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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> B (a child), Re [2006] EWCA Civ 1906 (05 December 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1906.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 1906 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM SOUTHAMPTON COUNTY COURT
(MS RECORDER RALPHS)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WALL
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IN THE MATTER OF B (a Child) |
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MR A HAND (instructed by Trethowans) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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"The Judge concluded during the hearing on 16 May that he would not go on with the case because of the cross-accusations of apparent bias but decided after weighing the balance of the desirability of judicial continuity and the avoidance of delay that he would continue to hear the case. Common law does not permit such balancing exercises and such application for recusal should be founded upon the test of whether the circumstances would lead a fair minded and informed observer to conclude that there was a real possibility that the judge was biased. If on an assessment of all the relevant circumstances the conclusion was that the principle of judicial impartiality either had been or would be breached the Judge would be automatically disqualified from hearing the case. It is not a discretionary case management decision recorded by weighing various relevant factors in the balance. If the court had to predict what might happen if the hearing went ahead any doubt should be extinguished by recusal."
"At present a shared residence order is in force with the respondent mother having the main day-to-day care and control. I am happy for the shared Residence Order to remain in force but would wish the main day-to-day care and control to rest with me."
It is not entirely clear how it was envisaged by the father that he should have the day-to-day care of P but there should nevertheless remain a shared residence order. Be that as it may, that was one of the matters that was stood over to be resolved by the two-day hearing that was due to be fixed.
"I do not have a school holiday timetable for the next school year, yet I hope some contact can be arranged for the sake of P. I hope in the light of events and the obstructions that stopped P spending the time with me […] as per the original order made last November by HHJ Milligan that the following contact can be ordered in my absence …"
Then he spells out four arrangements, starting the first one on 22 September and the last one relating to the Christmas holiday period.
"Previous contact orders were discharged together with a penal notice. She replaced the penal notice with a recital of obligations and an undertaking given by the Respondent mother.
Shared residence order concerning P was confirmed.
The father's application for variation was dismissed.
Set times were given when P should live with her father over the next 12 months - broadly one weekend every three weeks, and extended staying contact in the school holidays including half-term."
"There was not a fair trial of the issues. Indeed the matters in issue were purportedly dealt with by Recorder Ralphs without oral evidence being heard at all and no CAFCASS report being available.
The 'decisions' was made regarding P's contact to the applicant father denies P her right to a family life and privacy with her father.
The applicant father believes there was an element of bias.
The hearing on 18 August 2006 was for two relatively minor points made in the respondent mother's application to be heard. Instead everything was purportedly dealt with and the court's involvement brought to an end. The father's application for residence has just vanished along with his (paid for) C2 application."
"The father is going to complain about the weekends and being restricted to the Romsey area. That is going to be the rub it seems to me. I see the sense of it from P's point of view absolutely and I think, therefore, a recital to the order that the half-term holidays father is having an extended period of half-terms. That is a first draft Mr Belvin then?"
Mr Belvin said "yes" and the Recorder said:
"In recognition of the fact that the weekend holidays, the weekend contacts during term time, will be visiting only and that the reason for the visiting only restraint -- well sorry not visiting only I beg your pardon -- will take place in the Romsey area."
"Mr Belvin: In the Romsey area, yes?
"Recorder: That restraint being considered, by the court, to be in the interests of P because of the travel time, the journey time involved. That is a rough draft and I think a recital so that it is plain to Mr B how this has come about and the thinking behind it."
"A 30 mile radius and then that gives him much more scope. Is he going to complain about the cost of B&B? I mean he does not actually save anything in travel, does he? I do not know what his financial circumstances are at all."
Then there was a discussion about the father electing which of the various access options he was going to choose by a specific date. 5 September was suggested and the Recorder said:
"I think do not put once and for all because he will bridle at that, will he not? Just put here elects which of the following patterns he wants to adopt for weekend contact which comes to the same thing but --"
"Let us assume, and I may be doing him a great disservice, but let us assume that whatever I order today Mr B is going to have apoplexy if it is not entirely to the letter of what he wants."
Then:
"Which is going to make him angrier? Not to be told what I have done today before his next contact or to be told before his next contact so he can give P a really rough time because of the dreadful mother she has got? You know him. I need guidance."
Then:
"We can make sure that the court gets this order through at an appropriate time for P."
Finally at page 35 when the question of costs arose the Recorder said to the mother's counsel:
"Recorder: You are going to seek to persuade me that Mr B's a pain in the neck and he should pay?"
"Counsel: I am your honour and I will tell you why."
There followed then further discussion, which admittedly ended in the Recorder making no order for costs, having been invited by counsel for the mother not to do so.
Order: Appeal allowed.