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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 >> C (Children) [2006] EWCA Civ 1765 (28 November 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1765.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 1765 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE PRINCIPAL REGISTRY OF THE FAMILY DIVISION
(MR JUSTICE COLERIDGE)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WALL
LORD JUSTICE HOOPER
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IN THE MATTER OF C (Children) |
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MS C LISTER (instructed by Messrs Penman Johnson) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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"The only question which really falls for decision today is whether or not the process should be taken one step forward by the appointment of the National Youth Advisory Service, NYAS for short, as the children's guardian."
"I have also, as I say, had the huge advantage of hearing from Dr Bester in evidence today. He does not fundamentally alter his views as set out in his report. The bottom line is that he is completely clear that the children must understand the truth and be brought to knowing the truth. His concern is, and it is one which I am bound to say I share, that the children will if they are not told the truth in a planned, measured, structured, careful, sensitive way, they are likely, in due course, to find it out for themselves. They will know there is a secret in the family which they are not party to and they, if they do find out in this unstructured way, will suffer long-term damage.
"He went on to tell me that his fear also was that if they find out that they have been lied to then their relationship with their mother will be undermined and damaged, and he defines lying, quite rightly in my judgment, as keeping from them the truth about their father, and so he feels that the necessary steps need to be taken to progress the matter at least to a state of knowledge. He does not go beyond that, however. He does not recommend direct contact or anything of that kind, he only recommends that this early work is carried out. That is his position and I do no justice to his two very careful reports which I have read and ingested with great care, and it is of course the view, adopted in essence by the father."
The judge picks up this thread again in paragraph 17 where he says:
"The decision is extremely difficult. I have to take into account only what is in the best interests of the children, that is the only test by which I make a decision in the case of this kind. I have no doubt at all, having experience not only of this case, and having heard from Dr Bester and many other experts similar to him in similar situations, that the children's best interests will only be served if they are told this information in a timely way. I have also no doubt at all, as Dr Bester has emphasised, that the only person who can impart it in a way which the children will be able to absorb without difficulty is the mother."
"The mother today does not acknowledge, indeed positively denies that his need to do so was something which amounts to a psychiatric illness. She thinks that the steps which he has taken and the difficulties which she has been confronted with are things for which he should be held accountable in the real sense of the word. That much was completely plain from the evidence which she gave to me today. I say that in no critical sense at all and it is a factor which I have to have in mind because it is very much a fact in the case."
To this he returned in paragraph 16, when he said:
"The mother's antipathy does, to some extent at least, extend from the fact that she feels, rightly or wrongly, that the father has put himself into this position by his own voluntary behaviour."
Again in paragraph 20:
"I have found her to be impressive as a mother and whether or not I agree wholly with her approach she is their mother, she has done as counsel emphasised an extremely good job on her own […]"
"What work could initially be done with the children to prepare them for the reintroduction of contact?"
That question in my judgment fails to separate out the two quite distinct issues in the case. The critical issue is that which I have identified and it is clear to me that, although in places in his report Dr Bester himself elided it with the question of the reintroduction of direct contact, he was nonetheless fully well aware that the two were indeed distinct. The level of direct contact, he said, would need to be addressed bearing in mind the family's response to the work. The words he used in paragraph 16.5 of his second report were:
"… the prognosis for contact to occur and for the work to be effective is likely to be very modest".
By that I take him clearly to mean that whilst a need to inform the children of their father's change of gender was necessary in any event, the appellant should not be sanguine that it will necessarily lead to direct contact.
1) That the children need to know sooner rather than later about their father's change of gender;
2) That they need to be protected from knowing about it in a way that will damage them; and
3) That she does indeed need professional help in imparting the news of it sensitively to the children.
I therefore urge her, in the interests of the children, to co-operate with NYAS and to remember that NYAS has been appointed by this court to represent the interests of the children and that, like her, NYAS is motivated by the imperative that the children's welfare is indeed paramount.
Order: Appeal allowed.