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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> H & A (Children), Re [2002] EWCA Civ 383 (21st March, 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/383.html Cite as: [2002] 2 FCR 469, [2002] 1 FLR 1145, [2002] EWCA Civ 383 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CAERNARFON COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE ELYSTAN MORGAN)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
PRESIDENT OF THE FAMILY DIVISION
LORD JUSTICE THORPE
and
LORD JUSTICE KAY
____________________
H & A (Children), Re |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
(instructed by Messrs Tudor Owen Roberts Glynne & Co of Caernarfon LL55 1AG) appeared for the appellant
Nicholas Cooke QC and Shan Morris
(instructed by Messrs Elwyn Jones & Co of Bangor LL57 1NT) appeared for the respondent
____________________
AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
Crown Copyright ©
THORPE LJ:
(3) A blood sample may be taken from a person under the age of sixteen years, not being such a person as is referred to in sub-section (4) of this section –
(a) if the person who has the care and control of him consents; or
(b) where that person does not consent, if the court considers that it would be in his best interests for the sample to be taken.
“The welfare report was ordered to address the issue of contact between the twins and their father.”
“Mr B and Ms R give differing accounts of their relationship and of Mr B’s involvement with the twins. It seems that they had a relationship lasting about three years. The parties did not live together as a couple and since separating early this year, there has been no contact between the children and Mr B.”
“Ms R does not accept that Mr B was an involved parent. She says that she has always been their primary carer and that he saw the girls when she herself was also present. Ms R says that he only cared for the children for brief periods and that he has never had to attend to their physical needs.”
“I do not doubt that I am the biological father of the twins. I do not know why this application has been made by the applicant. I am aware that, on one occasion only, the applicant had sexual intercourse with my wife. However this was many months before the date of conception of the twins.”
“Q – You see, the reason you are upset is not necessarily the thought of blood tests being ordered, it is because of the deceit that has been perpetrated upon you, isn’t it?
A – No. If there was any chance, if there was only a 1% chance that Mr B is the father of these children it would impair everybody’s lives, including my own. I couldn’t act – if it is true then that Mr B is the father of G and L then I don’t – well, I’m almost certain that I couldn’t cope with that at all and I would have to let the family unit go because I couldn’t look after somebody else’s children, if you like.”
“Q – But if the court orders that there be DNA testing of the girls and it is discovered that Mr B was their father ....
A – Yes
Q - ....what would your attitude be then?
A – It would have to change. I don’t think I could cope.”
“I believe that .... would have a disastrous effect upon the family and that Mr R is more likely than not to leave the family. I was greatly impressed by what he said, that if that were so he would be looking into the eyes of the children and seeing the eyes of Mr B. He is, I think, that sort of person who would be crushed by such an experience.”
“I consider in the circumstances that if no test is ordered there is a fundamental unlikelihood of the mater ever becoming a real talking point to the degree that there is a danger that the children themselves will get to know of it. Of course one can never be sure about that.”
“The balancing exercise therefore that I have to conduct is to weigh the advantage of scientific truth against uncertainty, to consider the interest that the community has in establishing such certitude on the one hand and on the other hand the possible, and I believe, my finding, probably disastrous disintegrative effects of a finding that Mr B in fact is the father. I bear in mind my impressions in relation to all the other matters. This to my mind is a case very different from that of Re H and Re T that I have mentioned. In Re H the mother’s husband had undergone a vasectomy, in Re T the husband suffered a very low sperm count and there was the near certainty that he was infertile. This is a very, very different case and in all the circumstances, conducting that balancing exercise as carefully as I can, I come to the conclusion that the application for tests should be dismissed.”
“The judge indicated that the matter should be listed for further directions and invited the parties to file witness statements from third parties commenting upon the nature and duration of the parties’ relationship. The purpose of such evidence being to assist the court in determining the issue of paternity at a later stage.”
“The danger here would be if the remote chance of Mr B being shown to be the father were to be the subject matter of a scientific finding.”
“I stress that as far as all these matters that I am considering now are concerned, I am not making formal findings of fact but giving the impression which I currently hold, as I must, as a background to the considerations which will apply to the question of whether or not blood tests should be ordered.”
“The marriage of Mr and Mrs R has lasted 26 years. I have no doubt that it has had its hard knocks, somewhat harder than either Mrs R or Mr R were prepared to acknowledge to this court. But it has survived and I find at the moment that it has all the appearances of being a warm and loving relationship.”
“The only disadvantage to the child which is put forward as an argument against the use of a blood test, not for therapeutic purposes but to ascertain paternity, is that the child is exposed to the risk that he may lose the protection of the presumption of legitimacy.
Without seeking to depreciate the value of this presumption it is, I think, fair to say that whatever may have been the position in the past the general attitude towards illegitimacy has changed and the legal incidents of being born a bastard are now almost non-existent. I need not dilate upon this, for I recognise that it is impossible to say that there is no stigma of bastardy even though it be no more than the indirect stigma of the imputation of unchastity to the mother of the child so described. On the other hand, it is difficult to conceive of cases where, assuming illegitimacy in fact, it is to the advantage of the child that this legal status of legitimacy should be preserved only perhaps to be displaced by firm evidence of illegitimacy decided later in his or her life from a blood test.
The interests of justice in the abstract are best served by the ascertainment of the truth and their must be few cases where the interests of children can be shown to be best served by the suppression of truth. Scientific evidence of blood groups has been available since the early part of this century and the progress of serology has been so rapid that in many cases certainty or near certainty can be reached in the ascertainment of paternity. Why should the risk be taken of a judicial decision being made which is factually wrong and may later be demonstrated to be wrong?”
KAY LJ:
PRESIDENT: