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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 >> D (Children) [2016] EWCA Civ 89 (11 February 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/89.html Cite as: [2016] 1 FCR 545, [2016] WLR(D) 89, [2016] 4 WLR 52, [2016] EWCA Civ 89 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE FAMILY COURT SITTING AT WEST LONDON
RECORDER WOOD QC
KT12P00084
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE BLACK
and
MR JUSTICE BAKER
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RE D (CHILDREN) |
____________________
Francis Wilkinson (instructed through the Bar Pro Bono Unit) for the First Respondent mother
Jerry Fitzpatrick (instructed by NYAS) for the children by their guardian
Hearing date : 17th December 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Baker :
Summary of facts
The hearing and order under appeal
"Ultimately, if the father is genuinely saying that supervision can't be afforded, full stop, then unfortunately, indirect contact on Skype will be all that is available to him and the children for the foreseeable future or until such time as his financial situation changes. This will represent a considerable loss to the children but in the circumstances of this case an unavoidable one."
The recorder indicated that she assumed the parties would be able to resolve the issue of the identity of the supervisor by 5th May 2015 and directed the father to inform the mother by that date whether he will be taking up the contact and if so whether it would be three times a year or six times a year. She considered that Skype contact had been beneficial to the children and directed that it should continue on a weekly basis. The father had warned that, in the event that supervised contact was ordered, he would decide to stop the Skype contact. The recorder expressed the hope that this would not happen but added that if this was his choice she would release the mother from her obligation to facilitate it in accordance with the order.
(1) the mother should make the children available for supervised contact with their father on up to six occasions a year to take place during each of the three main school holidays and each half-term holiday;(2) each session of supervised contact should be supervised by a suitably qualified person, should last for a minimum period of two hours and a maximum period of eight hours and take place within the London area;
(3) the supervisor would be responsible for deciding the time, activity, venue and all arrangements in relation to contact;
(4) neither party should discuss the arrangements for contact with the children until they had been confirmed by the supervisor;
(5) all email communications passing between the parents and the supervisor in relation to supervised contact should be copied into the supervisor, the mother and the father;
(6) the supervisor was to be in earshot of all conversations during contact;
(7) the supervisor was to have the up to date registration number of the father's car, home address and mobile number;
(8) the non-molestation and prohibited steps orders were to be observed at all times and in all arrangements;
(9) the mother would provide the father with the CVs and costs of three potential supervisors by 20th April and that the father would select one of the mother's named individuals to supervise contact and inform the mother of his choice by email no later than 5th May;
(10) the father would be responsible for paying all the supervisor's fees;
(11) in the event that the father was not prepared to engage in the process of identifying a supervisor, or indicated an intention not to pay the costs of supervision, or did not take up the contact ordered, or failed to confirm by 5th May that he intended to see the children as provided in the order, the mother would be released from her obligations to make the children available for supervised contact;
(12) the mother should make the children available for Skype contact once a week on a Friday, with detailed provisions as to the mechanisms for this contact taking place;
(13) in the event that the father chose not to take up Skype contact, or that he misses without valid reason three consecutive Skype calls, the mother would be released from her obligation to facilitate Skype contact in accordance with the order;
(14) there should be such other supervised contact as agreed between the parties and reasonable indirect contact by way of cards and presents at appropriate times, including from the paternal family;
(15) pursuant to section 91(14), neither parent should apply for a child arrangements order without the court's leave for a period of 3 years;
(16) that any further applications should be reserved to Miss Recorder Wood QC;
(17) the father should pay the outstanding balance of the ISW's fees.
Grounds of appeal
"There are nine grounds of appeal, but before turning to those, there is one overwhelming submission made by the father today that may have merit. That is that having regard to the fact that he cannot go back before the court without leave for a period of three years and, given the fact that the judge knew he could not afford the supervised contact arrangements when his present charitable funding expires this year, he will be unable to take benefit nor will the children have the benefit of the supervised contact unless there is a further hearing before the court, which is barred by the terms of the order. Furthermore, he submits there appears to be no logical basis for a s.91(14) order for three years given that the supervised contact was intended to lead to something. It may well be that the judge has not carefully thought through what the purpose of supervised contact was intended to be, namely to lead to direct contact at some time in the future."
Ryder LJ then reformulated the grounds of appeal incorporating a tenth ground encompassing the point identified in the passage just cited.
(1) The recorder erred in ordering supervised contact, there being no evidence from any of the existing supervised contact sessions to support the requirement of supervision.(2) The recorder erred in finding that the father undermined the mother in front of the children during the Skype call on 25th July 2014.
(3) The recorder was wrong to order supervised contact when there was evidence that it was not affordable.
(4) The order pursuant to s.91(14) was unjustified.
(5) The recorder, in ordering supervised contact, placed too much weight on one email dated 1st August 2014.
(6) The requirement that the father pay the outstanding ISW costs was wrong and outside her jurisdiction.
(7) There is no logical basis for an order pursuant to s.91(14) for three years given that the supervised contact was intended to lead to something and, upon expiry of his present charitable funding in Easter 2016, neither the children nor the father will be able to take advantage of supervised contact without a further hearing before the court.
The requirement that contact be supervised
The order under s.91(14)
"On disposing of any application for an order under this Act, the court may (whether or not it makes any other order in response to the application) order that no application for an order under this Act of any specified kind may be made with respect to the child concerned by any person named in the order without leave of the court."
"(1) S.91(14) should be read in conjunction with s.1(1) which makes the welfare of the child the paramount consideration.
(2) The power to restrict applications to the court is discretionary and in the exercise of its discretion the court must weigh in the balance all the relevant circumstances.
(3) An important consideration is that to impose a restriction is a statutory intrusion into the right of a party to bring proceedings before the court and to be heard in matters affecting his/her child.
(4) The power is therefore to be used with great care and sparingly, the exception and not the rule.
(5) It is generally to be seen as a useful weapon of last resort in cases of repeated and unreasonable applications.
(6) In suitable circumstances (and on clear evidence), a court may impose the leave restriction in cases where the welfare of the child requires it, although there is no past history of making unreasonable applications.
(7) In cases under para (6) above, the court will need to be satisfied first that the facts go beyond the commonly encountered need for a time to settle to a regime ordered by the court and the all too common situation where there is animosity between the adults in dispute or between the local authority and the family and secondly that there is a serious risk that, without the imposition of the restriction, the child or the primary carers will be subject to unacceptable strain.
(8) A court may impose the restriction on making applications in the absence of a request from any of the parties, subject, of course, to the rules of natural justice such as an opportunity for the parties to be heard on the point.
(9) A restriction may be imposed with or without limit of time.
(10) The degree of restriction should be proportionate to the harm it is intended to avoid. Therefore the court imposing the restriction should carefully consider the extent of the restriction to be imposed and specify, where appropriate, the type of application to be restrained and the duration of the order.
(11) It would be undesirable in other than the most exceptional cases to make the order ex parte."
(1) Ideally, such an application should be made in writing on notice in the normal way….
(2) There will, however, be cases in which the question of a s.91(14) order arises either during or at the end of a hearing. It may arise on the application of one of the parties, or on the court's own initiative. One or more of the parties before the court may be unrepresented.
(3) In the circumstances identified in para (2), the court may make an order under s.91(14). It is, however, of the utmost importance that the party or parties or other persons affected by the order, particularly if they are in person: (a) understand that such an application is being made, or that consideration is being given to making a s.91(14) order; (b) understand the meaning and effect of such an order, and (c) have a proper opportunity to make submissions to the court….
(4) ….
(5) Where the party affected by a proposed s.91(14) order is in person, it is particularly important that he or she (a) understands the effect of such an order, and (b) is given a proper opportunity to respond to it. This may mean adjourning the application for it to be made in writing and on notice.
(6) Where the parties are both or all in person, there is a powerful obligation on any court minded to make a s.91(14) order to explain to them the course the court is minded to take. This will involve the court telling the parties in ordinary language what a s.91(14) order is, and what effect it has, together with the duration of the order which the court has in mind to impose. Above all, unrepresented parties must be given the opportunity to make any submissions they wish about the making of such an order, and if there is a substantive objection on which a litigant wishes to seek legal advice the court should either normally not make an order; alternatively it can make an order and give the recipient permission to apply to set it aside within a specified time."
"Neither the father nor the mother shall make applications for child arrangement orders (section 8 of the Children Act 1989) without the leave of the court until 4 pm on 2nd April 2018."
The recorder's reasons for making the order are set out in paragraph 103 of her judgment:
"In relation to the s.91(14) order, which of course acts as a filter to any further applications being made, I consider that an order is now in the children's interests. The mother in particular needs some respite from the litigation not least so that she can focus on her work (she is the sole financial provider for the children at present) and life away from the court arena: I find that her general sense of well being will improve and that in turn will benefit the children. In terms of the length of the bar, the guardian thought that the contact would have to be supervised until the children were 14/15. I think it's impossible to predict how matters might change on the ground for these children and how they might develop over time (in terms of any self-protective strategies for coping with the risks of unsupervised contact that I have identified …) Equally I think it highly unlikely that the father will ever take proper steps to address the issues identified by Dr, Newman – but I might be being unduly pessimistic – were he to do so this could only benefit the children. These are young children and I think on balance the proper period is 3 years."
"In relation to the mother, I formed the view that she has indeed become worn down and worn out by the whole situation. I think she is truly exasperated by what she regards as the father's approach and absolute refusal to engage in the process …. I find that she is overwhelmed by the father's intransigence and his attitude in general."
The second is in paragraph 41 of the judgment of 10th February 2014:
"I do not find the father has made the application as a means of continuing the process of violence, intimidation or harassment against the mother. I am, however, clear that these proceedings are extremely stressful for the mother, that her concerns are genuine and that the situation in general terms is hugely pressurising for her."
Given these repeated findings at various points in the long history of these proceedings, the recorder's conclusion that a period of respite would lead to an increase in the mother's sense of well-being which in turn would benefit the children was manifestly one which she was entitled to reach.
Outstanding invoice
"105. The father has paid some but not all of the costs. In my judgment, he should pay all of Ms Barrett's outstanding fees. Having been invoiced, [the father] took on the role of taxing master (a judge who decides on which costs in a case have been reasonably incurred), he told me he didn't think that Ms Barrett was 'cooking the books' but that in relation to some items she had for example claimed an excessive amount of travel time, or for time spent writing her report. The invoice was rendered in August 2014 in the sum of £812.80, [the father] has paid £197.80. The balance to be paid within 28 days.
106. I have been told that Ms Barrett made no charge for all the work she undertook in trying to set up the contact on the 28th July 2014. I don't mention that because it affects my decision in the slightest, but I think this reflects on the sort of person Ms Barrett is and why it is especially sad that she has withdrawn from being the supervisor."
Lady Justice Black
Lord Justice Patten