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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 & Y, Re (Intermediary: Practice and Procedure) [2024] EWHC 906 (Fam) (18 April 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2024/906.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 906 (Fam) |
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SITTING AT THE ROYAL COURTS OF JUSTICE
IN THE MATTER OF: X and Y
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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A |
1st Respondent |
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- and - |
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B |
2nd Respondent |
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- and - |
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X and Y (Through their 16.4 Children's Guardian) |
3rd and 4th Respondents |
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Re X & Y (Intermediary: Practice and Procedure) |
____________________
Sara Taite for the Mother A 1st Respondent
Gemma Bower for the Father B 2nd Respondent
Delia Minoprio for the Children 3rd& 4th Respondents
Hearing date: 12 April 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Williams:
The Respondent Mother has a diagnosis of PTSD and ADHD and requires support of an intermediary throughout proceedings. The personal and intimate nature of proceedings, as well as the client's dual diagnoses, may impact the client's ability to understand, focus and digest documents and information throughout the hearings, and proceedings more generally but a specialist assessment is required to identify these issues and to ensure the Mother's Article 6 rights are protected and she is able to give her best evidence.
"The ability to instruct an intermediary has been removed by the 2018 Standard Civil Contract Specification 2018 paragraph 4.28 and 6.61 therefore such instruction would fall outside of the scope of the certificate
The Legal Framework
i) provide for a party or witness to participate in proceedings with the assistance of an intermediary
ii) provide for a party or witness to be questioned in court with the assistance of an intermediary.
"… [I]intermediary means a person whose function is to –
(a) communicate questions put to a witness or party;
(b) communicate to any person asking such questions the answers given by the witness or party in reply to them; and
(c) explain such questions or answers so far as is necessary to enable them to be understood by the witness or party or by the person asking such questions…"
That identifies a very narrow remit for an intermediary. Whilst I do not think (albeit without hearing full argument) that the definition should necessarily be interpreted as meaning an intermediary can only perform those functions it does give an indication of what their primary function is. Thus, assisting a party during a hearing to understand the evidence given by others or assisting a party to read papers and to give instructions is a function not identified in the rules and one which requires to be evidenced. Due to the nature of how this application was disposed of I did not hear full argument on the remit of an intermediary and it may well be that this will require more detailed consideration on another day.
i) Support the party or witness giving evidence,
ii) Support a party to participate fairly by attending for other parts of the hearing.
The evidence available to the court from the application or an intermediary report will guide the court on what is necessary. The fact that a party or witness will be assisted by the support of an intermediary will not be likely to be sufficient; it would not meet the 'necessary' threshold. The court must be satisfied that an intermediary support is necessary to enable the party to participate fairly and that the other participation directions which can be put in place short of an intermediary will not achieve that end.
"36. As set out above, in the Practice Direction it is observed that the appointment of an intermediary for the defendant's evidence will be a rare occurrence and that it will be exceptionally rare for a whole trial order to be made. That projection as to frequency serves as an important reminder to judges that intermediaries are not to be appointed on a "just-in-case" basis or because the report by the intermediary, the psychologist or the psychiatrist has failed to provide the judge with a proper analysis of a vulnerable defendant's needs in the context of the particular circumstances of the trial to come. These are fact-sensitive decisions that call for not only an assessment of the relevant circumstances of the defendant, but also the circumstances of the particular trial. Put otherwise, any difficulty experienced by the defendant must be considered in the context of the actual proceedings which he or she faces.
37. Criminal cases vary infinitely in factual complexity, legal and procedural difficulty, and length. Intermediaries should not be appointed as a matter of routine trial management, but instead because there are compelling reasons for taking this step, it being clear that all other adaptations to the trial process will not sufficiently meet the defendant's needs to ensure he or she can effectively participate in the trial. The assessment in the Practice Direction as to the number of instances when this is likely to occur, albeit an important reminder to the judge to apply the most careful scrutiny to these applications, cannot derogate from the need to appoint an intermediary as identified by the Lord Chief Justice in Grant Murray "when necessary".
