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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) >> K v W (Fact-Finding Hearing: Permission to Appeal and Adducing New Evidence) [2023] EWFC 292 (B) (25 October 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/OJ/2023/292.html Cite as: [2023] EWFC 292, [2023] EWFC 292 (B) |
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IN THE MATTER OF THE CHILDREN ACT 1989
B e f o r e :
____________________
K |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
W |
Respondent |
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K v W (fact-finding hearing: permission to appeal and adducing new evidence) |
____________________
Gemma Bower (instructed by Nantes) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 4 October and 16 October 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Introduction
i) The mother's application for permission to appeal the judgment of District Judge Veal ('the District Judge') in respect of a fact-finding hearing which took place on 15, 16 May, and 18 May 2023 and in respect of which the written judgment was handed down on 31 May 2023;
ii) The mother's application to adduce new evidence that was not before the District Judge at the time of the fact-finding hearing which the mother says is relevant to an allegation of strangulation and an allegation of a threat to kill;
Background
Procedural Chronology
1 September 2021 | The father issues an application for a child arrangements order (CAO); |
12 January 2022 | Directions order by magistrates acknowledging that PD12J was engaged; |
23 March 2022 | The magistrates order interim contact, to be supported by the mother or the maternal grandparents; |
28 June 2022 | The mother applies for and obtains a without notice non-molestation order; |
15 July 2022 | District Judge Bridger orders consolidation of the Family Law Act proceedings with the Children Act proceedings; |
14 September 2022 | Recorder Southern orders a fact-finding hearing is necessary and lists the matter for a two day hearing on 24/25 October; |
[That hearing was subsequently vacated due to judicial availability] | |
24 January 2023 | The mother applies to add an additional allegation for consideration at the fact-finding hearing, namely that the father had inappropriately touched the parties' daughter. |
The matter is listed for a two day hearing on 28 Feb and 1 March; | |
28 February 2023 | The fact-finding hearing commences in front of the District Judge. Unfortunately the father falls ill on the first day and there are also issues with incomplete police disclosure. As a result the hearing is adjourned with consequential directions; |
15/16/18 May 2023 | Fact-finding hearing in front of the District Judge. Father represented by counsel, mother appears as litigant in person. An attended in person hearing. |
At paragraph 10 of his judgment the District Judge states: | |
'The fact finding hearing came back before me on 15 and 16 May 2023. At the start of the hearing, I reviewed the scope of the fact finding hearing with the parties and determined that, apart from the allegations said to have taken place at the end of November 2016 and those revealed by the ABE interview of X, no allegation prior to 2020 would be determined by the court. The ruling I gave is to be considered alongside this judgment. Because the police disclosed X's ABE interview late, and because of the sensitivity of it, the rest of the morning of the first day of the hearing was taken up with the parties and the court viewing that interview for the first time. The impact of that was that the hearing was part heard at the end of 16 May 2023, the evidence being complete, and so I heard submissions on the afternoon of 18 May 2023 and agreed to produce a written judgment to avoid further delay.' | |
31 May 2023 | The District Judge hands down his written judgment at a hearing conducted remotely, a judgment which runs to 220 numbered paragraphs and circa 17,000 words. |
The mother makes an oral application to the District Judge for permission to appeal. The application is refused. | |
Neither party makes any requests for clarification, either on or after 31 May 2023 |
The Allegations and Findings made
Both parties have permission to file and serve a position statement (if so advised) dealing with the scope of the fact finding hearing and/or the necessity to have a fact finding hearing, such to be no more than two sides of A4, by 4pm on 10 May 2023.
a. the allegation each party makes about domestic abuse on 29/30.11.16;
b. the matters from 2020 onwards set out in the composite schedule of allegations between pages A010 and A024 of the hearing bundle; and
c. the allegation made by the mother, following an alleged disclosure by X, of sexual abuse of X said to have been perpetrated by the father, as set out in the mother's C2 application dated 24 January 2023.
i) The allegation of sexual abuse was not proven;
ii) As to the incident on 30 November 2016:
a. The allegation of strangulation against the father was not proven;
b. The mother inflicted injuries on the father and the mother's explanation as to why they were inflicted was not accepted;
c. The mother's allegation that the father was making derogatory comments to their daughter about the mother was not proven;
d. The mother responded by physically assaulting the father;
e. the mother escalated the situation and the father was left having to act protectively;
f. The mother was unable to promote their daughter's welfare above the adult dispute;
g. The incident was liable to be frightening for their 6 year old daughter.
iii) As to the remaining allegations:
a. The fathers' numbered allegations 1(4), 4(2) and 6(2-(4) were not proven;
b. The father's numbered allegations 3(2)-(4), 5 and 9(4) do not need to be determined, but if necessary can be dealt with at the welfare stage;
c. The father's allegation 7(1) was admitted;
d. The father's allegation 7(2) was not proven;
e. The mother's allegations 10 and 13 were proved, but not to the extent alleged by the mother;
f. The mother's allegation 11 was not proved;
g. There was some support for the mother's allegation 14, the answer to which was to forge effective communication in the future.
Post Judgment Chronology
21 June 2023 | The mother files Appellant's notice at court with grounds of appeal attached. |
Skeleton argument to follow. | |
Seeks stay pending outcome of appeal and vacation of directions hearing listed for 10 July; | |
5 July 2023 | Skeleton argument filed in support of the mother's application for permission to appeal. Drafted by counsel, Dr Proudman. Runs to twenty-five pages and eighty-five numbered paragraphs; |
7 July 2023 | Order of HHJ Williams, providing for; |
• the mother to serve a copy of the application for permission to appeal on the father by 12 July; | |
• the father to file a skeleton argument by 19 July; | |
• the mother to file appeal bundle by 21 July; | |
• application listed for hearing in front of HHJ Simmonds at 2pm on 24 July with a time estimate of two hours; | |
• vacation of direction hearings listed for 10 July. | |
Hearing on 24 July subsequently vacated due to counsels' availability. Relisted in front of HHJ Williams at 10am on 4 October. An in person attended hearing at Bournemouth. | |
2 October 2023 | Ms Bowers, counsel for the father, files skeleton argument running to fourteen pages; |
4 October 2023 | Hearing adjourned. The father attended with counsel. The mother attended with her father. |
Mother's counsel, Dr Proudman did not attend, having emailed HHJ Williams at 17:42 on 3 October to say she was unable to travel to Bournemouth due to the national rail strike. | |
Adjourned hearing listed at 12 noon on 16 October; | |
16 October 2023 | Adjourned hearing of application for permission to appeal. |
Grounds of Appeal
Ground 1
The Judge failed to comply with para 29 of PD12J and produce a schedule outlining the findings made and the effect they would have on the mother and the children.
Ground 2
The Judge failed to address the impact of the findings of domestic abuse on the mother and the children and failed to identify that the children are victims of domestic abuse in their own right under Section 3 of the Domestic Abuse Act 2021 and para 4 PD12J
Ground 3
The Judge was wrong to make a finding that the father does not pose a safeguarding risk given the findings coupled with the father having breached the restraining order on two occasions resulting in convictions and the verbal abuse the father subjected the mother and children to and without considering para 35-40 PD12J
Ground 4
The Judge was wrong to exclude the mother's earlier allegations pre-2020 of threats to kill and strangulation attempts, which were relevant to a pattern of behaviour and a similar course of conduct perpetrated by father
Ground 5
The Judge was wrong not to make a finding that the father strangled the Mother
Ground 6
The Judge was wrong to draw an adverse inference against the mother because she did not obtain police reports when the Judge did not state they were necessary and mother is a litigant in person
Ground 7
The Judge was wrong to minimise domestic abuse and verbal abuse perpetrated by the father especially when finding that there is no safeguarding risk to the children in having contact with their father
Ground 8
The Judge was wrong in failing to stand back and consider whether the father's behaviour amounted to a pattern of verbally abusive and threatening conduct
Ground 9
The Judge was wrong to find that the father has not sexually abused his daughter.
Ground 10
The Judge fails to give reasons for not making a finding in respect of allegation 11: the father left lashing marks on [his son], used to force feed [his son], hit [his son] on the back of his head and called him names (2018-2020) and allegation 14: father refused to return the children during contact leaving [his son] distressed with no way of contacting father; father refusing to return them and father telling [the mother] to call the police.
Fresh Evidence
……..Although the mother says that she made an audio recording of the argument, that has not been exhibited in these proceedings……
The Law
Permission to appeal
(a) the court considers that the appeal would have a real prospect of success; or
(b) there is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard.
In Re B (a Child) [2013] UKSC 33, [2013] 1 WLR 1911 the Supreme Court set out the differing standards to be applied depending on whether the appeal asserts (i) an error of fact; or (ii) a faulty evaluation of the relevant facts and matters, or (iii) a miscarried exercise of discretion. In R (On the Application Of) Wales & West Utilities Ltd v Competition And Markets Authority [2022] EWHC 2940 (Admin) I sought to summarise the standards:
"39. An appeal against a finding of primary fact can only succeed where the finding had no evidence to support it; or was based on a misunderstanding of the evidence; or was one no reasonable judge could have reached: see Lord Neuberger PSC at [53].
22. In Re R (A Child) [2019] 2 FLR 1033 at [31], Peter Jackson LJ confirmed that the correct test to be applied on applications for PTA based on rule 30.3(7)(a) is "a real prospect of success", which means that:
"…there must be a realistic, as opposed to fanciful, prospect of success. There is no requirement that success should be probable, or more likely than not."
23. This decision tells us that the degree of likelihood of success on the appeal does not need to be as high as 51%, but it does not tell us what the minimum degree of likelihood is to justify the grant of permission to appeal. Obviously, the degree of likelihood is likely to be fact-sensitive. That said, it would no doubt be possible to undertake some empirical analysis to gain a well-informed feel for the minimum degree of likelihood.
24. A "real prospect of success" is the same test for an interlocutory injunction: see American Cyanamid Co v Ethicon Ltd [1975] AC 396. In AO v LA [2023] EWHC 83 (Fam) at [28] I suggested a degree of likelihood of at least 25% would normally be needed to satisfy the "real prospect of success" test for the grant of an interlocutory injunction, and I cannot see why the same metric should not apply to the identical PTA test.
Substantive appeal
(3) The appeal court will allow an appeal where the decision of the lower court was:
(a) wrong; or
(b) unjust because of a serious procedural or other irregularity in the proceedings in the lower court.
The court may conclude a decision is wrong or procedurally unjust where:
iv) an error of law has been made;
ii) a conclusion on the facts which was not open to the judge on the evidence has been reached: Royal Bank of Scotland v Carlyle [2015] UKSC 13, 2015 SC (UKSC) 93.
v) the judge has clearly failed to give due weight to some very significant matter, or has clearly given undue weight to some matter: B-v-B (Residence Orders: Reasons for decision) [1997] 2 FLR 602.
iv) a process has been adopted which is procedurally irregular and unfair to an extent that it renders the decision unjust: Re S-W (Care Proceedings: Case Management Hearing) [2015] 2 FLR 136.
vi) a discretion has been exercised in a way which was outside the parameters within which reasonable disagreement is possible: G v G (Minors: Custody Appeal) [1985] FLR 894.
Accordingly, in my view, by PD27A skeleton arguments upon appeal are limited to a maximum of 20 pages, a limit which should be scrupulously observed unless directed otherwise.
Fresh Evidence
'In order to justify the reception of fresh evidence or a new trial, three conditions must be fulfilled: first, it must be shown that the evidence could not have been obtained with reasonable diligence for use at the trial: second, the evidence must be such that, if given, it would probably have an important influence on the result of the case, though it need not be decisive: thirdly, the evidence must be such as is presumably to be believed, or in other words, it must be apparently credible, though it need not be incontrovertible.'
That well-known test should however be applied with progressively increasing rigour relative to the point in time when the application is made. Thus the test will be applied much more fiercely where the application is to adduce fresh evidence on an appeal than where the application is to adduce fresh evidence at a trial after the completion of the evidence-giving phase but before final submissions.
Decision on Grounds of appeal
Ground 1
The Judge failed to comply with para 29 of PD12J and produce a schedule outlining the findings made and the effect they would have on the mother and the children.
Finally, I have already commented on the failure by the judge to either produce his own schedule of findings or, if what I was told was correct, to endorse the schedule drafted by counsel. He was not alone in so doing, as the judge in the ABC appeal also failed to produce her own schedule of findings (though one was later produced by counsel at her invitation and attached to her order). Paragraph 29 of PD12J requires a schedule of findings to be attached to the court order following a fact-finding determination. In my view, it is desirable that, with the definitions of domestic abuse contained in PD12J firmly in mind when doing so, a judge produces her/his own schedule of findings, either incorporated into the body of a judgment or appended to its conclusion. That course avoids any lack of clarity about the detail of what the judge found, and any schedule can then be incorporated in or appended to the court's order. I make this suggestion fully conscious of the pressures on the family judiciary engaged in what can often be a relentless train of successive fact-finding determinations, but it is not intended to make the task of judgment writing more difficult. On the contrary, I hope it represents good practice which may help to illuminate a judge's evaluation of the evidence and to inform their ultimate findings.
This is not a reason to appeal. In fact, to the contrary, the law is clear, it is not sufficient for a party to draw attention to an alleged deficiency in a Judgment by way of an application for permission to appeal. It is incumbent on the party to point out the deficiency and to request clarification or a supplementary judgement on the issue (Re A (Child Abuse) [2008] 1 FLR 1423, CA. The Court of Appeal is losing patience with the failure of practitioners to follow this procedure before seeking permission to appeal. It has recently been observed that it is about time the Family Bar woke up to the fact that the procedure set out applies to family cases and must be followed.
Ground 2
The Judge failed to address the impact of the findings of domestic abuse on mother and the children and failed to identify that the children are victims of domestic abuse in their own right under Section 3 of the Domestic Abuse Act 2021 and para 4 PD12J
The concept that domestic abuse is harmful to children speaks to a great extent for itself. If any explanation were needed, it can be found in paragraph 4 of Practice Direction 12J and paragraph 31 of Re H-N. I set that out below.
