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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 >> H (a child), Re [2005] EWCA Civ 1404 (22 November 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/1404.html Cite as: [2006] 1 FLR 943, [2006] 1 FCR 102, [2006] Fam Law 439, [2005] EWCA Civ 1404 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM
HHJ COCKROFT
BRADFORD COUNTY COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
and
LORD JUSTICE WALL
____________________
H (A Child) |
____________________
Smith Bernal WordWave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Ian Miller (instructed by BSS Law Partners - Solicitors) for the Respondent
____________________
AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
CROWN COPYRIGHT ©
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Wall :
Introduction
(1) The mother do make H available for six one hour contact sessions over a period of 12 weeks to be supervised at a contact centre commencing as soon as availability of contact centre places permits.
(2) The sessions be supervised by CAFCASS and be attended by an appropriately trained interpreter of CAFCASS for as long as directed by CAFCASS.
(3) There be a review of contact on the 1st available date 12 week following the 1st session at the contact centre with a time estimate of 1 hour, the matter being reserved to His Honour Judge Cockroft. The solicitors for the father to notify the court of the 1st contact date in order that the review hearing can be listed.
(4) Hazel Kilner of CAFCASS do file and serve on both parties an addendum report no later than 7 days before the review hearing.
(5) The father's application for leave to appeal is refused.
The issues raised by the case
(1) that in the judgment under appeal, the judge was "operating with an imperfect recollection" of findings of fact which he himself had made at earlier hearing;
(2) that the judge had failed to have any regard to the judgment of this court in Re L (a child) (contact: domestic violence) [2001] Fam 260 (Re L); the psychiatric report written for this court in that case by Dr. Claire Sturge and Dr. Danya Glaser (the Sturge/Glaser report); and the guidelines prepared by the Children Act Sub-Committee (CASC) of the Lord Chancellor's Advisory Committee on Family Law in relation to contact cases where there had been domestic violence (the Guidelines), also cited with approval by this court in Re L. In particular, the judge had failed to consider at all the attitude of the father to his actions and the effect that contact would have on the mother and child;
(3) the judge had failed to have any or any sufficient regard to the views of Dr. Ali (a jointly instructed psychologist) and Mrs. Kilner, the CAFCASS Reporting Officer (CRO);
(4) the judge had turned what was intended to be a hour's review of the case into a final hearing without allowing sufficient time for full submissions and without hearing properly from the CRO or the parties.
The facts
"It would be helpful if there were findings of fact in this case. If the court is then satisfied that (the mother's) fears and anxieties are based on her past experience of (the father) and violence towards herself and H, I would urge that an order for no contact be made. If on the other hand the court considers that (the father's) recollection of incidents is accurate, then there would need to be further investigation as to whether or not progress could be made with contact, particularly given that H does not have a relationship with her father."
The finding of fact hearing
"1. Soon after his arrival in England in November 2000, the Applicant made a threat to kill the Respondent.
2. On one occasion soon after the Applicant pushed the Respondent onto the sofa.
3. Towards the end of February 2001 the Applicant slapped the Respondent twice across her face.
4. The Applicant locked H in the bathroom for 45 minutes.
5. Around March 2001 the Applicant beat the Respondent whereby he slapped and pushed her, causing her to bang her head against the door.
6. In March 2001 the Applicant threw the Respondent onto the floor.
7. On 13 June 2001 the Applicant slapped the Respondent on her face.
8. On 13 June 2001 the Applicant grabbed the Respondent by her hair and dragged her along the floor.
9. In June 2001 the Applicant beat the Respondent about her head and face with his shoe.
10. In June 2001 the Applicant bear the Respondent on her back with a shoe several times.
11. On 13 June 2001 the Applicant pulled the Respondent's hair.
12. On 13 June 2001 the Applicant punched the Respondent around her head.
13. On 13 June 2001 the Applicant beat the Respondent causing the small finger on her left hand to break.
14. On 13 June 2001 the applicant made threats to kill the Respondent and her daughter (H)."
(a) "I ignore and dismiss paragraphs 1 and 2, they have not been substantiated or even pursued by any evidence"
(b) On the balance of probabilities, paragraphs 3 and 4 did not happen
(c) As to paragraphs 5 and 6 "I merely find that (the father) slapped the (mother)"
(d) Paragraphs 7 to 14 all related to what the judge rightly described as "the major incident". He found paragraphs 7, 8, 9 and 10 proved. He did not think paragraphs 11 or 12 added anything. In relation to paragraph 13 he was satisfied "something happened during the assault to cause a small bone in the finger of her hand to be fractured, possibly the fall". In relation to paragraph 14, he was not satisfied that there were any threats to kill."
"I had no problems with my mother and father in law they were extremely respectable hardworking people. They in fact told (the mother) it was her fault. In fact I must praise all her family, including her brother's (sic)."
"I say it on a balance of probabilities because I cannot be sure of anything in this case, nor do I have to be. I have been told dramatically different accounts and I feel rather like someone required to perform brain surgery with some very blunt instruments. I have to come to conclusions about this marriage on a balance of probabilities in the disconcerting knowledge that I might be completely wrong. I might hold that one or the other or both are lying to me when it is not the case. The only certain thing in this case is that have not been told the unvarnished truth by both sides that would be entirely impossible. So there they are, quite soon in a home of their own in a loveless marriage with father increasingly disappointing his in-laws and their family at the way in which he is coping with life and work in this country."
"He has drawn my attention to the case of Re L in which the Court of Appeal emphasised what might in any event be regarded as common sense, namely that it is not only necessary to scrutinize whether the allegations are true or whether they are lies, but it is also important to consider whether they, if true in part, are nevertheless grossly exaggerated, and I bear that particularly in mind in the context of this case."
"17. Well what am I to make of this? Mr Shelton characterises mother's as an implausible account. It does not fit with father being delighted the previous month to see his daughter for the first time at the airport. If father was a severe disciplinarian, and this allegation suggests no less, then Mr Shelton points out that it is difficult to imagine one isolated incident. Cruelty is a pattern of behaviour and yet there are no other allegations that H was mistreated in any way at all. Finally he draws my attention to the fact that although mother's statement dramatically includes a wealth of colourful detail in relation to these allegations, there is no reference in that statement to her being dragged downstairs by him, when surely there would have been, if it had happened. This is confirmation that no such incident took place.
18. It would certainly have been convenient for this allegation to be made up, because at one stroke if truthful and unvarnished it shows not only father's capability of treating his wife with violence but his potential for cruelty, this being an application for contact, with the daughter, which if found true would have severe implications for the future. Nobody knows what did or did not happen behind the closed doors of that matrimonial home, nobody else can give any evidence about it. On a balance of probabilities I have come to the conclusion it did not happen, and my finding in relation to paragraph 3 and 4 is accordingly."
"20. ….I think what was in it was nobody else's business but father's, but mother's family, who had seen to it that father had his hair cut and dressed appropriately, were no respecters of his separate property and I believe they did have a discussion about how to deal with this……
21. …. when mother says she confronted father with the contents of the bag I can imagine his indignity and his embarrassment and I believe there may have been some incident of violence resulting from that, although the version of events which mother gives I believe has been exaggerated. It may be in his hurt and his humiliation and provocation he slapped her, but I am not prepared to go beyond that. So in connection with the relevant paragraphs of the schedule, paragraphs 5 and 6, I merely find that the applicant slapped the respondent in the context of her discovering the bag to him, but it will be apparent from the fact that I found the way I have in the first two items that this sadly is a case where I am satisfied both parties are lying where it suits them."
