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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> B (children) , Re [2006] EWCA Civ 1186 (21 June 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1186.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 1186 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM PLYMOUTH COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE TYZACK QC)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LAWS
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
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IN THE MATTER OF B (CHILDREN) |
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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)
MR G BRAITHWAITE & MR A WARD (instructed by Devon County Council, County Hall
Topsham Road, Exeter, EX2 4QD) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
"… on a balance of probability, on a date unknown but 2-3 weeks before 10.11.04, either the mother or the father (but likely to be the mother) caused [J] to suffer bilateral subdural haemorrhages probably by shaking her on one occasion. The retinal haemorrhages probably occurred at the same time."
"… she was on her back, her hands were straight with her thumbs up; her eyes were rolling around in her head; she was coughing; I turned her into the recovery position since it is part of my job [at B&Q] to know about first aid; I thought she was going to die she looked so poorly …"
"… abnormal fluid in the subdural space on both sides … The signal is that of old blood, i.e. chronic subdural haematomas."
"'Head scanning (CT and MRI) showed no major fresh bleeding, but chronic (more than 2 weeks' old) haemorrhages in the subdural space. These are typical of shaking type injury, imaging showing no suggestion of antenatal or perinatal brain damage.'"
"… surveys a wide canvas, including a detailed history of the parents' lives, their relationship and their interaction with professionals. There will be many contributions to this context, family members, neighbours, health records, as well as the observation of professionals such as social workers, health visitors and the children's guardian …"
"The balance of probability standard means that a court is satisfied an event occurred if the court considers that on the evidence the occurrence of the event is more likely than not. When assessing the probabilities the court will have in mind as a factor, to whatever degree is appropriate in a particular case, that the more serious the allegation the less likely it is that the event occurred and hence the stronger should be the evidence before the court concludes that the allegation is established on the balance of probability … deliberate physical injury is usually less likely than accidental physical injury … built into the preponderance of probability standard is a generous degree of flexibility in respect of the seriousness of the allegation. Although the result is much the same, this does not mean that where a serious allegation is the issue the standard of proof required is higher, it means only that the inherent probability or improbability of an event is itself a matter to be taken into account when weighing the probability in deciding whether on balance the event occurred. The more improbable the event, the stronger must be the evidence that it did occur, before on the balance of probability its occurrence will be established. Ungoed-Thomas J expressed this neatly in Re Dellow's Will Trusts [1964] 1 WLR 451: 'The more serious the allegation the more cogent is the evidence required to overcome the unlikelihood of what is alleged and thus to prove it …'"
"The mother and father being good and loving parents and part of a close-knit family."
"Delightful, confident and sociable young children, who smile readily as they engage with each other and family members and explore their environment."
She observed the mother's:
"… obvious enjoyment of her babies … (she) … engages with J and C in a gentle and affectionate manner."
Her handling of the children was confident. As the judge found in paragraph 22, in all she presented a very positive picture of this family and of the high standard of care given to the children.
"In his oral evidence he said that such haemorrhages could have been caused by the 'wedding fall', or an episode prior to that. He expressed difficulty in being able to date them and said that they would have occurred within weeks or months of presentation."
"… this 'always has to be a diagnosis of exclusion'. [C19] What he is saying in this case is all other possible causes can be excluded which means we are left with non-accidental injury -- since a child as young as [J] could not have caused the injuries herself. The mechanism of the injury is his opinion 'likely to be one of shaking/impact'. In cross-examination he said that '… shaking is the most significant mechanism in head trauma, the repetitive backwards and forwards; I mean shaking in the sense of acceleration/deceleration … The degree of force required is not known, he said, but is likely to be at least such that an independent observer would recognise that it would harm a child'[C20]."
"In terms of changes of behaviour, his evidence was that if a carer had shaken [J] there could have been a brief period of unconsciousness followed by a range of possible symptoms: crying inconsolably; vomiting feeds; droopy mouth; lethargy; not sleeping through the night. The perpetrator would realise that any such symptoms were caused by their actions [C20] but could easily be unaware that any intracranial injury had occurred."
"He said it was possible for subdural haematomas to occur following an impact such as a fall onto a concrete paving stone but he would have expected such 'impact blood' to disappear or resolve after about 2 weeks (Dr Johnson gave a slightly longer time frame -- up to four weeks).
"His answer is that whilst both falls are within the 'window', it is unlikely that either was responsible. The reason he gives for excluding the wedding fall is of course that he saw no evidence of acute -- that is fresh blood. What he saw was chronic blood which means that it has to be dated at least 2 weeks prior to the scans. In his oral evidence he said there was no evidence on the scans (i.e. acute blood) of a fall within 2-3 weeks hence his ability to say it was unlikely that the wedding fall is responsible."
"… how she was walking up a concrete slab path when she suddenly missed her footing and fell down holding [J] in her left arm. She says she heard a thud and then [J] screaming. 'I believe she hit her head on the ground. I am not sure whether she hit her head on a paving slab. However I believe she could have done so as I cut and scarred my left elbow."
That is in paragraph 39 of the judgment.
"The picture I have about how this came to light is a confusing one."
"This incident in July is put forward by the parents as a possible indeed highly credible explanation for subdural haematomas – hence the need for Drs Stoodley and Johnson to deal with it. However as I have already indicated I am quite satisfied the incident has been greatly exaggerated. I shall set out my reasons in a moment, but I pause to observe that if Dr Stoodley and Dr Johnson had been aware of that, the likelihood in my judgment is that neither would have attached much significance to it. Both doctors were of necessity proceeding on the basis that the mother's account was accurate."
"… it is unlikely (but not impossible) that the fall described in July 2004 caused the subdural haemorrhages.' The wedding fall he finds even less likely to be the cause of it because of the difficulty over timing."
"… less confident than Dr Stoodley in the MRI procedure and said that he would prefer to rely on CT scans, finding the latter more accurate. He would not be confident of dating using MRI alone. He concluded his evidence by saying that the wedding fall was an unlikely cause; the July cause was possible but unlikely; and he was not aware of any other cause. Therefore the likelihood of this being a case of non-accidental injury was significant; it was more probable than not, he could not be 100% [certain]."
"I find that on a balance of probability on a date unknown, but two to three weeks before 10 November 2004, 1) either the mother or the father caused J to suffer bilateral subdural haematomas, probably by shaking her on one occasion; 2) it is not possible on all the evidence I have heard and on a balance of probability to decide which of the two were responsible or whether both were responsible; 3) however, and with a view to assisting the parties and indeed the professionals in the future planning and conduct of this case, including the carrying out of any risk or other relevant assessment, as between the two parents I find there to be a rather greater likelihood that the mother was the perpetrator than the father because, as I have said above, she was the primary carer and I found her evidence to be far less credible than the father; 4) but having said that, I ought to make it quite clear that although there to be rather more evidence against the mother than the father, [it] is still insufficient in my judgment to be able to make any more precise finding."
Discussion
" I regret to say I did not find the mother a particularly impressive witness. What really troubles me is not only the way the July fall came to light but also that the alleged incident itself lacks credibility. I am prepared to accept that [J] may have been involved in an incident of some kind, at the grandmother's home in July but in all the circumstances I am driven to the very clear conclusion that it was nowhere near as serious as has been painted by the mother. If it had been I am quite satisfied that this mother (who has specifically described herself as being rather over-protective) would have mentioned it to the staff at the hospital and also to the police. It is also likely that, irrespective of her mother's word of caution, she would have taken [J] to the doctor and would have been likely to have mentioned it when she next saw the health visitor. A fall of a kind she describes (in which her own elbows were cut and grazed leaving scarring and her baby falls onto her head) would have been a most memorable incident in the life of this family and therefore it is highly unlikely that she would have simply forgotten about it. It only apparently happened 4 months before. I find it to be an unusual event for any mother to drop her baby daughter in such a way that she falls onto her head.
"53. I am therefore driven to conclude that whatever it was that happened in July it was a comparatively minor and trivial incident and the mother was well aware that it was trivial … I can well understand how any parent faced with this situation would cast around for any explanation which might come up with theories which were unmeritorious, but the problem in this case is that the mother is putting forward a possible cause or explanation for [J]'s injuries which I find is inconsistent with her behaviour at the time and subsequently.
"55. This inconsistency of behaviour together with the fact that inexplicably [J] suffers no visible injury at all, drives me to the conclusion that the mother exaggerated the incident […]
"56. I am concerned that the parents and grandmother have not told me the whole truth about this incident and this in my judgment casts a shadow over their evidence."
"[J] was an 11 month old baby who was unable to injure herself. I am satisfied that some event has happened to her about which I have not been told. I am satisfied that the parents have not told me the complete truth. In reaching that conclusion I am more concerned about the mother's evidence and credibility than that of the father who on the whole I think was truthful, although the way they both remembered the July incident was not credible.
"70. The impression I have is that the mother has used a minor incident to explain these serious injuries and the father has gone along with it. He was not present at the incident in July and therefore could not have known what had happened, but if he had been told in July when it is alleged that it happened that the mother accidentally dropped [J] in such a way that she had fallen on her head, then the likelihood is that she would have remembered this in November 2004 and said something.
"71. By late December 2004 or early January 2005, the mother must have realised that if the wedding fall was discounted some other credible explanation was going to be required. I am driven to the conclusion on all the evidence that I have heard that she, probably knowing perfectly well what had happened to [J] (in the sense of one episode of shaking), decided to place reliance on an innocuous event that occurred 4 months before by embellishing it to give it authenticity. The difficulty is that for the reasons I have given the event lacks credibility; it simply will not bear the weight of forensic analysis.
"72. I am satisfied on the balance of probabilities the reason why the mother has done this is to try and provide a credible explanation for [J]'s injuries and thereby exculpate both herself and the father. However despite this finding I have not found it possible on the evidence on a balance of probability to inculpate the mother."
"… probably knowing perfectly well what had happened to [J] (in the sense of one episode of shaking), decided to place reliance on an innocuous event …"
"62. I was impressed by the compelling evidence of Dr Stoodley and Dr Johnson. Both are highly skilled experts and experienced in their field. Although I have been referred to certain perceived differences between them I have come to the clear conclusion that the substance of their evidence is clear, consistent and really both are saying much the same thing. There is moreover in my judgment an irresistible logic in their evidence. They are both clear in their reading of the scans that what they are looking at is chronic not acute blood. Both say this dates the haematomas as at least two to three weeks old but they could be older. This therefore makes the wedding fall as unlikely to be causative. Both also say (Dr Johnson perhaps expressing more doubt than Dr Stoodley) that the July incident was unlikely to be responsible. Had both been aware of my findings on the July incident, namely that the mother has exaggerated it, both would have probably excluded it altogether.
"63. In any event Dr Johnson said that if there had been a bleed in July he would have expected it to have dispersed in 4 weeks, which of course is well before November. Too much can be made in my judgment of little differences between experts; is there much difference between 'unlikely', 'very unlikely', 'rather unlikely' and 'extremely unlikely'? They are all, in my judgment, degrees of unlikelihood in which there is a sliding scale of confidence that an event is unlikely; but what the word unlikely means in my judgment is that on a balance of probabilities it is more likely than not that the event did not happen making it therefore improbable.
"64. In any event I accept Mr Braithwaite's submission that the July incident was on all the evidence that I have heard, including the unsatisfactory evidence of the parents, an innocuous event which is much less serious than the mother maintained. This means in my judgment that it must render this incident as even more unlikely to have been the cause of subdural haematomas still visible on the scans in November, such that it can be excluded even as a possibility.
"65. Neither doctor can be sure to the criminal standard that these subdural haematomas were caused non-accidentally, which is an entirely understandable position, but I am satisfied to the civil standard that that is what they are. In my judgment the evidence of the two radiologists is sufficiently compelling and cogent to prove on a balance of probability that [J]'s injuries were probably caused by an adult applying an excessive and unreasonable amount of force on one occasion, and that whilst this was sufficient to cause the injures they were at the lower end of the spectrum."
So the judge's stark conclusion, as he expressed it, was that J was probably injured whilst in the care of her parents.
"I cannot tell you when. As I said, I cannot place a date for when these haemorrhages took place, so theoretically it could be related to a recent fall or it could be related to an episode that occurred prior to that."
He felt it was inappropriate to try to time an event based on the appearance of a haemorrhage, because in his view, the time could last for weeks, even months. So at best this evidence is neutral.
"If we do not have any suitable history then they [by which I assume he means 'we'] do become suspicious of non-accidental injury. But I do agree the presence of subdural haemorrhages is not an absolute sign of non- accidental injury and the appearance of the subdural haemorrhages could be the result of other factors."
"… probably caused by an adult applying an excessive and unreasonable amount of force on one occasion, and that whilst this was sufficient to cause the injuries they were at the lower end of the spectrum."
"The stark conclusion I reach on all the evidence that I have heard, is that J was probably injured whilst in the care of her parents."
Order: Appeal allowed.