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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 >> X Children, Re [2008] EWHC 242 (Fam) (13 February 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2008/242.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 242 (Fam), [2008] Fam Law 725, [2008] 2 FLR 944, [2008] 3 FCR 23, [2008] 3 All ER 958 |
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FAMILY DIVISION
(In Private)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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Postscript 31 March 2008 |
B e f o r e :
____________________
In the Matter of the X children |
____________________
Hearing date: 23 January 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Munby :
The background
"I was impotent. I had trouble siring 3 children. I though [sic] I had fertility problems."
As to this I observe only that the Defendant was plainly not impotent, for there is no suggestion anywhere in his evidence or elsewhere that he did not achieve full penetration on each of the seven occasions on which he admits having had sexual intercourse with B. And the fertility problems to which he alludes did not prevent him fathering D, a baby who is indubitably proved by DNA tests to have been his child.
"Mr [X], there are not going to be any more questions here but, as I mentioned yesterday, this is really your final opportunity, if not forever for a very long time, to tell us what happened and I am going to give you the opportunity, if you want to help us further, of writing down anything further you want to tell us. Not here and now today but you can write it down over the course of the next few days and send it to me because more than once you have suggested there are things which you find very difficult to say and it may be that there are things you would feel able to say if you wrote them down. I am going to give you a final opportunity to add to what you have told us already by putting it in writing and you can have until the middle of next week to do that. I am spelling that out so that if there is anything further you want to tell us and you put it in writing, then I will consider it. If, on the other hand, you do not take up that opportunity then I will have to make my decisions and draw whatever inferences are appropriate, come to whatever conclusions are appropriate on the basis that you have told us nothing further beyond what you have told us today. So that you have a final opportunity over the course of the next few days, if you wish to do it, of writing it all down and sending it to me and my final decision will be based upon everything I have heard, including what you have told us in the witness box over the last two days, together with anything that you may choose to put in writing over the next few days."
The Defendant elected not to avail himself of that opportunity.
"The Defendant has sexually abused B (inter alia) by having sexual intercourse with her, resulting in the birth of D. The Defendant has probably sexually abused B in other ways but, because of his lack of cooperation, it is not possible to determine the extent of the sexual abuse perpetrated upon B.
B suffered physical abuse as a result of sexual abuse by the Defendant and is at risk of further physical harm as a result of a pregnancy at aged 13.
The Defendant admitted in oral evidence and in his written concessions that he had sexual intercourse with B on more than one occasion. Although he said that he had sexual intercourse with her a maximum of seven times, the limit of seven occasions is not accepted by the local authority and Mrs X. The Defendant placed B at risk of pregnancy each time he had sexual intercourse with her by failing to take any precautions against pregnancy.
The Defendant has emotionally abused B by grooming her for sexual abuse in a manner and over a period which remain unknown, by sexually abusing her in ways and over a period which remain unknown and by bringing about a situation, by methods which remain unknown, whereby B did not disclose the sexual abuse by her father to anyone.
By his ongoing silence on the issue of his sexual abuse of B, the Defendant has prevented and continues to prevent the proper management, support and therapy in respect of the sexual and emotional abuse of B which she so desperately needs, thereby causing her further and continuing emotional harm.
The extent of B's emotional abuse at the hands of the Defendant remains unquantifiable. However, it includes sexual abuse, pregnancy at aged 13, the birth of D, the loss of D to adoption and the knowledge that she may never see D again. These matters will have a damaging effect on B for the remainder of her life. That effect is particularly profound because of B's severe autistic spectrum disorder, of which the Defendant was and is fully aware.
…
The Defendant's lack of acknowledgment of responsibility and lack of any expression of contrition for the emotional abuse and devastation of the lives of all three children and, additionally, the sexual and physical abuse of B has caused further and continuing emotional harm to all three children.
There is a continuing risk of sexual harm to B in the future as a result of the Defendant's refusal to give any information whatsoever about his sexual abuse of B with the result that there is no knowledge or understanding of the triggers for sexual abuse or the methods he used to control B or to maintain her longstanding silence.
…
The Defendant took the lead role in keeping B out of school and socially isolating her, thereby subjecting her to harm. As a result of his control of her, Mrs X acquiesced in this state of affairs. It is unknown whether the Defendant did so in order to abuse B sexually, to isolate her and make her even more dependent upon him, to prevent the risk of discovery of his sexual abuse of his young daughter, for all these reasons or for these and/or other reasons which are not apparent."
The applications
The hearing
The issues
i) First, disclosure of certain materials for use in or in connection with the criminal proceedings against the Defendant. The local authority seeks permission to disclose the transcript of his evidence to the Crown Prosecution Service and to the police. Mrs X seeks permission (a) to quote in her victim impact statement from the transcript of the Defendant's evidence, (b) to refer to matters which arose in the family proceedings and which are relevant to the impact on the family of the Defendant's sexual abuse of B, and (c) to disclose as part of her victim impact statement those parts of the threshold criteria document which are directly relevant to the Defendant's actions together with a statement that I have ruled in the family proceedings that that document accurately sets out the harm suffered by the children as a result of the Defendant's actions.
ii) Second, the disclosure of certain specified documents to the Criminal Injuries Compensation Authority in support of the local authority's application on B's behalf for criminal injuries compensation.
iii) Third, disclosure of the case papers relating to B to the local authority's adult services.
The Defendant opposes the applications under (i) and (iii) and submits that the disclosure sought under (ii) is too wide. His counsel submits that in what she calls this "sensitive case" disclosure should be limited to what is "absolutely necessary".
The legal framework
"as counsel for the CPS points out, referring to what I said in Re Z (Children) (Disclosure: Criminal Proceedings) [2003] EWHC 61 (Fam), [2003] 1 FLR 1194, at para [13], "the children, precisely because they are the [Defendant's] children, themselves have a direct and important interest in ensuring that there is no miscarriage of justice in the criminal trial and in ensuring that the truth, whatever it may be, comes out." I went on: "In this as in other respects, better for the children that the truth, whatever it may be, comes out." In the present case, as counsel for the CPS correctly observes, and the point was picked up and adopted by counsel for Mrs X, it is important for the future welfare of the children that the Defendant is dealt with for his crime in the most appropriate manner and on the basis of an accurate rather than a distorted view of the relevant facts. So the children themselves have an interest in there being proper disclosure. As counsel for Mrs X pithily observed, it is in the interests of the children that the Defendant receives a fair and just sentence. I agree."
"In any proceedings in which a court is hearing an application for an order under Part IV [of the Act], no person shall be excused from –
(a) giving evidence on any matter; or
(b) answering any question put to him in the course of his giving evidence,
on the ground that doing so might incriminate him or his spouse or civil partner of an offence."
Section 98(2) provides that:
"A statement or admission made in such proceedings shall not be admissible in evidence against the person making it or his spouse or civil partner in proceedings for an offence other than perjury."
"[49] In the first place, section 98(2) gives protection only against the use of such statement or admission "in evidence." It does not, for example, protect against use in a police inquiry into the commission of an offence: see In re C (A Minor) (Care Proceedings: Disclosure) [1997] Fam 76 at page 85 …
[50] Secondly, it is to be noted that putting inconsistent statements to a witness in order to challenge his evidence or attack his credibility does not amount to using those statements "against" him within the meaning of the section: Kent County Council v K [1994] 1 WLR 912 at page 916 followed in Re L (Care: Confidentiality) [1999] 1 FLR 165 at page 167."
The second of these two points is of particular significance in the present case.
Disclosure – the Crown Court proceedings
i) B has been and remains reluctant to discuss the circumstances of the Defendant's sexual abuse. She has profound difficulties which significantly hamper the professionals in ascertaining the reasons for her reluctance. However, it is highly likely that she is shouldering some of the responsibility for the Defendant's sexual abuse.
ii) A has expressed both to his social worker and to his guardian that the reason for the Defendant's sexual abuse of B was the Defendant's mental health difficulties and/or his alcohol abuse. A appears, wrongly, to see the Defendant as a victim as opposed to a perpetrator.
iii) The Defendant has admitted that he had sexual intercourse with B on more than one occasion. He admitted "not more than seven times", although it is not accepted by either the local authority or Mrs X that the incidence of sexual intercourse was so limited.
