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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> B (a child) O (children), Re [2006] EWCA Civ 1199 (25 August 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1199.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 1199 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM LEEDS COUNTY COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE HUNT
and BOURNEMOUTH HIGH COURT
MR JUSTICE COLERIDGE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
B (A child) |
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and |
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O (Children) |
____________________
Mr Shaun O'Connell - litigant in person
Hearing dates : 7th July 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Wall :
Mr Bradford's case
The facts in Mr. Bradford's case
"3. I have looked carefully at the written material placed before the court. This is a passionate father, one described by the judge as obsessive and I begin to see why. He complains bitterly about many things, going back over years. For example, he complains about the order made by Charles J. He complains about maladministration and misconduct by the immigration service. He complains about the welfare officers. He complains about legal aid. He complains about the respondent's solicitors. What he cannot concentrate on is the order which he seeks to appeal, and that is the only matter which I can deal with today.
4. His Honour Judge Hunt is familiar with this case. There is a complaint that the trial was unfair because Mr. B was stopped from asking the several hundred questions he planned to ask. There is nothing to support that allegation before me. The management of the hearing was for the judge to control. He was perfectly entitled to prevent unnecessary and oppressive questioning, and nothing in the papers before me suggests that this trial was in any way unfair. The judge addressed the correct principle. He made findings of fact well within his power to make, such as in paragraph 14 of his judgment his saying:
"The statement, I am afraid, reveals completely the father's total inability still to accept the past decisions of the courts. As a statement in these Family proceedings, it makes only fleeting reference to [K's] welfare. The content of that statement and the content of many of the father's questions of the witnesses today, amount to proof positive that the father remains, in my judgment, obsessively locked in to his distorted view of the mother as a person. He maintains an obsessively distorted view of the mother's qualities as a parent to [K]."
5. There are other important findings, such as in paragraph 18:
"... I find that the risk of [K] being harmed emotionally by the father perhaps behaving irresponsibly with [K] continues to be a risk of overwhelming proportions."
6. In the light of that finding it is not surprising that the judge ordered that supported contact should continue to take place.
7. I see no real prospect of successfully appealing that order and I would dismiss this application. Given the flurry of applications that were before the court then, there was every justification for making an order under section 91(14). I know, however, that a transcript of this judgment will find its way to Judge Hunt. The order he made is without limitation of time. That is an unusual order and one which might in other circumstances be subject to a limited appeal on that point. I will not give permission to do so because I am confident that Judge Hunt will keep this matter under review, having retained it to himself, and can, if and when the circumstances justify it, remove the unlimited restriction and allow things to return to normal when they can and as soon as they can.
8. So that is the postscript to the judgment to which I invite the judge's attention. The postscript to the judgment to which I invite the father's attention, though with no great confidence that he will take any notice of it, is to urge upon him to reflect again that the child's guardian, who earlier in these proceedings was supportive of the father, has changed his mind because he fears that the father's attitude to the mother, bristling with hostility as it is, risks the misfortune of driving a wedge between K and his father. The father would do well to read paragraph 22 of the judgment, which I will quote again:
"By his obsessive, blinkered and distorted views of the mother, the father is now not only putting the quality of his contact at the margins, he is in fact now running the grave risk of losing [K's] sympathy, love and respect altogether. This risk may develop to a point where there is a risk that [K] opts out of the contact and declines any longer to see his father. He is certainly rapidly reaching the age where he will tire of conflict at this level."
9. So the tragedy is that this father runs the risk of losing contact altogether, notwithstanding the fact, as he knows, that this little boy loves his father, but he also loves his mother and being put into the middle of a conflict of this sort will run the risk of his preferring his mother and losing respect for his father. Mr. B should reflect upon it and should moderate his behaviour. He can make a noble and easy gesture by arranging to provide this boy with a British passport, and so take some steps to mend the fences which he has broken. But his application is hopeless and I dismiss it.
10. A copy of this judgment should be prepared at public expense and sent to him and, of course, to the court."
(a) a contact order by which K's mother would be required to allow K to attend the baptism of K's half sister who lives with the Applicant and his wife …. ;
(b) a specific issue order requiring that K attend a secondary school with a Church of England foundation;
(c) a specific issue order requiring that K be taken to a Church of England service on Easter Day;
(d) a direction that the Applicant should be provided with a transcript of his cross examination of K's guardian in the hearing last year at which I made a defined contact order and the order under section 91 (14).
"I have on more than one occasion in the recent past delivered judgment in which I have explained why the court must continue to regard the Applicant as someone whose behaviour with and towards K and his mother is highly likely to be affected by a grossly distorted and unreasonable feeling of hostility that he holds towards the mother. The risks are so real and significant that I have taken the unusual and regrettable step of directing that K's contact with his father must continue for the foreseeable future to be in the context of supported contact at the (location omitted) contact centre. I made the orders of 29th June 2005 well aware that they precluded K from being with his father and his father's new family even on important and happy occasions such as a baptism. I am not able to regard as sincere the applications that K's mother should be required to take him to a Church of England service at Easter, or on other festivals, or that she must enrol him in a church maintained school. The Applicant conceded that he had made no particular issue about these matters at the hearing in June 2005. Unfortunately the Applicant's history of issuing flurries of applications all at once counts against him. I had in the end to treat the many applications issued prior to the 2005 hearing as frivolous and mischievous. Nothing said by the Applicant to me on 1st February 2006 causes me to take a different view of any of these applications. I am left with the clear impression that the Applicant continues to be motivated to cause more anxiety and distress to K's mother by forcing her into litigation about K. I found in June that K's mother had been significantly harmed emotionally by the stress of repeatedly having to respond to the litigation, most of which has been prompted by the Applicant's numerous applications to the court, these having come frequently, and over a period of many years now, throughout K's life.
My order therefore is to dismiss all of the applications take out by the Applicant on 9th December 2005".
"There is a law going back to Edward the Confessor that everyone must walk to church on Christmas day. I require observance of the law!"
"The history of the case contains fraudulent applications for court orders and public funding of the mother's advocates; the concealment of / failure to obtain key evidence by the mother and officers of the court; contempt of courts by officers of the courts; wilful neglect to public duty; perversion of the course of justice. The criminal offences have been formerly reported to the Police. Two inspectors, each from a different station, have indicated their inability to investigate unless / until invited to do so by a court. 'Judge' Hunt has reserved the case to himself and has refused my application for a lateral transfer. Accordingly, there has been no investigation of the allegations. Even when I made a specific order application for a review of the misconduct / criminal conduct of named officers of the courts, 'Judge' Hunt did not even bother referring to such serious matters in his ruling – presumably because he did not even bother considering them. 'Judge' Hunt denied me the right to a fair hearing."
"Further I must advise you that potentially you are running the risk of the court considering whether or not to make a "vexatious litigant" order against you. It is likely that the Court of Appeal will be very concerned by both the history of the litigation and the number of applications you had made, which were before Judge Hunt on the 29th June 2005."
1. 'Judge' Hunt was not a fit or proper person to conduct the hearing.
2. 'Judge' Hunt failed to respect my rights under the Human Rights Act and the rights of my daughter. 'Judge' Hunt is not entitled to ban K from being exposed to organised Christian influences.
3. 'Judge' Hunt failed to comply with the law.
4. 'Judge' Hunt is strongly and adversely influenced by the knowledge that I have made formal complaints against him, with regard to his conduct of this case, to the Lord Chancellors' Department and the Department of Constitutional Affairs.
5. 'Judge' Hunt failed to comply with an earlier Court of Appeal ruling.
Mr. O'Connell's application
"12. Although we do not have all the papers, it is clear that Mr. O'Connell has been engaged in litigation about his two children (now aged 13 and 11) in the Southampton County Court for a very long time. The first substantive hearing, in which Mr. O'Connell sought residence orders in relation to the children, concluded with a judgment given by HH Judge Milligan on 1 December 1997. The judge made residence orders in favour of the children's mother, granted Mr. O'Connell staying contact every alternate weekend, and reserved any further applications to himself. "
13. Judge Milligan formed an unfavourable view of Mr. O'Connell in 1997. He described him as conducting a campaign against the children's mother and said he was blind to the children's needs insofar as they came second to his own plans.
14. On 12 April 2000, HH Judge Milligan gave judgment on Mr. O'Connell's second application for residence of, alternatively contact with, the children. By this time, contact had ceased. On this occasion the judge's criticisms of Mr. O'Connell were even stronger. He recorded that Mr. O'Connell had made numerous complaints against the professionals in the case and had refused to accept the outcome of those complaints. The judge made the same assessment of the parties that he had made in 1997: he found that Mr. O'Connell remained obsessed with his unfounded view that the children's mother was abusively mistreating them. He found that Mr. O'Connell had manipulated the children by inappropriate questioning. Nothing, he held, had changed since 1997. The judge concluded his judgment with these words: -
"Does the father do this deliberately or unwittingly? The mother feels that he is motivated by revenge. I think this is possible. I think it also possible that he has such a low opinion of her that he is determined that his opinions and views shall prevail over hers. It is in my judgment equally likely that he has some mental or psychological block that simply prevents him from considering any other point of view. But for these unfortunate children the result is the same. When I identify the seriously abusive conduct of this father towards his children, in manipulating them to speak ill and falsely of their mother for his own ends, or inducing them to a state of confusion and anxiety placing an enormous strain upon them, for the reasons and in the circumstances which I have indicated, I am left in no doubt that for the present time any further contact between this man and his children is strongly contrary to their interests."
15. The judge then made an order under section 91(14) of the Children Act 1989 without limit of time. It is fair to say that in doing so he was encouraged by counsel for the mother, who when asked by the judge whether she was asking for a given period, replied: "Your Honour, I do not. I leave it open".
16. On 22 January 2002, the judge refused an application by Mr. O'Connell for permission to bring proceedings for shared residence and / or contact. Once again, he found nothing had changed. Giving leave at the present time, he said, would be to expose the children to considerable emotional risk and would be an act almost of irresponsibility. He refused permission to appeal and kept the indefinite section 91(14) embargo in place.
17. Mr. O'Connell unsuccessfully sought permission to appeal against the order of 22 January 2002 from this court. At an oral hearing on 19 April 2002, Sumner J refused the application. Expressing himself in more moderate language than that used by Judge Milligan, Sumner J nonetheless took the view that the application for permission to appeal was doomed to failure. At paragraph 10 of his judgment, he said: -
"I am left with the clear impression that Mr. O has within him the potential to be a caring and concerned father. Of his love for his children I am in absolutely no doubt; it is clear and genuine. But reading the judgments and the papers, it is apparent that what has happened now is that either the injustices or the perceived injustices – the lack of investigation, the poor quality of all the professionals and the misleading of them – has become a matter of obsession. The difficulty with that is the reaction it has had on the children. I would invite Mr. O'Connell to go back and read the earlier judgment of Judge Milligan and note the physical effects that it has had on the children. It is set out, as I recall it (and I am speaking from memory now) on page 1, and it is repeated later. The children have at various times expressed their own feelings for their father, but have asked that he does not behave in this way."
18. That is the background against which, on 29 September 2004, Mr. O'Connell issued a further application for permission to apply under section 8 of the Children Act 1989 for a shared residence order relating to his children. He also sought an order transferring the proceedings to the High Court and for Judge Milligan to recuse himself. In order to assist him make those applications, Mr. O'Connell made a preliminary application for the assistance of a McKenzie friend.
19. On 5 October 2004, HH Judge Milligan directed that Mr. O'Connell's application be listed without notice to the children's mother on 1 November 2004 with a time estimate of one hour. Although Mr. O'Connell asked for the application to be listed before a different judge, Judge Milligan took the view, correctly in our judgment, that an application for him to be recused from the case could not be made to another judge."
"22. Having concluded his short judgment, the judge remarked, it seems to us without any provocation from Mr. O'Connell: "I remain hopeful, Mr. O' Connell, that one of these days you will find it possible to put your children first". When Mr. O'Connell protested that he was, the judge delivered a homily, which the transcript records as follows:-
"JUDGE MILLIGAN: No, put them beyond your consuming view that you have been mistreated, and misunderstood, and everybody has ganged up against you, and all the professional agencies, and your wife, and everybody you can think of, and you are a misunderstood man. Please, Mr. O'Connell, ask yourself just once perhaps they might have got it right and you might have got it wrong.MR O'CONNELL: I have evidence of perjury and the perversion of the course of justice and misfeasance in public office.JUDGE MILLIGAN: You must adopt whatever position you think is appropriate, Mr. O'Connell. I simply make that appeal to you. You have heard it before. Out of fairness to your children I make it again today. You come to me in a different frame of mind and anything might be possible. I have no wish, ambition or desire to keep you from your children, Mr. O'Connell. I only do so because in my judgment you are an emotional danger to them. You know what that is. We have been round the course a number of times. You are entitled to your view and I respect it. One of these days I hope you will have the humility to reconsider. You do not have to respond. I am simply telling you what is in my mind."
23. We bear very much in mind that the judge had dealt with Mr. O'Connell over a period of some seven years, and had formed the clear view that his obsessional behaviour had caused serious damage to his children's emotional well-being. For the purposes of this judgment, we are prepared to accept that the judge is right about that. Mr. O'Connell also may well have tested the judge's patience in court on a number of occasions. We understand that. But we do not think that either the history of the case or Mr. O'Connell behaviour on 1 November 2004 warranted the judge addressing Mr. O'Connell in the terms set out above. The judge's use of the phrase "You come to me in a different frame of mind and anything might be possible" seems to us unfortunate.
"76.…..We need to point out, of course, that in Mr. O'Connell's case there was no representation or appearance on behalf the children's mother since, somewhat unusually, Ward LJ had directed that the appeal should be heard without notice to her. No doubt this was because the order under section 91(14) of the Children Act 1989 in Mr. O'Connell's case required any application for permission to be made initially to the judge without it being served on his former wife.
77. We were, however, able to make arrangements for her solicitors to be contacted, and they made it clear that were their client offered the opportunity to appear, it was highly unlikely that she would wish to do so. She was content for Mr. O'Connell's application for permission to apply for a shared residence order to be dealt with in this court. The solicitors acknowledged that permission to appeal might well be granted by this court, and that their client's position was fully protected since she would be able to deal with the application for shared residence/contact in the trial court on its merits.
78. We decided to proceed both with Mr. O'Connell's appeal against Judge Milligan's refusal to allow him the assistance of a McKenzie friend, and with his appeal against the judge's adjournment of his application for permission to make an application under section 8 of the Children Act 1989. Whilst against the background we have described, it may be that Mr. O'Connell's application for shared residence has little prospect of success, we took the view in the light of the judge's remarks post judgment that we had no alternative but to extend the limited permission to appeal given to Mr. O' Connell by Ward LJ in order to allow him to challenge the judge's section 91(14) embargo. We then allowed Mr. O'Connell's appeal, and directed that his application under section 8 of the Children Act be listed before Coleridge J, the Family Division Liaison Judge for the Western Circuit, for directions, with a view to Coleridge J either hearing the application himself, or allocating it to a different circuit judge. In making that application, Mr. O'Connell will, of course, be allowed the advice and assistance of a McKenzie friend."
"2. The points are really threefold. What the applicant sought from the judge on that day at a without notice hearing was a direction that the case should be transferred to the High Court, and separately that Judge Milligan should recuse himself from further sitting. Lastly, the applicant sought permission to issue an application for a residence or shared residence order. That was necessary since there was in place an order made under section 91(14) prohibiting issue without the permission of the court.
3. The applicant informs us that the restriction under section 91(14) was imposed by Judge Milligan five years ago or thereabouts, and was of indefinite duration. That is a form of order the propriety of which has been frequently questioned in appeals to this court. Accordingly, I would take the unusual course of saying that the judge should have addressed the application and decided it on 1 November. Had he done so, he would properly have perceived the need at least to grant it rather than to adjourn it indefinitely. There needs to be real progress and we have the assurance that the solicitor for the respondent has accepted that permission might be granted by this court this afternoon. He accepts that his client is fully protected since she will be able to deal with the application in the trial court on its merits.
4. Accordingly, all we need do is to say today that the application for permission to issue is granted. The applicant is therefore at liberty to issue in the Southampton County Court his application for either a residence or a shared residence order.
5. It is abundantly plain to me that Judge Milligan must part from this case permanently. We have had the opportunity of reading what I think may not unfairly be described as gratuitous observations by Judge Milligan to the applicant on 1 November, and I can well understand how a litigant would feel that justice would not be forthcoming for him before that judge in the light of those observations.
6. So the application when listed will be referred to Coleridge J, who will either take it himself or will arrange for it to be heard by another judge of his choosing, excepting of course only Judge Milligan.
7. Paragraph 1 of the order will in due course be set aside and an order granting permission to the applicant to disclose the papers in the case to a McKenzie Friend for the purpose of the proceedings only, and to have the assistance of a McKenzie Friend at any hearing until further order, will be dealt with in our judgments which we have reserved and will emerge in the orders which flow from those judgments. All we have done this afternoon is to validate the applicant's desire to issue in the county court.
8. We have provided that future proceedings should not be listed in front of Judge Milligan, and we have laid upon Coleridge J the burden of either hearing the application to be issued, or alternatively making arrangements on the circuit for it to be heard by another judge."
"Ancillary to the main applications for residence and contact, the following applications are also before the Court now. Firstly, by the Father, that the Guardian should be removed. Secondly, that a psychologist should be appointed to assess the children, in particular, a Dr Lowenstein, the American exponent of that much questioned theory 'parental alienation syndrome', and if not that expert then another. He also alluded to the possibility of seeking disclosure of further documents but that application never proceeded.
The Guardian on behalf of the children also applies for the re-imposition of the Section 91(14) restriction on the Father's ability to make further applications without the leave of the Court. The Father advanced his applications this morning in relation to the removal of the Guardian and the appointment of the psychologist, at great length, and with his customary articulate and, if I may say so, lucid presentation. At 2 o'clock, he, having presented his applications throughout the whole of the morning and referred me to a number of documents, and indeed played me a tape of events now some ten years old, I indicated that I was not going to accede to these two applications and that I would give judgment on all applications at this conclusion. I therefore moved on to the third application, namely the substantive application for residence, shared residence or contact and the Guardian's application under section 91(14).
At that point without warning the Father indicated that he wished to take no further part in these proceedings and left the Court. Accordingly, he has not been in Court this afternoon to hear any further submissions put to me by the Mother and the Guardian. However, he is not at a real disadvantage so far as that is concerned, because I have scarcely called upon the Guardian, in the light of the fact that the Guardian produced a most helpful and succinct skeleton argument setting out the Guardian's position in relation to all the applications in advance of this hearing. That was available yesterday. The Father protests that he only received that this morning, but I find that unlikely, given that he is in e-mail communication with all the parties in this case, including my Clerk, and I am assured that this was e-mailed to him yesterday evening. I too received it yesterday. So the Father has had the whole morning to advance his two main applications, and has chosen to take no further part this afternoon in relation to the remaining applications of which he had good notice and which he knows I was about to deal with. "
"Following the Court of Appeal's decision that the Father should have leave to proceed again, I wanted to try a fresh approach, given the total lack of any progress over the previous nine years. Accordingly, at my suggestion, and with the parties' agreement, last November, by order, I set up a meeting at Bournemouth Crown Court in a room away from the Court where the Father and children could meet in a neutral environment, observed by me and the Guardian. The reasons for my taking that approach are set out in a Judgment which I gave at the time. It has been transcribed and it is in these papers. I do not propose to repeat the reasons that drove me to take that particular course. I am conscious that it was a bold and unusual step. Deliberately so, I was determined to try again for the children's sake.
At that time the Father was again seeking the raft of orders for disclosure and the orders that he sought today, but all in the context of the children repeatedly and forcefully asserting to anyone they came across that they wanted nothing more to do with the Father at any price. It therefore was an unorthodox course which I deliberately adopted. It seemed to me to be necessary to see if the impasse between the children and their Father could be somehow breached. What I hoped essentially was to see if there was even the smallest glimmer of a possibility that, if all the parties, and in that respect I mean the children and the Father, could put the past behind them, then perhaps some tentative steps in the rebuilding of the relationship with the Father might be possible. I did not expect miracles. I hoped, perhaps naively, that the Father might ameliorate his adversarial approach in the interests of trying to get things started by one means or another.
The meeting took place on 2nd December 2005 and, at the Father's suggestion, and it was a good one, it was recorded. There is a transcript in the papers today of that meeting. Sadly my hopes were completely ill founded. Within seconds of the Father appearing in the room with the children, he was referring to past events and criticising the past behaviour of all and sundry. The children's reaction was, in those circumstances, predictable. They were absolutely adamant when talking to him that they wanted nothing to do with him or the Court process, or indeed psychologists, or anything else. They wanted to be left in peace to get on with their young lives, which are self evidently and despite everything progressing very successfully.
However, I should mention two things which struck me from the meeting. Firstly, the children were truly impressive, people. Both of them were highly intelligent and very articulate. M in particular is described by the Guardian as mature for her years. I also found that. The second aspect is in relation to the transcript itself. I would wish to underline that it gives no impression of the vehemence with which these children expressed their views. They are truly fed up that they are still the subject of these applications. And I felt, more than that there was real anguish in them over the possibility of their continuation. The adults have created this mess, was the impression I got from them, and it is time for the adults to stop the mess continuing.
I do not propose to read sections of the transcript, which needs to be read in its entirety, but the following small extracts emphasise the point. On page 8 of the transcript the daughter, M, says this: "I don't want to go with you. I don't know why it is so hard for everybody to understand that. Finally somebody's actually asking us what we want because we have always had people speak to us". I quote that extract because it reminds me that one of the factors which drove me to set up the meeting was that the Guardian had reported on more than one occasion that M, in particular, wished herself to be part of the process and not merely have others report on her behalf.
Again, on page 14, the daughter emphasises this: "We're just fine the way we are. We don't want to change it. We just don't want to change it". And later on A says this: "We would have to go to the station every week to see you". And I intervened to say, "Well, leave aside every week, but what about from time to time?" A replied, "I'd hate to do that. I'd absolutely hate it". Again, real vehemence, which was apparent to me. On page 15, Mr O'Connell said and I quote, "I would like a psychological report". And M replied, "We're not going to go and see a psychologist. You always boss everybody about".
The final extract which I would draw attention to is A saying on page 19 (and in a sense it sums up what was said through the meeting) I quote, "But whatever happens after all this, still, I don't want to see you. Whatever happens, whatever you say, whatever, we don't want to see you. So get that, get that in your head and we don't want to see you and that's it". It was truly an impressive meeting and it is one which certainly affects my views of how to proceed. "
"Later in the statement she says this "The harmony in this family often gets broken by a kind of ghost, a ghost with a name, Sean O'Connor. He is the man I married first, many years ago, and he is the natural father of my children. Things did not work out and I started a new life with my two little ones, but he did not. Sean got stuck in the past, never moved on and started this campaign against me first, and then against every single professional who got involved in the case, including social workers, doctors, health visitors, welfare officers etc. Sean O'Connell does not really want the children. He just wants revenge. He cannot accept that he failed as a husband and as a father". And she concludes her brief and carefully statement with these words, "Finally, please, somebody has to stop this man harassing my family and myself"."
"So the position on the evidence today, as affirmed by the Guardian both in her report and in evidence to me today, is that the children are extremely well settled, developing as sensible and balanced adults and they want to be left alone to get on with their lives. In addition to the evidence, I have had skeleton arguments, as I have indicated, by the Guardian and a very lengthy statement by the Father, running, I think, to some 59 paragraphs over six pages. It is his arguments in support of his applications today. The essence of the Father's stance is that he wants the entire past to be re-opened and re-investigated from first to last. Every previous report which has been produced he wants re-examined. He will never be content until he has achieved that."
"The first application is by the Father that the present Guardian should be removed. He says in written and oral submission that she is not impartial and she is not acting for the children. He says she has not been professional and she has failed to investigate properly a whole raft of concerns which he has. Most of them go back many, many years and relate to the children's presentation at a time, no doubt, when they were deeply embroiled in the immediate aftermath of the parties' separation.
The full extent of his arguments is set out, as I say, in the document he has filed. But essentially it is that if the Guardian has not herself re-investigated all those matters which were in fact investigated at the various times by the Social Services, the schools, the doctors, then she has failed in her duty. The first thing to be said about an application to remove a Guardian is that it is a power that has to be exercised with great care and exceedingly sparingly. Litigants cannot pick and choose a Guardian. To allow that to happen would gravely undermine their ability to operate throughout the case fearlessly and with independence in the children's interests.
I have no hesitation in saying there is not one scintilla of evidence to support or justify the Father's application. On the contrary, I have found this Guardian has performed her function extremely professionally. She has, within a short time, become a real friend to the children and a help to them through these difficult times. She has represented their interests extremely efficiently and sensitively, as is her task. She is not there to be particularly even handed between the parties for its own sake; she is there to support and represent the children's interest. Far from criticising her, I would indeed commend her for her excellent work and her work directly with the children. To dismiss her in the face of that work would be a slap in the fact so far as her support and representation of these children is concerned.
The guardian's own Counsel, as I have indicated, has produced a brief argument in support of the retention of the Guardian. He says that the criticism of Mrs Evans in reality amounts to a complaint that she fails to agree with him. I agree that is really what it amounts to. Accordingly, I would not accede to that application and it will be dismissed."
