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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 >> H-W (Child), Re [2017] EWCA Civ 154 (30 March 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/154.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Civ 154 |
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ON APPEAL FROM MANCHESTER FAMILY COURT
HER HONOUR JUDGE NEWTON
MA15P01297
Strand. London. WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE FLAUX
and
SIR TIMOTHY LLOYD
____________________
RE: H-W (child) |
____________________
Mr Matthew Richardson (instructed via the Bar Pro Bono Unit) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 21st February 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Black:
Fact finding hearing in 2010
Welfare hearing in 2011
"My view of contact is that it was a good quality, but there were aspects of that contact, about which the Guardian with her experience and knowledge of the broader picture, had cause to question and to express concern."
"My judgment is that W's distressing behaviour as described by his mother and the Guardian is attributable to his perception of the anxieties of his mother, the conflict between his parents and mother's lack of enthusiasm for contact to take place." (page 34)
"I am far from convinced that mother has the capacity to change significantly in this area [i.e. in relation to her fear, anxiety and lack of genuine enthusiasm for contact] in the immediate future... It may well be that the protracted nature of these proceedings, coupled with the pressures which [s]he has felt by father's various applications ... make it difficult or impossible for her at this stage to see any possibility of a change of attitude, either by father or on her own part." (page 39, correction mine)
"The Guardian in her evidence suggested that [W] needs a respite, and that cessation of direct contact could promote the reintroduction of contact. Mother volunteered to the Guardian that should W say he wished to see his father she would not stand in his way. Father's views are different. He believes that if contact is now brought to an end that he will never see W again.
The history of the conflict between the two parents is not encouraging. In reaching my decision, I have taken into account the possibility, even the probability, that if direct contact is ended, at best it may be a long time before W has face-to-face contact with his father."
Appeal to Judge Newton in February 2012
"The roots of the difficulties which W experiences in relation to contact lie, as is almost always the case in these unhappy disputes, in the dynamics of the relationship between the parents. It is the father and, to an extent, W who are paying the price for that dysfunction. The order of the learned District Judge provides a period of respite for the mother and for W, but I do not have any sense that this is a father who is going to slip away from his son's life, quite the contrary. In those circumstances, it would be wise for the mother to seek to address her own difficulties, at her own time and with a therapist she chooses and can trust. I hope that, in the years to come, the father will continue to move on, to give the mother the appropriate reassurance to enable her anxiety levels to reduce to a point where she can genuinely be relaxed about contact and can permit W to enjoy a relationship with his father. I am not suggesting that is going to happen tomorrow or next week or next month, but W is still only 4 years of age."
Refusal of permission to appeal by McFarlane LJ in July 2012
Other events between District Judge Fairclough's decision in 2011 and the hearing before Judge Newton in July 2014
The hearing before Judge Newton in July 2014
"To be entirely frank I do not know when or if the right time will come for W to begin the process of deepening his relationship with his father so that indirect contact can move to direct contact. I remain of the view that that must be the ultimate aim."
The father's appeal against Judge Newton's decision: March 2015
"The strategy was being pursued and being allowed to come to its conclusion. If the strategy has now failed, it will need expert evidence on the point. That evidence was not of course before the judge and no one including the guardian thought it necessary to ask for such evidence last July.
The circumstances are now changing, but that is no doubt sadly a matter that will come to be considered by a court in due course."
Commencement of the present proceedings; the CAFCASS officer's report of January 2016; the father's application for a psychological assessment
"(1) Whether it is consistent with the child's welfare for him to be spoken to directly by CAFCASS for the purposes of ascertaining his wishes and feelings.
(2) What strategies might be utilised in the reintroduction of direct contact, that are consistent with the child's welfare.
(3) What strategies/guidance might assist in promoting indirect contact.
(4) Whether there is a need for further expert assistance to inform decisions in relation to future contact; including any need for an updated psychological assessment."
"It will be understood I do not believe additional expert opinion will progress this matter. My view is these proceedings need to be concluded."
"it is the father's position that the Court should, as part of its duty to explore all available options to allow the child to have a relationship with him, make provision for further psychological assessment of the mother, given that a crucial feature of this case has always been the mother's obstructive and negative attitude towards the father and the notion of the child having a relationship with him, which has prevented meaningful progress being made, as well as influencing the attitude of the child against his father."
The hearing before Judge Newton in May 2016
"35. I am driven to the conclusion that W has been consistent in the expression of his wishes and feelings over many years. His ability to express and explain himself has developed as his understanding has grown.
