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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> P-K (Children) [2017] EWCA Civ 965 (12 July 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/965.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Civ 965 |
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ON APPEAL FROM DERBY COMBINED COURT CENTRE
His Honour Judge Orrell
DE15C00097
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
SENIOR PRESIDENT OF TRIBUNALS
and
LORD JUSTICE SALES
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In the matter of P-K (Children) |
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Miss Isaacs QC & Ms Jones (instructed by Derby City Council Legal Department) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 6 April 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Ernest Ryder, Senior President:
a. "The brain injuries were non accidental and in all probability were inflicted during the night or early morning of the 4-5 June 2009 by shaking or shaking together with impact against a soft surface. These injuries were caused whilst [the child] was in the care of either the Mother or [her partner] or in the care of both of them."
b. "The injuries to [the child's] lower limbs are very likely to have been sustained on a single occasion and were caused either by [the child] being held by the calves or by being shaken. The evidence suggests that it is likely that the injuries to the brain and those to the lower limbs were sustained during the same incident. The injuries to the lower limbs were also non accidental and were sustained whilst [the child] was in the care of the Mother or [her partner] or in the care of both of them."
a. The medical consensus was based on an insubstantial assumption of inflicted injury;
b. The process adopted during the hearing involved a procedural irregularity in that the judge released all of the expert witnesses after Dr Chapman had given evidence when he should have permitted cross examination thereby scrutinising the detail of the evidence; and
c. There is new evidence from a consultant paediatric radiologist, Dr Halliday, which casts doubt on the findings that were made.
a. There were inflicted lower limb fractures;
b. The brain injuries were acute, not accidental in origin and unconnected with the child's birth;
c. The injuries occurred during a single event;
d. There was no evidence of underlying congenital or metabolic disorder; a car accident and the presentation of the child at the GP on 3 June 2009 were unconnected with the causal event.
a. The window for the metaphyseal fracture is between 5 and 8 June on the following basis: the evidence of healing suggests a 7 to 14 day timescale working back from 19 June ie 5 to 12 June and the injury was known to exist on 8 June and so the window is 5 to 8 June; 2 to 3 June is very unlikely;
b. The fracture would cause initial distress of several minutes but then not many signs at all;
c. A child with such a serious head injury would be expected to show symptoms very soon afterwards; the child was unwell on 5 June but had been noted to be ill for quite a bit longer;
d. The child would be expected to collapse and become profoundly unwell soon after the head injury (to include for example a change in the level of consciousness, a convulsion and possibly the cessation of breathing).
a. A clavicle injury which is likely to have been caused during delivery and that was not known until radiology at five weeks of age;
b. The forceps delivery caused extensive bruising to the child's head;
c. The child's mother reported on admission of the child to hospital on 5 June that the child had screamed on being picked up or handled from birth, had taken time to calm down and was generally much happier when left lying quietly ie clinical symptoms of irritability; the mother's partner said that on 3 June the child was screaming, 'it wasn't screaming loud it was more a low moan';
d. The mother said in oral evidence that she had reported to the GP on 3 June that from about four days prior to admission she had noticed brief pauses in the child's breathing for about 3 to 4 seconds and the child had not been eating; to the GP she said that the child was sleeping a lot, was not feeding properly and was quite unresponsive; the mother's partner said that the child had been breath holding all the time and bringing up her food;
e. The absence of any evidence of a clear deterioration in the child's condition consistent with acute injury;
f. A complex picture of head injury compatible with chronic injury; and
g. The absence of birth records relating to the injuries undoubtedly sustained at birth.
Lord Justice Sales:
Lady Justice Black: