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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) >> A Local Authority v W & Ors (Application for Summary Dismissal of Findings) [2020] EWFC 40 (02 June 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/HCJ/2020/40.html Cite as: [2020] EWFC 40, [2020] 2 FLR 1219, [2020] WLR(D) 327, [2020] 4 WLR 83 |
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B e f o r e :
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A Local Authority |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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W -and- R -and- S and L (By their Children's Guardian) |
First Respondent Second Respondent Third and Fourth Respondents |
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Mr Nicholas Stonor QC and Kirsty Robinson (instructed by Butcher & Barlow LLP) for the First Respondent
Mr Damian Garido QC and Mark Steward (instructed by Susan Howarth Solicitors) for the Second Respondent
Ms Lisa Edmunds (instructed by BDH Solicitors) for the Third and Fourth Respondents
Hearing dates: 23 April 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice MacDonald:
INTRODUCTION
i) Does the court have power at the case management stage to summarily dismiss disputed findings sought by a local authority against a parent in proceedings under Part IV of the Children Act 1989 independent of its case management powers under the Family Procedure Rules 2010?ii) If the court does have such a power, should it be exercised in the circumstances of this case?
iii) If the court does not have such a power, should the court in any event decide and direct, pursuant to its case management powers under the FPR 2010, that it is not necessary for certain of the disputed findings sought by the local authority against the parents in these proceedings to be adjudicated by the court?
BACKGROUND
i) The two possible causes of S's presenting symptoms are (a) a naturally occurring but poorly understood process that interfered with S's breathing and (b) one of his parents intentionally suffocated him.ii) It is difficult to find positive medical evidence to support (b) where the aetiology of the intracranial features is non-specific, including hypoxic ischaemic injury and metabolic abnormality, the inability to exclude medically non accidental injury is not positive medical evidence of inflicted harm, and the treating clinician's view that there was no necessity for further child protection medical examination implies everything possible was done to find medical evidence of inflicted injury without success. Professor David acknowledges that evidence of absence is not quite the same as absence of evidence.
iii) Professor David's own analysis identifies a number of factors "which if anything point away from S's collapse having been an inflicted injury".
iv) Professor David "cannot state dogmatically" that it is impossible that there was no significant head injury from the fall, but in his view it is highly unlikely.
v) Professor David cannot exclude with certainty the possibility that the S's collapse was a totally unexpected and extraordinary delayed consequence of a very minor accident but considers this to be no more than a remote possibility.
i) There is no evidence of intracranial haemorrhage or abnormal surface fluid collection and no evidence of acute bleeding or spinal subdural haemorrhage.ii) There is no evidence of any significant generalised brain swelling, no evidence of significant generalised curable swelling to the lateral ventricles, basal cisterns and the peripheral subarachnoid spaces appear normal.
iii) There are no abnormal metabolite peaks to suggest any underlying metabolic abnormality.
iv) The two main possibilities with respect to the causation of the brain injury are either an acute life threatening event (ALTE) or an episode of unintentional, such as overlaying, or intentional asphyxia, such as attempted smothering.
v) It is not possible to differentiate between these possibilities on the basis of the scan appearances.
"...having analysed the problem as best one can the final task has been to see if there is sufficient medical evidence to assemble a coherent conclusion that is supported by the medical evidence. If there is insufficient medical evidence to complete the jigsaw or join the dots there needs to be a willingness (on my part) to admit defeat. By being able to take many other factors into account the Court may well be far better placed to complete the jigsaw".
i) On the parents' account, S's fall from the Moses basket occurred late in the evening and as a result of extreme intoxication on the part of the father and his friend. The friend is said to have drunk over 20 pints and kicked the basket. The only witness was the father, who it is said was himself intoxicated by alcohol and cocaine.ii) That alleged incident was, on the local authority's case, disclosed by the parents only some five days after S was admitted to hospital. There is a frank dispute of fact in this regard in circumstances where the parents assert they disclosed the incident in the Emergency Department. Expert opinion rules out the alleged incident as a likely cause of S's head injury.
iii) There is evidence that the father suffers from poor mental health. He has described a voice in his head that tells him what to do. A psychological assessment of the father records difficulties with anger (including the father stating that where he is unable to escape a situation his anger is triggered, with a consequent strong need or urge to cause physical harm), poly-substance misuse and that a complicating feature is a strong inclination towards fabrication, with the father having significant problems with fabrications and lying behaviours.
iv) There is evidence that both parents have misused cannabis and cocaine, leading them to neglect of the children's basic needs. The father now alleges that the mother is addicted to Tramadol. The father exhibits high levels of alcohol consumption.
v) There is evidence that the father has been involved in supplying cocaine from the family home as a result of his high levels of cocaine use, thereby exposing the children to risky individuals.
vi) There has been domestic abuse within the family home resulting in the police being called. The mother informed the Health Visitor that the father was abusive to her and the information provided by the police suggests that the domestic abuse included physical violence by the father.
vii) There is evidence that, within the context of his mental health difficulties, the father has demonstrated a significant level of aggression, has damaged the family home in temper (including on the mother's account punching the wall to the extent that it woke L) and has acted in an aggressive and abusive manner towards the mother. As recently as 19 March 2020 it is alleged that the father attempted to assault the mother (whilst in the company of the same friend it is said kicked S's Moses basket whilst heavily inebriated). The father has described getting angry every day and that anger is his easiest emotion. The father has stated that he is abusive and aggressive when drunk, with a tendency to be violent when under the influence of alcohol. The father has further stated that when angry he is unable to exit the situation and, if the situation involves a child, he will usually raise his voice and then break down and cry.
viii) There is evidence that the parents have neglected the needs of the children in several key welfare domains, including making themselves and the children intentionally homeless, failing to register S with a general practitioner, failing to provide L with a bed of her own and failure to provide sufficient food and formula for the children.
ix) Within this context, there is evidence that the sleeping arrangements for both children were contrary to professional advice, with S being permitted to sleep on his front and to use an adult size pillow as a mattress for his Moses basket and L being permitted to share an air bed with her parents.
x) There is evidence that the mother was adversely affected by S's cry, describing it as a high pitched scream that goes right through her.
xi) As at 10 May 2019, on the mother's account the father had ceased taking his medication and this was impacting on his behaviour.
xii) According to the mother, the father would state that he hated S and would threaten to throw S against a wall. On the night of the 1 to 2 June 2019 the mother has stated that the father made repeated statements that he hated S.
xiii) There is evidence that on the evening of 1 to 2 June 2019 the father had consumed eleven pints, with evidence that alcohol serves to disinhibit the father with respect to anger control.
xiv) The mobile phone evidence before the court indicates gaps in the communication traffic between the mother, the father and the father's friend who it is alleged kicked S's Moses basket during the material period. Whilst the parents make reference in their police interview to phone calls made in the period immediately prior to S being discovered moribund, no records exist of such calls. The father contends that he had use of three mobile phones, namely the one he surrendered for interrogation, a friend's phone and a further phone which was destroyed.
xv) Neither of the parents' phones demonstrate a 999 call being made (the transcript of the 999 call has yet to be obtained).
xvi) There is evidence that the behaviour of the parents during the period that S was critically ill raised suspicions, as did the father's vigorous and prolific account to the police in interview.
"Meadow's publication on unnatural sudden infant death, though the subject of several methodological and statistically (sic) difficulties which unfortunately infected most of his publications on inflicted injury, was (unexpectedly) particularly helpful in the case of S."
"The date of Southall and his colleagues who spent some years using covert video surveillance to detect 'imposed airway obstruction' or 'intentional suffocation', showed that these cases all followed a similar pattern in which repeated episodes led to repeated hospitalisations, sometimes going on for a prolonged period (months or more), leading eventually to the clinicians coming to suspect the cause of the illness episodes. It is true that very occasionally the episode 'went wrong, when a mother, trying just a bit too hard to convince the treating team that there really was something seriously wrong with the baby, would suffocate the child for longer than necessary to cause apnoea and loss of consciousness. The catastrophic end result of prolonged obstruction was brain damage resulting from lack of oxygen. This was fortunately a rare occurrence, but I have vivid recollection of one such case occurring on the paediatric ward at the old St Mary's Hospital in Manchester. At the risk of serious oversimplification, for the sake of brevity, the motivation for this behaviour was not to harm the child but was believed to be a form of attention seeking behaviour, the mother deriving 'support' from the extra medical attention given to a sick child".
SUBMISSIONS
The Father
"[67] The first was where you have a case of brain injury, and an alleged shaking case might be a good example, where the only question is the medical evidence in the case and where the medical evidence effectively collapses during the course of the case. It seems to me that, provided that collapse has revealed a benign causation which renders the parents' evidence otiose, it would be entirely appropriate for the court to intervene. That it rarely does is because almost invariably in those circumstances the local authority, with or without the intervention of the court, makes an application to withdraw."
The Mother
The Local Authority
"...having analysed the problem as best one can the final task has been to see if there is sufficient medical evidence to assemble a coherent conclusion that is supported by the medical evidence. If there is insufficient medical evidence to complete the jigsaw or join the dots there needs to be a willingness (on my part) to admit defeat. By being able to take many other factors into account the Court may well be far better placed to complete the jigsaw".