36. Insofar as it is the father's case that these are not W's true wishes and feelings, I am driven to the conclusion that he is sadly incorrect. Rightly or wrongly, I am left in no doubt that this is a true expression of W's wishes and feelings."
"I have tried to look individually at each of the father's suggested approaches and I have tried myself to devise strategies that might lead to the reintroduction of direct contact in a manner consistent with W's welfare."
"[The CAFCASS officer] did not accept the proposition that 'short-term pain would lead to long-term gain'. In his advice, the evidence leads clearly to a conclusion that this would be a potentially protracted exercise with potential harm, including longstanding emotional harm, not just a short period of distress. I am afraid I am driven to agree."
"b. Psychological assessment of the mother. The mother is opposed to this on the basis that she has undertaken counselling and, with the passage of time, no longer feels psychologically vulnerable. As I have indicated, the continuation of these proceedings does impose a strain upon her, as no doubt it does upon the father who is desperate to see his son again. I am not persuaded that psychological assessment of the mother is 'necessary' within the rules to enable the court to make its decisions nor even that it might prove helpful at such a late stage in these protracted proceedings."
"e. The involvement of a third party. Again, that has the objections, on [the CAFCASS officer's] evidence of it being too informal. [The CAFCASS officer] simply did not share [the father's] confidence that such an approach could lead to any different outcome. It is particularly problematic that there is nobody in the father's family with whom W has an existing relationship. I cannot see that introducing a third party, even a professional, would move matters forward in the way the father hopes."
"46. I have no reason to disagree with the firm and clear advice of an experienced CAFCASS officer. I must attach weight to W's wishes and feelings, now consistently expressed. Whilst I am disappointed that the monitoring order has proved so unsuccessful, I can now see no effective way forward in trying to establish safe and beneficial direct contact between W and his father at this stage."
"47. At the end of the day, and after nearly 9 years of trying and the expenditure of significant resources, there comes a time when the courts can do no more. Sadly this has proven to be one of those exceptional cases where, notwithstanding all proportionate and reasonable steps consistent with A's welfare having been considered, there is simply no way forward."
"48. It gives me no pleasure to find that direct contact to his father does not accord with W's welfare at present, nor does the pursuit of yet further attempts to investigate whether it might do so in the near future."
The father's ground of appeal and submissions
i) Assistance from an expert
Before McFarlane LJ, the father submitted that his application to Judge Newton for an expert to be instructed had been more widely cast, not relating simply to an assessment of the mother but seeking an expert to look at the case as a whole and, if necessary, to see $ as well as both parents. McFarlane LJ was not in any position, on a permission application, to determine whether the application had, in fact, been cast that widely, but, even if it had not, he was prepared to permit the father to argue that the judge should have considered the broader possibility of her own motion and failed to do so. The possible options for expert advice included, McFarlane LJ suggested, a preliminary paper exercise in which the psychologist or psychiatrist could use their expertise to see whether they could suggest a way forward or whether they shared the judge's conclusion that enough was enough. McFarlane LJ explained that he had in mind one of a small group of experts nationally who are used in highly conflicted cases. He referred back to Ryder la's contemplation, in March 2015, that an expert would have to be considered at the next stage (see above).
ii) Failure of the judge to consider Was interests in the longer term, as a young man and an adult
McFarlane LJ identified a second potential deficit in the judgment, namely a failure by the judge to consider whether it may be to W's long term benefit, including as a young man and an adult, to see whether there was a way in which the highly negative view that he has developed of his father could be turned around, notwithstanding the turmoil that might be caused by this.
iii) Failure to examine why the original strategy had gone wrong and to see whether it could be pursued again
A further possible defect was that the judge had not gone back to the original strategy of the case (a gap in contact, with the mother being expected to engage in therapy so as to put herself in a better position to support W's relationship with his father) to understand why it had not happened and to explore, again possibly with an expert, whether even at this late stage it could be pursued.
Discussion
"c. Involvement of a third party
W could meet with me in the presence of someone with whom he is familiar, other than his mother or [the CAFCASS officer]. This might be a school teacher, or a member of W's extended family, or a family friend, or perhaps a member of my family.
d. Psvchologist/therapist
W might benefit from speaking to someone who specialises in helping children to re-establish or maintain relationships with their non-resident parent. This might provide reassurance to the Respondent to allow her to promote some form of contact in a safe environment, where she would be receiving support at the same time."
Lord Justice Flaux:
Sir Timothy Lloyd: