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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> B (A Child) [2018] EWCA Civ 2127 (04 October 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/2127.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Civ 2127 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE FAMILY COURT AT SWINDON
Recorder Miller
SN17C00176
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE NEWEY
and
LADY JUSTICE ASPLIN
____________________
B (A Child) |
____________________
Tina Cook QC and John Ker-Reid (instructed by Royds Withy King) for the Respondent father
Aidan Vine QC and Maria Gallagher (instructed by Local Authority solicitor) for the Local Authority
Benjamin Jenkins and Rebecca Scammel (instructed by Bevirs Law Solicitors) for the Respondent child (by written submissions only)
Hearing date: 27 September 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Peter Jackson:
Outline
- However unexpectedly, Nathan had sustained serious inflicted injuries.
- The only candidates were the parents.
- The nature of the injuries (involving forceful twisting, jerking and squeezing) did not allow for an accidental explanation, and there was anyhow no account of any accident.
- There were three separate applications of force, occurring on one, two or three occasions within about 10 days of admission to hospital.
- The injuries were not likely to be deliberate but to be the result of loss of control.
- It was most unlikely that they were caused by more than one parent.
- There were no obvious risk factors in respect of either parent and many positives in respect of each of them.
- They worked as a team and were attuned to Nathan's needs.
- Both had the opportunity to cause the injuries, the mother more so than the father as she was the main caregiver and he had returned to work.
- The house was a small one in which, if both parents were at home, it would be difficult for one parent to cause injuries on this scale without the other becoming aware.
- One parent was not telling the truth.
- There was no evidence of collusion.
The judgment
- Is it possible to identify who caused the fractures? There are only two possible perpetrators; mother and father. This is accepted by each of them and accords with the evidence I have heard and read. [64]
- Criticism has been made by counsel on behalf of mother of the local authority's threshold document for failing to particularise its case.… Whereas there are significant elements of case preparation by the local authority of this case which have not been of a good standard I am quite satisfied that the parents have been given sufficient particulars of the local authority's case on the injuries in order that they can respond appropriately. There have been no surprises to them about the issues in this case. They have known about the injuries [Nathan] sustained and have had full access to all documents prepared to further the inquiry into the nature and cause of those injuries. I am satisfied there has been no infringement of their Article 6 rights in this regard. It is of course open to a local authority when it has considered the evidence at a fact finding hearing to modify the findings it seeks for example to remove an individual from the pool of possible perpetrators, but in this case the local authority has not considered it possible to do this. [65]
- Both parents love Nathan and had shown appropriate emotion during the hearing; however, the fact remains that he sustained serious injuries in their care. [69-70]
- The family home is a small house where noise from downstairs could be heard upstairs. It is difficult to conceive that noise out of the ordinary could go unnoticed by any adult present; even if asleep, they would be likely to awake. [72]
- In my judgement, it is more likely that [Nathan] was injured when he was alone with one of his parents. I find this because I think it probable that if both were present, they would support each other, thereby sharing the caring tasks and relieving any pressures those may create. It is clear that the parents had organised themselves and apparently worked as a team, sharing tasks. I think it improbable that one would stand by and let the other struggle in their presence. It is more likely that if alone tensions could build and potentially be overwhelming without the support of the other. [74]
- It is clear that mother had greater opportunity to inflict the fractures upon [Nathan]. However, mere opportunity does not necessarily equate with the probability she did so. I have to look at and assess all the evidence. [75]
- I have concluded the injury to the leg did not occur whilst both parents were at home together later on 16 November and into 17 November. I do so for a number of reasons. In my judgement, had it occurred at this time [Nathan] would have screamed in pain to which both his parents would have responded and both would have been aware. Even if mother was asleep upstairs it is probable she would have woken and investigated immediately. It is also likely that had father caused it at this time, he would have been showing signs of agitation and frustration of which mother would have been aware.… [80]
