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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> M-K (A Child) [2006] EWCA Civ 1013 (21 June 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1013.html Cite as: [2006] Fam Law 1034, [2007] 1 FLR 432, [2006] EWCA Civ 1013, [2006] 2 FCR 671 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE FAMILY DIVISION, PRINCIPAL REGISTRY
(MRS JUSTICE HOGG)
(LOWER COURT No. NN05P03158)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
LORD JUSTICE WILSON
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IN THE MATTER OF M-K (A CHILD) |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The Respondent father appeared in person.
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Crown Copyright ©
"I am qualified from the University of Brazil as an Advocate, which is the equivalent of a Solicitor. I qualified in 1996."
"Whilst I am a qualified lawyer in Brazil such qualifications, given my lack of English and lack of knowledge of English law, would not offer to me better employment."
That was a comparison with the work which she was doing at the date of her pregnancy. She had said in the previous paragraph that at the time of her pregnancy she was doing menial work stacking shelves.
"Ms M has stated the desire to return to work, in order to support herself and Iara. She acknowledged to me that she would need to take time to update her law degree but she was then hopeful of employment through her uncle's law firm, which I understand is located close by to her grandmother's house."
Q: So you have been to University?
A: Yes.
Q: Do you have to take any more exams in order to practise law?
A: Yes I will. I will take for… When you finish the University you take the (unclear). You need to take a test with many, many questions.
Q: Yes.
A: For take your card for be available to work.
Q: So you need some more exams?
A: No, just one.
Q: Just one?
A: Yes. This has happened between December every year, March and August.
Q: So you have got your university law degree.
A: Yes, I have.
Q: You now need to take a test.
A: Yes.
Q: To become a working lawyer?
A: Available to sign.
Q: And to be able to work for other people, to represent other people like the solicitors and barristers?
A: Yes."
Q: You have helpfully explained what it is going to take to qualify as a lawyer at home; yes? What I would like to ask is, before you came to England in 2002, how much time had you spent in training?
A: I was training to my teacher office. I spent six months. But I was studying […] to become a prosecutor."
There was then much questioning as to what that would entail.
"It is unfortunate that the paragraphs at B4 and B34 [I interpolate those are the statements in the written evidence which I have already cited] were never put to Miss M in cross-examination. She was never given an opportunity to give an explanation for the inaccuracies of her statements. If the case is to be decided against her on the basis of this one issue, then it is submitted that she should at least be given the opportunity to be recalled to the witness box in order to explain."
We do not have a transcript of what occurred on 24 February. The only thing we do know is that the mother was not recalled and did not give further oral evidence.
"Moreover, I am deeply concerned that until I raised the question of her qualification as a lawyer she had sought to persuade the court in her written documents that she was a qualified lawyer and could practise as such. It is far from the case. Indeed she has not been involved with any legal training or employment since 2000, nor is it certain when she could or would be qualified. I do not accept that this was a mere oversight on her behalf. It could have been corrected. Indeed, in her two statements she refers to the fact that she was qualified on two occasions. She was telling the court that she is something that she is not, that she could earn an income as a professional person when currently she cannot."
"In my view there has been an attempt to bolster her case which, but for certain questions put to her, could have misled the court. This is concerning because it casts into doubt so much of her stated good intentions to encourage and facilitate contact and the father/daughter relationships were I to live in Brazil."
"Indeed, Miss M indicated to me that she needs and craves the support that her family can give to her and I. In my opinion this is understandable. Miss M needs to know that she has a support network of family or friends to whom she can turn in times of need."
"She [Mrs Hayward] was aware that the mother would find it distressing if she could not return to Brazil with Iara and that distress could impact upon the care of Iara.
"28. However, this was within her contemplation when she answered my questions and gave her opinion. She was asked directly about this by the mother's counsel. Mrs Hayward recognised mother was unhappy and felt isolated here but she was making strides to enter the community by joining mother and toddler groups and attending a church. She said it would take time for the mother to come to terms if she stayed here. She wondered how deep the mother's wish was to return to Brazil given the lack of planning and definite proposals and the recent past difficulties within the family. She was not aware when she gave evidence that the mother was not qualified to practise as a lawyer but had only a law degree from 1996 and no professional qualifications.
"29. I have to ask myself what is in the best interests of Iara, balancing the mother's wish to go back to Brazil and the distress and impact that may have on her care of Iara if she cannot return against the need for Iara to have both parents available to her on a regular and frequent basis. I share Mrs Hayward's doubts as to the depth of distress the mother would suffer if she could not return to Brazil. I accept there will be some distress. I accept that for a period the mother may suffer upset and until she recovers from the upset and disappointment her care of Iara could be adversely affected but not enough to cause me to consider removing Iara from her care. It is likely to be only relatively short term until the mother establishes herself better in this country."
Q: Now, of course, at the moment Mother is buoyed along to a great extent by the hope that she will be permitted to relocate to Brazil. If that hope is dashed by refusal, are you able to say how this may impact on Mother's ability to maintain positivity about father, for example?
A: This is quite difficult to answer. What I think will happen is that Miss M would become… If she were not given the leave of the court, she could well become in the short time quite emotional and upset, and perhaps even depressed because… Again it is like a bereavement. It is letting go of something you had hoped to achieve or wanted to aspire to, and you know that you cannot do it. You cannot achieve that. There will be a time for her having to integrate that into herself, and that will be a very emotionally distressing time to Miss M. Indeed. And perhaps will add to the emotional distress she feels already. So, I know that for most children, whether their parents mean to show it to them or not, they do pick up on that -- even little ones as young as I. She would pick up on her mother's emotional distress at that time."
"But, I do acknowledge that Miss M is very emotional at this time, and, yes, she is on the right track for depression, as the GP would say there. Yes, she does need, I think, as we were talking about, perhaps the support of her family at this time, and her family is a long way away."
"Indeed, Miss M does have this hope. Again, I cannot comment on how deep that is, or how much her need for that is at this point in time. I can only comment on the person that I observe, and the person that I observe is someone who can, for her daughter's sake, keep that under wraps, and who can be the loving, caring mother that takes her out to the toddler group, and makes these little bits and pieces for the other children and their mothers and Iara is benefiting from that. But, as a professional also, I do understand that this is deeply depressing to Miss M. I think I put in my report that she does need the support of her family to help her in the upbringing of Iara. I do acknowledge that."
So insofar as the CAFCASS officer expressed any reservations as to her capacity to cope, it was not upon the depth of the mother's commitment to return but upon the depth of her hope as the sustaining factor in the run-up to trial.
"It is not clear to me whether they were aware that she was not qualified to practise or who in reality would supervise her. Even now, having received the letter of 2 February, I am not clear whether the office in fact has opened or who will supervise her when she will be qualified."
"We hereby inform you that the branch of our law office in the district of Andradas has been functioning since November 2005."
"We are offering her a traineeship at our office until she passes the Bar Council's Examination, when she will become an associate lawyer at the branch office …"
"So yes, this particular bundle coming through did answer some of those dilemmas that I was feeling about this. Yes. Thank you."
"… But no indeed, most of the information that we have discussed today has fleshed that out, as you would say. Yes. Thank you. That has been very helpful.
Q: So, it is right to say that there are not only glaring absences of information that you would feel uncomfortable with.
A: There probably are, but they're not hitting me in the face right at this moment. I think when I put the report together, these were the things that came out to me that I thought, "I've spoken to [Miss M]. I have looked at her statements before court. I have looked at the supplemental evidence that she has presented." These were the things that I still felt that the court would be served best by having information on. I think, certainly from my perspective, we have attended to those issues both verbally and in writing here. I would normally like to take time to review things, but just standing here, at this point of time, as I say, nothing else is jumping out to me at this point in time …
Q: … as being a gap in the plans.
A: Indeed."
Order: Application granted. Appeal allowed.