"The second application by the Father is for the appointment of a psychiatrist to carry out an assessment. The Father's point is that whatever the children may say, however vehemently they may be saying it, their views cannot be accepted. What they say is not what they mean. Accordingly, the only way in which it would be possible to be certain that their expressed views were indeed their real views would be to appoint a psychologist to carry out in-depth assessment of the children, and report to the Court.
The application is opposed by the Mother and the Guardian. It is misconceived, in my judgment. The Father is convinced that the children's views are planted by the Mother. It is far more likely, in my judgment, that the children's views are the result of the Father's actions and behaviour. Whether one describes their attitude to their Father as alienation or not, they certainly are vehemently expressing their views at the moment, and what I saw in my meeting with them, were two children who knew exactly what they were saying and why they were saying it.
It would be wrong to believe that this is one of those cases where the children's views have been bent by the Mother's own hostility to the Father. I do not find that to be the case. As the Guardian has pointed out, there has never been a difficulty about the children talking about happy events in their past, when the Father took part in their care. There are photographs of the Father freely available to the children in the home, and indeed the Guardian told me, in evidence this morning, that the children showed her pictures of the Father from a photograph album kept in the house. So, there is no particular warrant for the assertion that these children's views are not their own, but the product of warped brain washing.
But quite apart from that, the application by the Father is hopeless for two other reasons. Firstly, there is no evidence that they need any assessment at all. They are happy and well adjusted children, doing well at school. That is not the basis upon which the Court orders psychological assessments. Finally, and as if it was not enough, to make such an Order would be completely pointless because the children have indicated, both to the Guardian and to me at the meeting, that they would not take part in any further assessments. Accordingly, it would not be possible even to achieve an assessment of the children. It is impossible to carry out a psychological assessment without a very large measure of cooperation by the person being assessed. I am satisfied that these children would refuse to take part and if they did take part, I would also be satisfied that they would not be prepared to co-operate to the extent necessary. Accordingly, I will not involve these children in any further psychological assessment or assessment of any kind."
"Which brings me to the third and main application, which is, in the first place for contact, although the Father ideally seeks residence or shared residence. He seeks that in the face of the children's clear wishes and whatever may be the reasons from the past as to why they are saying it. It is an Order which I would not contemplate making at present. I have seen them. I have heard them and I propose to listen to them. I respect their wishes. If I made an Order now they would not obey it, and no Court would enforce it. It would be utterly counter-productive so far as the possibility might remain that the children one day might resume a relationship with the Father. At the present time, I am afraid to say that the application by the Father for contact, much less residence or shared residence, is hopeless."
"The Guardian against sets out in written argument the reasons why she wishes this restriction to be put in place. And it is, of course, relevant remind oneself that this is not the first time such a restriction has been put in place. It is in relation to this Father and these children, I think, the third such application. The Guardian relies on these factors, set out in paragraph 30 of the skeleton: "(a) the repeated failures of the Father is his applications to the Court; (b) the Father's repeated desire to re-open matters covered in previous litigation; (c) his total disregard for the children's wishes and feelings; (d) the Father's lack of insight or empathy; (e) his inappropriate application for an expert to report on the children (and I would add to that and his application without serious cause for the Guardian to be removed); (f) his inability to accept the past has little or no relevance now on any application brought in respect of the children; (g) the Father's relentless appetite for litigation in justification of his skewed view of justice". And in paragraph 31, Counsel's argument says, "Above all it is clear that the Father still has no conception of what is in the children's best interests."
I am urged further by Mr Hale, on behalf of the Guardian, having heard the Father give evidence this morning, that insofar as there could be any doubt in my mind about this matter, having seen Mr O'Connell advance his applications this morning, the Guardian is even more fortified in her concern to achieve such an Order. The Father is on a crusade in relation to the past, and the Guardian says to me that in her opinion there is a very real risk of emotional harm to these children if this litigation goes on any longer.
The Father, in my judgment, is abusing the family justice system and the system itself is in serious danger of abusing the children if these proceedings are not ended here and now and for good. The Father has been warned and counselled by Judges over and over again, that he will not achieve his aim by endless forensic brute force. He has been invited to step back and look again. But he knows better and heeds no such warnings or advice. The system cannot be used by litigants to fight campaigns against the statutory services for its own sake. I have to have well in mind, particularly nowadays, the children's wishes and feelings. Mr Hale referred me to the case of Marbon in 2005, where the Court of Appeal once again underlined and reiterated the importance of the Court taking full account of children's wishes, particularly children of this kind of age.
In my judgment, having seen the children myself, they have come to the end of their tether. The continuation of these proceedings in the teeth of their opposition is a gross invasion of their human rights, their rights to a reasonable private and family life. Those of us who work in the Family Courts day in and day out are apt to forget the terrible stress and pressure that is visited on a family by relentless court process, making incursions into their lives at regular intervals during the course of a year. This has been going on for nine years. The Father has been subject to a Section 91.14 Order before. He cannot but have realised that if he persisted, he would be likely to be visited by such an Order again. The Guardian applies to protect these children. She is right to do so. It is most certainly in their interests that they should receive that protection from the Court.
What the Father seems quite unable to appreciate is that the ongoing proceedings are doing much more harm to the prospects of his seeing the children that if he desisted. However, that he has totally lost sight of the real purpose of these applications. The Order will run until 8th October 2009, when M is 18 and A is 16. Mr Hale, is there anything else?"
"(1) Mr. O'Connell was abusing the family justice system and the system itself was in serous danger of abusing the children if these proceedings were not ended "here and now for good";
(2) The children had come to the end of their tether, and the continuation of the proceedings in the teeth of their opposition was a gross invasion of their ECHR Article 8 rights;
(3) The proceedings had been going on for nine years, and the children needed to be protected;
(4) Mr. O'Connell had totally lost sight of the real purpose of the applications."
"… the manner in which I have been treated to date makes me believe that I am a victim of a politically correct institution. Jews in the WW2 were better treated and put out of their Misery but I am persistently being tortured – something even ECtHR accepts as a violation of Article 3 of the Convention e.g. Tekin v Turkey where mental torture is recognised."
"Yet my children have not been able to tell fact from fiction, truth from falsity and unless an expert independent and impartial child psychologist is brought in the children will not have their psychological integrity respect, their voice will not be heard or their medium and long term best interests or their welfare respected.
If after the meeting with my children Mr Justice Coleridge had any real concern that there was no problem with them, he would not have made the order dated 31st January for a half day hearing for directions.
The Guardian had sought three experts as of 17th November but the person who thought an expert was not so urgent was Charles Hale QC after reading the Guardian's initial core bundle which did not include the evidential material necessary only the orders and judgments and the social worker's flawed and invented investigations."
Footnote
Some general observations
"The critical role of both parents in the lives of their children post separation
(3) The courts recognise the critical importance of the role of both parents in the lives o f their children. The courts are not anti-father and pro-mother or vice- versa. The court's task, imposed by Parliament in section 1 of the Children Act 1989 in every case is to treat the welfare of the child or children concerned as paramount, and to safeguard and promote the welfare of every child to the best of its ability.
Terminating non-resident parents' contact with their children is a matter of last resort
(4) Unless there are cogent reasons against it, the children of separated parents are entitled to know and have the love and society of both their parents. In particular, the courts recognise the vital importance of the role of non-resident fathers in the lives of their children, and only make orders terminating contact when there is no alternative.
Parental alienation
(5) The father asserts that this is a case in which the mother has deliberately alienated O from him. It is not. The principal reason that that O is hostile to contact with his father is because of his father's behaviour, and not because his mother has influenced O against his father. Unfortunately, the father is quite unable to understand or accept this. The father's reliance in this case on the so called "parental alienation syndrome" is misplaced.
Blaming the system
(6) The court system for dealing with contact disputes has serious faults, which were identified and addressed in Chapter 10 of the report of the Children Act Sub-Committee (CASC) of the Lord Chancellor's Advisory Board entitled Making Contact Work. I discuss these further in paragraphs 83 to 86 of the judgment. In particular, the court process is stressful for both parents and children, it is expensive for those who are not publicly funded; it is slow and adversarial. It tends to entrench parental attitudes rather than encouraging them to change. It is ill adapted to dealing with the difficult human dilemmas involved, notably when it comes to the enforcement of its orders.
Parental responsibility for the failure of contact
(7) Parents must, however, take their share of responsibility for the state of affairs they have created. Blaming the system, as the father does in this case, is no answer. He must shoulder his share of the responsibility for the state of affairs he has helped to bring about. All the evidence is that he has proved incapable of doing so.