- In my judgement, the mother's greater opportunity to cause these injuries is indeed significant. It is likely that in the week of 13 November, she was feeling emotional and struggling to care for [Nathan]. Father noticed this and took steps to help and support. This aspect of his evidence was not challenged. Father came across as straightforward and practical. He is organised and thoughtful. He was sensitive to his wife's needs. She saw no signs in him of stress or agitation or frustration with [Nathan]. As I have indicated when they were together, they worked as a team. Father did not have the opportunity to cause these injuries unnoticed. Mother was upset that she couldn't breastfeed [Nathan] as she would have wanted. I do not criticise her for feeling that way, it is natural. There were occasions when [Nathan] would not settle and she was alone with him no doubt in pain from her caesarean. Her mobility was restricted. There is evidence that on 14 November, for example, she'd had a bad day with [Nathan]. She accepted in evidence that it had not been an easy time for her but didn't suggest that this was a problem. In my judgement, it is highly unlikely that both parents caused the injuries to [Nathan] and therefore I find that one of them did. In my judgement, I am able, without straining to do so, to identify mother as the perpetrator of each of [Nathan]'s injuries. It is improbable she did so deliberately and I am satisfied she did not. It is likely that at a time when she was alone with [Nathan] and had been for some time, stress levels built and she was overwhelmed by the situation and inflicted force on him causing these fractures. It is probable that [Nathan] was not settling and crying and this caused her to lose control. I find that she knows she used force and hurt him but was not immediately aware that fractures resulted. I am satisfied that she is overwhelmed by grief and guilt about this. It was not a deliberate, malicious act, but the actions of someone who lost control at a time when the stress of caring for a young baby overwhelmed her. By the time father came home she had probably been able to restore calm and regain her composure and therefore it would not have been necessarily apparent to father what had happened during his absence. I have already said I am satisfied she loves [Nathan] deeply, and my findings do not alter this. [83]
- I am not able to say if all the injuries were caused at the same time, albeit with three separate applications of force however I can find that the father was not present when any of these injuries were caused and was probably at work. [84]
- In my judgment, it is more likely than not that mother caused these injuries and that as the pool consists of two possible perpetrators, I find that she did so and that father did not. Therefore, he is removed from the pool with a finding that he did not cause these injuries to his son. [85]
The appeal
The law: putting an adverse case
"52. In a perfect world, any ground for doubting the evidence of a witness ought to be put to him, and a judge should only rely on a ground for disbelieving a witness which that witness has had an opportunity of explaining. However, the world is not perfect, and, while both points remain ideals which should always be in the minds of cross-examiners and trial judges, they cannot be absolute requirements in every case. Even in a very full trial, it may often be disproportionate and unrealistic to expect a cross-examiner to put every possible reason for disbelieving a witness to that witness, especially in a complex case, and it may be particularly difficult to do so in a case such as this, where the Judge sensibly rationed the time for cross-examination and the witness concerned needed an interpreter. Once it is accepted that not every point may be put, it is inevitable that there will be cases where a point which strikes the judge as a significant reason for disbelieving some evidence when he comes to give judgment, has not been put to the witness who gave it.
53. Mr Parker relies on a general rule, namely that "it will not do to impeach the credibility of a witness upon a matter on which he has not had any opportunity of giving an explanation by reason of there having been no suggestion whatever in the course of the case that his story is not accepted", as Lord Herschell LC put it in Browne v Dunn (1893) 6 R 67, 71. In other words, where it is not made clear during (or before) a trial that the evidence, or a significant aspect of the evidence, of a witness (especially if he is a party in the proceedings) is challenged as inaccurate, it is not appropriate, at least in the absence of further relevant facts, for the evidence then to be challenged in closing speeches or in the subsequent judgment. A relatively recent example of the application of this rule by the English Court of Appeal can be found in Markem Corpn v Zipher Ltd [2005] RPC 31.
54. … It appears to the Board that an appellate court's decision whether to uphold a trial judge's decision to reject a witness's evidence on grounds which were not put to the witness must depend on the facts of the particular case. Ultimately, it must turn on the question whether the trial, viewed overall, was fair bearing in mind that the relevant issue was decided on the basis that a witness was disbelieved on grounds which were not put to him.
55. At a relatively high level of generality, in such a case an appellate court should have in mind two conflicting principles: the need for finality and minimising costs in litigation, on the one hand, and the even more important requirement of a fair trial, on the other. Specific factors to be taken into account would include the importance of the relevant issue both absolutely and in the context of the case; the closeness of the grounds to the points which were put to the witness; the reasonableness of the grounds not having been put, including the amount of time available for cross-examination and the amount of material to be put to the witness; whether the ground had been raised or touched on in speeches to the court, witness statements or other relevant places; and, in some cases, the plausibility of the notion that the witness might have satisfactorily answered the grounds."
"… where a witness' honesty is to be challenged, it will always be best if that is explicitly put to the witness. There can then be no doubt that honesty is in issue. But what ultimately matters is that the witness has had fair notice of a challenge to his or her honesty and an opportunity to deal with it. It may be that in a particular context a cross-examination which does not use the words "dishonest" or "lying" will give a witness fair warning. That will be a matter for the trial judge to decide. …"
The law: only two possible perpetrators
Applied to this case
(1) On 24 November 2017, the mother took part in a voluntary police interview "about your suspected involvement in a criminal offence" [S78ii].
(2) The case management order on 3 May 2018 recorded that the local authority was seeking a finding that the mother and/or the father were in the pool of perpetrators, and that a fact-finding hearing was to take place at which "in the event that one or other of the parents is excluded from the pool of perpetrators, the court may go on to consider whether any final order can be made" [C69-70].
(3) On 11 June 2018, the local authority filed a parenting assessment [S275] that made recommendations on three alternative bases: that the mother was exonerated, that the father was exonerated and that neither was exonerated.
(4) As for the parents, prior to the trial neither had made an explicit accusation against the other, but as these limited extracts from their evidence show, both told the court with varying degrees of enthusiasm that the other parent must be responsible:
Mother's evidence
[X at S288]
"As I knew that I had not hurt [Nathan] then it must have been [father]"
[X at S290]
"Q. Do you think there is anything that you did accidentally that might have caused those injuries?
A. No, there's no point where I thought that I had done anything to hurt [Nathan].
Q. Was there any moment when you, in a momentary loss of control, caused those injuries?
A. No… Absolutely not.
Q. How do you think those injuries were caused to him?
A. I think that [father] caused them."
[XX by F at S339]
"Q. Is there something more that you need to tell us about what happened to [Nathan]?
A. No."
Father's evidence
[XX by LA at S402]
"Q. The implication… must be that you are saying if it wasn't you, it must have been [mother], that's right, isn't it?
A. I am not going to make any accusations to who it could be, I'm saying it wasn't me. There is the implication there but I'm not saying she's caused it, … I haven't seen anything to suggest she has and that is, as you say, what we are here to try and find out today.
…
Q The only other person who could have caused them is his mother.
A. I do see that but, as I say, I'm not making any accusations."
[In reply to questions from the recorder at S492]
"… it's a very difficult position for me to be in but I don't want to throw accusations around because as I said I didn't do it, which obviously means that the assumption has to be that [mother] did, but I don't know how she did it, I don't know what happened, I don't know if it was an accident, I don't know if it was deliberate, so I don't want to accuse anything.
So it must, it obviously it must have been [mother] because I know it wasn't me, but that's all I am able to say, I can't say what happened because I don't know what happened, I have not witnessed anything, I have not seen anything that would make me think she's done something wrong, specifically, I didn't see any situations."
(5) In the parties' final written submissions, both parents argued that they should be exonerated and that the other should be identified as having caused the injuries.
Lady Justice Asplin
Lord Justice Newey