules which govern The Act.
Private law and public law
The majority of the text of the Children
Act 1989 addresses ‘public law’ scenarios in which local authorities’
obligations towards children are set out. The ‘private law’ element of the legislation, dealing with children who
live with their parent(s) rather than under the care of a local authority,
constitutes a smaller part of The Act but is the part that principally concerns
our members. A private law case between
parents may become a ‘public law’ case if the judge directs a local authority
to investigate and report because it is though that the child’s situation may
warrant the making of a supervision or care order.
General Principles underlying The Act
· The child’s
welfare is the paramount consideration, s1(1). Fairness between the adults has to take second place (as does everything
else) to what is considered to be in the child’s best interest. · Delay in
deterining ‘the question’ is presumed to prejudice the welfare of the child,
s1(2). The ponderous nature of the
family justice system doesn’t sit easily with this principle. Almost inevitably there will be long delays
in any application. · The ‘Welfare Checklist’, s1(3). A list
of seven factors that the court ‘shall have regard’ to when making an order.
Those preparing reports for the courts and judges themselves will often
explicitly review matters, by examining each of the headings under this
list. Be sure to be familiar with it. · The ‘No
Order’ principle, s1(5). The court
should consider whether making ‘no order’ on an application might be the
preferred outcome. After a period of
little regard for this principle the present emphasis on in-court conciliation and
dispute resolution, as a result of the ‘Private Law Programme’ guidance of 2004, has meant that an increasing number of applications are
ending up with ‘no order’ being made. · Parental
responsibility: this was one of the basic principles introduced, that parents
will have equal and enduring parental responsibility for their child before and
after separation. In 1989 parental
responsibility was regarded as a cornerstone of The Act, but over the years, as
the power of the ‘residence order’ has grown, its importance has been
diluted. Parental responsibility is
dealt with comprehensively on the separate Parental
Responsibility page on this
website.
Section 8 orders
These are the orders that our
members tend to apply for – residence and contact orders mostly. They are referred to as s8 orders as they are
listed under Section 8 of The Act. There
are 4 types of s8 orders:
· Contact orders
· Residence orders
· Specific issues orders
· Prohibited steps orders
Contact orders
In the words of The Act: “a contact order” means an
order requiring the person with whom a child lives, or is to live, to allow the
child to visit or stay with the person named in the order, or for that person
and the child otherwise to have contact with each other;
Contact orders made by the court
are tailored to individual circumstances. They can be brief and expressed in very general terms: e.g. the mother
will allow the father ‘reasonable contact’ to the child. They can be very detailed, explicitly stating
collection and return times, locations for handover, who can be present at
handover, arrangements for replacement contact if contact doesn’t take place,
dates of holiday contact etc – with the actual definition perhaps stretching even
to a couple of pages. This, the
inclusion of prescriptive details, tends to happen after previous orders, made
in less detail, have proved to be unworkable since the court will initially
prefer the parents themselves to agree and sort out the detail within the
general boundaries set out by the court.
Within contact orders certain descriptions may be used: ‘Direct contact’ refers to face-to-face
contact with the child, actually meeting your child, whereas ‘indirect contact’
means that contact takes places by phone, email or post. ‘Visiting contact’ describes a situation in
which a child has direct contact with the parent on outings or visiting the
parent’s home, but does not stay overnight. When the child sleeps overnight on a contact visit this is referred to as
‘staying contact’.
Residence orders
In the words of The Act: “a residence order” means an order settling the arrangements to be made as
to the person with whom a child is to live;
The use of the singular term ‘person’ in the above
definition can be read in the plural (“persons”) just as the term “child” also
covers “children” in The Act.. Any
doubts about this are dispelled by s11(4) which specifically states: “Where a
residence order is made in favour of two or more persons who do not themselves
all live together, the order may specify the periods during which the child is
to live in the different households concerned.” There is no explicit ‘shared residence order’ under the legislation,
simply the ability to order (under s8) that the child shall live with the
individuals named for the times specified in the order (s11(4)). See further material elsewhere on this
website specifically dealing with shared
residence.
If there is no dispute as to which parent the child
shall live then logically, taking into account the ‘no order principle’, a
residence order is not required and should not be made. However, even though a contact order, by
definition (see above), actually confirms which parent the child lives with,
courts are far too easily persuaded by mothers that they need a residence order
to ‘reassure’ them that the child lives with them and not the father –
especially when contact to the father is substantially increased. Besides giving the mother the increased
formal status of ‘resident parent’ a residence order also permits that parent
to remove the child from the UK for a month without the need to obtain the
other parent’s (parent with parental responsibility) written permission
[s13(1)(b)]. Where there is a residence
order in force there is also an explicit prohibition on causing the child to be
known by a new surname.
