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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> HM (An Adult), PM v KH & Anor [2010] EWHC 1579 (Fam) (24 June 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2010/1579.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 1579 (Fam), [2011] 1 FLR 97, [2010] Fam Law 1072 |
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LORD JUSTICE MUNBY
This judgment was handed down in private but the judge hereby gives leave for it to be published
FAMILY DIVISION
(In Private)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Judge of the Family Division)
____________________
In the Matter of HM (An Adult) PM |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) KH (2) HM (by her litigation friend the Official Solicitor) |
Defendants |
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- and - |
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THE STATES OF GUERNSEY |
____________________
The First Defendant (mother) in person
Ms Lisa Giovannetti (instructed by Bindmans) for the Second Defendant
Ms Fareha Choudhury (instructed by the Attorney General's Office, States of Guernsey) for the Interested Party
Hearing date: 30 April 2010
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Munby :
i) One order provided for HM's welfare needs. I approved the transition plan for HM to take up residence at Y which, as I am satisfied, not least in the light of all the professional evidence I have read and heard, remains in HM's best interests. The "danger" to which PM refers exists only in his mind and reflects nothing more than his inability to accept anything which does not accord with his own entrenched views. I also imposed a raft of injunctions against PM which I am satisfied are imperatively needed, at least for the immediate future, to safeguard HM's welfare, and her placement at Y, and to control PM's seemingly unrestrained and potentially destructive behaviour. Finally, the order directed a further hearing before me in July 2010 for a review and determination of the question of costs.
ii) Another order, which I was invited to make by the Official Solicitor, KH and the States of Guernsey, provided for the release to PM in two stages (initially the sum of £20,000 and thereafter the balance) of the funds previously held by DP and blocked by the order I had made in December 2009. The unblocking of those monies was foreshadowed in paragraph [52] of my previous judgment. Given that the other parties all consented to my making the order, and consistently with what I had said in my previous judgment, it was plainly appropriate to unblock these funds.
iii) Another order continued until 14 September 2010 the order I had made on 14 April 2010 blocking the funds held by X (see paragraph [51] of my previous judgment). My reason for doing so remained as before, namely that the evidence satisfied me that there is a real risk that PM would seek to place his assets beyond the jurisdiction of the court, thereby prejudicing the claims for costs which both the Official Solicitor and, now, the States of Guernsey propose to make against him (see further below).
iv) Five orders discharged various orders I had made on 12 November 2009 relating to the three individuals who had appeared and given oral evidence at the hearing on that date and to the two further friends or associates of PM who are referred to in paragraph [24(iii)] of my previous judgment. My reason for making these orders is as set out in paragraphs [50], [53]-[54] of that judgment.
v) The final order, in addition to giving various general directions, dealt with five matters:
a) It recited the disclosure already made to PM by the Official Solicitor's solicitors and provided that if PM sought to assert that any further documents ought to be disclosed he should apply on notice.b) It gave directions in relation to the committal application which the Official Solicitor informed me he proposed to make against PM. Included amongst them was a direction that the committal application was not to be listed before any of the six judges of the Family Division who have previously dealt with this litigation.c) It gave directions in relation to the costs applications being made against PM both by the Official Solicitor and by the States of Guernsey.d) It directed the Official Solicitor's solicitors to provide an account (and supporting documentation) in respect of the funds previously held by DP.e) Finally, it gave directions in relation to any application by PM in respect of costs or in respect of the sums expended from the funds previously held by DP.
i) to enable HM to become settled – settled both generally and in her new placement at Y – following the massive disruption to her life, routines and other family relationships resulting from PM's abduction and keeping of her in Israel from October 2009 until April 2010; and
ii) to ensure that HM is safe and is not again abducted by PM.
The Official Solicitor, supported by the States of Guernsey, submits that injunctions in these terms are necessary and proportionate in seeking to achieve these essential objectives. I agree. In my judgment they are necessary both to further HM's best interests and, indeed, to protect her own Article 8 rights.