It is therefore very important that the criminal court, so far as possible, sends out the message loudly and clearly that what the Defendant has done to B is very wrong, that he alone bears responsibility for what he has done and that he should be punished.
Disclosure – the CICA
i) B was subjected by the Defendant to repeated incidents of vaginal intercourse over a period of (at the very least) many months;
ii) given B's age and the fact that the abuser was her own father, it cannot in any meaningful sense be said that this abuse was anything other than non-consensual; and
iii) this repeated abuse had the very serious and long-lasting psychological and emotional effects on B which are summarised in the threshold criteria document.
Further details of the impact of all this on B will be found in the threshold criteria document.
Disclosure – adult services
Conclusion
Orders
"UPON THE JUDGE having found that the paragraphs of Part 1 and (so far as it goes) of Part 2 of the Threshold Criteria document set out in the Schedule to this order (and which Mrs X has leave to disclose into the criminal proceedings by virtue of paragraph 3 of this Order) accurately reflect the harm suffered by the three children who were victims of the Defendant's abuse
AND without prejudice to section 12 of the Administration of Justice Act 1960 (as amended) to section 97(2) of the Children Act 1989 (as amended) and to the order made herein by Mr Justice Munby on 8 May 2007
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that:
1 The local authority shall have leave to disclose a transcript of the evidence of the Defendant given in family proceedings Case No … before Mr Justice Munby on 29 and 30 November 2007 to … Crown Prosecution Service and … Constabulary.
2 Mrs X shall have leave to disclose the aforesaid transcript of the Defendant's evidence as part of her Victim Impact Statement to the Crown Court in criminal proceedings concerning the Defendant.
3 Mrs X shall have leave to disclose for the same purpose the following parts of the Threshold Criteria document namely
• Part 1: paragraphs 1-6, 9-14, 18, 19(b), 33-35, 41 and 43;
• Part 2: paragraphs 1-7;
being the parts which are set out in the Schedule to this order.
4 The local authority shall have leave to serve a copy of this order upon … Crown Prosecution Service and … Constabulary.
5 Mrs X shall have leave to disclose a copy of this order as part of her Victim Impact Statement in criminal proceedings.
THE SCHEDULE
(Relevant parts of the Threshold Criteria document)
[omitted in the interests of the children]"
"UPON THE JUDGE having found that the paragraphs of Part 1 and (so far as it goes) of Part 2 of the Threshold Criteria document referred to in Schedule A to this order accurately reflect the harm suffered by the three children who were victims of the Defendant's abuse
AND without prejudice to section 12 of the Administration of Justice Act 1960 (as amended) to section 97(2) of the Children Act 1989 (as amended) and to the order made herein by Mr Justice Munby on 8 May 2007
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that:
1 The local authority shall have leave to disclose to the Criminal Injuries Compensation Authority the documents set out in Schedule A to this order in order to assist the Authority to determine the claim made on behalf of B for compensation.
2 The local authority shall have leave to disclose to Adult Services the documents set out in Schedule B to this order.
SCHEDULE A
(Documents to be disclosed to the CICA)
[omitted in the interests of the children]
SCHEDULE B
(Documents to be disclosed to Adult Services)
[omitted in the interests of the children]"
The judgment
Postscript (31 March 2008)
"Sexual activity with a child family member contrary to Section 25(1) and (6) of the Sexual Offences Act 2003.
[The Defendant] between the 1st day of August 2005 and the 1st day of August 2006, being a person over the age of 18 intentionally touched his daughter [B], a person under the age of 18 by penetrating her vagina with his penis in circumstances where the touching was sexual, where he knew or could reasonably be expected to know that the said [B] was his daughter, and where he did not reasonably believe that the said [B] was aged 18 or over""