Prohibited steps orders
In the words of The Act: ” ‘a prohibited steps order’
means an order that no step which could be taken by a parent in meeting his
parental responsibility for a child, and which is of a kind specified in the
order, shall be taken by any person without the consent of the court.” A parent can be prohibited from taking any
number of steps, though the most common scenario is where one parent,
suspecting that the other may be planning to move abroad with the child,
applies for an order that s/he be ‘prohibited from removing the child from the
jurisdiction’. Others examples could be:
prohibiting the parent from allowing the child to: have body/ear piercings; her
hair cut (when with either parent); take part in dangerous activities; do
glamour modelling; be fed food contrary to religious beliefs; etc
Specific issues orders
In the words of The Act: “a ‘specific issue order’ means
an order giving directions for the purpose of determining a specific question
which has arisen, or which may arise, in connection with any aspect of parental
responsibility for a child.” These orders
are ‘positive’ orders in that they require a parent to do or allow something
rather than ‘prohibit’ a certain act . A common example is where the court is
asked to determine which school a child shall attend. Other examples could be: determining that a child should be
circumcised; that the child should be take part in certain religious practices;
that a child should be entered for entrance exams; etc
Neither prohibited steps orders (PSO), nor specific
issue orders (SIO) are to be used to achieve a result which could be achieved
by a contact or residence order [s9(5)(a)]. For example, rather than use a PSO to prevent the child visiting the
home of an undesirable adult during contact, the conditions attached to a contact
order should deal with this if required.
Family Assistance Orders
Family Assistance Orders (FAOs) as per s16 of The Act provided
a means whereby the court could order a welfare officer to ‘advise, assist and
befriend’ any person named in the order. Nowadays it is generally agreed that this provision has been underused,
partly because the Children Act 1989 required that for these orders to be made
the ‘circumstances of the case must be exceptional’. Following consultation, the Children
and Adoption Act 2006 [s6] sought to ‘beef up’ these orders. The requirement that the case be exceptional
has been removed and they can now run for 12 months rather than 6 months. Additional clauses inserted into s16 of The
Act specifically refer to the officer giving advice and assistance as regards
establishing, improving and maintaining contact, indicating the potential for a
more proactive, ongoing involvement for Cafcass officers, helping with contact
following a court order – instead of
simply providing a report for the court and hen withdrawing . Inexplicably, despite judicial
recommendation, the amendments brought by the 2006 legislation, failed to
remove the requirement that all the persons named in the order must consent to
it being made. This means that a mother
who is hostile to contact, who doesn’t want contact established, improved or
maintained, can veto the making of a family assistance order.
Interplay between Divorce and The Children Act 1989
The primary legislation governing divorce is the Matrimonial
Causes Act 1973. The MCA1973 almost
exclusively limits itself to the marital positions and financial affairs of the
husband and wife. Though, for a divorce
to be made absolute the court must consider under s41
of the Act ‘the arrangements for the
children’ following the divorce, this is almost always a formality since the
stated arrangements will almost inevitably be regarded as reasonable. The divorce court does have the authority to
‘exercise its powers under the Children Act 1989’ if ‘there are exceptional
circumstances that make it desirable …’ but it will almost never do so.
Understandably, some fathers are misled, since they
anticipate that their filed response to the effect that they disagree with the
petitioner’s ‘statement of arrangements for the children’ (as set out by the
mother in her divorce petition), will result in them having an opportunity to
challenge the mother and then they will have the divorce court decide the issue
of residence or contact. Even if the
mother is preventing the children from having any contact with the father at
all, some fathers still fail to issue Children Act 1989 proceedings and believe
that the divorce court will address the problem. Where there is a dispute between the parents
over which parent the children will live with following the divorce it is even
more important that Children Act 1989 proceedings are started early in divorce
proceedings, since the division of the matrimonial assets by the divorce court,
particularly with regard to the family home, should be dependent upon the
parents’ needs to provide for the children who are to live with them.
The Family Proceedings Rules 1991 (FPR1991)
The following link will provide you with the original version
of the FPR1991 that applied when the Children Act 1989 came into force in
October 2001. Part IV of the FPR1991
which addresses ‘Proceedings under the Children Act 1989’, are an important annexe
to that legislation. The ‘Rules’ were made and are updated by statutory instrument
rather than primary legislation. There
are no up-to-date, ‘as amended’, freely available versions of the FPR1991
online. Those involved in litigation,
particularly those representing themselves, could do no worse than to purchase
a copy of the annually
updated Herschman
& McFarlane Children Act Handbook 2008/09 (listed alphabetically under ‘H’ for
Herschman) from Jordan publishers which contains the Family Proceedings Rules
1991 alongside an up-to-date version of the Children Act 1989 and other useful
documents.
Updated 3 June 2008