"The Second Defendant shall be referred to as 'H', the Claimant as 'PM' and the First Defendant as 'KH' and nothing shall be reported that would identify H."
"in my judgment the public interest must prevail in this matter and the hearing should take place in public. This is not merely a question of private matters not being exposed to public gaze; there is a very real matter of public interest.
At the same time I am satisfied that the very greatest care should be taken to protect the positions of the wife and the mother, and also of the doctors and nurses who are caring for this patient. I am glad indeed that Mr Munby … has addressed that problem. He has submitted to the court a draft minute of order which is designed to implement the protection of their positions. The minute of order is based upon the finding that the court has power to order that the hearing should take place in chambers and therefore that it has jurisdiction to decide that issue. Accordingly, s 11 of the Contempt of Court Act 1981 will apply and can be invoked in order to protect the position of certain witnesses and parties. It seems to me that he has devised a comprehensive formula for carrying out that purpose. Subject to any further submissions which may be made upon the proposed minute of order, I am disposed to follow it and to adopt it in this case."
In the event, the President made the order in the terms of the draft minute.
"AND THE JUDGE being satisfied that he has the power to order that the trial of the Originating Summons herein take place in camera but being of the opinion that subject as hereinafter provided the trial should take place in open court.
IT IS ORDERED
1 That for the purposes of these proceedings and during the trial
(a) the First Defendant be referred to as Mr G(b) the Second Defendant be referred to as the Wife(c) the Third Defendant be referred to as the Mother(d) the First and Second Defendants' daughter (hereinafter called "the Daughter") be referred to as the Daughter(e) the hospital in which the First Defendant is being cared for (herein called "the Hospital") be referred to as the Hospital.
2 That at the trial the following witness that is to say
(a) the Second Defendant(b) the Third Defendant(c) any relative of the First Defendant who gives evidence and(d) any of the medical or nursing staff at the Hospital who gives evidence,
be permitted not to disclose either their name or their address in open court.
AND IT IS FURTHER ORDERED pursuant to section 11 of the Contempt of Court Act 1981
3 That no person shall publish in connection with these proceedings the name or address or any photograph of
(a) the First Defendant(b) the Second Defendant(c) the Third Defendant(d) the Daughter(e) the Hospital(f) any person giving evidence at the trial who was permitted not to disclose their name or address in open court."
i) First, it will be appreciated that although the direction in paragraph 1(a) would have been required whether or not the case was listed in open court (subject to the omission of the words "and during the trial" if the hearing was in private), the remaining directions in paragraphs 1 and 2 were required only because the hearing was to be in open court.
ii) Second, the power of the court to give the direction in paragraph 2 was, as I submitted to the President, established by R v Socialist Worker Printers and Publishers Ltd ex p Attorney-General [1975] QB 637 and Attorney-General v Leveller Magazine Ltd [1979] AC 440: in a proper case, the court, even if it would not be justified in sitting in camera can allow a witness giving evidence in open court to conceal his identity.
iii) Third, although the effect of such a direction on its own may not have been entirely clear in 1994 (see the various views expressed in Attorney-General v Leveller Magazine Ltd [1979] AC 440, though see now Independent Publishing Co Ltd v Attorney General of Trinidad and Tobago [2004] UKPC 26, [2005] 1 AC 190), the court has since 1981 had statutory power to grant a contra mundum order to ensure that its direction is complied with: section 11 of the Contempt of Court Act 1981. Hence the inclusion of paragraph 3 in the President's order and hence the reference in paragraph 3 to section 11.
iv) Fourth, paragraph 2 was not directed to the world at all; it was merely a direction permitting certain witnesses to do what they would otherwise not have been permitted to do, namely not to disclose their names and addresses. Paragraph 3, which in contrast was directed to the world at large, was an injunction designed to ensure that the purpose underlying the directions in paragraphs 1 and 2 was not frustrated.
i) much of what was included in paragraphs 1 and 2 of the President's order was there only because the case was to be heard in open court; and
ii) the orders in paragraphs 1 and 2 were not intended to be and did not take effect as injunctions.
