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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 >> E (A Child) (Mediation Privilege), Re (Rev 1) [2020] EWHC 3379 (Fam) (7 December 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2020/3379.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 3379 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
IN THE MATTER OF THE CHILD ABDUCTION AND CUSTODY ACT 1985
INCORPORATING THE 1980 HAGUE CONVENTION ON CIVIL ASPECTS OF INTERNATIONAL CHILD ABDUCTION
B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
(In Private)
____________________
SG | Applicant | |
and | ||
SW | Respondent |
____________________
Ms A. GILMORE (instructed by Buchanans Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
(1) The mother seeks to exclude from the material to be put before the trial judge references in the father's written statements and other documents to discussions that took place in the course of family mediation between the parties; and(2) The father seeks an order for disclosure of the mediator's notes and, if necessary, permission to file a witness statement from the mediator as to the discussions that took place between the parties.
Background
"Mediation is Confidential
… 13. Discussions in mediation about proposals and possible terms of settlement are 'without prejudice', which means they cannot be disclosed to the court, except as explained below at para 16.
16. This confidentiality protects the content of mediation and its outcome from disclosure to the court (except where you give your joint written consent; you must take legal advice before you give such consent.)…
Exceptions to confidentiality
17. Whenever an allegation is made within a mediation that someone (particularly a child) is at risk of harm we have a duty to contact the appropriate authorities with or without your permission."
The Mother's Position
The Father's Position
"where the words or actions of the wronged parent clearly and unequivocally show and have led the other parent to believe that the wronged parent is not asserting or going to assert his right to the summary return of the child and are inconsistent with such return, justice requires that the wronged parent be held to have acquiesced".
She asserts that reference to the discussions within mediation may well, in these circumstances, be the only way that a parent can establish the necessary evidence to found their defence. As such, it would not be in the interests of justice or in the interests of the particular child to prevent him from doing so. Excluding this material would, she says, deny the father a fair trial. It might also lead to a risk of harm to E's wellbeing and her ongoing relationship with her father should the consequence be that she is returned to the USA, when otherwise she would have remained in England.
The Law
"The 'without prejudice' rule is a rule governing the admissibility of evidence and is founded upon the public policy of encouraging litigants to settle their differences rather than litigate them to a finish... The rule applies to exclude all negotiations genuinely aimed at settlement whether oral or in writing from being given in evidence."
"At a meeting of that sort the discussions between the parties' representatives may contain a mixture of admissions and half-admissions against a party's interest, more or less confident assertions of a party's case, offers, counter-offers, and statements (which might be characterised as threats or as thinking aloud) about future plans and possibilities. As Simon Brown L.J. put it in the course of argument, a threat of infringement proceedings may be deeply embedded in negotiations for a compromise solution. Partial disclosure of the minutes of such a meeting may be, as Leggatt L.J. put it in Mulkr v. Linsley & Mortimer [1996] PNLR 74, 81, a concept as implausible as the curate's egg (which was good in parts)."
"In matrimonial cases there has developed what is now a distinct privilege extending to communications received in confidence with a view to matrimonial conciliation: see In re D. (Minors) (Conciliation: Disclosure of Information) [1993] Fam. 231, 238, where Sir Thomas Bingham M.R. thought it not "fruitful to debate the relationship of this privilege with the more familiar head of 'without prejudice' privilege. That its underlying rationale is similar, and that it developed by way of analogy with 'without prejudice' privilege, seem clear. But both Lord Hailsham of St. Marylebone and Lord Simon of Glaisdale in D. v. National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children [1978] AC 171, 226, 236 regarded it as having developed into a new category of privilege based on the public interest in the stability of marriage."
"In our judgment, the law is that evidence may not be given in proceedings under the Children Act 1989 of statements made by one or other of the parties in the course of meetings held or communications made for the purpose of conciliation save in the very unusual case where a statement is made clearly indicating that the maker has in the past caused or is likely in the future to cause serious harm to the well-being of a child."
"Even in the rare case which falls within the narrow exception we have defined, the trial judge will still have to exercise a discretion whether or not to admit the evidence. He will admit it only if, in his judgment, the public interest in protecting the interests of the child outweighs the public interest in preserving the confidentiality of attempted conciliation."
"I would say that I consider there is a strong argument for holding that mediation in the context of 1980 Hague Convention proceedings, with the international dimension that it contains, with the peculiar intensity of the post-abduction environment, and where the cloak of con?dentiality arises not simply from inference but from express terms, will not necessarily attract the Unilever plc v The Procter & Gamble Co [2000] 1 WLR 2436 exceptions but rather would be immune from disclosure in all circumstances, save for those identi?ed in In re D (Minors) (Conciliation: Disclosure of Information) [1993] Fam 231 and accepted within the mediation framework itself, namely disclosure might be justi?ed where there was a risk of signi?cant harm to a child. In so far as I can, in this limited context, I would want to reassure mediators that the cloak of con?dentiality remains as securely fastened as ever it was."
"Mediation is a confidential process; none of the parties to the mediation may provide information to the court as to the content of any discussions held in mediation and/or the reasons why agreement was not reached. Similarly, the mediator may not provide such information, unless the mediator considers that a safeguarding issue arises."
Discussion
"the general rule is that without prejudice privilege is the privilege of the parties to the dispute which can be waived by those parties. It is not a privilege of the Mediator. As the parties in this case have clearly waived without prejudice privilege, the without prejudice exception to confidentiality no longer applies but this raises the question as to whether there is any other aspect of confidentiality which applies to a mediation."
Ramsey J's comments about the wider interests of justice have to be seen in that context. No issue in this case has been raised or pursued about waiver or consent.
7 December 2020
L. Samuels QC