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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 >> W (A Child), Re [2008] EWCA Civ 1181 (30 October 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/1181.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 1181 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HH Judge Mayer sitting in the
Barnet County Court on 1 July 2008.
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
W (A Child)
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AW |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SW |
Respondent |
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Victoria Domenge (instructed by Osmond, Gaunt & Rose - Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 14th October 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Wall :
This case has been before the courts in one form or another since August 2001. There were proceedings for non-molestation, occupation orders, ancillary relief and contact disputes. I am unable to count how many times the parties appeared in court. The reality is, remarkably, that all proceedings so far have been settled by agreement I say "remarkably" because I have rarely seen two parties who agreed less with each other. Whatever issues have been between them remain unresolved. Some of the issues have been festering for years. I have rarely seen people with more dislike, contempt, lack of trust, lack of respect and desire to goad each other than these parties whose decree nisi was pronounced almost three years ago in January 2001.
Since this hearing before me is an important one, deciding perhaps the fate of this father's contact with his three children for a great part of their minorities I decided to air some of the issues which have been outstanding for years. My view is that had findings of fact been made in this case at the time that there was an argument about an occupation order many of the issues with which I have had to deal three years later may not have arisen.
Even the most neutral question became an opportunity for a torrent of vilification against the father. The interviews had an "orchestrated feel; a sense that all knew this was an opportunity to leave me in no doubt as to their feelings. All were supporting each other and there was not a chink between them. That a child of 11 should feel it acceptable to say (without comment from his mother or siblings) that he wished his father dead says a great deal about the atmosphere which the mother has allowed to develop. The family dynamic was obvious . The alliance against the father would be difficult for an individual to break, particularly the youngest. It was difficult to believe the mother was promoting contact with the father. It was clear she loathed him and regarded him as an emotional danger to her children.
It is not going to do nobody any good (sic). (AW) does not oppose the disclosure of the report. Dr. Kirk Weir is an expensive resource. I see absolutely no point in progressing the welfare of the children, which is my paramount consideration, in having him here telling me what he has written in his report. I have read his report. They are getting to ages where they will make their own minds up about what has happened in their childhood. They have got an analyst, an eminent psychiatrist, they have got their own lives and facts which they will rely upon. As I say, my consideration is the welfare of (DW) in this case and I cannot see that having a fact finding hearing, as you call it, on the basis of Dr Kirk Weir's report advances it.
At a later point, the judge described a finding of fact hearing as "disproportionate".
The argument for the father
(1) the relevance of the potential result for any future professional assistance to be afforded to DW;
(2) the important impact that findings might have on the parties and the wider family; and
(3) the importance that findings might have for the court when considering what orders to make.
(1) the interests of the child (which are relevant but not paramount);
(2) the time that the investigation will take;
(3) the likely cost to public funds;
(4) the evidential result;
(5) the necessity or otherwise of the investigation;
(6) the relevance of the potential result of the investigation to the future care plans for the child;
(7) the impact of any fact finding process upon the other parties;
(8) the prospects of a fair trial on the issue;
(9) the justice of the case
Discussion
13. In the present case, the doctors were not expressing a medical opinion on clinical grounds and insofar as they ventured an opinion on what was forensically required, they were trespassing onto judicial territory. The discretion of the judge in taking case management decisions is particularly generous. The judge here clearly decided that enough was enough, and enough had been achieved in Professor Patton's considered view that in this particular child osteogenesis imperfecta was extremely unlikely. The judge clearly placed considerable emphasis on the fact that the expensive blood test which was urged upon her had been demonstrated to establish osteogenesis imperfecta in cases where there were no other clinical signs in only one percent of three hundred cases researched. The judge also attached weight to the fact that testing for osteogenesis imperfecta is only 90 percent accurate.
14. So this seems to me not only a permissible decision but a wise decision. There has to be a point at which the garnering of evidence is sufficiently full and thorough to enable the court to arrive at a conclusion, even on the elevated balance of probabilities standard of proof. It seems to me that Miss Wiley's argument comes close to saying that no stone must be left unturned. I do not accept that. The value to be derived from submitting this child to what is an invasive investigation was too small to justify the considerable cost both in cash and in time. I have no hesitation at all in upholding the judge's conclusion.