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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 (A Child), Re [2015] EWCA Civ 910 (17 June 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/910.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 910 |
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ON APPEAL FROM CROYDON COUNTY COURT AND FAMILY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE ATKINS)
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE McFARLANE
LORD JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE
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IN THE MATTER OF | ||
A (A CHILD) |
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Miss J O'Malley (instructed by Blackfords LLP) appeared on behalf of the Respondent Mother
Miss S Early (instructed by Gill Turner Tucker) appeared on behalf of the Child's Guardian as Second Respondent
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"It is my view unless [B]'s parents take active responsibility in supporting their son's attachment to each of them, [B] will continue to experience conflicting emotions regarding contact with his father."
"mummy is going to get burned in the fire" "[Father] says you will get dead and cutted and go in the fire, your toes and fingers will get cut."
The Mother reported that B seemed to be currently obsessed with the topic of dying.
"... started using emotional blackmail and went further to say that I had touched my son's private parts. I felt that matters were getting out of control and I became concerned that she may be on the verge of having a nervous breakdown. Also the judge had said that [B] had to undergo a psychological assessment. At that moment I decided to withdraw my case to give [the Mother] space and time to relax and forget about the stress and pressure of the court proceedings".
"The other possibility is not that which confronted Judge Platt on 6 December, but it is one that is easy to posit, given the events before the justices. The resolute applicant may outface the defensive wall raised by the respondent who succumbs to the pressure of complex emotions. The respondent may in the abandonment of the defence endanger the welfare of the children and engage the court's obligation to protect. The judge may well in those circumstances determine to proceed with the investigation despite the absence of the principal defence evidence. There may be evidence from some other source; there may be material within the history; there may be a CAFCASS report, any one of which may heighten the need for investigation and form the basis for conclusions adverse to the applicant. Of course the court may always also engage child protective procedures by requesting an investigation and report from the local authority."
"[Mother] has a very high level of anxiety and depressive symptoms with regard to [Father]. She meets the criteria for a diagnosis of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). However, it is not clear whether the trauma she has suffered has been due to direct threat in the form of domestic violence as alleged, or from perceived threat. Perceived threat could have occurred due to the depression [Mother] describes suffering from at the time that she met [Father]."
Then this:
"[Mother] needs a targeted trauma focused treatment. However, it is not likely that she will have motivation for this to succeed if she believes that it is being undertaken in order to move forward contact. [Mother] was clear in her belief that contact is dangerous for [B]. Again, in these circumstances contact cannot succeed."
"[Father's] assessment did not indicate any mental health or personality difficulties. He was assessed to have good capacity for empathy and for understanding the point of view of another. He has worked in a caring profession for some years in the same care home."
More generally, Ms Rogers observed:
"[Mother] communicates continuously to [B] that his father is dangerous."
Then this:
"These are examples of how [Mother's] anxieties impact on [B], and how difficult it is for [B] to form any other view of [Father] than of highly dangerous. Evidence from longitudinal studies indicates that a view of a parent as dangerous or dislikable is damaging to the child's development and can have serious implications for future sense of self-and relationships."
Then two more short quotations from her second report. In her conclusions she said this:
"[B] clearly perceives his father as dangerous and not a nice person. He is clear that he wants no contact and does not want to know about his father or siblings."
(That is a reference to the two children subsequently born to the Father in his second marriage, which is still subsisting). Ms Rogers carries on:
"[B]'s position has shifted since [previous CAFCASS officer] saw him ... and he now no longer says he ever wants to meet his father."
"11. I have heard and read quite extensive evidence from the parties and from others, and if I summarise briefing the evidence of [the Father]), he said that he apparently did have a good relationship with [B], going back in time, but he considers really that there has been a sustained campaign against him - that is how it is put in the position statement filed on behalf of the father. He says that he highlights the conclusions of CAMHS who have been involved with [B] for some time - this is paragraph 11 of his position statement. The main themes that emerged during the course of his therapy were loss and mourning, fear of being left or abandoned, a wish to repair, need to remember and the need to forget. Father's case is that those things all apply to the loss of [B] to his father. He also says that the need for [B] to understand his cultural, ethnic and religious heritage is being ignored, with Mother being now embarrassed by her previous Muslim beliefs."
"To the Judge: I would like you to know I really do not want to see my dad whatsoever. I don't want to keep in touch with him, e.g. letters, postcards. I have made up my mind about it and I don't want to know him. Thank you. [B]."
That could not be more plainly stated, hard reading though it obviously will have been for the Father.
"39. The difficulties in relation to [the Father]), I summarise them really as follows, as I find them to be. I accept the evidence that [the Mother] has got to the point where really she has what is described as a trauma response to anything to do with [the Father]. She has told B that [the Father] is dangerous, and [B] has been negatively impacted by her emotional state and views, as the Guardian says at paragraph 19. [the Mother] does not understand that it would be beneficial to [B] to have a positive relationship with his own father and his family, C60, and she has very little capacity to reflect in relation to this aspect of her son's welfare. So those are all areas of real concern.
40. The third point in relation to [the Mother] is that it is apparent from the evidence that she herself is not resilient, she suffers from extreme anxiety and PTSD - I accept that diagnosis - and she is someone who is emotionally vulnerable. The fourth point is that in relation to her mental health difficulties and her vulnerability, it seems to me on the evidence that treatment of that is possible but there is a concern about her motivation, and I accept the evidence that such treatment is really unlikely to succeed in the context of continuing court proceedings.
