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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 >> R-E (Children) [2018] EWCA Civ 953 (01 May 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/953.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Civ 953 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE FAMILY COURT AT PETERBOROUGH
Her Honour Judge Davies
PE16C00425
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE MOYLAN
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IN THE MATTER OF R-E (CHILDREN) |
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Mr Michael Bailey (instructed by GT Stewart Solicitors) for the Father
Ms Debra Gold (instructed by LGSS Law Ltd) for the Local Authority
Ms Meryl Hughes (instructed by Janet Thompson Solicitors) for the Guardian
Hearing date : 11 April 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Moylan :
(1) Whether the judge was entitled at a directions hearing to reach the decision that there should not be a rehearing of the previous care proceedings and;
(2) Whether the judge decided that there should not be a rehearing without having the necessary information.
Background
"The Mother's explanations have gone from no explanation at all and no incident to then saying in the next statement that it must have been (the father); and finally, not until the hearing last week, suggesting that it must have been caused by [C] in an incident that she says she remembers in mid-April where he got hold of [D's] arm and pulled him through his crib, moving the crib across the room."
The judge found the mother's evidence to be "vague and inconsistent and unconvincing" and concluded that she was not an honest or reliable witness.
"Sadly, in respect of the mother, I accept the evidence of (the psychologist) and (the social worker) and the Guardian that the mother requires significant long-term therapy to effect the necessary changes without which she will continue to be dismissive of advice and parent children in a way that is likely to cause them attachment disorders and fail to meet their needs or keep them safe."
The Rehearing Applications
"In my view, it is quite likely that any bruising they manifest could be explained on the basis of an inherited connective tissue disorder resulting in spontaneous bruising due to impairment of the tensile strength of the collagen protein, which normally provides protection to subcutaneous capillaries (blood vessels). There is thus a prima facie case for suspecting that her two sons may have inherited the condition, thereby carrying the implication that any excessive bruising may have resulted from EDS/HM rather than necessarily implicating non-accidental injury."
"1. I was not made aware of D's fracture. I was made aware (by being shown a photograph of D) that he shared the chest deformity of pectus excavatum, with his mother, thereby indicating beyond reasonable doubt, that he shared the same phenotype (heritable disease pattern) with her.
2. I did not have access to the mother's medical records.
3. She self-referred herself to my clinic in order to establish whether or not she might be suffering from a heritable disorder of connective issue so that, were it to have been inherited by her two young sons, it might explain their bruising.
4. My notes do not refer to any comments that [the mother] may have made to me regarding the circumstances of the children's removal."
January 2018 Hearing
"Should there be any reconsideration at all of the findings made by the court? Reconsideration at this stage would mean an investigation/assessment to see if the children have inherited EDS (hypermobility) from their mother. The court is therefore considering whether there is some real reason to believe that the earlier findings require revisiting. Mere speculation and hope are not enough. There must be solid grounds for challenge (Re Z paragraph 33)".
"Subject to hearing the submissions of others, in the absence of any further symptoms in either child since being with the adopters and the absence of any explanation for the metaphyseal fracture, she does, however, not consider that Professor Grahame's letter provides a sufficiently cogent basis for re-opening the findings of abuse in this case.
She appreciates that the matter may be a finely balanced one and if the matter is to be taken further she would urge the court to ensure that there is the absolute minimum of delay before the matter is decided."
January Judgment
"29. When I look at all of the information that is before me today, I come to the conclusion that there is no real reason to believe that the earlier findings require revisiting. The mother hopes that Ehlers Danlos Syndrome might provide an answer to the reason why the children have sustained bruising and why D had a fractured wrist, but the evidence in this case is that the children did not bruise easily. The mother had described the children as playing roughly, or at least C being rough with D. There is no evidence of C having unexplained bruising. The only bruise that was identified on C was the one which the father accepted may well have been caused by him being what the father says is heavy-handed.
30. This is not a case of excessive bruising. This is not a case of multiple fractures. This is a case where C had one bruise, D had two bruises and a fractured wrist. This is not a case which is helped by the article by Dr Horlick which is headed "Multiple fractures in infants who have Ehlers Danlos Syndrome". In the examples he gives in his paper, the children have numerous fractures. In the first one, the child had 14 fractures. The second child had a whole range of fractures of the right tibia, left tibia, ribs, clavicle, radius, ulna, etc. The third child had 12 fractures, so his assessments went on with all these children having, as he says in the paper, multiple fractures. That is not this case. It is not a helpful document.
31. I am satisfied that, when I look backwards at the history of this case, there are no reasons to believe the earlier findings require revisiting. I look forwards as well, starting from the date of the order of His Honour Judge Greene. There are no references to either child having unexplained bruising after Judge Greene's order. It is right to say that, when the mother was having contact to the children, on three or possibly four occasions, she pointed out bruises to the contact supervisors. They were followed up by the social worker and explanations were given. One child had hurt its leg on a ladder. The other child had hurt itself and hit his head on a toy tractor. There was what the mother herself describes as ordinary toddler bruising of these children before October 2016, but no unexplained bruising or fractures after that date.
32. The children have had LAC medicals. They have had adoption medicals. The medicals indicate that the children are thriving. They are doing well. There is no concern raised by any of the doctors who have examined them that these children suffer from Ehlers Danlos Syndrome or unexplained bruising or elasticity of the skin or difficulties with feeding or any of the other trigger factors that might lead one to look for a diagnosis that fits in with Ehlers Danlos Syndrome."
"There was no mention of these problems in her written statements. There was no mention of her suffering from fatigue or chronic pain. There was no mention of her having to take days out and spending says in bed. In fact, the contrary. She gave detailed explanations and a detailed diary of all the activities she had done with the children … She may have chosen not to mention these problems at the time. It would be unusual for her not to mention these significant matters in the course of assessments but they were not mentioned."
"34. Although the mother says she has now had her diagnosis, I am satisfied that does not amount to a solid ground for challenging the findings made by Judge Green. I have done my best to ensure I have not set the test too high. If the children had been suffering unexplained bruises, if there had been unexplained fractures, if there had been issues relating to the other symptoms of EDS, that might have been a ground for saying that there is no evidence about the children. That might have led to testing of the children to see what was causing the bruising, their fractures, their feeding habits, their chronic pain or their chronic tiredness. That might have led to a re-opening of the evidence. That is not this case.
35. In this case, I am satisfied that there are no grounds for challenge. Any hope or speculation the mother had is not solid. There is no real reason to believe the earlier findings require revisiting. I therefore find that this case has not crossed the first stage of the tests set out by the President in the case of Re Z and followed by the subsequent authorities. I refuse the application."
Submissions
Determination
Sir Ernest Ryder, Senior President: