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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 >> A, H, C, & W (Children), Re [2009] EWCA Civ 1577 (20 October 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/1577.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Civ 1577, [2010] 2 FCR 588 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE BRIGHTON COUNTY COURT
(HER HONOUR JUDGE WADDICOR)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WALL
and
LORD JUSTICE COLERIDGE
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A, H, C, & W (Children), Re |
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Ms M Hancock & Ms G Taylor (instructed by Messrs W Sussex CC, Williams McDougal & Campbell, Harney & Wells, Howlett Clarke) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Wall:
"First, when did J sustain the injury to his thigh? Second, was the injury accidental or non-accidental? There are other related questions, but those are the two primary questions that I have to determine."
"The 'approved judgment' of the judge seems to me immaculate. The findings she made were clearly open to her and depend in no small measure on her assessment of the credibility of the various witnesses. In my view, it is a classic finding of fact exercise: thus the findings the judge made were open to her and she has explained them carefully. It is not suggested that she made an error of law.
Whilst the application for permission to appeal is skilfully presented, it is not for this court to second-guess the judge. I do not, accordingly, think that an appeal will stand any reasonable prospect of success."
I would quite understand, from the father's perspective, that he would think that someone like myself, coming to the appeal now when colleagues have given permission, would already have made up his or her mind.
"I am a speciality trainee year 1 in paediatrics at Worthing and Southlands NHS Trust. I obtained my primary medical degree from the University of Thessalis, Greece, in July 2006. I came to the UK in 2007 and spent three months undertaking a clinical fellowship at Kings College Hospital, London, in Paediatric Hepatology. I then worked as a locum foundation year 2 doctor in General Medicine at Darlington between March and August 2007, before commencing my full foundation year 2 rotation at Newcastle. During that year I worked in Orthopaedics, Haematology and spent four months working in Neonatology. I commenced my speciality training in Paediatrics, at [the local hospital] in September 2008."
"1. [J] sustained a CML [classic metaphyseal lesion] to his right femur, and that it is extremely unlikely that it was occasioned in utero or during delivery.
2. It is extremely unlikely that the injury is attributable to the post natal checks carried out at the hospital.
3. At the time of the injury occurred [J] would have felt and experienced pain."
"…would have required force either by gripping and rotation of the leg or by holding the baby perhaps around his torso and vigorously shaking him."
"I bear in mind the medical evidence of the type of force required to cause such an injury and the fact that neither parent reported anything untoward at that time."
"Firstly, it is not supported by the mother and is something I would have expected her to recall. Secondly, neither [Dr N] nor [RC] said that J screamed. I find that if he had done so it would have left a marked impression on [RC] who, by contrast, would call J an extremely quiet baby."
"I was impressed by [RC]. She struck me as a committed midwife who had been genuinely concerned about the mother. She volunteered that she was pleased to be dealing with the mother on delivery, having met her on her earlier visits to the hospital. She was emphatic that [J] did not have a hip check on that first examination. When asked why she could possibly recall so clearly that she was there, she said it was because she had recently been studying low birth weight babies and was very keen to learn from observations of examination of such a baby.
Dr [N] gave evidence. She too was firm that the midwife was present. She said the midwife, [RC], was present, because she would have needed a midwife with her in order to give instructions. That is inconsistent with what [RC] says about having been on her own choice to be there, but in my judgment, that is not a significant difference. Her contemporaneous notes appear in the bundle. They indicate that she did Barlow and Ortolani check. She was emphatic that [J] did not scream. She was emphatic that she did not turn round to the father and reassure him that babies often cry under these examinations. She said that at the end of the examination, she sat on the bed and completed the form and would have spoke to the parents then.
I find this fact that Dr N was attended by [RC] at that first examination. To find that she carried out that examination on her own would mean that both Dr [N] and [RC] were either mistaken or lying when they said they were both present. I have no hesitation at all in rejecting either of those possibilities. Those witnesses struck me as accurate and balanced in their evidence. Moreover, the father was alone in saying that Dr [N] was on her own."
This is a point to which I will return later.
"I find as a fact that [J] did cry during that examination but I find as a fact it was not a scream."
"I find that it must have been a stressful situation in that flat on the Saturday night and Sunday morning and I find that the father was someone who reacts badly to stress. Both parents say the father was never on his own. The mother told me that he could only have been on his own with [J] when she went to the toilet, which was just across the hall, no distance away. They both said he willingly got up to prepare the bottles and that the mother was largely responsible for handling [J]. Both were insistent that the father never handled him on his own.
I do not accept that the father had no opportunity to be with [J] on his own. I find the father was awake for much of the night. As I have said, on his own account he was listening out and could not settle.
In my judgment it was obviously possible for him to get up in the night with the baby and it would have been possible for him in the early part of Sunday morning to get up with the baby. I bear in mind however that this was a very small flat. I also bear in mind that the mother's hearing difficulty.
Taking all of the above evidence into account, I find that both parents had the opportunity to cause injury to [J] between the time of discharge and the time of the visit to the paternal grandmother's on the Sunday afternoon. I am satisfied, in the case of the mother, that it is highly unlikely that she caused the injury because I find her very protective physically of [J] and because she has experience of handling small babies. I find that she does earnestly want to know how [J] suffered this injury.
In contrast, I find it more likely than not that the father caused the injury to [J]. He was under stress. He had been working hard. He had been deprived of sleep and there reported examples around the time of his reaction to stress, although, as I emphasise, they do not include any physical violence. Whereas on those other occasions there were other people around to calm him down, there was no-one, in my judgment, to calm him down at the relevant time, from being in the home on Saturday, through to and including the Sunday morning."
"I find that he caused the injury to [J]. I find that he did not set out to harm [J]; I find that he lost his temper; and was rough with [J], either by gripping him by the leg and twisting him, or by holding him and shaking him. I find he used such force that it must have been obvious to him that there was a risk that [J] would have been harmed. In other words, he was reckless about whether [J] would sustain physical harm."
"I find that his insistence that Dr [N] caused the injury, although moderated in the course of presentation of his case, to include the possibility of that an accidental injury had occurred at any point during the hospital stay is an attempt by the father to cast blame elsewhere for an act which he knows he is responsible."
Lord Justice Thorpe:
Mr Justice Coleridge:
Order: Appeal dismissed