'this court is often told by experts about the effects of parental acrimony on children. That is, that children caught in the centre of their parents' conflict, will often feel conflicted themselves and that may manifest itself in a number of ways and perhaps not immediately.
In my judgment, there is good evidence that the children have been involved in the adult conflict, and for some time.
Ground 3
The Judge was wrong to make a finding that the father does not pose a safeguarding risk given the findings coupled with the father having breached the restraining order on two occasions resulting in convictions and the verbal abuse the father subjected the mother and children to and without considering para 35-40 PD12J
Factors to be taken into account when determining whether to make child arrangements orders in all cases where domestic abuse has occurred
When deciding the issue of child arrangements the court should ensure that any order for contact will not expose the child to an unmanageable risk of harm and will be in the best interests of the child.
For present purposes, however, it is helpful if I further identify that, if domestic abuse is found in a case, paragraphs 35 – 37 of Practice Direction 12J deal with additional factors which need to be considered at the welfare stage. Those include the physical and emotional welfare of the parent with whom the children live, before, during and after contact.
Fundamentally, parental conflict aside, there is in my judgment no immediate safeguarding issue arising out of the evidence that I have considered which should prevent contact between the father and the children.
Ground 4
The Judge was wrong to exclude mother's earlier allegations pre-2020 of threats to kill and strangulation attempts, which were relevant to a pattern of behaviour and a similar course of conduct perpetrated by father
Ground 5
The Judge was wrong not to make a finding that father strangled the Mother
Ground 6
The Judge was wrong to draw an adverse inference against mother because she did not obtain police reports when the Judge did not state they were necessary and mother is a litigant in person
Equally, the mother has not produced any records from the police, and nor has she applied for an order that the police disclose any such documents. She has had access to legal advice during these proceedings. The consequence of that is that there is no contemporaneous record of the incident before this court, even in terms of it setting out what would, at its highest, no doubt, have been mother's reported position at the time.
Ground 7
The Judge was wrong to minimise domestic abuse and verbal abuse perpetrated by the father especially when finding that there is no safeguarding risk to the children in having contact with their father
Ground 8
Standing back and looking at the evidence overall, and re-evaluating the provisional views expressed above, there are number of conclusions that I reach which impact various parts of the factual matrix. It is necessary for me to articulate my findings in a linear way. In reality, the strands of information which inform my decisions are intertwined and each of the answers I give is informed by the whole context.
Ground 9
The Judge was wrong to find that the father has not sexually abused X
Ground 10
The Judge fails to give reasons for not making a finding in respect of allegation 11: the father left lashing marks on [his son], used to force feed [his son], hit [his son] on the back of his head and called him names (2018-2020) and allegation 14: father refused to return the children during contact leaving [his son] distressed with no way of contacting father; father refusing to return them and father telling [the mother] to call the police.
Allegation 11, which is limited to the dressing gown cord issue, is not proved. The father says that it was an accident and the mother does not discharge the burden of proving that it was abuse.
Whilst he accepted that Y had sustained a mark across his back as a result of the father whipping him with a dressing gown cord, he said that that had occurred during a game and that it was an accident.
There is some support for allegation 14, even on the father's evidence. However, the answer to it is in forging effective communication between the parties in the future, which brings me back to the problem which has permeated all of the evidence in this case.
Decision on Fresh Evidence
i) The mother made an audio recording of an incident which took place in the weeks prior to the alleged strangulation on
ii) At the time of the incident, the father was unaware that the mother was making an audio recording.
iii) On the audio recording the father can be heard to say to the mother 'if you call the police I will break your neck'
Applying the test in Ladd v Marshall (see above) M submits the following:
a. M is vulnerable by virtue of being a victim of domestic abuse and thus pursuant to Part 3A and PD3AA FPR 2010, by way of a participation direction when she raised that she had evidence of the threat, M should have been permitted to disclose it and the Judge should have relied on it.
b. M struggled to give evidence due to her distress;
c. M was found to be a domestic abuse victim and as such, M struggled to provide all of her evidence due to the trauma she had suffered.
Conclusion
to file and serve a statement by 4pm on 31 October 2023, in response to the findings of the Court, setting out whether or not she accepts the findings of the Court and specifically the extent of any acceptance or otherwise. In addition, such statement to set out her proposals for a way forward in terms of the Children Act application.
Both parties must, no later than 4pm on the day 2 working days before the next hearing, file and serve:
a. Any Part 25 application/s for expert evidence which they wish to be determined at that hearing; and
b. A position statement. Such shall set out their respective positions as to directions including, for example, whether or not a Rule 16.4 guardian should be appointed, their position on any further assessment / reports, whether there is an application for costs, and contact going forward.