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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 (Children : Foreign Conviction) [2022] EWCA Civ 1118 (05 August 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/1118.html Cite as: [2023] 1 FLR 369, [2023] 3 All ER 483, [2022] WLR(D) 348, [2022] EWCA Civ 1118, [2023] 1 FCR 301, [2023] Fam 139, [2022] 3 WLR 1235 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
FAMILY DIVISION
Mrs Justice Lieven
NNC21C00023
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PETER JACKSON
and
LORD JUSTICE DINGEMANS
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W-A (Children: Foreign Conviction) |
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Nick Goodwin QC and Stuart Yeung (instructed by Pathfinder Legal Services Limited) for the Respondent Local Authority
Sam Momtaz QC and Samantha Dunn (instructed by Wilson Browne Solicitors) for the Respondent Mother
Andrew Norton QC and Christopher Adams (instructed by Sills & Betteridge LLP) for the Respondent Children through their Children's Guardian
Hearing date: 19 July 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Peter Jackson:
Introduction
The background
Family proceedings
"When welfare considerations apply, where the welfare of the minor is paramount… the very welfare of the minor dictates that regard must be had to every matter which bears upon a possible risk or benefit to the child…"
This is reflected in s. 1(3) the Children Act 1989, which requires the court to have regard in particular to the factors in the welfare checklist.
Previous judicial findings
"It then frequently arises that findings made in one set of proceedings are relevant, even crucial, in another. At one end of the spectrum, exactly the same parties are involved: findings are made in care proceedings when a care order is made, and will be relevant in later proceedings to discharge the care order. Then come cases involving the same child but different parties: the most obvious example is an adoption application relating to a child in care; but another example would be care proceedings relating to a child after a finding of sexual abuse had been made in private law proceedings between his parents; or vice versa, where private law proceedings follow care proceedings. Then come cases involving different children; in these the adult parties may be identical, if they are children of the same two parents; but it is perhaps more likely that they will not be entirely identical, as different parents may be involved. In some of these, the applicant local authority, who may loosely be termed the accuser, and the respondent parent, who may loosely be termed the accused, are the same, as happens to be the situation here. In others, a completely different local authority may be involved."
The judge's decision
"58. In my view, Hollington is not binding upon the Court in the present case. The most simple analysis is that it was not a case concerned with the statutory scheme under Part IV of the Children Act 1989. The law on the admissibility of evidence and the legal considerations under the CA are very different from those in issue in 1943 in Hollington.
59. Hollington concerned inter partes litigation where there was no broader public interest (other of course than the administration of justice more widely). Part IV CA proceedings are very different, at their heart lies the welfare of the child and the Court's duty under section 1 to consider that welfare. Although at this stage of proceedings the child's welfare is not paramount, it is a highly material consideration, and one that is central to the statutory scheme.
60. Therefore, the considerations that were central to Hollington, and are set out in the Court's reasoning, are very different in the present case. It is by reason of that public interest in the protection of children that the court in Part IV proceedings has a quasi-inquisitorial role, see Ryder LJ in Re W (Care Proceedings: Functions of the Court and Local Authority) [2013] EWCA Civ 1227:
"Although it is conventional to speak of facts having to be proved on the balance of probabilities by the party who makes the allegation, proceedings under the CA 1989 are quasi-inquisitorial (quasi-inquisitorial in the classic sense that the court does not issue the process of its own motion)."
61. For this reason, the court will rarely exclude relevant evidence. There is no dispute in this case that the evidence is highly relevant. It is important when considering the welfare interests of the children that it would be extremely difficult to prove to the English Court the facts behind the convictions. The events took place some years ago in Spain. Although [MH] is a compellable witness, if he completely denies the offences it will be extremely difficult for the LA to establish those facts if it cannot rely on the convictions and if the burden of proof rests on the LA."
"69. … the law on foreign judgments has moved on enormously since 1968, and the degree both of procedural safeguards, certainly within Council of Europe States, and of principles of comity are quite different now.
70. There are likely to be very significant differences between a criminal trial undertaken in a Council of Europe State, bound by ECHR principles, and the potential for a show trial in a State without what would be regarded as sufficient judicial protections. It would be entirely open to the English Court to put little weight on findings in the latter situation, and the burden on an individual to displace any findings of fact would in practice be much lower.
71. Further, as I have said, if the Spanish convictions cannot be taken into account to establish the underlying facts, then the LA would find it very hard to prove their threshold. There is a real risk that this would then put the children in the case at risk of significant harm."
"72. It is important at this stage to be clear that it is not being suggested that the Spanish convictions will be binding on the Court. It will be entirely open to [MH] to give evidence both as to why he did not carry out the actions found and that the criminal justice process that led to the convictions was unfair."
