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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 >> H (Children) [2014] EWCA Civ 733 (05 June 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/733.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 733 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT, FAMILY DIVISION
Mrs Justice Parker
CM13P00744
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE McFARLANE
and
LORD JUSTICE DAVIS
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Re: H (Children) |
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Miss Pamela Scriven QC and Miss Tina Harrington (instructed by Leonard Gray LLP Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 14 April 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice McFarlane:
Background
The basis of the appeal
i) The judge reached a premature adjudication on the issues of fact prior to hearing all of the evidence and in a manner which clouded her judgment as further evidence became available.
ii) In her conduct of the hearing the judge unfairly limited the witnesses that the mother was permitted to call, and drastically curtailed the ability of her counsel to adduce evidence from her client in chief and to cross-examine the other witnesses.
iii) On the morning of the second day of the hearing (20th December), being the night after the two younger boys had stayed with their father, the judge conducted interviews with the boys. The judge was in error in holding those interviews at that stage in the process and unfairly relied upon material that she gleaned during that process.
iv) The judge failed to give adequate reasons for the conclusions to which she came.
v) The court should have granted the mother's early application for the instruction of a psychologist. In proceeding without an expert opinion, the judge fell into the trap of making her own psychologically based evaluation upon which she founded her decision to change the residence of the children.
vi) The decision to make an immediate change of residence on 23rd December was peremptory and was not justified on any basis.
vii) Finally, six specific examples of unfair process are relied upon.
(a) The judicial interviews with the children
(b) Process
(a) Judicial interviews
"It cannot be stressed too often that the child's meeting with the judge is not for the purpose of gathering evidence. That is the responsibility of the CAFCASS officer. The purpose is to enable the child to gain some understanding of what is going on, and to be reassured that the judge has understood him/her"
(b) Unfair Process
"I have thought very hard, notwithstanding the evidence that I have heard about good contact, whether there could have been incidents when the father had taken a belt to the children, whose behaviour was, as I have said, seriously out of control at this time. But as a result of the combination of the timing; the older boy's assertions; the fact that the children were taken to the police station, as they must have been, in order to make this disclosure; the fact that I had made comments in my judgment only weeks previously about the lack of any assertion by the boys; I have come to the conclusion that I cannot place any reliance on these allegations. Also, the mother's case about what she knew at the time has been markedly unreliable and inconsistent. She cannot possibly have not known about beatings at the time had they happened."
Instruction of an expert
Immediate change of residence
"72. The social worker, JW, who is warm, caring and committed, urges me to leave the children living with the mother because that is what they say they want. Until I enforced contact she was also saying that there should be no contact, because that is what the boys say they want. The proof of that pudding has been very much in the eating, on present showing. I have more than once stressed in this case, as in others, that the word used in the Children Act about wishes and feelings is "ascertainable" and not "expressed". "Ascertainable" often means that the Court has to look at actions rather than words. The ascertainable wishes and feelings of these boys have been demonstrated by the evidence that they are more than happy to be with their father. I suspect they may feel some relief being out of the maelstrom. Their grandmother is calm and robust.
73. The Children's Guardian also urged me to do nothing and not to intervene because of what the boys say they are not willing to see their father. She has done remarkably little as a Guardian. She has not read most of the papers, she hardly knows the boys. When it was put to her that if this was a case of parental manipulation and recruitment, then this could be or would be emotionally abusive to the boys, she took that on board seemingly, or at least superficially, but then said, "But the boys say they don't want to go." She was reminded that they were fine when they went on contact. "Oh," she said, "but the boys don't want to go."
"74. I regard parental manipulation of children, of which I distressingly see an enormous amount, as exceptionally harmful. It distorts the relationship of the child not only with the parent but with the outside world. Children who are suborned into flouting court orders are given extremely damaging messages about the extent to which authority can be disregarded and given the impression that compliance with adult expectations is optional. Bearing in mind the documented history of this mother's inability to control these children, their relationship with one another and wholly inappropriate empowerment, it strikes me as highly damaging in this case. I am disappointed that the professionals in this case are unable truly to understand this message. The recent decision of the Court of Appeal, Re M (Children) [2013] EWCA Civ 1147 requires to be read by all practitioners in this field. Lady Justice Macur gave firm and clear guidance about the importance of contact. Parents who obstruct a relationship with the other parent are inflicting untold damage on their children and it is, in my view, about time that professionals truly understood this.
75. I am in no doubt that I am entitled to disagree with the view of both the Guardian and the social worker, both of whom, although expressing their own views forcefully, recognise that the decision is for me, having surveyed all the facts and depending upon the findings that I make. I disagree with them because they have not taken into account the degree of parental manipulation and the dangers presented to the younger children from the inappropriate power given to the eldest boy. I am in no doubt that the mother's track record is such that she cannot safely have unsupervised contact to her two younger boys at the moment. Much though I would like to give these boys a Christmas as they want it, or as they believe they want it, it is unsafe for them to spend Christmas Day with their mother and her family. Quite apart from anything else, the mother accepts that the two younger children should spend Christmas with the father and his family. They should be told that that is now the parental agreed plan.
76. I am in no doubt that the boys must remain living with their father until this case can be looked at again. I see no chance of any significant change to divert me from that view. I am not inclined to bring this matter back before the circuit judge in January, when I am away, unless there is some emergency which needs to be dealt with. There does need to be some form of further investigation. I am not at the moment persuaded, particularly because an expert of proper calibre has not been identified, that there needs to be any form of psychological assessment. That simply detracts from the judicial role and, after all, it is not experts who make findings and decisions; it is the Court. I would like to see how things settle down."
Lord Justice Davis
Lord Justice Tomlinson