ROYAL COURT OF
JERSEY
FD
19/01
Care and Supervision Proceedings –
Case Management
1.
This Practice Direction shall apply to
all care and supervision proceedings that are issued after 1 August 2019. It shall not apply to cases that are
already before the Court, but parties and their representatives are reminded
that they are expected to work to the standards of good practice which underlie
this practice direction, remembering at all times that the welfare of the
child(ren) involved is paramount.
2.
The outline in the tables below sets
out:
a.
The different stages of the court
process;
b.
The steps to be taken to prepare for
hearings (which will include meetings between advocates), and the issues that
should be considered;
c.
The timescales that parties and their
advocates are expected to abide by.
3.
The Court, the parties and lawyers
involved in these proceedings shall at all times have regard to the overriding
objective set out in Rule 4 of the Children Rules 2005, and to the principles
set out in Article 2 of the Children (Jersey) Law 2002.
4.
The Court has flexible powers at all
stages of the proceedings to meet the overriding objective. The Court may give directions without a
hearing. The steps that the Court
might normally take at a case management or other hearing may be taken at any
time the Court considers fit. The
Court may cancel, advance or delay any hearing. The Court may decide to hear evidence at
any hearing to resolve a particular issue, where it decides that it is
appropriate to do so.
5.
The Court may invite the parents, the
child and the social worker to attend court to discuss the progress of the
case. If the Court does so, the
Court shall notify counsel who may attend court if so advised.
6.
Where it appears the Court may need to
hear evidence at a hearing (other than the final hearing), the Court shall be
notified immediately and consideration given to what directions are required.
7.
At all hearings counsel must be prepared
to deal with all issues that may arise at that hearing so that the hearing can
be as productive as possible, and so as to avoid the need for further case
management hearings where possible.
Parties and experts are expected to produce documents and reports on
time.
8.
Nothing in this practice direction shall
affect an application for an emergency protection order, secure accommodation
order, child assessment order, recovery order or an application for a care or
supervision order to be discharged or varied.
“Pre-Proceedings”
9.
Before an application is made for a care
or supervision order the Minister for Health and Social Services (the
“Minister”) will often have implemented a
‘pre-proceedings’ process.
The aim of this process is to identify children who are at risk of significant
harm, and to inform the Minister as to whether the risk presented in a
particular case can be managed with additional support and guidance or whether
proceedings are necessary.
10.
The ‘pre-proceedings’
process does not currently take place under the umbrella of the Children
(Jersey) Law 2002, but events during this process will often become relevant to
any proceedings that are issued subsequently.
11.
The Court expects the Minister to ensure
that counsel appointed to advise parents during the ‘pre-proceedings’
process are provided promptly with all documentation that they need to provide
meaningful advice and support to their client.
12.
The Court expects that, during the
‘pre-proceedings’ process, the parents will be told in clear terms
what concerns the Minister has in relation to the child(ren)
and what the parents need to do to alleviate those concerns and to avoid
proceedings. If proceedings are
subsequently issued the Court will expect the social worker’s statement
to set out clearly why it has become necessary to issue proceedings and in what
way the parent(s) failed to meet the expectations of the Minister.
13.
The Court notes that the
‘pre-proceedings’ process is expected to run for not more than
twelve weeks from the date of the first pre-proceedings meeting, unless a delay
has been authorised by the appointed Head of Service. In most cases the expectation will be
that counsel and the parents will meet with the Minister on three occasions
during the Pre-Proceedings process.
Stage 1
The Start of Proceedings
14.
The Law Officers’ Department shall file the
application in the form required under the Children (Jersey) Law 2002 and the
Children Rules 2005. Generally, the
Law Officers’ Department will file the following documents with the
application form(s) unless to do so would require a delay which is not in the
best interests of the child(ren):-
a.
A case summary. This summary should identify the
parties, the advocates (if appointed) and other relevant individuals, and
provide a summary of any allegations of fact, the Minister’s proposals
for the child(ren), any disputes between the parties
that need to be resolved by the Court at an early stage and a short summary of
the case in general. This summary
shall be updated at every stage of the case and every summary shall be dated;
b.
The first social work chronology (at this stage
limited to the two year period preceding the application);
c.
The first social work statement and genogram;
d.
The first care plan;
e.
The interim threshold document; and
f.
The Child and Family Assessment
15.
The Law Officers’ Department shall contact
the Judicial Secretary to notify the Court of the need for (a) a case
management hearing or (b) a hearing for an interim order (in cases where this
is expected to happen) and a case management hearing.
16.