Hollington v Hewthorn
"Is it, then, relevant to an issue whether the defendant, by negligent driving, collided with and thereby injured the plaintiff, to prove that he had been convicted of driving without due care and attention on the occasion when the plaintiff was injured? As stated above, Mr. Denning admits that he would have to identify the negligent driving which formed the subject of the charge with that which caused the injury to the plaintiff, for the record of the conviction itself would show no more than that the defendant was convicted for so driving on a certain day and in a certain parish or place. In truth, the conviction is only proof that another court considered that the defendant was guilty of careless driving. Even were it proved that it was the accident that led to the prosecution, the conviction proves no more than what has just been stated. The court which has to try the claim for damages knows nothing of the evidence that was before the criminal court. It cannot know what arguments were addressed to it, or what influenced the court in arriving at its decision. Moreover, the issue in the criminal proceedings is not identical with that raised in the claim for damages. Assume that evidence is called to prove that the defendant did collide with the plaintiff, that has only an evidential value on the issue whether the defendant, by driving carelessly, caused damage to the plaintiff. To link up or identify the careless driving with the accident, it would be necessary in most cases, probably in all, to call substantially the same evidence before the court trying the claim for personal injuries, and so proof of the conviction by itself would amount to no more than proof that the criminal court came to the conclusion that the defendant was guilty. It is admitted that the conviction is in no sense an estoppel, but only evidence to which the court or a jury can attach such weight as they think proper, but it is obvious that once the defendant challenges the propriety of the conviction the court, on the subsequent trial, would have to retry the criminal case to find out what weight ought to be attached to the result. It frequently happens that a bystander has a complete and full view of an accident. It is beyond question that, while he may inform the court of everything that he saw, he may not express any opinion on whether either or both of the parties were negligent. The reason commonly assigned is that this is the precise question the court has to decide, but, in truth, it is because his opinion is not relevant. Any fact that he can prove is relevant, but his opinion is not. The well recognized exception in the case of scientific or expert witnesses depends on considerations which, for present purposes, are immaterial. So, on the trial of the issue in the civil court, the opinion of the criminal court is equally irrelevant."
"Other reasons can, of course, be given for the rule, and in other cases would have great force. A judgment obtained by A against B ought not to be evidence against C, for, in the words of the Chief Justice in the Duchess of Kingston's Case (1776) 2 Sin. L. C, 13th ed., 644, "it would be unjust to bind any person who could not be admitted to make a defence, or to examine witnesses or to appeal from a judgment he might think erroneous: and therefore . . . . the judgment of the court upon facts found, although evidence against the parties, and all claiming, under them, are not, in general, to be used to the prejudice of strangers." This is true, not only of convictions, but also of judgments in civil actions. If given between the same parties they are conclusive, but not against anyone who was not a party. If the judgment is not conclusive we have already given our reasons for holding that it ought not to be admitted as some evidence of a fact which must have been found owing mainly to the impossibility of determining what weight should be given to it without retrying the former case. A judgment, however, is conclusive as against all persons of the existence of the state of things which it actually affects when the existence of that state is a fact in issue."
"In many, perhaps in most, cases the correctness of the conviction would not be questioned, but where it is, its value can only be assessed by a retrial on the same evidence. However convenient the other course may be, it is, in our opinion, safer in the interests of justice that on the subsequent trial the court should come to a decision on the facts placed before it without regard to the result of other proceedings before another tribunal."
"The underlying rationale in my view, albeit not clearly spelt out in the judgment of the Court of Appeal, is the rationale to which I referred earlier for the exclusion of opinion evidence in general: namely, that it is the duty of a court to form its own opinion on the basis of the evidence placed before it; and that it would not be proper for the court in forming that opinion to be influenced by the opinion of someone else, however reliable that person's opinion is likely to be. In so far as the evidence before the later court is the same as the evidence before the earlier court, the later court is in as good a position to draw inferences and conclusions from the evidence. In so far as the evidence is different, the opinion of the earlier court does not assist the court's task."
"As in the case of the rule which excludes opinion evidence generally, therefore, the true justification for the rule in Hollington v Hewthorn, as I see it, is not that the opinion of an earlier court is irrelevant but lies in the requirements for a fair trial. The responsibility of a judge to make his or her own independent assessment of the evidence entails that weight ought not to be attached to conclusions reached by another judge – all the more so where the party to whose interests the conclusions are adverse was not a party to the earlier proceedings. That, I think, was the principle which the Court of Appeal was expounding in Hollington v Hewthorn."
[39] As the judge rightly recognised the foundation on which the rule must now rest is that findings of fact made by another decision-maker are not to be admitted in a subsequent trial because the decision at that trial is to be made by the judge appointed to hear it (the trial judge), and not another. … The opinion of someone who is not the trial judge is, therefore, as a matter of law, irrelevant and not one to which he ought to have regard.
[40] In essence, as the judge rightly said, the foundation of the rule must now be the preservation of the fairness of a trial in which the decision is entrusted to the trial judge alone."
Subsequent events
"We have restricted our recommendation to convictions by courts of competent jurisdiction in the United Kingdom. We do not include convictions by foreign courts. This is for practical reasons. The substantive criminal law varies widely in different countries. So does criminal procedure and the law of evidence. The relevance of the foreign conviction to the issues in the English civil action could not be ascertained without expert evidence of the substantive criminal law of the foreign country. Its weight could not be judged without expert evidence of the procedural law of the foreign country and reliable information as to the standards of its courts. There are, of course, many countries whose standard of the administration of criminal justice is as high as our own, but there are others in which one cannot be assured of this. It would be invidious to leave the admissibility and weight of a foreign conviction to the discretion of an English judge unfamiliar with the legal system and standards of criminal justice of the foreign country concerned. Furthermore, the burden of showing that a foreign conviction was erroneous would be difficult, perhaps impossible, to sustain, since there would be no way of compelling the witnesses in the foreign criminal proceedings to attend to give evidence in the English courts. The practical effect of making foreign convictions admissible might well be to make them conclusive and the remoter the country in which the conviction took place the more difficult it would be to dispute its correctness".
The submissions
i) The judge was wrong to find that Hollington v Hewthorn was not binding and could be distinguished.
ii) If the court had a residual discretion, the judge placed inappropriate weight on considerations of comity and evidential difficulty for the local authority.
iii) If foreign convictions are admissible, the judge was wrong in law to hold that they carry presumptive weight.
Conclusions
Lord Justice Dingemans
Lord Justice Bean