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United Kingdom Supreme Court |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> L and B (Children), Re [2013] UKSC 8 (20 February 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2013/8.html Cite as: [2013] WLR(D) 69, [2013] 2 FCR 19, [2013] 1 WLR 634, [2013] Fam Law 664, [2013] UKSC 8, [2013] 2 FLR 859, [2013] 2 All ER 294 |
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Hilary Term
[2013] UKSC 8
On appeal from: [2012] EWCA Civ 984
JUDGMENT
In the matter of L and B (Children)
before
Lord Neuberger, President
Lady Hale
Lord Kerr
Lord Wilson
Lord Sumption
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
20 February 2013
Heard on 21 January 2013
Appellant Gwynneth Knowles QC Sarah Kilvington (Instructed by Russell and Russell Solicitors) |
Respondent Anthony Hayden QC Karl Rowley (Instructed by Bolton Council Legal Services) |
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Respondent Charles Geekie QC Rachael Banks (Instructed by CMA Law) |
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Respondent Gillian Irving QC (Instructed by Barkers Solicitors) |
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Respondent Frances Judd QC Linda Sweeney (Instructed by AFG Law) |
LADY HALE (with whom Lord Neuberger, Lord Kerr, Lord Wilson and Lord Sumption agree)
The facts
". . . it is the responsibility of the advocate, whether or not invited to do so by the judge, to raise with the judge and draw to his attention any material omission in the judgment, any genuine query or ambiguity which arises on the judgment, and any perceived lack of reasons or other perceived deficiency in the judge's reasoning process."
"Given the uncertain nature of the evidence after the passage of so much time I am unable to find to the requisite standard which of the parents it was who succumbed to the stress to which the family was subject. It could have been either of them who injured [Susan] and that is my finding."
The jurisdiction
"So long as the order has not been perfected the judge has a power of re-considering the matter, but, when once the order has been completed, the jurisdiction of the judge over it has come to an end."
Strictly speaking, the reference to what may be done before the order is perfected was obiter, but that this was the law was established by the Court of Appeal no later than the case of Millensted v Grosvenor House (Park Lane) Ld [1937] 1 KB 717, where the judge had revised his award of damages before his order was drawn up and the court held that he was entitled to do so.
Exercising it
"When oral judgments have been given, either in a court of first instance or on appeal, the successful party ought save in the most exceptional circumstances to be able to assume that the judgment is a valid and effective one. The cases to which we were referred in which judgments in civil courts have been varied after delivery (apart from the correction of slips) were all cases in which some most unusual element was present."
There was no such justification in that case.
"Provided that the formula of 'exceptional circumstances' is not turned into a straitjacket of its own, and the interests of justice and its constituents as laid down in the overriding principle are held closely to mind, I do not think that the proper balance will be lost. Clearly, it cannot be in every case that a litigant should be entitled to ask the judge to think again. Therefore, on one ground or another the case must raise considerations, in the interests of justice, which are out of the ordinary, extraordinary or exceptional. An exceptional case does not have to be uniquely special. 'Strong reasons' is perhaps an acceptable alternative to 'exceptional circumstances'. It will necessarily be in an exceptional case that strong reasons are shown for reconsideration."
"With one possible qualification it is in my judgment incontrovertible that until the order of a judge has been sealed he retains the ability to recall the order he has made even if he has given reasons for that order by a judgment handed down or orally delivered. . . . Such judicial tergiversation is in general not to be encouraged, but circumstances may arise in which it is necessary for the judge to have the courage to recall his order. If . . . the judge realises that he has made an error, how can he be true to his judicial oath other than by correcting that error so long as it lies within his power to do so? No doubt that will happen only in exceptional circumstances, but I have serious misgivings about elevating that correct description of the circumstances when that occurs as exceptional into some sort of criterion for what is required . . . "
The possible qualification was when the judgment has been reasonably relied upon by a party who has altered his position irretrievably in consequence.
Exercising the discretion in this case
But what if the order had been sealed?
"Consistently with this, the findings at a fact-finding hearing are not set in stone so as to be incapable of being revisited in the light of subsequent developments as, for example, if further material emerges during the final hearing: see In re M and MC (Care: Issues of Fact: Drawing of Orders) [2003] 1 FLR 461, paras 14, 24."
"It is now well-settled that a judge in care proceedings is entitled to revisit an earlier identification of the perpetrator if fresh evidence warrants this (and this court saw an example of this in the recent case In re I (A Child) (Contact Application: Jurisdiction) (Centre for Family Law and Practice intervening) [2010] 1 AC 319)." (para 46)
A concluding comment