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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 >> LA v MF [2013] EWHC 1433 (Fam) (24 May 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2013/1433.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 1433 (Fam) |
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This judgment was handed down in private on 24th May 2013. It consists of 20 pages and has been signed and dated by the judge. The judgment is being distributed on the strict understanding that in any report no person other than the advocates and their solicitor may be identified by name or location and that in particular the anonymity of the Respondents and members of their family must be strictly preserved..
FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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LA |
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MF |
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CY |
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RN |
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N |
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Mr Marcus Scott-Manderson Q. C. & Ms Marie-Claire Sparrow (instructed by Pritchard, Joyce & Hinds) for the 1st Respondent
Mr Rex Howling Q. C. (instructed by Goodman Ray) for the 2nd Respondent
Ms Deirdre Fottrell (instructed by Creighton & Partners) for the 4th – 7th Respondents
Hearing dates: 7th – 10th 13th and 24th May 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Theis DBE :
(1) There has been considerable delay in this case. The children were placed in the care of the LA in November 2011 when the parents were arrested and charged with offences of assault and child cruelty. The parents subsequently challenged the jurisdiction of the court to make orders, as they submitted the habitual residence of the children was in France. That issue was raised six months into the proceedings and, despite the inevitable delay, needed to be determined. That issue was determined after the children had been with foster carers for a year. It is essential the court is alive to issues of jurisdiction, enquiring of this issue in cases where it may be relevant at an early stage in the proceedings and making effective directions for it to be determined without delay. That did not happen in this case.
(2) This hearing was to consider welfare, with a time estimate of four days. At the start of the first day the father's counsel had to withdraw from the proceedings,
followed later that morning by his solicitors. After enquiries made by the court a new legal team was effectively on board by 3.30 that afternoon. The court is enormously grateful to Ms Hollmann of Goodman Ray and Mr Howling QC for taking this case on at such short notice. They have provided the father with extremely effective representation. The court is particularly grateful when it is very aware of the huge pressures on legal representatives who undertake publicly funded family work. Their response to the request demonstrates the enormous commitment and dedication of those who undertake this work, which is often not properly recognised. If they had not so efficiently responded to the request there was a real risk there would have been further delay for these young children, who have already waited over 18 months for a decision about their future.
Background
The evidence
The Law
Discussion and findings DN
Discussions and findings GN GRN, CMN
(1) Unfortunately the mother remains a witness the court cannot rely on to give a credible account of events. In assessing her evidence I have carefully considered whether the changing account of her and the children's relationship with the father is as a result of other factors, such as being so under the control of the father it has impacted on her ability to reveal what has happened; or, by giving a full account she thought or feared it would make her position worse; or, due to the cultural considerations, she has felt unable to reveal the details of their relationship. I, of course, accept it is not unusual for those who have been subjected to domestic abuse to find it difficult to talk about what has happened to them. But even making all due allowance for these factors I come back to her account being inherently unreliable.
(2) On her own case she now accepts DN and GN were assaulted by the father, as was she. That is obviously a significant development, but it raised more questions than answers. What is so inherently improbable about her account is why it has taken her over 18 months to recollect these events, which, on her own account, must have been memorable, as they were the only times this had occurred. I simply do not accept that it was only prompted by reading Ms Smith's report on the eve of this hearing, when she sets out details of what GN told her about the assaults by her father. Even as she gave her oral evidence her account of these significant events were given in a way that lacked any real detail.
(3) This mother has had the support of an experienced and consistent legal team for over a year. She has been separated from the father for a considerable period of time, and recently has been receiving support through Dispensaire Francais. Despite having this support and distance from the physical presence from the father she has not felt able to provide details of events when she and the children clearly experienced physical and emotional harm. Her explanation of only remembering significant events, such as her daughter informing her that she had been 'tapped' by the father, following the reading of Ms Smith's report, is simply not credible. Particularly as similar issues were raised in Ms Green's statement, which the mother responded to in considerable detail in her statement, making no mention of this significant event. Her evidence becomes even more inherently unreliable when she recalls, for the first time, in her oral evidence the assault on her and DN by the father.
(4) The consequence of this is that I do not accept that the mother has given a full and truthful account of her relationship with the father, and his and her relationship with the children. These relationships resulted in the children, even on the mother's account, suffering significant emotional and, in the case of DN and GN, physical harm. It is, in my judgment, more likely than not that the mother's account has seriously minimised events. This assessment is supported by the way she played down the events she described (e.g DN not being hurt following being slapped in the face by the father, the mother not being hurt following being slapped by the father). I consider it more likely than not that she has significantly minimised the reality of what went on. It is more likely than not that this was a house controlled by the father through frequent threats and fear and, on occasion, physical assaults to both the mother and the children.
(5) This assessment is supported by the father's evidence. Up until his most recent written statement and oral evidence he has denied any harm to these children. The limited admissions in his evidence, in my judgment, minimise the reality of what went on in the family home and his conduct to the mother and children. He, in my judgment, has not been truthful and has shown a chilling disregard for the welfare of all the children. He has failed to offer any credible explanation to assist in establishing a credible account of DN`s background, when he is the only one who holds the key to providing that information. That was graphically illustrated when he was unwilling to provide any information about the photograph produced during the hearing. His account that he did not know who it was other than a vague account of it being a relation he could not name was wholly unconvincing. His limited admissions about his behaviour to the mother and children came across as inherently unreliable.
(6) I agree with Dr Blumenthal and Ms Smith that one of the deeply concerning aspects of the mother's evidence is her lack of empathy. Whilst I have factored in the undoubted pressure in giving oral evidence, and the difficulties inherent in assessing the position through an interpreter, this lack of empathy for the children was, in my judgment, a feature in much of her oral evidence. For example, her failure to ask DN whether she had been assaulted by the father after the mother left in 2010; her description of DN not crying after she had been slapped by her father and her statement that it would not have hurt her; her failure to grasp in her oral evidence what the risk was to the children after she left, bearing in mind what she had described about the father losing his temper if the children made a noise; her failure to ask GN any more detail about what she said the father had done when he 'tapped' her and what had caused him to do that; her failure to enquire more when she had observed DN crying. Without this ability to empathise the children would, in my judgment, be at risk of significant harm if returned to her care as the mother simply does not have the internal cues to take steps to protect the children. This is something not related to the mother's relationship with the father or with another violent partner.
(7) I accept Dr Blumenthal's evidence that it would not be possible for the risk to be managed in the future. This is because of what he termed the 'deception'; there is still not a credible account of what has gone on in the past; without that it is very difficult to manage future risk. Dr Blumenthal revised his assessment of the risk of recidivism upwards in his oral evidence, which I accept.
(8) The deception, coupled with that increased risk and inability to empathise with the children means that to restore the children to their mother's care would put them at an unacceptable risk due to her failure to be able protect them from future significant harm.
(1) There remains uncertainty about the mother's social isolation, which is unlikely to change. The mother's evidence was vague and unhelpful. For the first time during her oral evidence it emerged that the Cameroonian community were assisting her. It was very difficult to get a clear picture as to how that support came about and whether it was, and remains, at the direction, and possibly control, of the father. There was some evidence to suggest that it was. The mother was unable to say how the rent and bills on the property had been paid. It was notable that the person who was organising it was a close friend of the fathers who had attended outside court on the first day of this hearing to try and see the father, not to provide any support to the mother. This inability to give full details is perhaps indicative of the difficulties in this case in trying to find out what the true position is.
(2) Although the mother says she has separated from the father she has taken limited steps to follow that through. Divorce proceedings were issued in France but not continued with. She remains in a property in the father's name which he may need to give details of if he applies for home detention curfew in less than two weeks time.
(3) The mother has only just begun to get help by way of counselling. Whilst that is a good development, the evidence from Dr Blumenthal and Ms Smith is that it can take years to bring about any sustainable change.
(4) The provision of support in the form of assistance from social services here or in France would be unlikely to make any real difference. It is notable that whilst the mother had been resourceful enough to move to France and seek help there, it is very concerning that, despite being in receipt of that support and having the physical distance between her and the father, she still returned the DN to his care and left GN with him too.
(5) I do not accept the suggestion that the LA have failed to properly assess the mother. The fact is until her oral evidence in this hearing she had consistently denied there was domestic abuse in her relationship with the father and denied any physical harm to the children. This was her position to the expert instructed on her behalf.
Mme T
(1) Whilst Mme T has the great advantage of being a member of the mother's wider family the children do not know her. Her commitment to care for the children is not supported by her actions, other than the preparation of a statement and attending to give evidence. Whilst this in itself would not be a concern, it is in the context of this case. Mme T has taken no steps to make contact with the children, to try and establish contact with them, even indirectly, for over eighteen months. It raises concerns about the extent of her understanding of why the children were removed from their parents care.
(2) When she discovered she had missed the appointment in January she took no steps to try and make a new appointment with the relevant officials in France.
(3) There is no evidence to corroborate the matters she sets out in her recent statement challenging the assessment of Ms Green. For example, any written record to confirm what she said are the views expressed by Mme M.
(4) There was no incentive or motive for Ms Green to make up the evidence she gave of her various meetings with Mme T and her family. Ms Green's descriptions of Mme T`s change in attitude when she informed her she had a telephone appointment with the French equivalent of social services and her avoidance technique of introducing photos all had the ring of truth about them. Where there was a conflict in the evidence between Ms Green and Mme T I preferred the evidence of Ms Green.
(5) Mme T showed very limited insight of the effect on the children of a move to live with her. She suggested in her evidence they would settle very quickly and did not envisage any difficulties. Ms Smith's evidence is that the children would find such a transition much more difficult, particularly GN who she described as being emotionally very fragile.
(6) I have carefully considered whether there should be any further delay, to enable further enquires of Mme T to be undertaken by the French authorities, as was intended to have taken place in January. I have reached the conclusion that such a delay would be detrimental to the children and would be unlikely to make any material difference to my conclusion which is mainly based on Mme T`s lack of insight into the needs of these particular children.
(7) A final concern I have about the proposal to place the children with Mme Tu is in my judgment the mother sees it as a stepping stone for eventual re-unification of the children in her care, rather than a long term placement.
Placement in France
Placement Order