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England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) >> Y and X (Children) [2020] EWFC 15 (06 February 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/HCJ/2020/15.html Cite as: [2020] 4 WLR 47, [2020] WLR(D) 100, [2020] EWFC 15 |
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B e f o r e :
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A City Council |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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A Mother And AB And CD And XB and YD (By their Children's Guardian) |
Respondents |
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Mr Sampson for the mother
Mr Keyes for AB
Mr Dove for CD
Miss Pemberton for the children
Hearing dates: 21-24 January, 29 January, 5 February and 6 February 2020.
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Knowles:
Introduction
The Parties' Positions
The Legal Principles
Background to the Proceedings
To Summer 2017
Summer 2017 – June 2018
June 2018 – March 2019
Care Proceedings, March 2019 onwards
Threshold: Discussion
a) Following the breakdown of the relationship between [the mother] and AB, which resulted in a high level of mutual mistrust, the mother became highly anxious and, over time, developed a belief that X was being sexually and physically abused by her father. AB did not and was not sexually or physically abusing X and the mother's belief was erroneous.b) As a result of [the mother's] erroneous belief and the interaction she had with her daughter based on this belief, X was conditioned such that on occasion she said she had been abused by her father when this abuse had not taken place.
c) At times, [the mother] erroneously believed that X was communicating (by her words and/or her actions) that she had been the victim of sexual and physical abuse despite there being no justification for this belief. At these times, the mother failed to properly consider alternative explanations and jumped to the worst conclusions.
d) The mother allowed: a) her mistrust of [AB] and; b) the responses of professionals to feed her concerns such that a cycle of erroneous allegations took hold and became entrenched in the period between October 2017 and May 2019.
e) As a result of the matters at paragraphs a)-d) above, the mother has not promoted or encouraged the relationship between X and her father as she should have done.
"As a result of the mother's unjustified beliefs and actions, X was:i) exposed to a range of intrusive investigations by different professionals;ii) exposed to a full physical examination on 18 July 2018 (which included her genitals and anus) which was unnecessary;iii) taken to an appointment with a psychologist on 22 October 2017 which was unnecessary;iv) filmed on at least 10 different occasions being questioned by her mother about abuse in a leading/pressurising manner and being encouraged, at times, to demonstrate abuse. In at least three of the videos, X's private parts were exposed which infringed her dignity and which rendered the videos indecent. In another video, X was shown an image of a sex toy;
v) exposed to information, images and discussions of a sexual nature which were not age-appropriate."
The Involvement of the Local Authority
a) repeated section 47 investigations, which are not anchored to a comprehensive family assessment, are ultimately of little benefit;
b) greater respect needs to be given to the views of professionals who see the family more often than most social workers ever do;
c) in the interests of effective multi-disciplinary working, social workers may, on occasion, have good reason to challenge the views of other professionals. Ensuring other professionals understand the local authority's concerns and are updated as to recent events may assist that process;
d) families should be referred to sources of guidance and support or offered it as part of the local authority's intervention. This should happen sooner rather than later. The mother might well have benefitted from guidance about separated parenting and child development. Both parents would also have benefitted from advice and guidance in managing contact handovers and in communicating with each other about their child;
e) mediation services (aimed at separated parents and with appropriate expertise in dealing with complex contact cases) might have helped this family at an early stage of the proceedings;
f) delay in commissioning expert assessments is damaging. This case would have benefitted from an early specialist assessment which might have obviated the need for these proceedings;
g) such cases require a high degree of professional skill from social workers and their managers and, in my view, should not be allocated to trainee or inexperienced social workers. These can be some of the most frustrating and difficult cases to work because of the high levels of entrenched parental conflict into which children are inevitably drawn. Better training about the complex issues these cases demonstrate, such as repeated but unsubstantiated allegations of abuse, seems to me to be urgently needed both for local authority social workers and their managers.
I recognise that implementing these suggestions, if they are to be useful, will need not just commitment from senior managers in local authorities but also substantial investment in services and training. Provision of the necessary resources will be for others to address but this case demonstrates they are urgently needed.
Conclusion