The Children's Guardian
LAW
The Fact Finding Exercise
i) In care proceedings the court has to test the evidence and piece together the parts of the jigsaw in order to determine whether a clear picture emerges (Re A (A Minor)(Retinal Haemorrhages: Non-accidental injury) [2001] 3 FCR 262).ii) The decision on whether the facts in issue have been proved to the requisite standard of proof must be based on all of the available relevant and admissible evidence including that from the alleged perpetrator and family members (see Re I-A (Allegations of Sexual Abuse) [2012] 2 FLR 837) and the wider context of social, emotional, ethical and moral factors (see A County Council v A Mother, A Father and X, Y and Z [2005] EWHC 31 (Fam) at [44]). This is sometimes referred to as "the wide canvas" (see Re U (Serious Injury: Standard of Proof) [2005] Fam 134 at [26]).
iii) Although the medical evidence is of very great importance it is not the only evidence in the case. The opinions of the medical experts will need to be considered in the context of all the evidence before the court as the court must consider each piece of evidence in the context of all of the other evidence (Re T [2004] 2 FLR 838 at [33]).
iv) Explanations given by carers and the credibility of those involved with the child concerned are of great significance. All the evidence, both medical and non-medical, has to be considered in assessing whether the pieces of the jigsaw form into a clear, convincing picture of what happened (Re A (A Minor)(Retinal Haemorrhages: Non-accidental injury) [2001] 3 FCR 262).
v) The court is the ultimate arbiter of fact and as such it is open to the court to accept or reject expert opinion on the basis of the all evidence. Expert evidence may favour an innocent explanation (or be equivocal or equidistant between innocent and sinister) but the judge, surveying the totality of the evidence, is still entitled to find that a child has suffered inflicted injury (A Local Authority v K, D, & L [2005] EWHC 144 (Fam), Re M-W (Care Proceedings: Expert Evidence) [2010] EWCA Civ 12 and Re BR (Proof of Facts) [2015] EWFC 41)
"In reaching my decision a number of processes have to be undertaken. The mere expression of opinion or belief by a witness, however eminent, that the vaccine can or cannot cause brain damage, does not suffice. The court has to evaluate the witness and soundness of his opinion. Most importantly this involves an examination of the reasons given for his opinions and the extent to which they are supported by the evidence. The judge also has to decide what weight to attach to a witness's opinion by examining the internal consistency and logic of his evidence; his precision and accuracy of thought as demonstrated by his answers; how he responds to searching and informed cross-examination and in particular the extent to which a witness faces up to and accepts the logic and proposition put in cross-examination or is prepared to concede points that are seen to be correct; the extent to which a witness has conceived an opinion and is reluctant to re-examine it in light of later evidence, or demonstrates a flexibility of mind which may involve changing or modifying opinions previously held; whether or not a witness is biased or lacks independence."
Purported Power Summarily to Dismiss Disputed Findings of Fact
"In terms of case management authority, I finally refer (but only for reasons that will become apparent) to the earlier decision of this court (Thorpe and Munby LJJ) in Re C (Children) [2012] EWCA Civ 1489. That was a private law case in which the judge had effectively stopped the proceedings having heard the applicant because he took the view that the application would inevitably fail and that there was no purpose in continuing. In giving the leading judgment, Munby LJ said at [18]: "It is pre-eminently a matter for the trial judge in a case of this sort to determine the form of procedure which will best meet the welfare needs of the children." I have to say that I do not regard that decision as being of assistance in the present case, and I note that Sir James Munby, a member of the court in both Re C and Re S-W, took a very different approach in the later case, no doubt because it concerned child protection and state intervention within a formal framework."
And, in this context, at [46]:
"Rather than seeking to cast doubt on the analysis undertaken by this court in Re S-W (Children) (Care Proceedings: Case Management Hearing) [2015] EWCA Civ 27, [2015] 1 WLR 4099, [2015] 2 FLR 136, by which he was bound and which was and remains authoritative guidance on the summary determination of public law care proceedings, he should have applied it."
Conventional Case Management Powers
"[5] In referring above to established case management practice, I mean in particular Part 12, Ch 3 of the Family Procedure Rules 2010 (FPR 2010) of which contains special provisions about public law proceedings. Part 12 is supplemented by the Guide to Case Management contained in Practice Direction 12A, which itself incorporates the Public Law Outline. This is not the occasion for a full survey of those provisions, but two points are of relevance to this appeal:
(1) The provisions are a self-contained code designed to assist the parties and the court to deal with care proceedings justly and efficiently. Part 12 is a specific application to care cases of Part 1 (the Overriding Objective) and Part 4 (General Case Management Powers) and contains detailed provisions reflecting the spirit of those earlier parts of the Rules. Part 12 is therefore likely to contain all the powers that the court needs, making it unlikely that recourse to the more general procedural provisions will be necessary; at all events, in a case to which Part 12 applies the earlier provisions do not represent an alternative procedural regime.
(2) Part 12 and the Public Law Outline are the most recent in a series of initiatives designed to achieve good, timely outcomes in care cases. They set out stages to the process, list matters to be considered at main hearings, promote judicial continuity and set timescales. The aim is to cut down on superfluous hearings, while maintaining some flexibility. So, r 12.25(1) provides for just one case management hearing with r 12.25(2) permitting a further case management hearing only where it is necessary. By r 12.25(4) the issues resolution hearing can itself be a final hearing, where it is possible for all the issues to be resolved. Extensions of time are closely controlled by s 32 of the 1989 Act, which specifically states that extensions are not to be granted routinely and are to be seen as requiring specific justification; this is reflected in r 12.26A. Seen overall, the system encourages and empowers strategic thinking within a standardised framework; indeed, it requires it. It is a deliberate move away from ad hoc case management under which cases often developed organically and without structure. It places very considerable demands on all participants, but that is what Parliament has required for the benefit of the children and families concerned; moreover, experience shows that non-compliance usually causes even greater difficulties."
"The overriding objective
1.1
(1) These rules are a new procedural code with the overriding objective of enabling the court to deal with cases justly, having regard to any welfare issues involved.
(2) Dealing with a case justly includes, so far as is practicable –
(a) ensuring that it is dealt with expeditiously and fairly;
(b) dealing with the case in ways which are proportionate to the nature, importance and complexity of the issues;
(c) ensuring that the parties are on an equal footing;
(d) saving expense; and
(e) allotting to it an appropriate share of the court's resources, while taking into account the need to allot resources to other cases.
Application by the court of the overriding objective
1.2
(1) The court must seek to give effect to the overriding objective when it –
(a) exercises any power given to it by these rules; or
(b) interprets any rule.
Duty of the parties
1.3
The parties are required to help the court to further the overriding objective.
Court's duty to manage cases
1.4
(1) The court must further the overriding objective by actively managing cases.
(2) Active case management includes–
(a) setting timetables or otherwise controlling the progress of the case;
(b) identifying at an early stage–
(i) the issues; and
(ii) who should be a party to the proceedings;
(c) deciding promptly –
(i) which issues need full investigation and hearing and which do not; and
(ii) the procedure to be followed in the case;
(d) deciding the order in which issues are to be resolved;
(e) controlling the use of expert evidence;
(f) encouraging the parties to use a non-court dispute resolution procedure if the court considers that appropriate and facilitating the use of such procedure;
(g) helping the parties to settle the whole or part of the case;
(h) encouraging the parties to co-operate with each other in the conduct of proceedings;
(i) considering whether the likely benefits of taking a particular step justify the cost of taking it;
(j) dealing with as many aspects of the case as it can on the same occasion;
(k) dealing with the case without the parties needing to attend at court;
(l) making use of technology; and
(m) giving directions to ensure that the case proceeds quickly and efficiently."
"The court's general powers of management
4.1
(1) In this Part, 'statement of case' means the whole or part of, an application form or answer.
(1A) When the court is considering whether to exercise the power to strike out a statement of case, it must take into account any written evidence filed in relation to the application or answer.
(2) The list of powers in this rule is in addition to any powers given to the court by any other rule or practice direction or by any other enactment or any powers it may otherwise have.
(3) Except where these rules provide otherwise, the court may –
(a) extend or shorten the time for compliance with any rule, practice direction or court order (even if an application for extension is made after the time for compliance has expired);
(b) make such order for disclosure and inspection, including specific disclosure of documents, as it thinks fit;
(bb) direct that any proceedings in the High Court be heard by a Divisional Court of the High Court; (Rule 37.15(6)(b) makes specific provision in relation to Divisional Courts.)
(c) adjourn or bring forward a hearing;
(d) require a party or a party's legal representative to attend the court;
(e) hold a hearing and receive evidence by telephone or by using any other method of direct oral communication;
(f) direct that part of any proceedings be dealt with as separate proceedings;
(g) stay the whole or part of any proceedings or judgment either generally or until a specified date or event;
(h) consolidate proceedings;
(i) hear two or more applications on the same occasion;
(j) direct a separate hearing of any issue;
(k) decide the order in which issues are to be heard;
(l) exclude an issue from consideration;
(m) dismiss or give a decision on an application after a decision on a preliminary issue;
(n) direct any party to file and serve an estimate of costs; and
(o) take any other step or make any other order for the purpose of managing the case and furthering the overriding objective."
"[72] ... It is the court which decides what the key issues are, that is the matters of disputed fact and opinion that it is necessary to determine in order to make the ultimate decision asked of the court."
"[24] The authorities make it plain that, amongst other factors, the following are likely to be relevant and need to be borne in mind before deciding whether or not to conduct a particular fact finding exercise: (a) the interests of the child (which are relevant but not paramount); (b) the time that the investigation will take; (c) the likely cost to public funds; (d) the evidential result; (e) the necessity or otherwise of the investigation; (f) the relevance of the potential result of the investigation to the future care plans for the child; (g) the impact of any fact finding process upon the other parties; (h) the prospects of a fair trial on the issue; (i) the justice of the case."
"[26] There is no doubt that in family proceedings the court has a discretion whether to hear evidence in relation to disputed matters of fact with a view to determining them. In A County Council v DP and Others [2005] EWHC 1593, [2005] 2 FLR 1031, McFarlane J, at para [24], helpfully identified, by reference to previous authorities, nine matters which the court should bear in mind before deciding whether to conduct a particular fact-finding exercise. I have no doubt that, notwithstanding that in the present case a decision had been made in the exercise of such a discretion to arrange for the disputed facts, in relation in particular to the allegations against A, to be determined at the hearing fixed to begin on 7 April 2008, Her Honour Judge Hughes also even at that stage retained a discretion to decline to conduct it. Nevertheless in my view additional considerations fall to be weighed by a judge who is considering, at the outset of a prearranged fact-finding hearing, whether in effect to abort it. That judge should weigh, with appropriate respect, the previous decision that the exercise should be undertaken and should ask whether any fresh circumstances, or at least any circumstances freshly discovered, should lead her or him to depart from the chosen forensic course. Equally she or he should weigh the costs already incurred in the assembly of the case on all sides and the degree to which a refusal at that stage to conduct the hearing would waste them. Furthermore she or he should weigh any special features such as, in the present case, the facts that a girl then aged 16 had been shown the court room, that she had participated in discussions with the guardian as to the way in which she would prefer to give evidence and that she was thus expecting that she would imminently be giving oral evidence in some way or another, although the judge should not on the other hand ignore the girl's likely apprehension at that prospect. What needs, however, to be avoided at all costs is a sudden decision to abort the hearing in circumstances in which, later, the findings not then made might after all be considered to be necessary. So a judge in the position of Her Honour Judge Hughes on 8 April should in my view act most cautiously before putting the forensic programme into reverse."
DISCUSSION
i) It is the court's case management powers under the FPR 2010 that govern the manner in which the court determines which disputed findings require determination by the court and which do not. It is not necessary or appropriate to look for a power to summarily dismiss a disputed finding of fact that exists independently of the court's case management powers under FPR 2010, whether grounded in the decision of VBC v AGM and Ors or otherwise.ii) Pursuant to FPR r.12.25(c), the court is required at the case management stage of public law proceedings to identify the issues in the case as a specific application of the provisions of Part 1 and Part 4 of the FPR to public law cases, by which Parts the court is given power to determine which issues need full investigation and hearing and which do not and to exclude an issue from consideration.
iii) Within this clear procedural framework, the proper analytical framework for identifying at the case management stage whether a court should adjudicate on a particular disputed finding in proceedings under Part IV of the Children Act 1989 is that set out by McFarlane J (as he then was) in A County Council v DP, RS, BS (By the Children's Guardian).
iv) In the particular circumstances of this case and on the evidence currently before the court, applying the requisite legal principles it would be wrong to direct, pursuant to the court's case management powers, that it is not necessary to determine the allegations made by the local authority regarding the causation of the head injury sustained by S.
My reasons for so deciding, with the consequence that the court will proceed to determine the allegations made by the local authority regarding the causation of the head injury sustained by S at the forthcoming finding of fact hearing, are as follows.
Power Summarily to Dismiss Allegations
Application of Conventional Case Management Powers
(a) Interests of Children and Relevance of Potential Result
(b) Timescales
(c) Cost
(d) Evidential Result
(e) The Necessity or Otherwise of the Investigation
(f) The Impact of Any Fact Finding Process
(g) Prospects of a Fair Trial
(h) The Justice of the Case
CONCLUSION