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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 >> A Local Authority v AZ & Ors [2023] EWHC 3513 (Fam) (14 August 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2023/3513.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 3513 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
A LOCAL AUTHORITY |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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AZ (THE MOTHER) |
First Respondent |
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and |
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BX (THE FATHER) |
Second Respondent |
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and |
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CX |
Third Respondent |
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and |
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DZ |
Fourth Respondent |
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and |
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FX |
Fifth Respondent |
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Ms Liz McGrath KC and Ms Nicola Beese (instructed by Hawley and Rodgers Solicitors) for the First Respondent
Ms Nick Goodwin KC and Mr Stephen Williams (instructed by Jackson Quinn Solicitors) for the Second Respondent
Ms Anne Buttler (instructed by Tallents Solicitors) for the Third Respondent
Ms Vickie Hodges (instructed by Hopkins Solicitors) for the Fourth Respondent
Mr Joshua Hazelwood (instructed by Bhatia Best Solicitors) for the Fifth Respondent
Hearing dates: 31 July – 4 August 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Lieven DBE :
Factual Background
"a. 'The first respondent accepts that she saw the bruises to [DZ] and that she was present during the assault. The first respondent could not stop the second respondent assaulting [DZ]. The first respondent will state that she was not abused by the second respondent.'
b. 'The first respondent does accept that [DZ] did make her aware that she was being raped by the second respondent and that she challenged the second respondent about the alleged rape which he denied.'
c. 'The first respondent accepts that she was spoken to by the social worker and police officer on the 31 October 2022 and she admitted that [GX] and [FX] are physically chastised but she denied that the second respondent is physical to her and [DZ]. The first responder was too frightened of the repercussions from the second respondent if she admitted that the second respondent was physical to her and [DZ].'"
"a. '[DZ] did not tell me about being abused by her father but if she has said this, I accept it and believe her.'
b. 'I do not accept that the second respondent physically abused the children but there were occasions…he would hit them with his hand on their bottom.'
c. 'The second respondent was a good husband and father, he looked after us. We were a happy family and all of a sudden [DZ] made a complaint against her father. It came as a surprise to me.'
d. '[DZ] brought the friend's iPhone home again. The second respondent was angry only and not physical with [DZ]… There was no physical abuse by the second respondent in relation to [DZ]. He spoke to tell her off but he did not touch her in any way.'
e. 'I did not see any of the bruises referred to. I did not see the second respondent beating [DZ]'.
f. 'I did tell social services that I did not know anything about the abuse from [DZ].'
g. 'I was not aware of what was happening to [DZ] and that she was being abused by the second respondent.'"
"a. (In relation to the alleged beating with a belt) 'The first respondent was not aware of any argument between [DZ] and the second respondent about the mobile telephone. The first respondent was not aware of physical or emotional harm caused by the second respondent to [DZ]. The first respondent denies having been present when this alleged incident took place and was not aware at the time that the incident was taking place.'
b. 'The first respondent denies that she was aware of the sexual abuse against [DZ] and denies having been informed about it on 2 occasions.'
c. 'The first respondent denies having questioned the Father about the sexual abuse as she was not aware of the sexual abuse.'"
"My dear daughter [DZ], darling everyone is missing you at home, come home, the whole household is finished, we don't know where Papa is, Papa tried to commit suicide, but we saved him for your sake. [DZ] darling take your complaint back, save your Papa, Papa will be jailed for 19 years, Papa will die, don't take this sin on yourself, God will never forgive you, Papa is saying tell my [DZ] to forgive me, made a mistake, darling forgive me once, I will not say anything to you ever, I will go to jail for you ten times. I will lose all my respect. What will Mx Uncle, Mz, Mb Uncle and other people say about it? Can you forgive Papa darling? Do a favour to your Papa – can you forgive him? For your father's sake take your complaint back, I was annoyed with Papa and Papa annoyed me, not to use the phone, not to watch TV and just do your studies, and that's it. You were making me angry, I got angry then I had to lie. The social worker won't say anything to you. Say it with emotion/anger I want to take the complaint back and also say I love my dad and I want my dad back. Say that we will be separated otherwise. We love you dear."