38. It follows that these applications need to be addressed carefully, with sensitivity and with caution to ensure the defendant's effective participation by whatever adaptation of the usual arrangements is required. The recommendation by one or more experts that an intermediary should be appointed is not determinative of this issue. This is a question for the judge to resolve, who is best placed to understand what is required in order to ensure the accused is fairly tried. The guidance given in R v Cox [2012] EWCA Crim 549, [2012] 2 CrAppR 6 at page 63 is important in this regard:
i. "29. We immediately acknowledge the valuable contribution made to the administration of justice by the use of intermediaries in appropriate cases. We recognise that there are occasions when the use of an intermediary would improve the trial process. That, however, is far from saying that whenever the process would be improved by the availability of an intermediary, it is mandatory for an intermediary to be made available. It can, after all, sometimes be overlooked that as part of their general responsibilities judges are expected to deal with specific communication problems faced by any defendant or any individual witness (whether a witness for the prosecution or the defence) as part and parcel of their ordinary control of the judicial process. When necessary, the processes have to be adapted to ensure that a particular individual is not disadvantaged as a result of personal difficulties, whatever form they may take. In short, the overall responsibility of the trial judge for the fairness of the trial has not been altered because of the increased availability of intermediaries, or indeed the wide band of possible special measures now enshrined in statute.
ii. 30. In the context of a defendant with communication problems, when every sensible step taken to identify an available intermediary has been unsuccessful, the next stage is not for the proceedings to be stayed, which in a case like the present would represent a gross unfairness to the complainant, but for the judge to make an informed assessment of whether the absence of an intermediary would make the proposed trial an unfair trial. It would, in fact, be a most unusual case for a defendant who is fit to plead to be found to be so disadvantaged by his condition that a properly brought prosecution would have to be stayed. That would be an unjust outcome where, on the face of the evidence, a genuine complaint has properly been brought against the defendant. If the question were to arise, this court would have to re-examine whether the principles relating to fitness to plead may require reconsideration."
39. In this regard it is important to bear in mind the judgment of the Vice President in R v Biddle [2019] EWCA Crim 86, [2019] 2 CrAppR 2 :
i. "39. The principles, as set out in Rashid and the Practice Direction, are clear: the intermediary can make a recommendation based on the material they have considered but it is just that — a recommendation. Ultimately it is for the trial judge to decide, having considered all the material, whether and to what extent an intermediary is necessary […]" [my added emphasis]
40. In Cox the court gave a helpful guide of the extent to which the court proceedings can be modified to ensure effective participation if an intermediary is not appointed, or none is available:
i. "21. […] [The judge] underlined …the word 'effectively'. He examined 'a complete raft of procedural modifications to the ordinary trial process' which would be appropriate in the situation which now obtained. These included short periods of evidence, followed by twenty-minute breaks to enable the appellant to relax and his counsel to summarise the evidence for him and to take further instructions. The evidence would be adduced by means of very simply phrased questions. Witnesses would be asked to express their answers in short sentences. The tape-recordings of the interview should be played, partly to accustom the jury to the appellant's patterns of speech, and also to give the clearest possible indication of his defence to the charge. For this purpose, it was an agreed fact before the jury that 'Anthony Cox has complex learning difficulties. He could understand simple language and pay attention for short periods'. This was a carefully crafted admission to ensure that proper allowances would be made for the difficulties facing the appellant without creating any risk that the jury might reflect on the evidence in the context of the question of whether or not the appellant was potentially dangerous."
41. We would stress that this passage from Cox remains an excellent rehearsal of at least some of the steps that can be taken to accommodate a vulnerable defendant's needs without having to resort to appointing an intermediary.
42. In R v Rashid Yahya [2017] EWCA Crim 2, [2017] 1 CrAppR 25 , the court similarly emphasised the need for the advocates to ensure that the case is presented in a readily comprehensible way, particularly as to how the evidence is elicited. The competence expected of the advocates includes:
i. "80. […] the ability to ask questions without using tag questions, by using short and simple sentences, by using easy to understand language, by ensuring that questions and sentences were grammatically simple, by using open ended prompts to elicit further information and by avoiding the use of tone of voice to imply an answer […]""
i) It will be "exceptionally rare" for an order for an intermediary to be appointed for a whole trial. Intermediaries are not to be appointed on a "just in case" basis. Thomas [36]. This is notable because in the family justice system it appears to be common for intermediaries to be appointed for the whole trial. However, it is clear from this passage that a judge appointing an intermediary should consider very carefully whether a whole trial order is justified, and not make such an order simply because they are asked to do so.
ii) The judge must give careful consideration not merely to the circumstances of the individual but also to the facts and issues in the case, Thomas [36];
iii) Intermediaries should only be appointed if there are "compelling" reasons to do so, Thomas [37]. An intermediary should not be appointed simply because the process "would be improved"; R v Cox [2012] EWCA Crim 549 at [29];
iv) In determining whether to appoint an intermediary the Judge must have regard to whether there are other adaptations which will sufficiently meet the need to ensure that the defendant can effectively participate in the trial, Thomas [37];
v) The application must be considered carefully and with sensitivity, but the recommendation by an expert for an intermediary is not determinative. The decision is always one for the judge, Thomas [38];
vi) If every effort has been made to identify an intermediary but none has been found, it would be unusual (indeed it is suggested very unusual) for a case to be adjourned because of the lack of an intermediary, Cox [30];
vii) At [21] in Cox the Court of Appeal set out some steps that can be taken to assist the individual to ensure effective participation where no intermediary is appointed. These include having breaks in the evidence, and importantly ensuring that "evidence is adduced in very shortly phrased questions" and witnesses are asked to give their "answers in short sentences". This was emphasised by the Court of Appeal in R v Rashid (Yahya) [2017] 1 WLR 2449.
"All these points are directly applicable to the Family Court. Counsel submitted that there was a need for intermediaries because relevant parties often did not understand the proceedings and the language that was being used. However, the first and normal approach to this difficulty is for the judge and the lawyers to ensure that simple language is used, and breaks taken to ensure that litigants understand what is happening. All advocates in cases involving vulnerable parties or witnesses should be familiar with the Advocates Gateway and the advice on how to help vulnerable parties understand and participate in the proceedings. I am reminded of the words of Hallett LJ in R v Lubemba [2014] EWCA Crim 2064 at [45] "Advocates must adapt to the witness, not the other way round". A critical aspect of this is for cross-examination to be in short focused questions without long and complicated preambles and the use of complex language. Equally, it is for the lawyers to explain the process to their clients outside court, in language that they are likely to understand.
Finally, it is the role of the judge to consider whether the appointment of an intermediary is justified. It may often be the case that all the parties support the appointment, because it will make the hearing easier, but that is not the test the judge needs to apply.
i) The application was made for a Part 25 appointment of an expert to carry out the assessment. That is not the appropriate application.
ii) The basis for the application was a simple assertion that the party had a diagnosis with no supporting evidence of the diagnosis or the impact on the party of that diagnosis in terms of her ability to participate.
iii) There is currently no explanation of why on the specific facts of this case it is needed. In that regard
a) Previous proceedings of various forms have taken place and no issue appears to have been identified in the hearings or reports going back several years in relation to these proceedings and earlier proceedings relating to other children even before.
b) There is little in the current expert, Social worker or Independent Social Worker reports which suggest a significant difficulty, although it is true that they recognise the possible relevance of a diagnosis of ADHD or PTSD. The psychologist (who the mother did not meet with as and when required and so resulted in an incomplete assessment) said
I am not certain that A has a clear understanding of how important this assessment and other court assessments are. This is not because I feel she is not capable of understanding, but more because she is avoiding discussions with professionals regarding the purpose of the court process.
c) In a previous Position Statement filed by a previous legal team it was said
The Mother's instructions are clear; she fully appreciates the importance of engaging with the Guardian and the seriousness of these proceedings. It is hoped that a date can be agreed at the hearing for the Guardian to meet with X, so all have this information upon leaving court
d) Her new solicitors said
In addition, the Mother reports symptoms of possible ADHD which makes for additional complications in respect of the taking of instructions and the fairness of the proceedings moving forward without consideration of special measures.
e) The Threshold Response which had been drafted and the mothers demeanour in court in interjecting to identify errors in counsels submissions or to express her disagreement did not suggest a serious issue with understanding or participation.