The Judicial Secretary shall fix a date for the
hearing(s). The Court shall order the appointment of a JFCAS guardian. A copy
of the application forms showing the date(s) fixed for the hearing(s) and any
accompanying documents shall be sent to JFCAS by the Law Officers’
Department.
17.
A guardian for the child(ren) shall be appointed by JFCAS. At this stage, or at any point
thereafter, JFCAS may apply for a lawyer to be appointed to represent the child(ren). Such applications should be limited to cases
where there is a particularised need for the child(ren) to be represented. When making their application JFCAS
shall state why, on the facts of the case, it is appropriate to appoint a
lawyer for the child(ren).
The guardian is able to seek legal advice in deciding whether to make an
application for a lawyer to be appointed, and to assist with the preparation of
that application.
If the
application is made before the first court hearing takes place, the Court will
consider any such application on the papers and on its merits.
18.
The Law Officers’ Department shall notify the
Children Panel of the names of the respondents and the child(ren) and provide the Panel with sufficient information to
allocate panel lawyers promptly upon applications for representation being
received.
19.
The Law Officers’ Department shall serve the
application form(s) showing the date fixed for the hearing(s), and any
accompanying documents on the respondents.
Stage 2 – The Case Management
Hearing
Prior to the Case Management Hearing
20.
The first Case Management Hearing should take place
within 3 weeks of proceedings being issued.
21.
If there is an application for an urgent interim
order, there is no requirement for that application to wait until after the
Case Management Hearing. It should
be listed for an urgent hearing in the usual way.
22.
The need for an urgent interim hearing should not
delay the timeframe for a Case Management Hearing.
23.
If the Court hears an application for an interim
order within three weeks of proceedings being issued, the Case Management
Hearing may take place at the conclusion of that hearing. The advocates must
ensure that they are sufficiently prepared to deal with all issues arising at a
Case Management Hearing, and that they are in a position to be helpful to the
Court.
24.
Five working days prior to the Case Management
Hearing the Law Officers’ Department shall produce and serve the
following on the parties or their advocates and on JFCAS (unless the documents
have already been served):-
a.
the social worker’s first statement and care
plan;
b.
the interim threshold document;
c.
the
chronology;
d.
copies of any previous orders;
e.
records of key discussions with the family, key
minutes and records and any pre-existing care plans (i.e. child in need, looked
after child or child protection plans);
f.
copies of any correspondence with the family;
g.
the Child and Family Assessment;
h.
copies of any contact logs. These logs will be circulated regularly
throughout the proceedings in cases where the Minister is supervising contact;
and
i.
an
index of relevant documents. This
index will be kept up to date by the Law Officer’s Department and will
list all relevant documents in the proceedings.
25.
A meeting of advocates, the Guardian (and litigants
in person) shall take place. Wherever possible this will happen not less than
two business days before the Case Management Hearing. At this meeting, the advocates will
consider the directions needed at the Case Management Hearing (see below). And:-
a.
the attendees will identify the parties’
positions as they stand at this stage (it being accepted that the
parties’ positions may change);
b.
the attendees will identify whether there is a
potential need for any experts to be appointed, and if so in which discipline,
and shall discuss whether any adjustments may be required to the standard
letter of instruction;
c.
the attendees will identify the need for the
disclosure of any documents;
d.
the attendees will identify any need for an interim
hearing (e.g. an application for an interim order, a contact dispute);
e.
the attendees will discuss whether and, if so why,
an application should be made for a lawyer to be appointed for the child(ren); and
f.
the
attendees will discuss whether any kinship or connected persons assessments are
likely to be required, and of whom.
Experts
26.
Experts shall not be instructed in public law
proceedings until the Court has given leave.
27.
The expert(s) shall be selected from a panel of
experts that has been approved by the Court, unless the Court has given leave
to the contrary. The panel of
experts will be approved by the Court after due consultation with the Minister
and the panel of lawyers accredited to represent parents and children in public
law proceedings. The panel of
experts shall be reviewed at regular intervals.
28.
The Court has approved a standard letter of
instruction for each type of assessment commonly undertaken in public law
proceedings. This standard letter
of instruction shall be used unless the Court has given leave to the contrary.
29.
Experts shall be asked to include with their
reports an executive summary setting out a concise summary of their findings
and opinion.
30.
Following the advocates’ meeting, the Law
Officers’ Department shall produce letters of instruction for any
proposed experts and shall provide drafts of those letters to the advocates for
their comments. The draft(s) shall
show clearly any variations to the standard form letter of instruction. The draft(s) shall show clearly any area
of disagreement between the parties in relation to the letter of instruction.
31.
