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England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) >> Lancashire County Council v B [2014] EWFC 19 (17 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/HCJ/2014/19.html Cite as: [2014] EWFC 19 |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting at Lancaster Castle
____________________
LANCASHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL | Applicant | |
-and- | ||
B | ||
-and- | ||
W | ||
-and- | ||
R | Respondents |
____________________
Ruth Tankel (instructed by Vincents Solicitors) for the Mother
Kate Akerman (instructed by JWR Law) for the Father
Jacqueline Wall (instructed by Forbes Solicitors) for the Child
Hearing dates: 16– 17 July
Judgment date: 17 July
JUDGMENT : Lancashire CC v B, W and R (fact-finding)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Peter Jackson:
Background
The medical evidence
The week R went to hospital
The incident on 30 April 2014
I stopped the car and told [him] to get out. He said "What?" And I told him to get out of the car. Without warning [he] back fisted me with his right hand which connected with my nose causing great pain and for it to bleed. [He] also threw his bacon sandwich at me. [He] then got out of the car and walked off. I returned home with my bloody nose and cleaned the blood off. My whole face hurt and [I had] a small cut to the top of my nose. The same day, I went to the [A & E] department where I was treated for the cut and swelling to my nose.
AV U TOLD [THE SOCIAL WORKER] N THE POLICE
[R] WILL NEVER CUM BACK CUS ITS NOT STABLE
WATCH [M'S NAME] WOT I SAY NOW TO POLICE
The parents' credibility as witnesses
Conclusions
(1) R was injured when his right leg was yanked and twisted by one of his parents.(2) The injury occurred sometime between 4.30 pm on 18 December and 5.30 am on 19 December, mostly likely in the middle of the night at a time when R was not settling.
(3) When he was hurt, R will have protested loudly and both parents were aware that something had happened to him.
(4) To the mother's credit, she took him to hospital after no more than a few hours, but ever since then she and the father have colluded with each other in an attempt to conceal the truth from the doctors and from everyone else.
(5) The parents are such unreliable witnesses that it is impossible to say which one caused R's injury and which one is covering up for them. I decline to speculate about which is the more likely perpetrator.
(6) In some cases, this conclusion creates the possibility of real unfairness, with a blameless parent being blamed as a result of a lack of clarity in the evidence. That is not the situation here. Both these parents are responsible for the removal of R, because of their joint decision not to tell the truth. Causing a serious injury to a baby is a terrible thing, but experience shows that it can be done by an otherwise good parent in a moment of impatience and loss of control. What is to my mind just as blameworthy, if not more so, is a deliberate cover-up of a kind that has taken place here.
(7) I lastly find that the father assaulted the mother in the car on 30 April in the manner that she described in her statement on 1 May. It may be that the experience of colluding on that occasion to ensure that the father was acquitted has led the parents to believe that they could use that strategy in this court as well.
[After further submissions]