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 >> Re W (Children) [2010] EWCA Civ 537 (20 May 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/537.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Civ 537 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM Portsmouth County Court
His Honour Judge Marston
PO07/C00582
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
Re W (Children) |
____________________
Hearing date: 23 March 2010
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Wall :
(1) In any proceedings tried without a jury, the judge shall have power on application to order a rehearing where no error of the court at the hearing is alleged.
(2) Unless the court otherwise orders, any application under paragraph (1) shall be made to the judge by whom the proceedings were tried.
(3) A rehearing may be ordered on any question without interfering with the finding or decision or any other question …
The passage in the Red Book reads as follows:-
This rule provides an exception to the provision of County Courts Act 1984, s 70, which provides that every judgment or order of the county court shall be treated as final and conclusive between the parties. It gives the county court power to review its own decision where no error of the court is alleged. This is wider than the powers available to the High Court under Supreme Court Act 1981, s 17, which in effect requires an application for a new trial to made to the Court of Appeal under CPR 1998, r 52.10(2)(c). A judge, or district judge (r 1(4)), may order a rehearing. This means that the judge or district judge will consider the evidence at the original hearing together with the fresh evidence. Where the complaint is that a party was not present at the hearing an application should be made under r 2. An order made by consent may be varied under the terms of this rule (and FPR 1991, r 8.1) – see under FPR 1991, r 8.1. This provision, whilst being the more appropriate course, does not preclude an appeal (see O'Connor v Din [1997] 1 FLR 226).
No error of the court—an application for a rehearing may be made under this rule where no error of the court is alleged. The test to be applied is "Is the allegation which is made against the decision an allegation that the court went wrong on the materials before it, or is it an allegation that the court went wrong because evidence on a vital matter was concealed from the court?" (Peek v Peek [1948] 2 All ER 297). If the allegation is that the court went wrong (ie an error of the court) on the information before it, the remedy is an appeal. If material on a vital matter was not before the court, an application should be made under this rule. The most common grounds for an application are:
(a) where there has been default or misconduct by an officer of the court or a party;
(b) where fresh evidence has been discovered or the judgment has been obtained by fraud;
(c) where there has been an irregularity during the course of the trial, eg during speeches the judge was misled or there was perjury or a mistake by a witness;
(d) where there is an allegation of material non-disclosure (see eg Livesey (formerly Jenkins) v Jenkins 1985] FLR 813, HL; T v T (Consent Order: Procedure to Set Aside) [1996] 2 FLR 640).
… The Order gives the Court power to review its own decision where no error of the Court is alleged. Here, fundamentally, what Mr W was relying upon was the fact that he was found not guilty in the Criminal Court; that in itself of course does not provide grounds for re-hearing or for setting aside an Order of the Civil Court's findings because of the difference in standard of proof. But here Mr W has asked me to look very carefully at what ISW said in the criminal court which is of course something that I knew nothing about in the handing down of Judgment, because he says that ISW's evidence is different to the evidence which I had in the various interviews and videos and so on that I had before me, having ruled that ISW was not to give evidence in the Care Proceedings. The effect of the new evidence from ISW would be, it was said, to destroy the credibility of her evidence that I had and therefore mean that I had to set the original Judgment aside.
The test I have to apply to is "Is the allegation which is made against the decision, an allegation in which the Court went wrong on the material before it or is it an allegation that the Court went wrong because evidence of a vital matter was concealed from the Court: Peek v Peek [1948] 2 All ER 297(wrongly transcribed as Pete v Pete). By analogy "concealed from the Court" I take this also to be not available to the Court at that time through no fault of any of the parties. This means that I have to conduct, in my view, a narrow enquiry into what, if any, new evidence is relied upon. What I do not do is to go back and look again at the information that I had before me because the remedy for that is to go to the Court of Appeal and that has already happened…..
Mr W then seeks to rely upon non-disclosure of various documents in order to convince me that the Local Authority has conducted the case in such a way as to actively try to conceal matters from me. I reject this part of the Application. There are some 8 files of documents before me. Everything that I have ordered to be disclosed has, so far as I can see, been disclosed in this case and there is no material before me now save for the Criminal trial that was not before me at the Finding of Fact hearing which finished in October of last year. Mr Morgan, for the Local Authority, was I think right to express his concern that this was moving back to the conspiracy theories that Mr W had set out in the main trial as one of the matters that he had to deal with. As Mr O'Connell put it in his final submission "Mr W wants to re-visit the points that he missed in the other hearing". That is not the purpose of this hearing.
Having considered ISW's behaviour and the question of issue estoppel, the judge says: -
I now turn to what seems to me to be the real question in this case, which is whether if I had had the transcript of ISW's evidence before me in the Criminal trial, I would have come to a different conclusion to that which I came to.
I would then have taken that evidence and set it in context to everything else that I had heard in the case and I am bound to say that I am convinced that I would have come to the same decision with the same process of reasoning that I set out in my Judgment.
In all of the circumstances here the evidence that was put forward which was not available to me that is the evidence that ISW gave in the Crown Court would not have changed the decision that I came to. The vast preponderance of other matters that put to me on Mr W's behalf are ones that related to the original hearing and are not relevant to this Application. In those circumstances, the Application for me to set aside my original Judgment and provide for a re-hearing is dismissed.
The judge's reliance on Peek v Peek [1948] 2 All ER 297 (wrongly transcribed as "Pete") ( Peek).
The attack on the judge's decision
…… the court is bound to want to consider whether there is any reason to think that a hearing of the issue will result in any different finding from that in the earlier trial. By this I mean something more than the mere fact that different Judges might on occasions reach different conclusion upon the same evidence. No doubt we would all be reluctant to allow a matter to be re-litigated on that basis alone. The court will want to know (a) whether the previous findings were the result of a full hearing in which the person concerned took part and the evidence was tested in the usual way; (b) if so, whether there is any ground upon the accuracy of the previous finding could have been attacked at the time, and why therefore there was no appeal at the time; and (c) whether there is any new evidence or information casting doubt upon the accuracy of the original findings.
Discussion