Beyond Parental Dominion: Court of Appeal Re-Affirms Welfare Paramountcy and Restricts the Reach of Gillick Competence – Commentary on S, Re (Wardship: Removal to Ghana) [2025] EWCA Civ 1011
1. Introduction
The decision of the Court of Appeal in S, Re (Wardship: Removal to Ghana) ([2025] EWCA Civ 1011) addresses a modern variation of an old problem: how far can parents go in making radical life-changing decisions for a teenager when the State, through the High Court’s inherent wardship jurisdiction, is already seised of the child’s welfare? The case concerns a 14-year-old boy, “S”, taken to Ghana against his will amid parental fears that he was becoming enmeshed in gang culture in London. Having been left there with no passport, S began wardship proceedings in his own right, seeking an order compelling his parents to bring him home.
At first instance Hayden J discharged the wardship and endorsed the parents’ decision to keep S in Ghana. On appeal, Sir Andrew McFarlane P (with Baker LJ and Arnold LJ concurring) overturned that order, reinstated the wardship and directed a re-hearing. The judgment lays down two key principles that will resonate far beyond its unusual facts:
- The welfare of the child remains the single, paramount consideration in wardship. A judicial evaluation of parental responsibility is not a separate threshold or counter-weight, and the court must not “view welfare through the parents’ lens”.
- Gillick competence – a child’s capacity to give valid consent – is a doctrine confined, as a matter of legal effect, to medical decision-making. In non-medical welfare disputes the concept is merely descriptive; it does not create a heightened test (“clear and compelling reasons”) for overriding a mature child’s wishes.
2. Summary of the Judgment
Allowing the appeal, the Court of Appeal held that Hayden J’s welfare analysis was “one-sided” and procedurally premature:
- He conflated (a) the lawfulness of the parents’ decision with (b) the court’s own welfare determination under section 1 of the Children Act 1989.
- He failed to evaluate adequately S’s strong, cogent wishes and feelings – particularly given the parties’ acceptance that S was mature and articulate.
- He made a final order despite the absence of any safe, investigated plan for S’s care should he return to England, when the court, as quasi-parent, had a positive duty to fill that evidential gap.
- He gave scant attention to the potential and continuing harm to S arising from the deception, dislocation and enforced stay in Ghana.
The appeal court therefore:
- Reinstated the wardship.
- Directed a full re-hearing before a different High Court judge, with the earlier factual findings about S’s life in England standing.
- Clarified that the Gillick principle’s legal effect is limited to consent in medical contexts, and rejected the submission that a “clear and compelling” test applies whenever a Gillick-competent child’s wishes are overridden outside that field.
3. Analytical Commentary
3.1 Precedents Cited and Their Influence
- Mabon v Mabon [2005] 1 FLR 1011 – emphasised the child’s autonomy and participatory rights. This informed the need to give appropriate weight to S’s views.
- KD [1988] 1 AC 806 and Re L (Care: Threshold) [2007] 1 FLR 2025 – classic authorities on the centrality of parental responsibility; cited by Hayden J to underscore parents’ primacy, but the Court of Appeal cautioned against allowing that theme to eclipse welfare.
- Re Ashya King [2014] EWHC 2964 (Fam) and Great Ormond Street Hospital v Yates [2017] EWCA Civ 410 – collectively demonstrate that “significant harm” is not a free-standing test governing inherent-jurisdiction interventions, a point re-affirmed by the Appeal Court.
- Gillick v West Norfolk [1986] AC 112 – interpreted and confined; its language adopted by practitioners as shorthand for maturity, but its ratio limited to medical consent.
3.2 Legal Reasoning of the Court of Appeal
- Paramountcy over Parental Discretion. The court reaffirmed that once wardship is invoked, there is a single overarching principle: the child’s welfare. The parents’ rights are evidential, not jurisdictional. Any “audit” of parental decision-making must not skew the welfare balance.
- Evidential Completeness and Judicial Duty. A wardship court cannot decide a case when crucial welfare information is missing, particularly where the court itself has parental responsibility. Ordering reports under Children Act 1989 sections 7 or 37, or calling further evidence, is part of that duty.
- Weight to S’s Wishes and Feelings. Section 1(3)(a) requires the court to consider the child’s wishes “in the light of his age and understanding”. Hayden J expressly accepted S’s maturity but failed to set his passionate objections against the risks in England in any articulated balance. This omission undermined the integrity of the analysis.
- Limit of Gillick. The Appeal Court produced a succinct rehearsal of doctrine: Gillick competence is a rule about valid consent to medical treatment – nothing more. In welfare disputes it is “a convenient label” signifying maturity, not a legal threshold inhibiting the court’s ultimate discretion.
3.3 Likely Impact on Future Litigation
- Wardship Practice. Judges must separate their appraisal of parental choices from their own welfare analysis. Expect more active judicial case-management to obtain evidence before final determination.
- Gillick Usage Curtailed. Advocates can no longer rely on the phrase “Gillick-competent child” as a semi-constitutional trump card outside medical consent. Arguments will need to be framed in traditional welfare-checklist language.
- Abduction-Style Concealment Cases. Although not an international child-abduction case under the Hague Convention, the decision emphasises that covert or deceptive parental relocation may itself generate harm requiring careful scrutiny – a principle likely to influence s 8 relocation jurisprudence.
- Local Authority Engagement. The judgment highlights the limitations of section 37 directions and encourages strategic use of section 7 welfare reports where public-law thresholds are not met but investigative input is indispensable.
4. Complex Concepts Simplified
- Wardship – The inherent jurisdiction of the High Court to act as “super-parent” where a child is made a “ward of court”. The court, not the parents, has ultimate control of decisions affecting the child’s welfare.
- Parental Responsibility – Defined in section 3 Children Act 1989 as “all the rights, duties, powers, responsibilities and authority” a parent has in relation to the child. It is not absolute; it yields to court orders when the child’s welfare so requires.
- Gillick Competence – A doctrine from Gillick v West Norfolk allowing minors under 16 to consent to medical treatment if they have “sufficient understanding”. Outside medical contexts the term is merely descriptive of maturity.
- Children Act 1989, s 37 Report – A direction to the local authority to investigate a child’s circumstances and decide whether to issue care proceedings. It is not a general welfare report.
- Children Act 1989, s 7 Report – A welfare report from CAFCASS or a local authority addressing specific questions posed by the court in private law disputes.
- Welfare Checklist (s 1(3)) – A list of factors (including the child’s wishes, needs, risks of harm, etc.) that the court must consider when making any Section 8 order or, by analogy, in wardship.
5. Conclusion
S, Re (Wardship: Removal to Ghana) is neither an international abduction nor a conventional care case. It occupies the liminal space where parental fears about a child’s safety collide with the child’s own autonomy and the court’s protective function. The Court of Appeal’s intervention achieves three things:
- It re-centres welfare as the solitary paramount consideration, cautioning judges against allowing reverence for parental responsibility to skew analysis.
- It re-calibrates the jurisprudential weight of Gillick competence, confining its binding force to medical consent and restoring flexibility to welfare assessments.
- It emphasises the proactive, inquisitorial dimension of wardship – a reminder that the court must not decide without a “Plan A, B or C” visibly on the table.
The case is therefore a timely restatement of fundamental principles and a practical guide for future litigants and judges navigating the complex interface between adolescent autonomy, parental prerogative and judicial responsibility.
Comments