Following the advocates’ meeting, the Law
Officers’ Department shall produce a draft case management order. This draft shall be circulated to the
parties and shall where possible be agreed by counsel, failing which any areas
of disagreement must be clearly marked on the draft. This will be filed with the Court (and
Judicial Greffe) in hard copy and electronically by 9
am on the business day before the hearing together with an updated case summary
and copies of any draft letters of instruction for experts. The updated case
summary shall be dated, and should be provided in clean and ‘track
changed’ version. It should
set out clearly the current situation, the Minister’s current proposals
for the child(ren), any
disputes between the parties that need to be resolved by the Court at this
stage and a short summary of the case in general. This case summary will continue to be
updated prior to each hearing, and each updated case summary shall be dated.
The Case Management Hearing
32.
At the hearing, the Court will give detailed
directions as to:
a.
the timetable for the proceedings (taking into
account dates and periods which are important to the child(ren)’s
welfare and development);
b.
identifying any additional parties;
c.
whether there should be a lawyer for the child(ren);
d.
identifying the key issues in the case;
e.
identifying the evidence that is likely to be
necessary and considering the reliance on hearsay evidence;
f.
identifying whether, and if so why, there is any need for a
fact find hearing. It will not be
appropriate for a separate fact find hearing to take place where this will
cause delay for the child(ren) unless such a hearing
is necessary and in the best interests of the child(ren);
g.
identifying whether there is a real issue around
threshold to be resolved;
h.
experts (to include the identity of the expert and
the letter of instruction which; shall be in standard form, unless leave is
given);
i.
identify the need for disclosure;
j.
ensuring compliance with directions;
k.
directing the filing of any evidence, care plan,
threshold agreement, position or witness statement and responses which should
be filed before the Issues Resolution Hearing;
l.
directing a timeframe for the conclusion of any
connected persons or kinship assessment and (where appropriate) for the filing
of those assessments;
m.
in cases where the Minister is supervising contact,
directing the disclosure of contact logs (if any) to the parties fortnightly or
on such other basis as the Court may order;
n.
directing an advocate’s meeting prior to the Issues
Resolution Hearing;
o.
directing the fixing of a date for the Issues
Resolution Hearing, Final Hearing or a further Case Management Hearing and
directing the duration of each hearing to be fixed; and
p.
giving directions for special measures,
interpreters or intermediaries;
Stage
3 – The Issues Resolution Hearing (stage 4 being the final hearing)
Prior
to the Issues Resolution Hearing (IRH)
33.
A meeting of advocates, the Guardian (and any
litigants in person) shall take place. Wherever possible this will happen not
less than seven business days before the IRH. At the meeting those attending will:-
a.
Review the evidence and the position of the parties;
b.
Identify the attendees’ views of the key
issues and how they can be resolved or narrowed at the IRH;
c.
Consider what evidence is required and whether
evidence should be heard at the IRH to narrow any issue;
d.
Consider what issues need to be resolved at the IRH;
and
e.
Consider whether the issues in the case have been
so sufficiently narrowed that the IRH can be used as the Final Hearing.
34.
Following the advocates’ meeting, the Law
Officers’ Department will file a draft case management order. This draft shall be circulated to the
parties and shall where possible be agreed by counsel, failing which any areas
of disagreement must be clearly marked on the draft. This will be filed with the Court (and
Judicial Greffe) in hard copy and electronically two
clear business days prior to the hearing together with an updated case summary
and such other papers as are necessary for the court to consider the issues
arising at the IRH.
35.
If the parties agree that the issues in the case
have been so sufficiently narrowed that the IRH can be used as the Final
Hearing, this agreement shall be brought to the attention of the Court in the
draft case management order and the updated case summary.
The Issues Resolution Hearing
36.
The IRH shall be listed for half a day or one
day. A longer hearing may be fixed
if the Court has given leave.
37.
The Court will identify the key issues and whether
they can be narrowed or resolved prior to the Final Hearing.
38.
The Court will consider whether the issues have
been so sufficiently narrowed that the IRH can be used as the Final
Hearing. Where the parties have not
agreed upon this in advance of the IRH, the Court may decide to proceed in this
way regardless but shall first obtain the views of the parties.
39.
The Court will identify the evidence that is needed
at the Final Hearing, and what issues will need to be resolved at the Final
Hearing.
40.
The Court will review the time set down for the
Final Hearing and vacate any time no longer required, or identify any
additional time required. The Court
will give final case management directions. These shall include directions as to the
size and content of the bundle for the Final Hearing, which shall generally be
limited to 350 pages. Where
possible, the Law Officer’s Department will provide the court with a
draft index for the final hearing bundle so that this can be considered at the
IRH.