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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 >> A (A Child) [2014] EWCA Civ 871 (26 June 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/871.html Cite as: [2014] Fam Law 1395, [2014] EWCA Civ 871, [2014] WLR 4453, [2014] WLR(D) 285, [2014] 1 WLR 4453 |
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B4/2013/3249 |
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
FAMILY DIVISION (PRINCIPAL REGISTRY)
HHJ Horowitz QC
HHJ Plumstead
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE BLACK
and
LORD JUSTICE UNDERHILL
____________________
A (a Child) |
____________________
The mother appeared in person assisted by Mr Holden
Hearing date : 8 May 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Patten :
"The Father do file and serve within 14 days of today a revised Form E supplying all the information required and set out in the template blank form".
"20. CORRECTIONS TO Green v. Adams [2011] EWHC 2380 (Fam) 14/2/2011
The Respondent requests the following corrections to this Judgment, some rather more serious than others. Refusal to correct numerous errors of record which would be libellous outside the privilege of the Court is evidence of bias and the Respondent reserves the right to ask His Honour Judge Horowitz QC to stand down from the case."
"Secondly, [the father] is intending to appeal the Disclosure, Form E1, order of Judge Horowitz QC and so obviously cannot comply with that order as to do so would render an appeal nugatory. It is intended to file the Leave to Appeal application in the Court of Appeal next week, within the 21 day time limit, and naturally the usual stay of execution will be sought."
"Revision of 2011 judgment: My judgment is 2½ years old and was not appealed. The Father rejects my citation of a submission by Counsel that he had made over 80 applications – which he unhelpfully calls a deliberate lie but his objections go beyond mere correction of fact and require a re-casting of the balance of my findings. I decline to even start the process on the merits alone. My judgment was directly approved by Peter Jackson J whose assessment of the overall approach of the parties was much the same as mine and who also gave leave to report: [2011] EWHC 968 (Fam) and especially paras 4, 5, 25, 33, 38, 46 and 49."
"affirm, set aside or vary any order or judgment made or given by the lower court;"
"[27] Lake v Lake can at first sight be read as an authority about the importance of a "judgment" or "order" being contained in a formal document. But that I think may be by virtue of the way it was argued, and in any event is too restrictive an interpretation. A formal order was made in the then usual form in favour of the wife in matrimonial proceedings, but the Commissioner in his reasoned judgment, and by virtue of questions asked of him at the conclusion of the proceedings, had found that the wife had committed adultery. In the Court of Appeal, counsel sought to get an amendment to the formal order; that was rejected. Counsel then sought to argue that even without something in the formal order he should be allowed to appeal the finding of adultery. The appeal was rejected by the Master of the Rolls, at least as the first ground, on the basis that the formal order "records accurately the conclusion which, in the end of all, the commissioner reached" [342] and on the ground that even if successful there was nothing in the formal order that would be varied [343]. Hodson LJ's initial reasoning appears to me to be the same. It is true that in the Master of the Rolls' judgment and in Hodson LJ's judgment some reliance is placed by them on the order or judgment being the "formal order" but that is as compared (I suggest) with the "reasons for it". It is difficult to think that there simply could be no appeal without a formal order. Many appeals are brought on the basis of an order made by a judge prior to the formal document being drawn up, and In re B demonstrates that the correct reading of Lake v Lake is not that some formal document recording the order must exist. Lake v Lake properly understood means that if the decision when properly analysed and if it were to be recorded in a formal order would be one that the would be Appellant would not be seeking to challenge or vary, then there is no jurisdiction to entertain an appeal. That is in my view consistent with In re B. That this is so is not simply by virtue of interpretation of the words "judgment" or "order", but as much to do with the fact that the court only has jurisdiction to entertain "an appeal". A loser in relation to a "judgment" or "order" or "determination" has to be appealing if the court is to have any jurisdiction at all. Thus if the decision of the court on the issue it has to try (or the judgment or order of the court in relation to the issue it has to try) is one which a party does not wish to challenge in the result, it is not open to that party to challenge a finding of fact simply because it is not one he or she does not like.
[28] The decision on a preliminary issue will be a judgment or order even if it is limited to a finding of fact. There is no difficulty where the only issue to be decided at a preliminary stage is one of fact. It is that issue on which the court has been asked to pronounce a judgment and, even if the court exercises its power to give judgment against a party on the whole of the case, since that was the issue the court was asked to determine, and since it is that issue on which the whole case ultimately turns, it will be the determination of that issue which will be the relevant judgment or determination so far as jurisdiction is concerned. In Re B is a good example of a decision on preliminary issues of fact. Furthermore the case having been adjourned, and the facts making a difference as to what might flow from the adjournment, the facts in Mr Pollock's words were pregnant with legal consequences. If however in that case the court had gone on to make a decision in relation to the legal consequences which one party would not seek to challenge, in my view that party would not be entitled simply to appeal the findings because it did not like the reasons for the decision in his or her favour. It is in that context that it might be appropriate for the court at first instance to consider whether some declaration should be granted to provide a "judgment" or "order" or "determination" which could be the subject of an appeal. If for example the findings of fact might be relevant to some other proceedings, (and Mr Pollock accepted this), it might be appropriate to make a declaration so as to enable a party to challenge those findings and not find him or herself prejudiced by them. The findings would still be pregnant with legal consequences. It is to go beyond the scope of this judgment to consider precisely what circumstances might allow for the granting of a declaration where findings of fact might affect other proceedings. If an issue estoppel might arise that I suppose might provide a basis. Even in Lake v Lake it might at least through the modern eyes relating to declarations have been appropriate to grant a declaration even though issue estoppel did not apply in that context (see the judgments of the Master of the Rolls and Hodson LJ at 345 and 347). The fact that there may be circumstances shows the breadth of the discretion that the court has in relation to granting declarations, but the circumstances envisaged are not the circumstances that are suggested as allowing the court to make the form of declaration that Rix LJ did in this case."
"[53] I start from the elementary proposition that, if a judgment contains what the judge acknowledges is an error when it is pointed out, the judgment should be corrected, unless there is some very good reason for not doing so. A judgment should be an accurate record of the judge's findings and of the reasons for the decision. It should not normally be necessary for a party to bring an appeal to correct an error, if it turns out that the parties and the judge agree that there is an error and that a correction should be made. This applies to a handed down judgment before the order is entered, though the occasion for correction will be rarer if the parties' representatives have been given a prior opportunity to suggest corrections of typing mistakes and obvious errors in the writing of the judgment. Before the correction is made the judge should obviously give both sides an opportunity to make submissions on whether there is a valid objection to a proposed amendment of the judgment."
"The Father's Form E omitted any particulars of his income, income needs (including benefits received or receivable) earning capacity or expenditure but also noted that he set out bank deposits of c £40,000 and claimed to be entitled to withhold full disclosure on the basis (a) Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights and (b) that his assertion that he would negotiate and/or meet any reasonable capital award."
"the construction of a judicial order, like that of any other legal instrument, is a single coherent process. It depends on what the language of the order would convey, in the circumstances in which the court made it, so far as these circumstances were before the court and patent to the parties. The reasons for making the order which are given by the court in its judgment are an overt and authoritative statement of the circumstances which it regarded as relevant. They are therefore always admissible to construe the order. In particular, the interpretation of an order may be critically affected by knowing what the court considered to be the issue which its order was supposed to resolve."
The fact that Judge Horowitz declined when asked on 27 September to amend his order so that it referred to a revised Form E1 does not alter this conclusion.
Lord Justice Underhill :
Lady Justice Black :