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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (other Judges) >> Child A & Child B, In the Matter Of [2023] EWFC 37 (B) (20 March 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/OJ/2023/37.html Cite as: [2023] EWFC 37, [2023] EWFC 37 (B) |
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SITTING AT CHESTER CIVIL & FAMILY JUSTICE CENTRE
IN THE MATTER OF THE CHILDREN ACT 1989
AND IN THE MATTER OF:
CHILD "A" AND CHILD "B"
B e f o r e :
____________________
A COUNCIL |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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THE MOTHER |
First Respondent |
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- and - |
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THE FATHER |
Second Respondent |
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- and - |
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THE CHILDREN (acting by way of Children's Guardian, Brenda Anglim) |
Third and Fourth Respondents |
____________________
MS CHAN (instructed by Pluck Andrew Solicitors) appeared for the First Respondent
MS HENTHORN (instructed by AFG Law) appeared for the Second Respondent
MS ROBERTS (instructed by Berksons Solicitors LLP) appeared for the children via their Children's Guardian
HEARING DATE: FRIDAY 17 MARCH 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND
i. Deliberate inflicted injury; and/or
ii. Reckless behaviours; and/or
iii. Lack of appropriate parental supervision; and, or
iv. Failure to protect,
v. The potential perpetrators, whether deliberately or otherwise, are asserted as the mother, and or the father.
vi. The mother and/or the father fail to adequately supervise the children at
all times.
There is no final threshold document.
a) The Court noted this is a single-issue case and, on the evidence, presented to date:
i. there are no concerns in respect of the parent's parenting capacity,
accordingly full parenting assessments are not necessary
ii. expert evidence is necessary and a composite finding of fact/welfare hearing is appropriate
iii. pre-proceedings was not appropriate
iv. paternal grandparents are not included in the interim threshold document as in the pool of possible perpetrators and so should be fully assessed.
b) The Court is open to what is in the best interests of the children and as long as full safeguarding measures are in place, with an interim care order and a working agreement, would expect the parents to be able to be around their children whilst they are awake and being able to put the children to bed subject to supervision by appropriately assessed persons
THE FATHER'S APPLICATION
… the Local Authority's position has altered in that we no longer deem a Care Order necessary on conclusion of proceedings and whether a finding is made of the injury being accidental or non accidental the local authority deem a level of supervision and monitoring to be the most appropriate way forward. In regards to the lesser order principal this support does not have to be dependent on a Care Order. In addition a Care Order wouldn't offer additional services it would only ensure that the Local Authority shares parental responsibility. The Local Authority would not be seeking removal in any event of findings and as such accepts the court has to consider if a fact finding is proportionate and whether it also impacts on the nature of the order made.
…The Local Authority wish to conclude with a recommendation to the court of a final care plan to be one of No Public Law Order and a recommendation of a child in need plan.
… The Local Authority request to listing remaining for IRH so that the multi agency with parents can be pulled together to agree the child in need plan and ensure that the professionals such as the health visitor, school and nursery along with grandmother can support, to end without seeing the proceedings to IRH leaves the family and professionals blind to the plan."
• "Although the LA had proposed a CIN Plan for 3 months, I have spoken with the SW who has confirmed he does not think threshold for CIN will be met and this had been offered on the basis the parents agreed CIN, which I am now told they do not. CG is also of the view threshold for CIN is not met.
• The SW accepts that given the LA's current position, there is no basis for the LA to propose ICO / continued supervision should continue in the event the matter remains listed for IRH next week. Parents are clear the ICO and supervision should end today and proceedings should conclude today.
• The only issue raised by the SW in respect of the matter remaining listed for IRH is that the IRO has not been consulted in respect of the LA no longer being of the view a finding of fact hearing is necessary. This will be a matter for the court and all parties are agreed in any event there should be a judgment in this matter."
THE HEARING
THE MEDICAL AND OTHER RELEVANT EVIDENCE
A MEDICAL EVIDENCE
It is possible that an independently mobile child, of this age, could sustain this injury as a result of an unwitnessed event but I would expect the child to show distress at the time of the injury such that any carer would have been aware that a significant and memorable event had occurred.
In the absence of a clear and satisfactory account of the mechanism of trauma or a medical explanation for the fracture, inflicted injury must be considered."
In my opinion and in view of all the contextual information gathered so far, it is possible that "B"'s injury could have been accidental during this event. Nevertheless, this remains an unwitnessed event and therefore I am unable to attribute any degree of certainty to this."
He went on to say that because soft tissue swelling generally persists for 14
days in total, this would indicate that the impact which caused the scalp soft tissue injury occurred in a 14-day period before the CT scan was performed.
My view is that it is entirely plausible that even an attentive carer might not recognise that there was any abnormality in the immediate period after a fracture had been sustained."
51. The Court will no doubt be well aware that skull fractures are otherwise generally not associated with specific symptoms. There may be local pain at the site of the fracture, but in contrast to long bone fractures, there is commonly no major change in behaviour which might otherwise lead a carer to suspect that an injury had been sustained.
52. Unfortunately, there is little that can be done to assist the Court with narrowing the period in which the skull fracture was sustained from the clinical features taken in isolation.
53. Whilst a matter for the Court, I would make the following observations. I could well imagine that any parent might not have suspected that a fracture had been sustained by a small child from a low level fall. There would be widespread understanding within the lay population of the low level falls are generally benign events.
54. The situation with regard to the presence of a swelling is somewhat different. My experience is that carers are alarmed by the discovery of any swelling on the scalp, especially where this appears soft or yielding (boggy) to the touch. This is because we know full well that the bony skull underneath the scalp means it is usually hard to the touch.
55. The court will therefore need to take into consideration the fact that in some cases, the feature that leads to the presentation of a child for medical review is not necessarily either the fall or the immediate appearance or feel of the scalp, but is the softness of the swelling some days later.
59 "As long ago as 1984, Hobbs sought to identify the features of fractures which might be taken as pointing towards accidental or non-accidental mechanisms (Skull Fracture in the Diagnosis of Abuse, CJ Hobbs. Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1984, 59;246-252). He noted the following comment:
- Accidents usually resulted in single, narrow, linear fractures, most commonly of the parietal bone, with no associated intracranial injury.
60. My understanding is that this is exactly the type of fracture sustained by "B"."
"61. "B"'s father and mother have identified a possible instance of a fall as the cause of the fracture. At 2 years old, "B" would have been fully mobile and would have been starting to run and jump. She would have had the neurodevelopmental capability to have manoeuvred herself into a position where she might have fallen."
36. He further discusses the research data and factors which may influence force to the skull from even a low level fall including the surface the fall is to and the height and states that "It seems reasonable and logical to me to extrapolate from this data that falls from a much lower level than 1 metre can exceptionally cause an injury such as an isolated skull fracture…..
[It]…is simply impossible to estimate the effect of speed, force of impact and how much a child's fall will be broken by putting their hands out in terms of this altering the forces sustained in an accidental fall."
65…The court will need to assess the account given by [the father] of "B"'s response to the fall, but it seems to me that this was broadly consistent with a significant incident having taken place.
66. The possibility that "B" sustained the fracture as a result of a fall exists and cannot be discounted. However, I believe that it would be perverse of me (and potentially misleading to the Court) to prefer this mechanism as the cause because this would require me to advise that an unusual injury was likely to have resulted from an unidentified minor fall. This is matter for the Court."
67. Put simply, skull fractures relatively commonly occur after both accidental and nonaccidental mechanisms and there is nothing about this fracture from a medical point of view which allows me to advise the Court that accidental or non-accidental mechanisms are more likely.
"Unfortunately, whilst the characteristics of this fracture are entirely in keeping with them having been caused by an accidently episode, they are equally in keeping with a non-accidental mechanism. I do not think that the fact that the fracture was single, linear, not depressed and involved the parietal bone with no associated intracranial injury could be taken to indicate that a non-accidental mechanism was less likely than an accidental mechanism.
the view that "B" did not seem to display symptoms which might have alerted a parent to the fact that she had sustained an injury before the swelling had developed.
B OTHER EVIDENCE
F…I remember "A" and "B" were running around the garden. So, it's all grass, it's not massive, erm, but there are… there's some paving stones so like that lead like a pathway to… up to the patio area. So, I was putting the food out, so I didn't see what happened or how she fell over, but she's… suddenly you hear a cry and she's sitting on one of these paving stones, erm, crying. Not like, "Oh my god, what's that? Terrible, it's just a normal, she's fallen over and—
DC A: Yes.
F: —cry.
So, I've gone over to her cos I think [M]'s in the kitchen sorting food, so I've gone over, got to her first, erm, picked her up and like reassured her, and I've said, "What hurts?" I couldn't see anything on her, I gave her a quick look, but I didn't spend ages, but what hurts, and she said, "I've hurt… banged my nose," she said. So, I though it was a bit odd about how… and there wasn't any mark on her, so, erm, but again, she stopped crying like really fast, which "B" does tend to do, she's recovered a bit more. But that was… it wasn't anything that made me think… and also, I'd no idea how she would have got from that, how she would have ended up with a bang on the top of her head cos she's—
DC A: How was she sitting when you went over to her?
F: Literally then like cross legged, cross legged with her arms in the air, waiting to be picked up.
…. she wasn't even that fussed. We literally just put her down in front of the food and she stopped crying immediately.
"I picked her up and gave her a hug and a kiss. I checked her all over and couldn't see any blood or any other sign of injury on her and I didn't see or feel any lump on her head. Once she'd stopped crying I asked her if she'd banged anything and she replied 'my nose'. As I couldn't see any sign of injury I presumed it was not serious. I took her over to the table and sat her down to eat. She ate normally and seemed perfectly fine for the rest of the evening. I didn't feel it was necessary to tell [M] about the fall as I'd been able to comfort "B" and she appeared to be absolutely fine"…
Later that evening, I was giving the children a bath when I felt a lump on "B"'s head. I called [M] in to take a look. We were both terrified that it was something very serious like cancer as she was perfectly fine otherwise, so we decided to call 111 for their medical opinion. [M] also contacted her mum to ask her to come over to the house to walk our dog as I would need to stay at home with "A" whilst [M] took "B" to the hospital.
When she arrived, [M]'s mum also shared our concerns that the lump might be something very serious such as cancer and strongly supported our decision to take "B" to A&E…
I did not link the fall to the lump at the time because, as far as I was concerned, she hadn't appeared to have suffered any injury and as such did not consider it a significant incident. There were no marks on her, she did not present any common symptoms of a head injury, her behaviour for the rest of the evening was completely normal and she showed no discomfort at all when touching the lump and I was extremely worried that a painless lump could be cancerous."
I'd hung up the phone to 111 and they told me nothing to worry about, give your GP a call and book a non-emergency appointment. So my mum came in and we said, "Oh, she's got a lump but we've been told not to go in, I'm not sure if that's right," so mum felt the lump and said, "Well, if you've been told not to go in, you've got to do what you feel you have to do," like you know, make sure that you're comfortable with what you're doing. So […] and I both said that we need to go to A&E…"
The parents have questioned every step taken by the Local Authority despite being fully legally represented and again whilst this may be understandable as they have never had any social care interventions before, it has meant delay in completing work including words and pictures work with the children.
There are some concerns regarding [the mother and father']s ability to work openly and honestly with professionals and, during these proceedings, they have actively prevented the Local Authority from visiting the children."
These appear to be the height of the Local Authority concerns except for the unexplained injury of course. The parents completely deny these allegations stating that they have never refused a visit and confirming weekly visits from the Family Support Worker. At the height of the local authority's case, they remain mere "concerns"
Should no findings be made that the parents deliberately caused the injury to "B", reunification with No Order would be the preferred plan of the Local Authority.
If findings are made that either parent deliberately caused the injury to "B", this has been assessed by the Local Authority as the best option for the children at this time. Further risk assessment would be needed to consider the findings identified within the proceedings and a support plan that would be put in place to reduce the risk of further injury. Consideration of parents ability to accept the finding/s and each others ability to protect and support would be needed within a support plan for the family. Give the
children have remained within the family network throughout the proceedings removal isn't seen as proportionate."
In the event that no findings are made, I agree that no order is necessary, and the Local Authority will have no further involvement."
56. Her final skeleton argument for this hearing took a different position. Having had additional time to consider the matter and the case law, "the Guardian forms the view that it is neither necessary nor proportionate to hold a finding of fact hearing… that it is unlikely the court would find the injuries to have been caused non accidently".
THE LEGAL FRAMEWORK
FPR r1.1 states:
(1) These rules are a new procedural code with the overriding objective of enabling the court to deal with cases justly, having regard to any welfare issues involved.
(2) Dealing with a case justly includes, so far as is practicable –
(a) ensuring that it is dealt with expeditiously and fairly;
(b) dealing with the case in ways which are proportionate to the nature, importance and complexity of the issues;
(c) ensuring that the parties are on an equal footing;
(d) saving expense; and
(e) allotting to it an appropriate share of the court's resources, while taking into account the need to allot resources to other cases.
"The paramount consideration for any court dealing with [an application to withdraw care proceedings] is accordingly the question whether the withdrawal of the care proceedings will promote or conflict with the welfare of the child concerned. It is not to be assumed, when determining that question, that every child who is made the subject of care proceedings derives an automatic advantage from having them continued. There is no advantage to any child in being maintained as the subject of proceedings that have become redundant in purpose or ineffective in result. It is a matter of looking at each case to see whether there is some solid advantage to the child to be derived from continuing the proceedings."
This approach is consistent with s.1(5) of the Act, which provides that:
"where a court is considering whether or not to make one or more orders under this Act with respect to a child, it shall not make the order or any of the orders unless it considers that doing so would be better for the child than making no order at all."
17. Since then, the provision has been considered by judges of the Family Division in a number of cases at first instance, in particular in A County Council v DP and others [2005] EWHC 1593 (Fam) (McFarlane J, as he then was), Redbridge London Borough Council v B and C and A [2011] EWHC 517 (Fam) (Hedley J), Re J, A, M and X (Children) [2014] EWHC 4648 (Fam) (Cobb J), and A Local Authority v X, Y and Z (Permission to Withdraw) [2017] EWHC 3741 (Fam) (MacDonald J). The latter three cases were decided following the implementation of the Family Procedure Rules 2010 which, unlike their predecessors, include the overriding objective in rule 1.1.
18. For my part, I would endorse the approach evolved in these first instance decisions, which can be summarised as follows.
19. As identified by Hedley J in the Redbridge case, applications to withdraw care proceedings will fall into two categories. In the first, the local authority will be unable to satisfy the threshold criteria for making a care or supervision order under s.31(2) of the Act. In such cases, the application must succeed. But for cases to fall into this first category, the inability to satisfy the criteria must, in the words of Cobb J in Re J, A, M and X (Children), be "obvious".
20. In the second category, there will be cases where on the evidence it is possible for the local authority to satisfy the threshold criteria. In those circumstances, an application to withdraw the proceedings must be determined by considering (1) whether withdrawal of the care proceedings will promote or conflict with the welfare of the child concerned, and (2) the overriding objective under the Family Procedure Rules. The relevant factors will include those identified by McFarlane J in A County Council v DP which, having regard to the paramountcy of the child's welfare and the overriding objective in the FPR, can be restated in these terms:
(a) the necessity of the investigation and the relevance of the potential result to the future care plans for the child;
(b) the obligation to deal with cases justly;
(c) whether the hearing would be proportionate to the nature, importance and complexity of the issues;
(d) the prospects of a fair trial of the issues and the impact of any fact-finding process on other parties;
(e) the time the investigation would take and the likely cost to public funds.
"…the application made by the LA should not have been made and that the judge was wrong to grant permission to the LA to withdraw the application. Looking at the written medical evidence alone as available to the judge at the case management hearing, the Court of Appeal found that it was not possible for the lower court to conclude that the test for granting permission to withdraw the proceedings was satisfied.
The Court of Appeal also made clear that a judge does not look at evidence in isolation. Each piece of evidence must be considered in the context of all the other evidence (Re T [2004] EWCA Civ 558, [2004] 2 FLR 838), and that whilst appropriate attention must be paid to the opinion of medical experts, those opinions need to be considered in the context of all the other evidence (A County Council v K, D & L [2005] EWHC 144 (Fam) at paragraphs 39, 44 and 49).
The Court of Appeal reiterated that the role of the judge is crucial, as observed in Re S (A Child) (Care Proceedings: Surrogacy) [2015] EWFC 99 (at paragraph 124):
'It cannot be over-emphasised that it is the judge, not an expert or group of experts, who has the responsibility of making the findings in family cases involving allegations of child abuse. Only the judge hears the totality of the expert evidence, including cross-examination by specialist counsel which often, as in this case, brings to the fore issues that are less apparent from the written reports. Only the judge considers all the expert evidence together, and has the opportunity to identify strands and patterns running through that evidence. And only the judge is able to consider all of the evidence – including expert medical evidence and the testimony of family members and other lay witnesses.'
In the view of the Court of Appeal this is a 'paradigm example' of a case where a judge needs to hear all the evidence, to assess whether the lay witnesses' evidence is truthful, accurate and reliable, and evaluate the medical opinion evidence, tested in cross-examination, in the context of the totality of the evidence, and that it was simply not possible for the judge to reach a conclusion as to the cause of G's injuries on the basis of the written evidence alone. It was impossible for the judge in this case to conclude that the case fell into the first category, namely that there was 'insufficient evidence to cross the threshold', and in those circumstances, the judge had to consider the factors identified by McFarlane J in A Local Authority v DP. Applying those factors to this case, it is clear that the fact-finding hearing was required and must go ahead.
In short, the Court of Appeal concluded that having regard to the child's welfare as the paramount consideration, and the overriding objective in FPR r.1.1, it is plain to that the fact-finding hearing should go ahead and that the local authority's application to withdraw the proceedings should have been refused.
a) The interests of the child (which are relevant but not paramount)
b) The time that the investigation will take;
c) The likely cost to public funds;
d) The evidential result;
e) The necessity or otherwise of the investigation;
f) The relevance of the potential result of the investigation to the future care plans for the child;
g) The impact of any fact finding process upon the other parties;
h) The prospects of a fair trial on the issue;
i) The justice of the case.'
Considered and expanded the relevant considerations:
"The factors identified in Oxfordshire should therefore be approached flexibly in the light of the overriding objective in order to do justice efficiently in the individual case. For example:
(i) When considering the welfare of the child, the significance to the individual child of knowing the truth can be considered, as can the effect on the child's welfare of an allegation being investigated or not.
(ii) The likely cost to public funds can extend to the expenditure of court
resources and their diversion from other cases.
(iii) The time that the investigation will take allows the court to take account of the nature of the evidence. For example, an incident that has been recorded electronically may be swifter to prove than one that relies on contested witness evidence or circumstantial argument.
(iv) The evidential result may relate not only to the case before the court but
also to other existing or likely future cases in which a finding one way or the
other is likely to be of importance. The public interest in the identification of
perpetrators of child abuse can also be considered.
(v) The relevance of the potential result of the investigation to the future care
plans for the child should be seen in the light of the s. 31(3B) obligation on the court to consider the impact of harm on the child and the way in which his or her resulting needs are to be met.
(vi) The impact of any fact finding process upon the other parties can also take account of the opportunity costs for the local authority, even if it is the party seeking the investigation, in terms of resources and professional time that might be devoted to other children.
(vii) The prospects of a fair trial may also encompass the advantages of a trial now over a trial at a possibly distant and unpredictable future date.
(viii) The justice of the case gives the court the opportunity to stand back and ensure that all matters relevant to the overriding objective have been taken into account. One such matter is whether the contested allegation may be investigated within criminal proceedings. Another is the extent of any gulf between the factual basis for the court's decision with or without a fact-finding hearing. The level of seriousness of the disputed allegation may inform this assessment. As I have said, the court must ask itself whether its process will do justice to the reality of the case."
"the main things that the Court should consider in deciding whether to order a fact-finding hearing are: (a) the nature of the allegations and the extent to which those allegations are likely to be relevant to the making of the child arrangements order, (b) that the purpose of fact-finding is to allow assessment of the risk to the child and the impact of any abuse on the child, (c) whether fact-finding is necessary or whether other evidence suffices, and (d) whether fact-finding is proportionate."
ANALYSIS OF THE LAW AND APPLICATION TO THIS CASE
"Presently the Local Authority would seek to place with parents and regulate
(Placement with Parents/Care Planning, Placement and Case Review (England) Regulations 2010). ……. If findings are made that either parent deliberately caused the injury to "B", this has been assessed by the Local Authority as the best option for the children at this time."
The issue therefore would be whether the Local Authority could justify needing a care order or not. I have struggled to find any justification for the need for a care order in these proceedings. As I have already stated there are no other concerns regarding the parents. The Local Authority eventually themselves questioned what intervention is needed with this family. They have a parenting assessment and observation throughout the past 7 months with no other issues in regard to parenting capacity, needs of the parents, areas of challenge and additional issues or recommendations of services and support required within the assessments. The concerns solely remain about whether the injury has been non accidental.
DECISION AND ORDER
HHJ Hesford
20 March 2023