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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> M (Children) [2005] EWCA Civ 615 (11 April 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/615.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 615 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM OXFORD COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE CORRIE)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CLARKE
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M (CHILDREN) |
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(Computer-Aided Transcript of the Palantype Notes of
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The Appellant appeared on his own behalf
MR SIMON MILLER (instructed by Messrs Whetter Duckworth Fowler, Oxford OX5 2DH) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
"I have taken instructions from [Mrs M] and she is content on the fact that [Mr M] has accepted two breaches of the order and to leave it at that and not actively to pursue the other alleged breaches."
"... I am beginning to think I had better hear the evidence in this, and I shall hear evidence about all the allegations today and for however many other days it may take. It is clear that you are not admitting any breaches. I thought you were, and were you represented you might take a different approach, but I am afraid I find myself unable to explain to you what your position may be."
So the committal proceedings were stood over until the afternoon on 14th May.
"Given that I regard both those two witnesses as credible and consistent, who were unshaken by cross-examination by [Mr M], and given that [Mrs M's] evidence is supported by that given by Susan Fisher [the social worker], I equally have no hesitation in disbelieving [Mr M's] account of this event and in concluding that he did not arrive, and was thereby in breach of paragraph 5 of the order, until somewhere around 4.10pm on 25th March. I, therefore, find that breach proved to the requisite standard."
"The breach itself might be seen out of context as trivial. But it was not, in the court's judgment, a mistaken breach. There was nothing wrong with your watch -- you were not claiming that -- you simply, on my finding, deliberately brought her late ... In context, this breach, though apparently trivial, shows that you have a great contempt for orders of the court with which you do not agree. I, therefore, have to consider, bearing in mind that you contested the allegations, having apparently at first admitted two of them, what to do with you."
"A fine is not, in my judgment, appropriate because you are known to be of very limited means and there is at the moment a costs order against you of some substance. No order is not appropriate because of the attitude you have, as I have just described it, to this order and indeed any order which does not fit with your view of what should happen; a view not shared by CAFCASS or Social Services or indeed the court hitherto. So I do take a serious view of this.
The appropriate sentence is, in my judgment, a custodial one, but suspended. The sentence will, accordingly, be one of seven days' imprisonment, suspended for six months on terms that you comply with whatever orders of the court may have penal notices attached to them."
"... I have not heard any mitigation from [Mr M] yet, but, as I said before, I regard the committal application as, in a sense, a sideshow. I am not minimising it because it is a serious matter when court orders are not obeyed, but I rather doubt whether it would be appropriate to impose any or any significant penalty now ..."
He then went on to ask counsel for the mother's views on disposal. Counsel indicated that she did have a view. The judge asked if he wanted to take instructions and said this:
"I am certainly not going to send [Mr M] to prison for this.
MR MILLER: That was one option I discussed with the mother.
JUDGE CORRIE: I can understand she may have thought that that would be appropriate at the time."
ORDER: Appeal allowed; the finding of contempt to stand, but the suspended committal sentence discharged and no order substituted; detailed assessment of the respondent's Community Legal Services Funding costs.