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Consent to psychological assessment of parents

Judicial regulation of family disputes often unfolds in an environment of intense conflict, where the best interests of the child are invoked as the supreme guiding principle.

This principle, however, does not operate in isolation from the constitutional framework. It must be harmonised with the fundamental guarantees of the rule of law and the individual rights of parents.

When a court is called upon to consider measures that intrude into the personal and psychological sphere of the litigants themselves, the issue ceases to be merely procedural and becomes profoundly institutional in nature.

The background and the contested order

The decision of the Court of Appeal in Civil Appeal No. E24/2025, dated February 19, which may be described as novel within Cypriot jurisprudence, was delivered in the context of parental responsibility proceedings.

At an interim stage, the Family Court ordered that the parties participate in a process and/or programme of assessment by the adult mental health services.

It was further provided that, should the competent services deem it necessary, counselling or psychological support could also be included.

The appellant challenged the order, arguing that no legislative basis exists for imposing such an assessment without consent and that her right to private life had been violated.

The substantive issue before the Court of Appeal was whether the ordered “assessment” could fall within the powers of the Family Court as an appropriate interim measure, or whether it constituted a health intervention subject to the special legislative regime governing the protection of patients’ rights.

The court’s novel legal approach

The Court of Appeal undertook a substantive and systematic interpretation of the concept of “healthcare” in light of the legislation on patients’ rights. It emphasised that healthcare encompasses any act of prevention, diagnosis or evaluation, including mental health.

An “assessment” of a person’s psychological condition does not materially differ from a “diagnosis”, as it may lead to the identification or disclosure of an existing condition.

According to the court’s reasoning, agreeing with counsel for the appellant, the imposition of such an assessment constitutes an intervention in the personal sphere and falls within the meaning of healthcare, for which informed consent is required.

It is not a mere procedural facilitation, but a measure with a potentially diagnostic character. In the absence of explicit legislative authorisation, the unilateral imposition of such an obligation is not permissible.

The limits of judicial discretion and the principle of proportionality

The Court of Appeal reiterated the fundamental principle that appellate intervention in the exercise of a trial court’s discretion is justified where that discretion has been exercised outside the legal framework or on an erroneous legal basis.

In the present case, it was found that the Family Court had not sufficiently justified why the specific measure was necessary at an interim stage, particularly where supportive measures for the minors had already been implemented.

Furthermore, the court had effectively delegated the determination of necessity to the Mental Health Services, allowing a third body to decide whether assessment or parental support was required.

The Court of Appeal held that such an arrangement amounted to a problematic delegation of judicial judgment and ran contrary to the principle that the court itself must determine whether the conditions for limiting rights are met.

Particular emphasis was placed on the principle of proportionality. The imposition of a measure intruding into the psychological sphere requires a clear finding of necessity and an adequate factual basis.

The Court of Appeal concluded that such a basis had not been sufficiently established and that the order had been issued without the requisite specific reasoning.

It ultimately held that the trial court’s discretion had been exercised beyond the limits permitted by law and set aside the contested order.

This decision draws clear jurisprudential boundaries regarding the imposition of psychological assessments on parents in the context of family disputes.

It serves as a reminder that the best interests of the child do not constitute a blank cheque for judicial intervention, but must be pursued within strict constitutional limits.

In a state governed by the rule of law, even the most sensitive family matters cannot become a field for informal expansion of judicial authority. The imposed measure constituted a health intervention, subject to the special legislative framework protecting patients’ rights.

Ria.city






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