BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Clarke v Clarke [2004] EWCA Civ 1185 (05 July 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/1185.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 1185 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM LEEDS COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE KAMIL)
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WALL
____________________
DONALD CLARKE | Claimant/Appellant | |
-v- | ||
SANDRA CLARKE | Respondent/Defendant |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MRS ANN MARIE GREGORY (instructed by Chadwick Lawrence, Ossett WF5 9BJ) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Monday, 5 July 2004
"Of course Mr Clarke said he didn't know that she'd been visiting her mother's. The first that he knew about it was when he decided that they had run out of milk, he having been working in the garden all day, and decided to go with his girlfriend to go and get the milk. So he went to the gate, he opened the gate and as he was opening the gate he saw, as he looked down towards the mother's home, his ex-wife leaving with what appeared to be his children and a small dog. He then went back into the house, collected his money, got the car keys, got in the car, and then he decided that, notwithstanding the fact that he knew that she was in the vicinity, he was going to leave the property at that particular moment. He decided he was going to choose a different route from the one he normally goes on, which wouldn't take him past the mother's house, but would still take him to the shops, by a longer route, and then, lo and behold, he said, he was quite astounded when he was driving along to suddenly see them about 50 or 100 yards in front of him. Of course he said that it wasn't until that point that he realised who they were. He continued on his way instead of pausing or going back, having regard to the past problems that he knew he'd had, and the fact that he certainly at the very least knew that there were injunction proceedings in the offing. He never paused, or slowed or crossed over the road in any way but just carried on and went along. 'The only thing that', he said that, 'I did as I'd got the window down was I did look across at them because I wasn't at all sure that one of the children was in fact my daughter, because she seemed to be rather larger than he remembered her as being'."
"Then on the following day, the 24th of May, it is alleged by Mrs Clarke that she was at home at the sister's when she was looking out of the window and she saw Mr Clarke drive very slowly past that address. There was absolutely no need for him to be in that street and because he was driving slowly she felt well and truly intimidated and harassed because she thought there was only one reason why he could possibly be no that street. He, she says in her statement, which was never challenged, was driving a Scimitar motor vehicle and indeed the sister, who gave a [written] statement and who also gave live evidence, in her written statement says that she spotted him in the Scimitar and she actually made contact with her sister on the phone because she was concerned for her and for her safety, so both of those witnesses well and truly put him in that street in that car on that day.
Mr Clarke said, well, 'I do have a Scimitar', as he gave live evidence to that effect. 'The Peugeot car which I may very well have been driving on the 28th of May does in fact belong to my mother but I drive that motor vehicle because I take my mother around and she's infirm, she can't drive it, so I use that motor vehicle, but I do have a Scimitar. I have had it for many years and that's my car', is what he says. 'The Peugeot isn't even registered in my name. ... I don't even know the correct number of it. I am only able to give some of the letters and digits'."
That is the judge's assessment of the second incident.
"Then on the 28th of May, the final incident, the only perhaps point of agreement between the parties is that Mr Clarke says that, 'Yes, I accept the fact that I was in the street on that day but I have a perfectly legitimate reason for being in the street in the vicinity of the sister's flat on that day I'd left the house, I was going out, and then I realised that I hadn't got my phone with me, so instead of having to do a U turn in a busy main road such as Church Walk I decided to do what I've done on occasions in the past and in effect use Grove Lea Walk ... as the U turn to take me safely round and back the way I had come and then back to my house and that's all I did on that occasion. No question of me driving very slowly down the road. I was - you can't drive fast because there are - fairly narrow road, as can be seen from the photos and there are usually cars parked along there. Any parking places that there may be', and he concedes the fact that there are three parking places, he said, 'aren't big enough anyway to do a complete sweep round with the car so it's just as safe and easy to carry on down the street and go out through the other end and that is all I was doing. I was driving at a perfectly normal, safe speed for that road. No question of me stopping or going excessively slowly and certainly no question of me taking any photos at all.'.
On the other hand of course Mrs Clarke says, 'Well, that's what I saw. I saw him driving very, very slowly. The car paused. It stopped at the other side of the road and I could see from the kitchen window that he appeared to be taking photographs of me and also of my boyfriend's car. My sister went rushing out into the bedroom and then she appeared outside with her own camera in time to take some photographs of Mr Clarke as he was alongside the boyfriend's car, that's Mr Senior's car, and also as he was driving out of the street.' Mr Senior again confirms the fact that certainly he saw Mr Clarke in the street and pausing - in his car - pausing alongside his own car that was out there."
"All I will say that, and I do accept the fact that of course there are discrepancies in what Mrs Clarke and her witnesses have had to say about what exactly transpired on that occasion but I have absolutely no doubt whatsoever that there would also have been criticism of witnesses had those witnesses been absolutely word perfect. Whatever happens, when it comes to looking at the evidence of witnesses, there is always the accusation either that witnesses have been rehearsed or that the discrepancies of course are so great that it must be untrue, but there is a complete divergence there, the suggestion being quite clearly that Mrs Clarke and her sister and Mr Senior have been lying about what happened."
"I now come to my conclusions. Having considered everything that has been put before me and having seen and heard the witnesses, it seems absolutely clear that this is a matter that depends solely upon credibility. I have no difficulty, I have got to say, satisfying myself to the appropriate standard that it is more than just coincidence that Mr Clarke should choose to go out in his car on the 23rd of May at the same time as Mrs Clarke was leaving her mother's with the children. He doesn't deny that he drove past her. The issue here is did he drive slowly and, in effect, menacingly past her in order to place her in fear and make her know of his presence and that in fact, in effect, he knew that she was back in town.
Having summarised the evidence so far as this is concerned, I have absolutely no doubt that her account is the more accurate one. I find this to be proved.
On the 24th of May there is a clear dispute as to whether this happened at all. Mr Clarke, as I have said, denied that he ever went down the street on that day and went past her sister's flat. Mrs Clarke and her sister say that they saw that he was there and that he was driving his Scimitar, quite specific about this. He admits that he has a Scimitar. I believe he said it was a J registered one but he has a Scimitar and I know exactly what a Scimitar looks like. I have no hesitation in accepting their account that he did on that day drive slowly past the flat and that was with the intention of frightening and harassing her and that he indeed succeeded...
Finally, I turn to the 28th of May. Having seen and heard the witnesses I am quite sure that Mr Clarke drove down the street past the sister's with the one intention and one intention only of frightening Mrs Clarke. There may have been discrepancies in what the witnesses exactly say they saw but there's no dispute that he was in the street and that he must have driven past. He knew exactly in my view what he was doing and why he was in that street. I don't accept his account of the events. I am sure that he paused on the way along and certainly gave the appearance at the very least of taking pictures. He was certainly there long enough to give time for the sister, who is under sufficient disability to need a walking stick, to go into her bedroom, get her camera and go out onto the street and still manage to take a photograph of what is highly likely to be his motor vehicle and which he accepts looks like his motor vehicle turning at the end of the street. I am quite sure that he knew what was in the court documents that were served on him on the 21st of May and that he knew his ex-wife must be back in the area. It must have been like manna from heaven when he actually saw her on the 23re of May and everything else then followed.
To summarise, I therefore find that all three breaches are proved."
"... the learned judge erred in that he made a fundamental mistake of fact, wrongly believing the witness Pauline Evans to be a corroborative eye-witness to the alleged breach, in that:
i) the learned judge wrongly believed that Pauline Evans had seen the Appellant driving his Scimitar motor car on Grove Lea Walk on 24th May 2004 in breach of the injunction (which the Appellant denied) when in fact she had seen the Appellant drive his Scimitar motor car on Church Balk Lane, not amounting to a breach of the injunction (which the Appellant accepted);
ii) the learned judge wrongly believed that Pauline Evans had seen the Appellant drive so slowly as to be with the intention of being frightening; whereas she merely saw him driving appropriately slowly.
3. The above mistaken finding of fact was an integral part of the learned judge's reasoning and findings that the 3 breaches were proved beyond reasonable doubt."
"The following day, Monday 24th May about 3.10 pm I was walking down Church Balk Lane, having just turned out of my street. I saw Mr Clarke drive past me slowly. I rang Sandra who was at my house to warn her Mr Clarke was about.
I did not see him again in that area until Friday 28th May the details of which are contained in my [illegible] statement."
(Appeal allowed; Appellant's publicly-funded costs to be subject to detailed assessment).