BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> X, Y, Z (Minors), Re [2011] EWHC 402 (Fam) (03 March 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2011/402.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 402 (Fam) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
This judgment is being handed down in private on 3 March 2011 It consists of 66 pages and has been signed and dated by the judge. The judge hereby gives leave for it to be reported.
The judgment is being distributed on the strict understanding that in any report no person other than the advocates or the solicitors instructing them (and other persons identified by name in the judgment itself) may be identified by name or location and that in particular the anonymity of the children and the adult members of their family must be strictly preserved.
FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
KENT COUNTY COUNCIL | Applicant |
|
- and - | ||
A MOTHER | 1st Respondent | |
F | 2nd Respondent | |
X, Y, Z (Minors) | 3rd Respondents | |
IR | Intervenor |
____________________
Eleanor Platt QC and Sandria Murkin (instructed by Gill Turner Tucker) for the 1st Respondent
Marianna Hildyard QC and Isabelle Watson (instructed by Clarke Keirnan) for the 2nd Respondent
Alison Ball QC and Margo Boye (instructed by Davis Simmonds and Donaghey) for the 3rd Respondent
Jo Delahunty QC and Christopher Poole (instructed by Messrs Reeves & Co) for the Intervenor
Hearing dates: 18 - 22 October, 25-29 October, 24 November, 7 December, 5-6 January, 14 January, 17-21 January, 8 February
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE BAKER:
JUDGMENT
HISTORY
"Things within the house appeared to be the same as ever. All the children, particularly X, appeared extremely unkempt and they all appeared to be very bored. [The mother] informed me V is now staying at a friend's house during the week and returned to see them at the weekend, as he was unable to cope with the long commute everyday. When I enquired after W I was informed she had been staying with a man who used to live in the b and b accommodation. He has now been re-housed but the children all take it in turns to spend the night at his new house. X informed me her night was on Saturday and she was very much looking forward to it. I asked X where they sleep when they stay and how old the man is. She said the man is unable to sleep in his bedroom due to some illness and therefore sleeps on the sofa and the child that happens to be staying there that night sleeps on the chair. She also stated she thought the man was around 40 years old".
"W remembered the incident immediately. She said X was upset on the way to school one morning, and when she asked her why, X had told her that IR 'kept touching her …. She went to T1 and told her' …. W said that after school, at home, mum 'really had a go at X' and the next day X told school she had 'made it up about IR to get him into trouble' W also said 'mum always does that' …. We asked W what she thought about IR – she said 'it's not right, X sits on his knees and cuddles him, but she's 14. Z doesn't do that and she's little'. She also said 'X always has love bites on her neck from him too'. We established that the last time was about 3 weeks ago. We asked if mum knew about this. W said she does, and says 'it's just a bit of fun'".
In passing I mention that the record of this conversation was one of the documents that, in circumstances I shall describe below, were not disclosed until a late stage in the hearing.
HISTORY OF THE PROCEEDINGS
"the allegations against IR, and the allegations against the mother of failing to protect, are thus inextricably linked in a way that was not apparently the case with the allegations of sexual abuse perpetrated by Mason. Furthermore, whereas Mason made what appears to be a full confession, IR denies any wrongdoing. Thus, whereas it has not been necessary to establish the precise details of the abuse perpetrated by Mason in order to consider the allegation that the mother failed to protect the children from that abuse, in my judgment it is necessary to investigate the truth, or otherwise, of the allegations against IR in order to evaluate the allegation that the mother failed to protect the children from him."
THE FINDINGS NOW SOUGHT BY THE PARTIES
(1) X has been sexually abused by David Mason.
(2) Y has been sexually abused by David Mason.
(3) Z has been sexually abused by David Mason.
(4) The mother did not believe that the children had been abused by David Mason.
(5) The mother does not believe that the children have been abused by David Mason.
(6) On the mother's own admission, X did try to tell her that she was being abused by David Mason, but the mother failed to take any or any appropriate action.
(7) The mother allowed W to move in with David Mason after she had been informed by X that she been abused by him.
(8) The mother allowed the children to continue to attend David Mason's address even though she knew of the allegations made by X against him.
(9) The mother did not take any appropriate action when she was told in March 2009 that X had alleged that she had been abused by IR. Her reaction was one of instant dismissal.
(10) On 12 March 1986 F was convicted of offences of sexual intercourse with a girl under the age of 16 years, soliciting a girl under the age of 21 to obtain immoral earnings and (it seems) conspiring with others to live on such earnings.
(11) On 2 June 2004 X was allegedly physically assaulted by F. The mother did not properly support X, aged 9, in pursuing her complaint of assault against him. Instead, it was withdrawn.
(12) The mother maintained an ongoing association with F despite advice from social services that he posed a risk to her and the children.
(13) The mother is unable/unlikely to be able to protect the children from sexual abuse in the future as she does not accept that they have been abused.
(14) The mother has a long history of poor parenting. In 2004, X's school reported concerns about her physical condition. Over the years the mother has received significant social services support in the following areas but with little lasting effect (a) the home being dirty; (b) the home being untidy; (c) the home being unhygienic; (d) the home being cluttered; (e) equipping the home; (f) basic parenting skills; (g) assertiveness and maintaining boundaries; (h) the impact of domestic violence on the children; (i) the physical care of the home; (j) the physical care of the children; (k) relationships with, and between, the children; (l) managing the children's behaviour; and (m) lack of stimulation.
(15) In addition, the mother has been unable and/or has failed appropriately to meet the children's emotional needs in view of: (a) the emotional impact on X of repeatedly not being believed by the mother when she alleged abuse; (b) her failure to assert herself as the responsible adult in the household in respect of effectively managing the children's behaviour and keeping them safe; (c) a failure to protect the children from exposure to emotional harm by way of them witnessing violence between her and F and allowing them to come into contact with, and maintain contact with David Mason; and (d) a failure to promote their emotional and social development by inhibiting meaningful relationships with their peers due to their physical presentation and behaviour.
(16) The mother is responsible for the physical and emotional neglect of the children, inadequate supervision and, despite receiving support, maintaining an unhygienic and chaotic household. The particulars include: (a) longstanding concerns over the physical care of the children; (b) V hitting and threatening W; (c) V hitting X; (d) X being victimised and bullied in the home; (e) V threatening the mother; (f) X hitting the mother.
(17) The mother had prioritised her relationships with men over and above her children. In particular, (a) she failed to support X in pursuing her complaint against F; (b) she took no action when X complained of abuse by her partner; and (c) she breached the written agreement with the local authority dated 23rd September 2009 by allowing IR to be at the home when he should not have been, and lied to social services about how long he had been there
(1) He suggested to her that they should move to Birmingham, and arranged for her furniture and possessions to be transported to Birmingham by van, obtained with money she provided. He drove her to Birmingham in his car together with X and Y, shortly before she was due to give birth, but left the mother and children there after one or two days.
(2) After the mother returned to Kent, his relationship with the children was poor. He did not wish them to be present when he visited.
(3) On or about 2nd June 2004 he assaulted X, causing X to run away. He was arrested but X did not wish to pursue the matter so no police action followed.
(4) He failed to take up supervised contact when it was offered in 2005 and has had no contact since February 2006.
(5) Despite receiving various solicitors' letters, he continued to visit the mother and accost her in the street, but did not inquire about Z's welfare.
THE LAW
(1) In family proceedings there is only one standard of proof, namely the simple balance of probabilities: Re B [2008] UKHL 35.
(2) "If a legal rule requires a fact to be proved (a 'fact in issue'), a judge or jury must decide whether or not it happened. There is no room for a finding that it might have happened. The law operates a binary system in which the only values are 0 and 1" (per Lord Hoffman in Re B, supra, at paragraph 2),
(3) A court weighing up hearsay evidence has to take into account the fact that it was not subject to cross-examination.
(4) "If a court concludes that a witness has lied about one matter, it does not follow that he has lied about everything. A witness may lie for many reasons, for example, out of shame, humiliation, misplaced loyalty, panic, fear, distress, confusion and emotional pressure" - R v Lucas [1981] QB 720.
(5) "Evidence cannot be evaluated and assessed in separate compartments. A judge in these difficult cases must have regard to the relevance of each piece of evidence to other evidence and to exercise an overview of the totality of the evidence in order to come to the conclusion whether the case put forward by the local authority has been made out to the appropriate standard of proof": per Butler-Sloss P in Re T [2004] EWCA (Civ) 558, [2004] 2 FLR 838 at para.33.
(6) Because it is generally in the best interests of a child to be brought up with its natural family, "society must be willing to tolerate very diverse standards of parenting, including the eccentric, the barely adequate and the inconsistent …. [I]t is not the provenance of the state to spare children all the consequences of defective parenting …. Only exceptionally should the state intervene with compulsive powers and then only when a court is satisfied that the significant harm criteria in s.31 (2) [are] made out" (per Hedley J in Re L (Care: Threshold Criteria) [2007] 1 FLR 2050).
(7) However, "[t]he test under s.31 (2) is, and has to be, an objective one. If it were otherwise, and the 'care which it is reasonable to expect a parent to give' were to be judged by the standards of the parent with the characteristics of the particular parent in question, the protection afforded to children would be very limited indeed, if not entirely illusory. It would in effect then be limited to protection against the parent who was fully able to provide proper care but either chose not to do so or neglected through fault to do so. That is not the meaning of section 31(2). It is abundantly clear that a parent may unhappily fail to provide reasonable care even though he is doing his incompetent best" (per Hughes LJ in Re D [2010] EWCA Civ 1000).
THE WITNESSES
(1) T2, community liaison manager at the M School attended by W, X and Y;
(2) T1, assistant SEN coordinator at the M School;
(3) Clifford Robins, consultant psychologist who carried out assessments of the mother and DA;
(4) T3, head teacher of the infants school attended by Z and previously a class teacher at another primary school attended by the four older children;
(5) ES, the social worker involved with the family between July 2008 (when W went to live with David Mason) and January 2009;
(6) SW, formerly district manager of children's services in the area where the family lived after November 2006;
(7) SF, the social worker assistant working for ARC allocated to work with X in 2006-7;
(8) JC, the social worker allocated to the family in September 2009;
(9) LD, a senior social worker involved with the family from 2004 until the move in November 2006;
(10) W;
(11) SB, the police officer involved at the time of D's move to live with David Mason and who later conducted the ABE interviews of W and X in 2009;
(12) AL, a principal social worker previously overseeing ES;
(13) the mother; and
(14) F.
The mother
F
W
i) Cross-examined by Miss Platt, W said that she had heard nothing bad about David Mason before she went to live with him in July 2007. In her police interview, however, she said that before she moved there, X had told her that David Mason had offered her money if she gave him a blow job.
ii) Furthermore, contrary to her police interview, in her oral evidence she said that David Mason was never alone with Z in the bathroom.
iii) In the course of her conversation with police and social workers on 29 September, W said that, in March 2009, after X had told T1 that IR had touched her, that evening her mother had "really had a go at her". In her oral evidence, W said that she did not see her mother have a go at X but assumed that she had.
iv) In the same conversation with police social workers on 29 September, W referred to X having love bites on her neck from IR and added that her mother was "okay about it". In her oral evidence, at first she said that she did not see love bites on X, had not said that they had been caused by IR, had never said that her mother was okay about it and that the police record was therefore wrong. Cross-examined by Miss Hildyard, however, she said that she could not remember everything she had said on 29 September but "guessed that she did see love bites on X's neck from IR". Later, she said that she did remember that X had love bites but could not remember how she got them.
v) As stated above, in June 2008, W alleged that she had been sexually assaulted by a man called R. In her statement and in her oral evidence, she admitted that she had made up that allegation.
X
David Mason
THE FINDINGS SOUGHT BY THE PARTIES - SUMMARY
(1) Were X, Y and Z sexually abused by David Mason?
(2) Did the mother fail to protect the children from abuse?
(3) The allegations concerning F
(4) Issues of neglect
(5) The mother's failure to control the children
WERE THE CHILDREN SEXUALLY ABUSED BY DAVID MASON?
MOTHER'S FAILURE TO PROTECT CHILDREN FROM SEXUAL ABUSE
"X said something to me, but I didn't know if to believe her at the time. She said something about him trying to touch her up but I didn't know if to believe it or no at all, because I thought he was a nice guy and he was just a family friend, but I didn't know his background or nothing, so I didn't know if to believe her. And then a couple of months after that, after the kids stopped going up there, W phones me up and tells me to go up and see U (W's boyfriend). So I go up to U's, and then when I get up to U's, Dave's old neighbour… is up there as well, and she told me that Dave had been arrested that night and what he's been arrested for."
"Q. I am wondering why you didn't put your foot down and say 'I want them back'.?
A I tried to but Dave was persuasive and he wouldn't listen.
Q. Were you worried about her staying overnight?
A. I was, yes, being with him in the house overnight.
Q. What were you worried about?
A. We hadn't met him long. Even though we'd built up a friendship, I didn't know him, nor did X or the others. My concern was him telling me on the phone he would walk her home and be persuasive on the phone and getting me to say "yes" to her staying there. In the back of my mind I wasn't happy about it. He was a lot older and he could have done anything.
Q. What could he have done?
A. He could have touched her up, or something
Q. You recall this incident with Dave on the telephone being persuasive, laying the law down his end, you being surprised and worried? You didn't know much about him, worried too that he might possibly might want to try and touch her up?
A. Yes that's right
Q. [Judge] So did the thought cross your mind at that point when he was persuading you over the phone?
A. It did go across my mind, yes
Q, During the phone call?
A. Yes
Q. [AK QC] I know none of us are brilliant at dates and it's difficult at looking back, isn't it, to try and get accurate dates in our minds? This phone call, that incident, was it the first time that X had stayed overnight?
A. That was, yes."
ALLEGATIONS CONCERNING F
(1) whether F was violent to the mother and the children;
(2) whether F took the mother and the children to Birmingham and deserted her there;
(3) the events of 2 June 2004, including the question raised by the local authority whether the mother failed to support X in pursuing her complaint against F; and
(4) whether the mother, as alleged by the local authority, maintained an ongoing association with F despite advice from social services that he posed a risk to her and the children.
Was F violent to the mother and children?
The Birmingham incident
The 2nd June 2004 incident
"Whilst it is difficult to know the exact details of the events of 2 June 2004, there was a serious event between F and X in the family home such that she disappeared for some time, was very distressed on her return and that the police arrested him and he spent the night in the cells."
X may well have been distressed during the incident but it does not follow that the reason for her distress was because F had assaulted her. I agree with Miss Hildyard and Miss Watson no findings against F can properly be made in relation to this incident, and accordingly I proceed on the basis that F did not assault X on 2nd June 2004.
Ongoing association between the mother and F
NEGLECT
FAILURE TO CONTROL THE CHILDREN
SUMMARY OF FINDINGS
(1) X, Y and Z were sexually abused by David Mason over a prolonged period.
(2) Despite being confronted with the evidence that this abuse has occurred, the mother has refused, until recently, to accept that X and Y were abused, and still refuses to accept that Z was abused.
(3) The mother allowed W, X and Y to stay overnight with David Mason on a regular basis. A reasonable parent would never have allowed that to happen.
(4) On a date unknown but some time before July 2009, X told the mother that she had been sexually abused by David Mason. The mother refused to believe her and failed to tell anyone about the allegation until after Mason had been arrested.
(5) On occasions when he was living with the family, F over-chastised W, X and Y. On one occasion, he slapped X across the face. On two occasions, he assaulted the mother.
(6) In June/July 2003, shortly before Z was born, F took the mother and V, X and Y to Birmingham, and abandoned them there.
(7) On 2nd June 2004, X alleged that F had assaulted X. The court does not make a finding that this assault did occur, but finds that the mother failed to give proper support to X in pursuing the complaint.
(8) The mother continued her association with F despite advice from the local authority that he posed a risk to her and the children.
(9) The mother struggled for a number of years to provide a consistent and adequate level of physical care for the children.
(10) The mother has a chronic inability to control her children. V, W, X and Y routinely paid no attention to her attempts to manage their behaviour, persisted in fighting and other unruly conduct, and on occasions assaulted her.
WIDER ISSUES
Parents with learning difficulties
Failures to respond to information concerning David Mason and the children
The local authority's failure to carry out a fostering assessment
The local authority's approach to W's "placement" with U
The local authority's record-keeping
"The ICS system is recognised as being ineffective in supporting the business processes of the organisation. Three disconnected systems, including ICS, are used in tandem to compensate. This results in generally poor recording and difficulties in obtaining and understanding case histories exacerbated by missing or poorly completed case chronologies which are only required to be complied in cases that are proceeding to court."
This is exactly what happened in the current case. There was no social work chronology on the files or the computer, and a retired social worker was engaged shortly before the hearing to compile one. Not surprisingly, it was incomplete and inadequate. In the course of the hearing, it emerged that the version of it in the possession of counsel for the local authority was different from the version disclosed to the other parties. The purpose of a social work chronology, which has been standard practice for a number of years, is to enable any social worker accessing the file to identify what the issues are in the family. This case was crying out for such a document. It is likely that, had a social work chronology been on file, some of the errors and omissions would have been avoided. It should also be noted that certain social services' actions during this case have been inadequately recorded, and in some instances apparently not recorded at all. For example, the note in the computer record of the important visit to the home on 28th July 2009 (described at paragraph 44 above) is unsigned and anonymous, and the computerised record of the s 47 investigation started after the visit to the home on 28th September 2009 is incomplete. More worryingly, no record at all has been produced of the reasons for the decision taken by senior staff on 21st September 2009 to return the children, a decision taken without consulting the key workers and other professionals involved with the family, including the police.
"The advent of electronic records has immeasurably increased the difficulties for children's' guardians, and it is clear from members' comments that the difficulties are so pervasive that records are looked at much less frequently and thoroughly if at all [my emphasis]. The main obstacles identified in feedback to Nagalro are the access to local authority computer systems, the problems of locating information once logged into the system, problems with copying records and the lack of support from Cafcass for this aspect of their performance of the task."
The local authority's approach to disclosure
(1) It is a duty owed to the court both by the parties and by their legal representatives to give full and frank disclosure: Practice Direction Case Management, 31 January 1995, [1995] 1 FLR 457.
(2) Standard disclosure requires a party to disclose only
(a) the documents on which he relies; and
(b) the documents which (i) adversely affect his own case; (ii) adversely affect another party's case; or (iii) support another party's case; and
(c) the documents which he is required to disclose by relevant practice direction: Civil Procedure Rules, rule 31.6.
(3) The initial onus as to disclosure lies on the local authority which starts care proceedings in which it seeks to establish facts on which decisions about the children's welfare will be taken. This requires the local authority actively to consider what relevant documents it possesses and whether or not there is any countervailing argument against disclosure, such as public interest immunity: see Re C (Expert Evidence: Disclosure: Practice) [1995] 1 FLR 204; Re R (Care: Disclosure: Nature of Proceedings) [2002] 1 FLR 755.
(4) In conducting the preparation for the hearing, the local authority has to carry out a proper examination of the background material, including the relevant files held in the social services department in order to comply with its obligations as to disclosure and to assist in the preparation of statements of evidence. This task can only be carried out by someone within the local authority who has a proper understanding of the relevant legal principles, the issues in the case, and the procedures of the court: see Re R (supra) at page 773H per Charles J. By reason of their respective training and experience, these matters are familiar to a litigation lawyer but not necessarily to a social worker: Re R at page 774C.
(5) "It is not only the applicant local authority and their advisors who have duties in respect of the preparation of cases… all the respondents also have such duties. The guardian has access to the local authority's files. However… this access does not mean that the other respondents should treat, or regard, the guardian as a bloodhound or a detective or otherwise rely on the guardian to take prior responsibility to see there has been full and proper preparation of evidence, disclosure and instructions to experts": Re R at page 774 E-F.
(6) "All respondents and their advisors
(a) have mirror duties and responsibilities to those… set out relating to the local authority in respect of their evidence;
(b) should check the decisions made as to the experts to be instructed and the terms of those instructions and thus the input they want to have into those terms;
(c) should consider whether it appears that the local authority have performed their duties in preparing the case and as to disclosure;
(d) should consider what further information or material should be obtained; and
(e) should pursue issues as to disclosure at interlocutory hearings if they have not been agreed.": Re R at page 773G-H.
"the lawyer to whom the case is allocated will attend a legal planning meeting. Copies of any relevant child protection conference minutes, core assessments, and other reports or minutes will usually provided before that meeting ….[I]f a decision is taken to issue care proceedings, the lawyer will advise on what evidence should be filed, what further evidence should be sought, and what expert assessments will be required ….It is not usual for the Council's lawyers to conduct an exhaustive examination of the social work records. The court will be aware of the various locations in which those records might be maintained, and will have seen how voluminous they can be …. I apologise if this is thought to be a contravention of Re R, but local authority lawyers have to perform a balancing act between the demands of case preparation and the need to ensure that every case allocated to them is given proper attention. That balancing act has been made significantly more difficult by the requirements placed on them by the Public Law Outline, the increase in the number of care proceedings following the Baby Peter case, and the growing pressure on local authority budgets".
FINAL OBSERVATIONS