The law
a. Cases of alleged child sexual abuse create particularly acute forensic difficulties for the family courts charged with determining whether sexual abuse has occurred and, if so, who has perpetrated that abuse . . . no case of alleged sexual abuse where there is an absence of any probative medical or other direct physical evidence to support a finding can be regarded as straightforward. [3]
b. Great care should be taken before deciding that an obviously unsatisfactory explanation provided and pursued by a respondent, or the failure to provide and pursue an explanation for a given allegation, is evidence of culpability. [246]
c. It is important, forensically, in a case of alleged sexual abuse, to examine the first point in time at which a child gives an account or accounts of alleged sexual abuse, the precise circumstances in which the account or accounts arose and how those were treated subsequently by those to whom they were made. [570]
d. The court can take judicial notice of the following. [577]
e. Children, and especially young children, are suggestible.
f. Memory is prone to error and easily influenced by the environment in which recall is invited.
g. Memories can be confabulated from imagined experiences, it is possible to induce false memories and children can speak sincerely and emotionally about events that did not in fact occur.
h. Allegations made by children may emerge in a piecemeal fashion, with children often not reporting events in a linear history, reporting them in a partial way and revisiting topics.
i. The wider circumstances of the child's life may influence, explain or colour what the child is saying.
j. Factors affecting when a child says something will include their capacity to understand their world and their role within it, requiring caution when interpreting children's references to behaviour or parts of the body through the prism of adult learning or reading.
k. Accounts given by children are susceptible to influence by leading or otherwise suggestive questions, repetition, pressure, threats, negative stereotyping and encouragement, reward or praise.
l. Accounts given by children are susceptible to influence as the result of bias or preconceived ideas on the part of the interlocutor.
m. Accounts given by children are susceptible to contamination by the statements of others, which contamination may influence a child's responses.
n. Children may embellish or overlay a general theme with apparently convincing detail which can appear highly credible and be very difficult to detect, even for those who are experienced in dealing with children.
o. Delay between an event recounted and the allegation made with respect to that event may influence the accuracy of the account given.
p. Within this context, the way, and the stage at which a child is asked questions / interviewed will have a profound effect on the accuracy of the child's testimony.
q. Those speaking to children who have made allegations of sexual abuse must keep an open mind with respect to the allegations made and must guard against the development of bias or preconceived ideas. A professional who loses their objectivity ceases, by definition, to act professionally. [1245 vii]
r. Overall, the proper methodology is one that combines listening to the child and taking them seriously with an open-minded approach that takes account of both sides of the story, is open to new evidence that disconfirms original ideas, that reasons dispassionately, that demands that claims be backed by evidence and that deduces and infers conclusions only from available facts. [1245 x]
s. In cases of alleged sexual abuse, there is a significant forensic tension between the need to provide understanding, support and care for children who may have been sexually abused, where the presence of a supportive non-abusing adult who listens without judgment and takes seriously what the child is saying is essential to that child's current and future wellbeing, and the requirements of the legal process for establishing the truth or otherwise of those allegations in a court of law. [7]
a. Notwithstanding the emotive subject matter, the court's task is to take an entirely dispassionate approach to the fact-finding exercise. [240]
b. The court must always resist the siren call of what has been termed 'the child protection imperative'. As noted by Hughes LJ in Re B (Allegation of Sexual Abuse: Child's Evidence) [2006] 2 FLR 1071, "...the fact that one is in a family case sailing under the comforting colours of child protection is not a reason to afford to unsatisfactory evidence a weight greater than it can properly bear. That is in nobody's interests, least of all the child's" [240]. In the present case we submit that the attribution of excessive weight to unsatisfactory evidence risks elevating a suspicion into proof. The residue of suspicion will remain in very many cases and family judges may have nagging doubts about leaving the child unprotected. This, however, goes with the territory and will be, appropriately, the first casualty of forensic rigour.
c. The fact that an allegation has been made does not create a rebuttable presumption that the allegations are likely to be true [242]. We add that the corollary of that principle is that there is no burden on the parents here to prove that [DZ]'s retraction is true.
d. The court's decision to make no findings, or only some findings, is not a failed or unsuccessful outcome. As Baroness Hale noted in Re S-B [2010] 1 FLR 1161, "If every child protection case were to result in an order, it would mean either that local authorities were not bringing enough cases to court or that the courts were not subjecting those cases to a sufficiently rigorous scrutiny". [240].
e. There is an overarching importance, when determining whether the case is proved to the requisite standard, of the court standing back to consider the whole picture and asking itself the ultimate question of whether that which is alleged is more likely than not to be true. [270]
f. The court must steer safely clear of capitulating to suspicion and the beguiling adage that there is 'no smoke without fire'. [272]
g. The existence of confirmation bias is what underpins the oft repeated guidance for those investigating allegations of child sexual abuse to keep an open mind and is, fundamentally, what makes proceeding from a starting point of "the child must be believed" so problematic, indeed dangerous, forensically. [585]
Retractions
"The retraction of a complaint normally requires careful and specific consideration…the fact that a complaint is subsequently retracted does not prevent a judge from accepting that it is in fact true but it gives rise to questions which must be addressed sufficiently, fully and directly in the judge's reasons so that one can be confident that the fact of the retraction has been given proper weight in the judge's conclusions about the subject matter of the retracted allegation."
" . . . The judge was well aware of K's retractions of her allegations and properly considered the implications of these and what may have been behind them. She considered the explanations offered for K making up false allegations but was entitled to reject them for the reasons she gave."
Medical and expert evidence
"The described finding of a transection in the posterior hymen most likely represents a healed laceration (tear) caused by vaginal (medical definition) penetration. The first incident of vaginal penetration is most likely to tear the hymen, and subsequent incidents are less likely to cause tearing. It is not possible to determine whether there were single or multiple episodes of vaginal penetration. Furthermore, it is not possible to determine whether vaginal penetration was with a penis, finger or object."
The factual evidence
a. Being raped since the age of 10.
b. The first time it happened her mother was at work and her older brother was out and her younger brother was in the toilet.
c. When it happened, the Mother was probably at work or she would be sleeping at night because she had to sleep early.
d. DZ's brothers would go upstairs in their rooms.
e. The last time it happened on Sunday morning the Mother was at work and her brothers were sleeping.
f. The sexual abuse happened 3-4 times a week.
g. It stopped for a quite a long time but started again.
h. It stopped because her baby brother would cry at night and her father was scared that he would be caught by her mother.
i. Once it re-started it would happen about once a week.
j. The Father would take DZ to his room downstairs and lock the door.
k. The Father would lock the door every single time.
l. The Father would touch DZ's breast.
m. The Father would insert his penis in DZ's vagina.
n. The Father would force DZ's legs open telling her to be quiet as her brother was next door.
o. The Father would tell DZ to shush, lower her voice and be quiet.
p. On one occasion DZ shouted at the Father and he was scared the Mother would wake up.
q. The sexual abuse occurred on a mattress on the floor.
r. DZ would try to push the Father away but he was bigger and stronger than her.
s. The Father would push DZ's hands down and hold them.
t. The Father would take out his penis before ejaculating and then go to the toilet.
u. The Father told DZ to close her eyes and DZ felt so much pain in her vagina.
v. DZ started to bleed.
w. The Father only stopped when DZ started crying.
x. The Father always made DZ shower.
y. The Father would tell DZ to wash and her clean clothes.
z. When DZ asked the Father to stop he threatened her with deporting her back to India.
aa. DZ told the Mother about the sexual abuse 2-3 times, first when she was 12-13 and lastly on the Sunday before she made the allegations to the police.
GX
PIM
The Mother
The Father
"[BX]: She said, er, [DZ], erm, asking about these thing, why are you doing this to her? And I mention I didn't do anything. Then she was angry with me and she was, er, just blaming and just, er, giving me some threatening, "I will go to the, er, police and I will do this and do…"
DC4496: Is that your wife said that?
[BX]: Yes. Then I explained then after some time, we asked [DZ], she came out and we ask her and she was totally silent, she didn't mention. I told her, "Mention anything if you (inaudible)," then she didn't mention, she said, "Sorry, Papa." She came to me and, er, hugged me and, "Sorry," when mum left the lobby, she enter the room then she came to me, she wants (inaudible) then she, like, went like this… (believed to demonstrate) …Mum went to the room, she's in the lobby, I'm on the sofa, she came to me, in front of me she stood and her mum was in the room, she was looking at the room and, er, taking her (inaudible).
…
HH: So that means sorry?
[BX]: Yeah.
HH: And you said your wife's told you, what did… What were her words?
[BX]: Words [DZ] said.
HH: And what were they?
[BX]: "You are doing sex with her, [DZ] said."
HH: So having sex with [DZ]. And how did you feel about that then at the time?
[BX]: Then I feel very, er, uncomfortable, then I mention, "[DZ], you will never lay out again with me."
The Parties' Cases
Conclusions