Annexe: the injunctions against PM
"2 PM shall not remove, or attempt to remove, or instruct or encourage any other person to remove, HM from the premises where she is residing, whether:
(a) at Y, or(b) in the care of her mother, the First Defendant, KH, or(c) elsewhere pursuant to an order or direction of the Court.
3 PM shall not remove, or attempt to remove, or instruct or encourage any other person to remove, HM from the jurisdiction of England and Wales.
4 PM shall not have direct contact with HM, whether at Y or elsewhere. For the purposes of this order, direct contact does not include:
(a) Contact by way of skype calls (which, it is envisaged, will ordinarily take place twice each week, subject to HM's expressed wishes and feelings);(b) Contact by PM sending letters, cards, photographs and/or gifts to HM.
5 PM shall not:
(i) attend the premises where HM is residing (whether at Y, with KH, or elsewhere pursuant to any order or direction of the Court),(ii) approach HM, or(iii) enter the area marked out and hatched on the map annexed hereto as Schedule 1 to this order [the area surrounding Y].
6 PM shall not obtain, or take any steps to obtain, a passport or any other travel document for HM. If HM's passport, or any other travel document for HM, is, or at any time comes into, PM's possession or control, he shall forthwith deliver it to the Official Solicitor's representative.
7 PM shall not approach or contact (by any means, including by telephone, letter or e-mail) any employee of the Y Group, or any person working at Y, whether or not employed directly by the Y Group.
8 Any information or views which PM wishes to communicate in relation to HM's care and welfare shall be communicated through the Care Co-Ordinator, in accordance with the provisions of Schedule 2 to this Order, which sets out the role of the Care Co-ordinator and the framework for consultation and future decision-making in respect of HM, in substitution for the provisions scheduled to the order dated 6 September 2009.
…
10 PM shall not bring any further proceedings, in this Court or in a County Court, relating to HM, whether in his own name or on HM's behalf, (including but not limited to, in respect of issues relating to her residence, education and contact with her family), without the permission of this Court or of the Court of Protection.
11 In the event that PM wishes to seek permission to bring proceedings pursuant to paragraph 10 above, he shall:
(a) Notify the Official Solicitor of that intention and serve the Official Solicitor with the application for permission; and(b) Provide to the Court, with the application for permission:(i) A copy of this order; and(ii) A copy of Approved Judgment (No.2) of Lord Justice Munby in these proceedings, dated 30 April 2010
12 PM is prohibited, whether by himself or by instructing or encouraging any other person, from identifying HM by the publishing in any newspaper or magazine or other written medium, or the broadcasting in any sound or television broadcast by means of any cable or satellite service or public computer network or other electronic medium of:
(i) her name, and/or address and/or geographical location;(ii) the names of members of her family (including for the avoidance of doubt KH and JM), or(iii) the name or location of any establishment which is responsible for her care from time to time and/or of the individuals responsible for her care at that establishment;(iv) any picture of any of the above;(v) any other material that is likely to lead to, or is calculated to lead to the identification of HM
if, but only if, such publication is likely to lead to the identification of HM as being a person who is a party to these proceedings and/or whose welfare is the subject of proceedings.
13 PM shall not communicate (otherwise than for ordinary domestic and social purposes) any matter relating to the residence, care, education or treatment of HM, or her contact with her family (including any proceedings before any Court) other than to: (a) any legal adviser whom he may consult or instruct; (b) the other parties and/or their legal advisers; (c) the care co-ordinator, in accordance with Schedule 2 annexed hereto; (d) the Legal Services Commission; (e) any person to whom information is communicated for the purpose of enabling the person to exercise any function in relation to HM which is authorised by statute or by a court of competent jurisdiction; and (e) any other person the Court may permit.
…
15 The Official Solicitor is permitted to serve a copy of this order, with paragraphs 1-5 and 7-14 redacted, on the Home Office Identity and Passport Service, together with an annexe identifying PM and HM by their full names."