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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> B v Reading Borough Council & Ors [2007] EWCA Civ 1313 (11 December 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/1313.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 1313 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
The Honourable Mr Justice Keith
HQO2X01802
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MAY
and
LADY JUSTICE HALLETT
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B |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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Reading Borough Council Wokingham District Council (3) The Chief Constable of Thames Valley Police |
First and Second Defendants/Appellants Third Defendant |
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Mr Nick Bowen (instructed by Messrs Gabb & Co) for the Claimant/Respondent
Hearing date: 20 November 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Anthony Clarke MR:
This is the judgment of the court.
Introduction
B's claims
"4. The interview was not video-recorded, nor were contemporaneous notes made of it by Ms Sullivan or WPC Grey. But L said things which made them think that B had sexually abused her, even though they were subsequently to accept that what L had told them had not amounted to evidence of sexual abuse.
5. Ms Sullivan and WPC Grey interviewed L again the following day. This time the interview was video-recorded. The claimants' case is that the questioning of L was "outrageous and oppressive"; she was pestered and pressed until she became upset, she was exposed to a number of inappropriate sexual suggestions, but despite all that nothing was elicited which could have been described as evidence of sexual abuse. Specifically, L denied that a game she had played with her father, and which had led Ms Sullivan and WPC Grey to suspect sexual abuse, had been "naughty", she said that she had played the game with her mother, and she said that B was not the only person she referred to as "Daddy". That was what she called one of her mother's boyfriends.
6. B was arrested following this interview. In the course of his interview, WPC Grey told him that the police had medical evidence that L had been sexually abused. That was untrue. Despite that, B denied having ever abused L. He was released without charge, but on 25 April 1990 Ms Sullivan attended a child protection case conference about L, at which she claimed that L had said things which could only have meant that fellatio had taken place. The Re-amended Particulars of Claim do not state whether she recommended that L be placed on the child protection register as a child who had suffered sexual abuse, but what is pleaded is that that was the consequence of Ms Sullivan's claim that what L had said B had done amounted to fellatio. That decision was confirmed on subsequent occasions, and B was not allowed to see L. It looks as if it is being alleged that those decisions were based on the recommendations of the various social workers who were responsible for L's case subsequently.
7. In due course, B issued an application for contact with L. That application was eventually consolidated with Berkshire's application for a care or supervision order in respect of L. Those applications were considered by Judge Kenny in Reading County Court in 1993. He urged the social workers to "take a fresh look" at the case. Despite that, and despite the doubts expressed in the psychiatric evidence filed in those proceedings about the propriety of the actions of the social workers and whether B had indeed sexually abused L, it looks as if it is being alleged that the social workers continued to recommend the retention of L's name on the child protection register. Eventually, following a lengthy hearing in 1995, Judge Kenny found that B had not sexually abused L in any way, and he made various orders intended to promote contact between L, B and B's parents. Eventually, a full care order was made in favour of Berkshire so that L could receive such support and counselling as she needed. In October 1996, she went to live with B, and has lived with him and his new family ever since."
i) on Ms Sullivan (a) to ensure that she carried out interviews, recorded L's responses and demeanour during the interviews, represented the contents of interviews to others, all with reasonable care; and (b) to provide her line management and the Child Protection conference with such information following the interviews as a reasonably competent social worker in her position would have provided;ii) on Ms Sullivan and others to support contact if possible and competently to operate whatever system her employer put in place before (a) recommending that L be placed or remain on the Child Protection Register as an actual victim of sexual abuse; or (b) operating any system to ensure that there was a proper assessment of the allegations before informing others that L had been abused by B and/or that B had an opportunity to challenge information or decisions and/or to attend reviews and the like and/or that the Child Protection conference (and its chairman) were aware of all relevant evidential material; and
iii) on Ms Sullivan and others, in the absence of a reasonable or any system introduced by the local authority, to discharge their professional duties with reasonable care and to follow internal departmental and such statutory and non-statutory guidance as was then in existence.
The police
"However the matter did not end there. Although there was no evidence to support criminal proceedings WPC Grey nevertheless came to the conclusion that the complaint by L's mother was of sufficient substance that L was at risk of further abuse from her father. It is arguable, in my judgment, that from then on there was a legal assumption of responsibility and a special relationship between WPC Grey and the social worker on the one hand and the father on the other, and that a duty of care arose to take reasonable steps not to damage the father by their subsequent conduct."
The first judgment
"In considering whether it would be fair, just and reasonable to impose such a duty, a court has to have regard, however, to all the circumstances and, in particular, to the doctors' admitted duty to the children. The duty to the children is simply to exercise reasonable care and skill in diagnosing and treating any condition from which they may be suffering. In carrying out that duty the doctors have regard only to the interests of the children. Suppose, however, that they were also under a duty to the parents not to cause them psychiatric harm by concluding that they might have abused their child. Then, in deciding how to proceed, the doctors would always have to take account of the risk that they might harm the parents in this way. There would be not one but two sets of interests to be considered. Acting on, or persisting in, a suspicion of abuse might well be reasonable when only the child's interests were engaged, but unreasonable if the interests of the parents had also to be taken into account. Of its very nature, therefore, this kind of duty to the parents would cut across the duty of care to the children."
The second judgment
"(i) the social services department had a written policy on the manner in which social work assessments were to be carried out before findings of abuse were made and suspected victims placed upon the child protection register;
(ii) the department had a written policy on supervision and that it was implemented through competent supervision and management of the said social workers;
(iii) the department ensured that proper case and supervision records were maintained and retained;
(iv) the department ensured that said workers were properly trained and aware of the relevant guidance;
(v) without prejudice to the generality of (iv) the duty extended to having a system which supported contact between parents and their children and further ensured the participation of both parents in the child protection process, even where one parent was suspected of abuse."
"had no reasonable or indeed any sufficient system to enable [its] employees to discharge their professional duties with reasonable care or to follow internal Departmental and such statutory and non statutory guidance Circular Guidance as was then in existence."
Paragraph 51A continued by giving particulars under the headings of "failure to properly assess", "failure to supervise" and "failure to train/support contact". In each case the particulars asserted a failure to have a proper system in place, including a failure to deploy proper procedures and policies, a failure to give proper instructions and a failure to supervise the local authority's social workers.
"Save for one reservation, I do not believe that the imposition of such a duty creates a conflict of interest of the kind which applies to social workers when they carry out investigations into child abuse. It is in the interests of the parents just as much as the children that investigations are carried out competently by staff who are properly managed and supervised, that such staff are aware of the relevant local and national guidance relating to the investigation of such allegations and are properly trained in their application, and that proper records are kept and maintained of such investigations and of the management, supervision and training of staff who carry them out. I see no basis on which it can be said that if duties of this kind were owed to children suspected of having been abused, they would conflict with duties of this kind being owed to the parents suspected of having abused them. Nor have I seen anything in the speeches in D to suggest that the House of Lords would have thought otherwise."
"The primary question before the House is whether doctors and, vicariously or directly, health trusts, are liable in damages to a patient in such a case. Hand-in-hand with this is a parallel question concerning the liability of a local authority in respect of its investigation of suspected child abuse."
At [76] Lord Nicholls said that the essence of the claims was that health professionals responsible for protecting a suspected child victim owe a person suspected of having committed a crime against the child a duty to investigate their suspicions, a duty sounding in damages if they act in good faith but carelessly. Lord Nicholls added at [77] that, stated in that broad form, it was a surprising proposition. He rejected that approach at [78].
"… In principle the appropriate level of protection for a parent suspected of abusing his child is that clinical and other investigations must be conducted in good faith. This affords suspected parents a similar level of protection to that afforded generally to persons suspected of committing crimes."
See also per Lord Brown at [138]. See also, on the correct approach in general to suspects, Brooks v Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis [2005] UKHL 24, [2005] 1 WLR 1495, per Lord Rodger at [38].
"In recent cases before the House concerning applications to strike out statements of claim, the importance of considering actual rather than assumed facts, where there has been scope for argument as to liability, has been stressed: see X (Minors) v Bedfordshire County Council [1995] 2 AC 633; Barrett v Enfield London Borough Council [2001] 2 AC 550 and W v Essex County Council [2001] 2 AC 592."
While recognising that principle, this is a case in which it seems to us that, on analysis, this is a plain case in the light of the reasoning of the majority in D and that there is no need for a trial in order to decide this issue.
Permission to appeal against the first judgment?
CONCLUSION
POSTSCRIPT