41. The fifth point is that I express a serious concern that [the Mother] has insufficient regard for court orders. She effectively said so herself, in giving her evidence, and that is a continuing concern."
So far as the Father is concerned, the judge said this:
"43. What about [the Father]? Firstly the past. He himself accepts that in the course of the relationship with [the Mother] there were arguments, and I am sure he is right to accept that. The more serious allegations that have been made are all denied by him, and there has been no finding of fact hearing and this hearing has not been a hearing to establish the truth or otherwise of those allegations. But I can say in relation to [the Father] as he presents now that he, as I find, presents as a ... calm, thoughtful and caring man, somebody who has a good relationship with his own family, and somebody who does not present a risk to [B]. I consider that he does genuinely care for and want a relationship with [B]."
""49. (e) is any harm the child has suffered or is at risk of suffering. The position here is that the social worker was asked to provide a report considering this specifically, and her views were recorded, as I have mentioned, in the evidence that she gave, but I have to say that I agree with the Guardian when she said that this is a case in which, sadly, it is pretty clear that [B] has suffered significant harm. The result of that is that there is potentially the jurisdiction to make, for example, a supervision order because I think the threshold for a public order is satisfied in this case, and I disagree with the social worker when she said otherwise and I agree with the Guardian, I think the Guardian was right when she said that. The Guardian was perhaps somewhat reluctant to say it when she was giving her evidence, it is not a very constructive thing to say about any family, but I am afraid it is clearly the case for [B] in my view."
"53. Firstly this, that in relation to a change of residence order, whether suspended or adjourned, with the intention really that it effectively provides for an order for direct contact, I am satisfied that that order should not be made and that the deemed application should be dismissed. I say that for a number of reasons. Firstly perhaps that an actual change of residence, insofar as that is envisaged in the possibility of any such order, would be a normal mouse loss to [B], it would be very damaging to him and I agree with both doctor Rogers and the guardian about that, and indeed I think, to be fair, [the Father] himself recognised that when he gave his evidence.
54. Secondly, I think the effectively threat of a change of residence would be very unlikely to work and would be much more likely to cause further damage to [B]'s view of his own father, because it would be seen really as a threat. Thirdly, it seems to me that it is inappropriate and really unfortunately ineffective to make an order by means of really what is a threat unless you mean it, unless you are prepared to carry it through if it comes to the point, and here, as the Father himself recognised, that is not realistic, it would clearly not be in [B]'s best interests to carry through any such change of residence order, whether suspended or adjourned.
55. The second question is what about direct contact, an order for direct contact? Again, I have come to the same conclusion that I do not think that any such order should be made. I say that for a number of reasons: firstly, I agree with the evidence, for example, of Dr Rogers and the Guardian that it would not work; secondly, it seems to me that it in fact would be counterproductive to make such an order, I think it would be detrimental to [the Mother]'s mental health, it would be likely to cause [B] distress and it would have a detrimental effect on [B]'s view of his own father. So I am clearly of the view that no order for direct contact should be made.
56. I should spell out, however, for the avoidance of any doubt, that I am clearly of that view but it is not because I think [the Father] presents any risk to [B]; I am quite satisfied that he does not, and that is not the basis of my decision that there should be no direct contact."
The appeal
"(2A) A court, in the circumstances mentioned in subsection (4)(a) or (7), is as respects each parent within subsection (6)(a) to presume, unless the contrary is shown, that involvement of that parent in the life of the child concerned will further the child's welfare.
(2B) In subsection (2A) 'involvement' means involvement of some kind, either direct or indirect, but not any particular division of a child's time."
Discussion
"75. In all aspects of life, whilst some duties and responsibilities may be a pleasure to discharge, others may well be unwelcome and a burden. Whilst parenting in many respects brings joy, even in families where life is comparatively harmonious, the responsibility of being a parent can be tough. Where parents separate the burden for each and every member of the family group can be, and probably will be, heavy. It is not easy, indeed it is tough, to be a single parent with the care of a child. Equally, it is tough to be the parent of a child for whom you no longer have the day to day care and with whom you no longer enjoy the ordinary stuff of everyday life because you only spend limited time with your child. Where all contact between a parent and a child is prevented, the burden on that parent will be of the highest order. Equally, for the parent who has the primary care of a child, to send that child off to spend time with the other parent may, in some cases, be itself a significant burden; it may, to use modern parlance, be 'a very big ask'. Where, however, it is plainly in the best interests of a child to spend time with the other parent then, tough or not, part of the responsibility of the parent with care must be the duty and responsibility to deliver what the child needs, hard though that may be.
...
77. Where there are significant difficulties in the way of establishing safe and beneficial contact, the parents share the primary responsibility of addressing those difficulties so that, in time, and maybe with outside help, the child can benefit from being in a full relationship with each parent ...
78. Parents, both those who have primary care and those who seek to spend time with their child, have a responsibility to do their best to meet their child's needs in relation to the provision of contact, just as they do in every other regard. It is not, at face value, acceptable for a parent to shirk that responsibility and simply to say 'no' to reasonable strategies designed to improve the situation in this regard."