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England and Wales Family Court Decisions (other Judges) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (other Judges) >> A Father v A Mother [2023] EWFC 290 (B) (11 September 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/OJ/2023/290.html Cite as: [2023] EWFC 290 (B), [2023] EWFC 290 |
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High Holborn London WC1V 6NP |
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B e f o r e :
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A Father |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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A Mother |
Appellant |
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MR P HEPHER (instructed by Howard Kennedy LLP) appeared on behalf of the Appellant
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Crown Copyright ©
HIS HONOUR JUDGE TALBOTT:
Introduction
The Grounds of Appeal
i) The Deputy District Judge gave insufficient weight to a number of aspects of the evidence before the Court;
ii) The Deputy District Judge did not properly balance the evidence and failed to give sufficient reasons for not making certain findings;
iii) The Deputy District Judge failed to make reasonable allowances nor give appropriate recognition or consideration to the fact that the appellant mother was a victim of domestic abuse in two ways. Firstly. by virtue of an insufficient consideration of participation directions. Secondly, in failing to consider the impact on the appellant mother's evidence that her status as a victim of domestic abuse under the Domestic Abuse Act 2021 may have had;
iv) The Deputy District Judge failed to analyse the respondent father's admissions of domestically abusive behaviour in the context of their impact on other allegations made by the appellant mother and, in particular, failed to take a step back from those admissions and view them in the context of the other allegations;
v) The Deputy District Judge was wrong to order unsupervised contact by way of an interim child arrangements order at the conclusion of the fact-finding hearing.
The Positions of the Respondent
The Law
Permission to Appeal Out of Time
The Application for Permission to Appeal
"59. Judgments reflect the thinking of the individual judge and there is no room for dogma, but in my view a good judgment will in its own way, at some point and as concisely as possible:
(1) state the background facts
(2) identify the issue(s) that must be decided
(3) articulate the legal test(s) that must be applied
(4) note the key features of the written and oral evidence, bearing in mind that a judgment is not a summing-up in which every possibly relevant piece of evidence must be mentioned
(5) record each party's core case on the issues
(6) make findings of fact about any disputed matters that are significant for the decision
(7) evaluate the evidence as a whole, making clear why more or less weight is to be given to key features relied on by the parties
(8) give the court's decision, explaining why one outcome has been selected in preference to other possible outcomes."
The perpetration of domestic abuse is an expression of an aspect of a person's character within a relationship, and the fact that a person is capable of being seriously abusive in one way inevitably increases the likelihood of them having been abusive in other ways.
"As the children were spending unsupervised and overnight time with their F following the separation, the recommendations of the Local Authority and positive supervised contact notes, I see no reason why there should not be a regular twice weekly, visiting only, spends time with arrangements pending the risk assessment of the F and the s7 report of the ISW, and this could move to overnight contact if the ISW recommends it pending the DRA. I will consider how this is to commence further with the parties, and it may be that the first 2 visits be supervised. I would expect F to give an undertaking that he will not drink before contact and agree to further Hair strand and blood testing for alcohol."
The Way Forward