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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 >> A (Children) [2007] EWCA Civ 110 (31 January 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/110.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 110 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM LEEDS DISTRICT REGISTRY
(HER HONOUR JUDGE CAHILL)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE HALLETT
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IN THE MATTER OF A (Children) |
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THE SECOND APPELLANT APPEARED IN PERSON.
THE RESPONDENT DID NOT APPEAR AND WAS NOT REPRESENTED.
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Crown Copyright ©
"(1) This paragraph applies where an appellant, who is represented, makes a request for a decision to be reconsidered at an oral hearing.
(2) The appellant's advocate must, at least four days before the hearing, in a brief written statement –
(a) inform the court and the respondent of the points which he proposes to raise at the hearing;
(b) set out his reasons why permission should not be granted notwithstanding the reasons given for the refusal of permission; and
(c) confirm where applicable that the requirements of paragraph 4.17 have been complied with (appellant in receipt of services funded by the Legal Services Commission)."
"Where the appellant is in receipt of services funded by the Legal Services Commission (or legally aided) and permission to appeal has been refused by the appeal court without a hearing, the appellant must send a copy of the reasons the appeal court gave for refusing permission to the relevant office of the Legal Services Commission as soon as it has been received from the court. The court will then require confirmation that this has been done if a hearing is requested to re-consider the question of permission."
"He is 8 years old, but he is a bright and intelligent boy who clearly loves his parents and who I accept would like if at all possible to return to them. There is no reason that has been advanced to me that would support the proposition that he would either lie about his parents or make things up about them. There are parts of the interview that are unclear but in my judgment there was a core of allegations made by RA that individually are reliable and credible."
"Apart from [RA]'s interview he has made a number of spontaneous remarks to carers, teachers and Social Worker all of which are consistent with the main core of his allegations. These in turn in my view are supported by the evidence of others. [RA] has said he and [DA] were left alone. The Health Visitor, the gas man, the Social Worker and the police all corroborate this, having themselves found the boys alone. There is a consistency between the allegation and the supportive evidence that cannot be ignored. He has further said that he was locked in rooms in the house. The parents deny there were locks, but these were seen by several witnesses and I am satisfied they were there. I reject the parent's evidence that the Social Workers and [a named Leeds Housing Association officer] were lying when they say they saw locks, and lying about who visited the property. I accept that [the lady in question] hand delivered a letter to the father referring to these locks."
"The evidence I have heard from the mother, the father and [the cousin] was inconsistent and at times incredible. Where each of their evidence differs from that of the other witnesses I completely reject it. In particular I reject the submission that the professionals have entered into a conspiracy to remove these children from their parents and in so doing have lied to and misled the Court. I am satisfied that each of the witnesses … [and she names a number of them] … have come to this court with the intention of telling the truth and have done so. I do not accept that they have made up their evidence to support the Local Authority's case. On the other hand the parents and … [the cousin] were deeply unimpressive. Their memory recall was selective. Whenever uncertain about a point they told me it was difficult to answer despite being matters which should have been known to them. They were evasive and contradictory of themselves, changing their accounts to fit the particular point they were addressing. I found myself completely understanding the difficulty described by the Local Authority witnesses that it was impossible to obtain a reliable account. It is impossible to be clear from the evidence I have heard from the parents and … [the cousin] about even something as basic as where the father lives and has lived over the last three years. If they can mislead me about such a basic point it is easy to see how they have misled Social Workers. If as the father now asserts he has effectively lived in London for most of the period since August 2003, why has he lied to the Social Workers and the Court in his statements about this? He gave information about living in London at a point in his evidence when he was seeking to exculpate himself from blame from missed appointments and was perhaps not thinking of the wider implications. I am satisfied that he has spent large amounts of time in London leaving his wife to care for the children and without money so that she had to work and in a household where … [the cousin] was a visitor. The reason why the father hid that information from Social Services is obvious."
"There is evidence which I accept that the children have exhibited difficult behaviour at school from 2004. [RA] was on the special needs register for challenging emotional behaviour in January 2006. [DA] was also exhibiting such behaviour in January 2006. I reject the parents' contention that the difficult behaviour started only after they went into care although I fully accept that there has been such behaviour whilst in care. Poor parenting may undoubtedly have contributed to this behaviour however I do not consider that I can safely conclude it was the cause. There may have been many other contributory factors. I am however satisfied that poor parenting and neglect have caused these boys emotional harm and is likely to cause them emotional harm in the future if repeated."
1) The judge, properly reminding himself of his age, was entitled to survey the video of RA's interview without expert evidence. Re N (Child Abuse: Evidence) (1996) 2 FLR -- I interpolate an authority cited by the judge to which I shall return -- is not authority that such evidence is always required. Indeed, it is seldom required. Anyway, the suggestion that it be obtained was made far too late. The father's reference to the absence of "an independent person" at interview is a totally different point. The complaint that the judge was wrong to apply guidance referable to criminal proceedings is a complaint which he took too strict, not too lenient, an approach to the evidential value of the video.
2) The judge was well aware that the threshold relates to "significant" harm and in the light of the findings that the boys were locked in their room, left alone at home, exposed to some violence was well open to her to infer such harm without expert evidence.
3) The allegations that the boys have not thriven in foster care and Mr Anderson's evidence (a psychologist to whom I will return) are relevant only at the forthcoming disposal stage.
4) The parents' mistreatment of the boys at home has found to amount to an abuse of them whatever the family's cultural norms and the apparently correct interlocutory decision to refuse expert evidence in that regard was never the subject of an attempt at appeal and could not now be appealed.
5) In paragraph 46 (that is of course the paragraph I have read) there are devastating findings after apparently a 12 day hearing about the credibility of the parents and the cousin which make it in effect impossible this court to rewrite the judge's conclusions about specific incidents.
6) The judge had before her a report from a psychologist, Mr Larry Anderson. Mr Anderson had been instructed on the guardian's behalf or by the guardian on behalf of the children to make an assessment amongst other things of the children's relationship with their parents and the effect of the parents' parenting on DA's Down's Syndrome.
"… the level and nature of the attachment between the children and between the children and their parents".
"What would be the effect on the children should they ultimately be separated from their parents?"
"I was left with two very vivid images:
One of [RA] being driven away, forlornly waving to his parents, who, although they had hugged and kissed him goodbye, were understandably taken up with trying to help [DA];
The other was of [DA], a vulnerable little boy, quite beside himself with the trauma and grief of maternal separation.
I also felt that I had been party to an act of institutional abuse."
"I have no serious doubts that these children have what, in the language of classic attachment theory, is called a 'secure base'. They are confident and competent in the skills and habits of care-seeking."
"Whether, and to what extent, [DA]'s behaviour is as a result of Down's Syndrome or the parenting he has received prior to entering foster care?"
"The careful assessment by [a particular official] leaves me in no doubt that the deterioration in DA's behaviour is a result of his being placed into local-authority care, or rather, a result of traumatic separation from his parents.
"The manner in which this anguish has been expressed is, of course, related to his special needs."
"Unfortunately for you the judge has given detailed reasons for concluding that you and your wife were wholly unreliable witnesses even on matters as basic as where you have been living. You and she would not be able to persuade this court to prefer your evidence about for example whether the boys were locked in their rooms and whether they were left alone at home on 21 February 2006.
"b) You have misunderstood the nature of the judge's enquiry which was into the boys' circumstances prior to their reception into care on or about 8 March 2006. The evidence from Mr Anderson about the future course best taken in their interests and your complaints about contact, the abuse allegedly suffered by RA in care, and your assertions about his wishes are relevant only at the next stage of the hearing."
Order: Application refused.