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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> T (A Child) [2009] EWCA Civ 1208 (20 November 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/1208.html Cite as: (2010) 112 BMLR 13, [2009] EWCA Civ 1208, [2009] 3 FCR 631, [2010] Fam Law 336, [2010] 1 FLR 1325 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE PRINCIPAL REGISTRY OF THE FAMILY DIVISION
HIS HONOUR JUDGE O'DWYER
Lower Court No: FD08000390
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WILSON
and
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
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T (A Child) |
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Sarah Davies (instructed by H E Thomas & Co) for the Respondent Father
Judith Charlton (instructed by its Law and Governance Department) for the Local Authority
Damian Stuart (instructed by Sternberg Reid) for the Child, by his Children's Guardian
Hearing date: 5 November 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Mark Potter P:
"I accept what the guardian says that her depression as such is not of probative value in looking at the injuries suffered by [T] in the sense that the depression itself does not establish a propensity to harm the child; however it is part of the evidential matrix of this case."
"On balance the local authority seeks a finding that neither parent can be excluded as a perpetrator of the injuries. They say that at least in respect of some of the injuries including the most serious the mother cannot be excluded".
"62. how could a mother, whose case was that she was closely bound to the personal care of her very young baby, have failed to observe the non-accidental injuries this child has clearly suffered and have failed to take steps to protect this child. Or is the truth that she herself has participated in the harm this child has suffered? This point has troubled me greatly. Looking coolly at the evidence here was a troubled and unhappy child who cried a lot (quite probably as a result of the abuse), who was seen by the mother to have scratches and blood around his mouth on at least two occasions probably more, a child who has suffered a number of non-accidental injuries yet was only taken to hospital in extremis on 2 occasions. This was not a child whose protection and welfare was at the centre of the household but a child whose needs were in conflict with the mother's own needs as someone who perceived herself to be depressed and ill. Either the mother tolerated the father's abuse of the child at the least turning a blind eye to it or she herself inflicted the abuse."
"64. there is also the hugely obvious point that as Dr W says, during this child's short life, he was systematically abused and has undoubted [sic] suffered a series of serious non-accidental injuries. In the context of the close nuclear family life described by both parents, it is highly unlikely that one parent would not have noticed not only the effect of the injuries on the child: the immediate pain and distress of the child, but also the actual inflicting of injuries on the child in particular two skull fractures and broken fractured ribs. In relation to injury 8, the bruise under the left eye, neither parent is able to give any explanation and indeed, on the mother's own case she is primarily responsible for the child who by this time does not settle with the father.
65. I am driven to the conclusion firstly that on the balance of probability the mother has failed to protect this child. Secondly, which is the decision which most troubled me, I find the local authority has proved its case that the mother must remain in the pool of perpetrators. That is that these injuries (apart from the bruise in hospital and the cut lip) identified above were non-accidental and were inflicted by the mother or the father or both."
"66. In terms of attributing likelihood between the parents, given that the father is the sole perpetrator of two of the violent, although in this context lesser events, the father is more likely to have committed the other acts of violence."
In this respect the Judge also referred to the father's partial admission that he may have caused the rib fractures, and noted that the "limp and floppy" episodes had been noticed when the child was in the father's hands.
"68. It has been very difficult to penetrate during the course of this hearing the truth as to what was happening in the child's household at the relevant time. The father expresses bewilderment as to how these injuries occurred
69. The mother, who in all earlier documentation professed no doubts about the father, as soon as proceedings were envisaged began to move her case to one of blame of the father. In Court she professes the child to be her sole concern but in my judgment the contemporaneous evidence (e.g. the report to HV on 4.8.08) indicates a predominant concern with her own health and welfare which this unhappy child's welfare has trespassed upon.
70. Bearing in mind the pattern of this child's life; - with his mother (and father with the mother) throughout most of the day and with his father in the evenings and the mother overnight and given the difficulty in the timing of these injuries it is a real possibility that either of them, frustrated at the child's inability to settle overnight or crying, abused the child in such a way as to cause these injuries and I am satisfied that one or both of them did cause these injuries. "
"9. Re B [2008] UKHL 35, [2009] 1 AC 1, of course, establishes that the standard of proof to be applied to all findings of fact in care proceedings is "the simple balance of probabilities test": - see (amongst other places) the speech of Baroness Hale of Richmond at paragraph 73 and the "binary system" analysis contained in the speech of Lord Hoffmann. We think it important, however, to make two points in relation to Re B, which, we think, is in danger of being misunderstood.
10. The first point is that the court is not required to identify a perpetrator simply because, as Lord Hoffmann graphically puts it in paragraph 15 of his speech:
"If, for example, it is clear that a child was assaulted by one or other of two people, the fact is that one of them did and the question for the tribunal is simply whether it is more probable that one rather than the other was the perpetrator.
11. We do not resile from the propositions stated by this court in paragraphs 55 and 56 of its judgment in Re K [2004] EWCA Civ 1181, [2005] 1 FLR 285:
"[55] As a general proposition we think that it is in the public interest for those who cause serious non-accidental injuries to children to be identified, wherever such identification is possible. It is paradigmatic of such cases that the perpetrator denies responsibility and that those close to or emotionally engaged with the perpetrator likewise deny any knowledge of how the injuries occurred. Any process, which encourages or facilitates frankness, is, accordingly, in our view to be welcomed in principle.
[56] As a second background proposition, we are also of the view that it is in the public interest that children have the right, as they grow into adulthood, to know the truth about who injured them when they were children, and why. Children who are removed from their parents as a result of non-accidental injuries have in due course to come to terms with the fact that one or both of their parents injured them. This is a heavy burden for any child to bear. In principle, children need to know the truth, if the truth can be ascertained.
12. We do not think that there is anything in these two paragraphs which is in any way inconsistent with the speeches in the House of Lords in Re B. The crucial phrases in the two paragraphs we have cited from Re K, however, are "wherever such identification is possible" and "if the truth can be ascertained". Nothing in Re B, in our judgment, requires the court to identify an individual as the perpetrator of non-accidental injuries to a child, simply because the standard of proof for such an identification is the balance of probabilities. If such an identification is not possible because, for example, a judge remains genuinely uncertain at the end of a fact finding hearing, and cannot find on the balance of probabilities that A rather than B caused the injuries to the child, but that neither A nor B can be excluded as a perpetrator - it is the duty of the judge to state that as his or her conclusion. To put the matter another way, judges should not, as a result of the decision in Re B, and the fact that it supersedes Re H [1996] AC 563, strain to identify the perpetrator of non-accidental injuries to children. If an individual perpetrator can be properly identified on the balance of probabilities, then for the reasons given in Re K it is the judge's duty to identify him or her. But the judge should not start from the premise that it will only be in an exceptional case that it will not be possible to make such an identification. There will inevitably be cases - of which this, in our judgment, is one where the only conclusion which the court can properly reach is that one of the two parents or both - must have inflicted the injuries, and that neither can be excluded."
"26. The first area concerns cases of the type involved in the present appeals, where the judge finds a child has suffered significant physical harm at the hands of his parents but is unable to say which.
27. Here, as a matter of legal policy, the position seems to me straightforward. Quite simply, it would be grotesque if such a case had to proceed at the welfare stage on the footing that, because neither parent, considered individually, has been proved to be the perpetrator, therefore the child is not at risk from either of them. This would be grotesque because it would mean the court would proceed on the footing that neither parent represents a risk even though one or other of them was the perpetrator of the harm in question.
28. That would be a self-defeating interpretation of the legislation. It would mean that, in 'uncertain perpetrator' cases, the court decides that the threshold criteria are satisfied but then lacks the ability to proceed in a sensible way in the best interests of the child. The preferable interpretation of the legislation is that in such cases the court is able to proceed at the welfare stage on the footing that each of the possible perpetrators is, indeed, just that: a possible perpetrator. As Hale LJ said in re G (Care Proceedings: Split Trials) [2001] 1 FLR 872, 882:
"the fact that a judge cannot always decide means that when one gets to the later hearing, the later hearing has to proceed on the basis that each is a possible perpetrator."
This approach accords with the basic principle that in considering the requirements of the child's welfare the court will have regard to all the circumstances of the case.
29. In such cases the judge at the preliminary hearing, while unable to identify the perpetrator, may decide that one or other of the parents, perhaps both, was guilty of failure to protect. It was submitted that herein lies a better solution to the problem. The court should assess future risk on the basis of this proved shortcoming. This would be a better way to proceed because it would avoid attaching to each parent the stigma of possible perpetrator.
30. I do not believe this would be a satisfactory alternative. Inability to identify the perpetrator is not always accompanied by a finding of failure to protect. A finding of failure to protect is not a reason for leaving out of account at the welfare stage the undoubted fact that one or other of the parents inflicted the physical harm on the child. This may be important in cases where circumstances have changed since the injuries were inflicted and the parents are no longer living together.
31. In 'uncertain perpetrator' cases the correct approach must be that the judge conducting the disposal hearing will have regard, to whatever extent is appropriate, to the facts found by the judge at the preliminary hearing .
32. the judge at the disposal hearing will take into account any views expressed by the judge at the preliminary hearing on the likelihood that one carer was or was not the perpetrator, or a perpetrator, of the inflicted injuries. Depending on the circumstances, these views may be of considerable value in deciding the outcome of the application: for instance, whether the child should be rehabilitated with his mother.
33.
34. I wholly understand that parents are apprehensive that, if each of them is labelled a possible perpetrator, social workers and others may all too readily rule out the prospect of rehabilitation with either of them because the child would be 'at risk' with either of them. As already noted, failure to protect is one thing, perpetration is another. A parent fears that, once the possibility that he or she was a perpetrator is brought into the scales, cautious social workers will let that factor outweigh all others.
35. I understand this concern. Whether it is well-founded, generally or in particular cases, is an altogether different matter. Whether well- founded or not, the way ahead cannot be for cases to proceed on an artificial footing. Rather, in cases of split hearings judges must be astute to express such views as they can at the preliminary hearing to assist social workers and psychiatrists in making their assessments and preparing the draft care plan. For their part social workers, I do not doubt, will have well in mind the need to consider all the circumstances when assessing the risk posed by a carer who is, but who is no more than, a possible perpetrator. To this end transcripts of judgments given at the preliminary hearing should always be made readily available when required, so that reliance does not have to be placed on summaries or even bare statements of conclusions: see Dame Elizabeth Butler-Sloss P in re G (Care Proceedings: Split Trials) [2001] 1 FLR 872, 876.
36. I must mention a further point. The burden of proof on care order applications rests on the local authority. But, it was submitted, to proceed as mentioned above would improperly reverse the burden of proof. The parent would have the onus of exculpating himself when the local authority failed to prove he was a perpetrator but the possibility that he was a perpetrator was left open. I am unable to accept this submission. It cannot stand with the decision in Lancashire County Council v B [2000] 2 AC 147 [2000]1 FLR 583. As already noted, the effect of this decision was that a care order may be made in this type of case even though the local authority failed to prove, to the requisite standard of proof, which parent was the perpetrator of the physical harm. The approach described above does no more than give effect to this decision at the welfare stage in the only sensible way which is possible."
Lord Justice Wilson:
(a) all the injuries inflicted upon T were non-accidental;
(b) it was not possible for any person other than one or other or both of the parents to have inflicted any of them;
(c) it was not established on the balance of probabilities that any of the injuries (excluding the cut lip and the bruise on the forehead) were perpetrated by the father;
(d) accordingly, being the opposite side of the same coin, it was not open to the judge to exclude the mother from being a possible perpetrator of them; and
(e) the mother therefore had to be placed, along with the father, in a pool of possible perpetrators of them.
Lord Justice Rimer