"23. It may be useful, when looking at this allegation, to look at the end first because the only hard objective independent evidence I have in this case at all comes from the hospital record, which is to be found at E1 and following pages in the bundle. There can be no doubt about it that mother was admitted to Bradford Hospital NHS Trust at 2.37 pm on the afternoon of the 13th June. At that time she was fully conscious, there was a large periorbital haematoma, that is to say bruising, around the left eye. She was tender on the left zygoma, the jaw bone, beneath the orbit of the eye; there were lumps over the occipital scalp, she was tender on the upper back and there was bruising and tenderness to the proximal interphalangeal joint of the left little finger. There were x-rays carried out not only to that little finger but also to the face, which suggests significant injuries consistent with the possibility of there being some underlying structural bony damage. In fact there were no bony injuries revealed by the facial x-rays but there was a fracture to the middle phalanx of the left little finger. It was strapped to its neighbour, she was prescribed pain killers and invited back next week, when I think really no further complications except for residual bruising were apparent. So on any view by 2.40 on the afternoon of the day in question mother was presenting with significant multiple injuries involving her face, head and her little finger. Fortunately with a small amount of treatment a full recovery has been achieved. "
"24. How were those injuries caused? It is her account that she got up, as she did every morning, to prepare her husband's breakfast, to make his chapattis for his lunch. When father got up he was chuntering about her brother using bad language and she told him not to swear when referring to her brother, whereupon he fell into a rage and began a sustained assault upon her. Her account of this is at paragraph 13, page C19 in the statement. She says "He slapped me hard, initially to the face, which caused me to fall to the floor. He then grabbed my hair and dragged me from one room to another. I was screaming. He pushed H to one side, who was trying to intervene on my behalf. He then straddled me, took his shoe off and started to hit me about my head and face. He then, planning to hit her so that there would be no further sign of it, forced her dress up or down and beat her upon the back with his shoe. She was begging and pleading with him to stop, "and at the same time he was pulling my hair and punching me around the head with his free hand." That was no doubt, if true, a sustained and extremely unpleasant assault, although there is no reason to suppose that mother was in fear of her life or anything like that."
"25. This did not happen, the injuries that were caused to mother were not caused by me. I say again I did not lay a hand upon my wife during our marriage. I got up that morning, there was nothing remarkable about it. As I recall it, mother, who did not always prepare my breakfast, was that day in bed in her separate bedroom, and I left for work at 9.30 or thereabouts. The family business was not far away from where we lived so I walked there. I heard nothing of any difficulty until three hours later when T, my brother, came to my work place to tell me that there was trouble involving the family and that there had been a fight involving my wife. He says that he did not immediately down tools and take advantage of T's having transport to go to the house, that he walked there in his own time to see what was happening. He found the door locked and nobody there."
"29. In the end I am not satisfied that mother, together with various members of her family from who I have heard, have dreamt this up out of thin air. Although they are, as I have described, sophisticated and resourceful, I do not believe they have come here to blame father for something that he did not do. It may be after on any view an extremely frustrating and a humiliating experience in this country, and I have read his statement and it is part of his evidence in chief as to the autocratic and domineering way that he was treated, his patience finally snapped that morning, and I believe that he did beat mother. Although the assault caused the injuries which are described in the medical record, there has been some further exaggeration on the part of the mother as to her life being in jeopardy and so on. This was just an ugly and sustained assault for which, on a balance of probabilities, I find he is responsible. I may of course be quite wrong. I suffer from a dearth of evidence in this case but it is more likely than not that when I look at the damage to mother's face, head and finger as described in the hospital record I am looking at damage which I believe he has caused – put into its context of months of an impossible marriage and a good deal of provocation – nevertheless it is more likely than not that he was to blame for her injuries.
30. So in relation to the relevant paragraphs of the schedule I am satisfied, paragraph 7, that he slapped her on the face; I am satisfied he dragged her by the hair along the floor, paragraph 8; I am satisfied he beat her about the head and face with his shoe and on the back, paragraph 9 and 10; paragraph 11 seems to add nothing, nor paragraph 12; paragraph 13, something happened during the assault to cause a small bone in one of the fingers of her hand to be fractured, possibly in the fall. I am not satisfied there were any threats to kill, paragraph 14.
31. After the incident was over, mother says that she was made to swear upon the Koran that she would tell no-one of this incident. That has the ring of truth about it. I think father was instantly ashamed at what he had done and did not want it to go any further, showing proper remorse after losing his temper and control. Of course, mother did, I am not sure whether she is in fact a follower of Islam, I notice that she did not swear upon the Koran although there are reasons for that, she elected to affirm. Whether it be that she was so distressed that she put her own position above her religious duty, nevertheless she immediately broke that promise, told her family, and I do not need to detail the evidence from her aunt or her brother or her mother, which was broadly supportive of mother's in that regard. Of course none of them saw the incident but they each described mother's accusation as to who was responsible, and aunt in particular imitated the gesture of the applicant, being contrite, head cast down, hands put together, which is very much the posture that he has taken up throughout this case. When the allegation was put to him he did not try to brazen it out or insist that somebody else was responsible, he had nothing to add or explain, and that weighs with me in coming to the conclusion that sadly he did behave in most of the ways that are alleged on that particular day.
32. Whether or not two years later that should deprive him of all contact or any contact with his daughter is a very moot point for another day with the benefit of a CAFCASS officer's report upon all the circumstances, including the findings as I have found them. I am going to say no more. "
Events after the finding of fact hearing
"(The mother) has suffered from intrusive thoughts and images of being verbally humiliated and physically abused by her husband. These occurred without any cue or reminder for the first few weeks following her removal from her marital home. Since then they have reduced in frequency and intensity and are only triggered by cues such as conversations about her experiences. She often experiences flashbacks if she watches television scenes similar to her experiences. She is still bothered by intrusive images of the look in (the father's) eyes whilst he was assaulting her.
(The mother) continues to feel tense and anxious. She becomes easily upset and aroused and feels that her life had been destroyed. She sometimes experiences flashbacks and feels that she is reliving her experiences. She is aware that her heart starts pounding uncontrollably and she feels agitated and upset when reminded of her experiences. These symptoms are now less in their intensity and frequency than initially, but have not fully resolved. The worry that her daughter is going to be allowed contact whether direct or indirect with her father has exacerbated her agitation."
"From (the mother)'s account, it appears that she was under enormous psychological stress at the time she was living with (the father). As a direct result of her situation within the marriage, (the mother) has suffered from symptoms of PTSD, which are highlighted in appendix A. She continues to feel anxious in relatively minor situations. Her symptoms are not as intense as initially but continue to affect her for example she is better on some days but if she needs to deal with legal issues relating to the contact order she is anxious and is unable to sleep for days beforehand.
In addition, she suffers from mild symptoms of depression although she does not qualify as suffering from clinical depression. Her low moods are accompanied by anxiety and a tendency to ruminate excessively about the consequences on her life and her daughter's if a contact order is made. She felt concerned about her daughter's welfare as she felt H was a happier child now well cared for by her extended family and feared that contact with her father would disrupt the stability she had gained since they separated from (the father).
(The mother) is extremely worried about how she will react if (the father) has contact with H. Given her own experiences while living with him she inevitably holds a deep mistrust of his motives and feels that his attempt to have contact is merely a way of gaining permanent residence. She feels agitated and traumatised at the thought of attending court to face him in any way and at present feels tremendously vulnerable and lacking the capacity to cope with the stress of a contact order in favour of (the father).
However, more importantly, she is terrified about (the father) taking his frustrations out on her daughter, as her belief is that when things do not go his way, he is abusive towards those closest to him. Research suggests that there is strong likelihood that men who are physically abusive will become violent in a new relationship and that they often use non-violent tactics that can harm the children. This is a deep concern for (the mother) that either (the father) will expose H to violent situations given that he did not seek to protect her when he allegedly abused her mother or that he will be violent towards his daughter. (The father)'s contact with H will have a deleterious effect on (the mother)'s mental health by exacerbating her current symptoms of anxiety and depression therefore impacting on her ability to care for her daughter.
In conclusion, (the mother) is emotionally very vulnerable and there is a danger of her mental health deteriorating into developing a clinically depressive state if her stress levels are not controlled. In my opinion a direct or indirect order would be psychologically damaging for (the mother), as she no longer has the capacity to cope with any further stress."
"The abuse of women has an impact on many aspects of their lives, including their psychological well-being, self-esteem, bodily integrity, public participation, autonomy, and the well-being of their children. Current research suggests that victims experience a variety of negative mental health effects from physical assault, including, but not limited to, post-traumatic stress symptoms.
It is my opinion that (the mother) has suffered from symptoms of PTSD and depression following her experiences within the marriage. I am also of the opinion that experiences have created a vulnerability in her, which will cause further psychological distress if a contact order is made in respect of her daughter at the present time. Her daughter appears to be well cared for and is the focus of both her and the immediate family's life. If the situation was to change and she had to allow H to have contact with her father, I believe it will have a significant negative impact on her emotional and physical health, which will then impact on her ability to be a good enough mother to her daughter."
The hearing before the judge on 27 January 2005
"Q. On the basis that you may have been instructed to carry out an examination of (the mother), you were entitled to take what she told you as being accurate and truthful, whereas my findings of fact include findings that mother was extremely resourceful, utterly hostile to father, exaggerating and deceitful and manipulative, but that does not make any difference to the way in which you have concluded your report?
A. Even those sort of attributes in a personality, fair enough they are there but the way she reacts to a situation, it may be because she is deceitful, it may be she is hostile, but she has reacted quite emotionally to her situation, her marriage and everything that went on. Her reactions are still quite severe. It may be because she is hostile to her estranged husband but nevertheless she has developed symptoms which are as a result of being in a marriage, you know, regardless of the fact that she may have been deceitful and resourceful, but she was in a marriage that maybe she did not want to be in any longer and it did create a lot of emotional upheaval in her and therefore a sort of possessiveness towards her daughter and perhaps her perception of wanting to protect her daughter from somebody who she perceived as being hostile to her."
"Judge Cockroft:
I do not think that is an improper question, clearly. I am just thinking, I have been doing these cases for fifteen years now and I would hope I am able to assess the adverse effects upon a child of any contact being ordered against the wishes of the main carer and main parent. Did you feel able to comment on that doctor?
A. I do believe that her mental health will suffer quite significantly if this order is made.
Q. Mother's?
A. Mother's. I do feel that that is the case.
Q. I think you were outside court, of course, when the matter was briefly opened and it was then made clear, you should have the opportunity of knowing this, that there is no question of contact being unsupervised and it is going to be happening, if it happens at all, infrequently, in the most restricted of circumstances, by way of an experiment before the idea that father and daughter should leave the rests of their lives, effectively, without knowing each other. Does that affect what you say might be the reaction of mother?
A. I would say that she is going to suffer quite significantly but if that was an order that was made, for supervised access, I think she would have to be encouraged to have support. I know she has been having counselling before all this thing was sort of brought to court again, she was actually doing quite well in counselling and I think one of the things that has set her back is the though of having to have some sort of contact again. So if that is an order that you will make it would need for her to have some sort of supportive counselling or therapy in place for her to be able really manage her distress so it does not impact on H. As you say, the welfare of H is the most paramount here and it would need to be managed in a way that H does not have to sort of see her mother in a state of distress every time she has to go for access.
Q. What I meant to say was does it make any difference to your answer if you now know that the only contact which is being contemplated is for several hours, once every few months.
A. It makes a difference in the sense that –
Q. Under the closest supervision.
A. Yes the distress will be a lot less than I anticipated if it was to be sort of regular contact unsupervised."
… I am coming to the conclusion, I mean there is no criticism of the doctor, that really she is unlikely to be able to help me further on the issue which is now before the court, which is what is H's best interests, because we know that contact is often ordered because it is deemed to be desirable, despite a mother's hostility and therefore despite the fact that it is going to cause the mother distress, so even if Dr Bhatti Ali were entirely right on what she perceived, even where it is inconsistent with my findings, I do not think it bears on what is best for H."
The second report and oral evidence of the CRO
"When (the father) came to my office he appeared to be under the impression that the Finding of Fact Hearing had exonerated him on any blame for violence towards the mother. He stated that the Findings had not been properly explained to him at the time."
"17. The court is aware of the views of Drs Sturge and Glaser on violence within the family and its effects on children and their carers. I shall quote from them: -
Domestic violence involves a very serious and significant failure in parenting – failure to protect the child's carer and failure to protect the child emotionally (and in some cases physically – which meets any definition of child abuse). Without the following we would see the balance of advantage and disadvantage as tipping against contact: -
(a) Some (preferably full) acknowledgement of the violence.
(b) Some acceptance (preferably full if appropriate i.e. the sole instigator of violence) of responsibility for that violence.
(c) Full acceptance of the inappropriateness of the violence particularly in respect of the domestic and parenting context and the likely ill effects on the child.
(d) A genuine interest in the child's welfare and full commitment to the child.
(e) A wish to make reparation to the child and work towards the child recognising the inappropriateness of the violence and the attitude to and treatment of the mother and helping the child to develop appropriate values and attitudes.
(f) An expression of regret and the showing of some understanding of the impact of their behaviour on the ex-partner in the past and currently.
(g) Indication that the parent seeking contact can reliably sustain contact in all senses."
"(The father) did not meet any of the above when I first met him in 2002 shortly after the events and he is, if anything, even more in denial now. He swings from denying completely that he injured (the mother), or occasionally says that he injured her accidentally but that the responsibility for that lies with her. He does not acknowledge, nor try to understand, the impact either on the mother or on H.
H has no relationship with her father and no warm memory whatsoever of him. He was part of the family for a very short time. She remembers the violence her father perpetrated against her mother during that time, and she also says that she remembers that he was violent to her.
The mother is making a good job of parenting H. In spite of her anxiety, she tries hard not to let H be affected. H's security lies with her mother and any threat to her mother's well being is also a threat to H's.
This matter has been ongoing for two years, during which time the mother has not been free to rebuild her life. Every court hearing revives the memory of the violence for her. Dr Bhatti-Ali comments on the mother's post-traumatic stress disorder, her vulnerability, and the possible impact that an order for direct or indirect contact would have on the mother's physical and emotional health, and her ability to care for H. It is imperative that this matter is finally decided so that mother and child can continue to live a secure and settled life together, within their family.
Balancing carefully the usual advantages against the disadvantages of contact for H, I am of the opinion that the disadvantages far outweigh any advantage. In these circumstances, and in H's best interests, I have no hesitation in recommending an Order for No Contact."
"A. And have to say I hoped that the father would accept what your Honour had found but …..
Q. Well it seems neither parent does.
A. That is right and because the father is the person applying for contact, H's father, natural father in this, I was hoping against hope that he took responsibility for what your Honour describes as the violence that he perpetrated and that I could then look at an assessment of what he felt the effect on H was of witnessing the assault, how he might be able to empathise with her and how it would be for her seeing her mother beaten and how he might want to change and look at how he could behave differently if he were in situations of stress, but I am afraid, your Honour, he, apart from blaming me, he blamed anyone but himself and even said that your Honour had it wrong at one stage. So that disappointed me greatly, your Honour, because it is difficult to know where to go from there because H is in a position of having of having been witness to the violence –
Q. But I did not say so, did I, in my transcript?
A. I think you did somewhere, your Honour, I think so."
"Judge Cockroft:
No, I should have stated it but I think you are entitled to point out that H was obviously there when the trouble started and there is no reference either way to what happened to her afterwards. Yes, right, thank you. But I know what might happen in an ideal world, Mrs Kilner, I mean in an ideal world there should never have been such an incident at all. Once regrettably there has been, it should be faced up to and acknowledged –
A. Absolutely, your Honour, particular –
Q. But this was three and a half years ago.
A. It was your Honour.
Q. And what I have to decide now, and it is a very difficult decision, is whether the link between H and her father should effectively be broken for all time as a result of an attack which I found came after months of unreasonable behaviour by mother and provocation by her, of which father was immediately remorseful, and I do not know whether he had her swear on the Koran that she would not tell anyone because of the shame of that incident, whether that assault, and really little else, should stand in the way of an attempt to build some relationship between father and daughter here.
A. I think your Honour, with the greatest of respect I would have to say that I cannot accept as a professional that any amount of unhappiness and provocation justifies an assault on a woman.
Q. No it does not justify it.
A. So that is my basis your Honour. And in terms of remorse, my own experience of (the father) has not been one of a remorseful man, in fact he consistently says he didn't do it and blames other people, he blames people I have never heard of, he blames his mother, even obtusely blames yourself, and so that has been my experience of him, your Honour, I can only tell you what that has been and I have seen him on more than once occasion. I do take your point very seriously about the future for H and the seriousness of even contemplating that a child should not see her father who does not live with her, that is something I take very seriously your Honour, but I come back … there are lots of strands to this and one of them is that as well as H's experience of that incident, H's mother is her primary carer and I have read the account your Honour gave in the judgment about the assault and one of the things that really has been mentioned, and I think it is relevant, is that part of the assault took place with a shoe and I am sure your Honour will be aware in the Asian culture using a shoe as well as other forms of assaults, not to put too fine a point of it, is saying to the person on the receiving end, as one of my colleagues put it, I will paraphrase that, but one of my own Asian colleagues who I followed this up with said "In our culture we would not hit a dog with a shoe, it is like saying you are not worth even being like the excrement on my shoe." So I think that is –
Q. That very much mirrors the attitude that I found mother displayed towards father so I do not know how that takes us any further.
A. Very well your Honour. But I think the way it takes me further is that in my second inquiries with (the father), he continued to denigrate mother, the child's primary carer, and to criticise her care of the child, and taken alongside not accepting responsibility for the violence that gives me great concern, your Honour. How would it be for H if she was seeing this man who is her father if he continues to do this and she lives with her mother, who cares for her all the time, the conflict for her in this, combined with the distress of mother, which I believe would be there, which has been evident all along. And I am concerned how that would be for H and also how would her father deal with her when the chips were down. She is six now, little girls of six tend to get more difficult to deal with and as they grow up they can become quite mouthy and challenging and if he cannot take responsibility for his actions in dealing with her carer, how will he deal with her, your Honour?
Q. I suppose the answer to that is we shall never know if it is not tried, if the experiment is clearly unsuccessful it will be brought to an end, is that not so?
A. I am loathe to experiment with this child's welfare, your Honour. It concerns me given … If father had come to my office saying, "I heard what the judge said, I did do it and I regret it, it happened and it should not have happened and I would like to do something about it, maybe make amends to my child" I would have seen some way forward, your Honour with this, and probably at that point we would even have tried a supervised contact to assess the situation.
I think as well your Honour, although I heard what the psychologist said that she did not manage to interview (the father), I did, and his attitude worried me frankly. I have read criticisms of mother and I accept what your Honour is saying, and she does focus on her child when I speak to her, whereas (the father) focuses on himself."
"A. We do not know what the future holds, your Honour, but we know how he behaved in the past and my fears are for H and her carer, how does her carer deal with it in a way that H is not in conflict, emotional conflict about this contact, and how does father portray mother to H, how does father deal with H if she is quite challenging for him?
Judge Cockroft:
But is this not ultimately to argue, Mrs Kilner, that in a case where, maybe for good reason, mother is irredeemably hostile to contact, contact should not take place?
A. No your Honour I would not argue that.
Q. Does that not cut the court out from the decision-making process altogether?
A. I would say not, your Honour. I can count on maybe two fingers the cases where I have made an assessment that contact was inappropriate, and I deal with hostile parents all the time."
"A. May I just explain, your Honour, when we are talking about acceptance of a person's behaviour, I am talking about in the context of wanting to change and do things differently and if a person who wants contact with a child cannot see that maybe dealing with a situation differently would help, then I find that very difficult; the acceptance leads to change. And if this man is saying "I didn't do it, I don't want to change because I didn't do it" in the middle of all this is a little girl who may be put in a situation where father behaves in a similar way again. That is my concern, your Honour. I think your Honour I have laid it out in the comments of Drs Sturge and on Glaser on page 5 of my report dated 15th July 2004 and –
Q. Your Honour that is at page 29 –
Judge Cockroft: Yes I have it open in front of me.
A. Even an express of regret your Honour, would have been somewhere to start."
"Well I can see these factors; this is not a judicial announcement of the Court of Appeal, is it? It is nothing more than common sense, but I am bound to say, Miss McFadden, what is equally if not more significant in my judgment is the months of cruelty that led up to that loss of temper on the one occasion, which no one seems to have focused much upon. But I take your point, I can see there are some paragraphs of this learned text and it is obvious that domestic violence, even when perpetrated on a partner and where the child concerned is very young is nevertheless an important factor.
Miss McFadden: Your Honour I believe that to some extent the Court of Appeal have taken this research into effect in reaching judgments, and in particular that the courts would expect a violent party to change his behaviour and demonstrate that he is a fit person to have contact, so –
Judge Cockroft: Having heard all the evidence in the case, having spent two days coming to an assessment of this marriage I can say now I came to the conclusion that father was not typically a violent partner."
"I entirely accept that, with perhaps one reservation that if H is vividly recalling her father's cruelty it is because she is assiduously reminded of it for mother's own purposes."
I have not found anything in the evidence which suggests that the mother behaved in this way.
"Well you have made it clear that in your view if even the most minimal observed or supervised contact were ordered there is, in your judgment, a risk that mother's mental health would be adversely affected and therefore H's. If the view were taken that it might be in H's best interests for her to have some limited contact with her father, I would have thought that there is a pretty obvious amount of work there to be done to lubricate the wheels, by way of explanation to H why the court took the view it did, supposing that was the order of the court, and how mother can best approach such an order, both in terms of her own behaviour and in terms of encouraging daughter. I do not think I can spell it out more clearly than that, it is just a thought that occurred to me.
A. Right your Honour. Were the court to order that, your Honour, I think, I heard what the doctor said too, I think mother might need maybe a psychologist or a counsellor to do some very in-depth work with her, work that I would not see that I was capable of doing. I would obviously be able to prepare her for what the court wants to happen and explain matters to H, and provide a review at an appropriate point. But with regard to her emotional health, I think it would need someone who was differently qualified from myself your Honour."
"….. I am grateful to you for your evidence, irrespective of the view that I may come to in the end. I hope I have an open mind but having vividly formed a picture of what led up to the lamentable events of June I do not think it would remotely useful for a psychologist or any other specialist to be focusing upon that. What is important now, three and a half years later, would be preparing father for an experience strange to him, that is to say seeing and looking after a six year old daughter, and preparing mother for the consequences of such contact. Any attempt to harp back three and a half years to what happened in the most extenuating of circumstances in June of 2001 in my judgment would be as futile as it would be unhelpful. I say that before we break in order that you might add that into the balance here.
We have talked about an experiment and I am conscious that one does not experiment with a child's welfare if the risk is disproportionate to the benefit but we all, with respect, I think ought to be approaching this case as every case on the basis that contact will be pressed for by the court, save in the most exceptional circumstances. In fifteen years I have denied a father contact who was taking drugs whilst the child was with him, I denied contact in cases of persistent and serious violence. This is not a violent man, it is a man who was driven to lose control wholly exceptionally in circumstances that |I have outlined, for which mother is principally responsible. So I am not going to say that either that event, or his continuing attitude to it, make contact something that cannot be addressed here on the face of it. What everyone seems to overlook is the long term possible disadvantage to a young child in never knowing her father. That is why, I suspect, the courts do strive, and now ever more vigorously than before, to set up contact in the teeth of hostility often, where it is thought nevertheless that in the long term there may be an advantage to the child.
If it is clearly not working it will not be persisted in. That is what it looks like to me, and of course I have to hear the evidence of the parents, if mother wishes to pursue her claim that there should be no contact and I will do so being prepared to alter my views as I have presently stated them. But it will be naïve to suppose I have not got a very full grasp of this marriage from the evidence that I heard over two days, from both sides."
Mrs. Kilner's third report
"(The mother) complied fully with the work I undertook with H and was accepting of it. She looked tired and drawn. She appeared 'flat' and lacking in energy. When I discussed the Court proceedings with her it became clear that she feels browbeaten by the process and resigned to it. She wants and needs it to come to a conclusion as soon as possible. She feels that she has taken the right action in protecting her child, but now has no emotional resources left.
The mother agreed to my request that H take the sheets of photographs home with her."
"(The father's) stance has not changed. He has little understanding of any impact on H of the past history, and does not acknowledge his part of it. Indeed, he now says that he cannot remember. He appears to have a very selective memory, and continues to be unable or unwilling to recognise that he, for whatever reason, assaulted H's mother. His responses as to how he would deal with H's possibly awkward questions are inadequate. He continues to show no respect for H's mother and openly blames her for the marriage breakdown and the assault. I remain fearful about any response he may have to any un-co-operative behaviour from H or her mother were direct contact to be ordered.
Throughout the course of my enquiries with (the father) he has never once enquired as to H's progress and welfare. This is surprising when he purports to have her best interests at heart."
"H has no attachment to her father. He knew her for five months. She has not seen him since the day of the violent incident when the marriage ended and (the father) was prevented from returning to the matrimonial home. H's security lies with her mother, who is her primary carer. The mother has shown consistent care and concern for H, and a clear understanding of her needs. She is, though, worn down by the Court process. She needs the space to be able to settle down and recover her emotional health without it continuing to drag on, for H's and her own sake.
For all the reasons stated above and in my previous report dated 15 July 2004, I consider direct contact is not in H's best interests.
H clearly needs some knowledge of her father and his history, the paternal family, and of her place in it. I would suggest that the Court order that a life storybook is prepared so that H has an understanding of her paternal family. I am available to assist H's parents with preparing one, and in explaining it to H. I am satisfied that The mother would allow H to have this and to keep it for the future.
I would also suggest that (the father) be provided with a school report and photograph of H, on an annual basis. If he were able to reply to that communication, say by sending H a card, The mother could add the cards to the life storybook each year."
The judgment under appeal
"2. My involvement in this case has a very long history and in order to understand the order that I am about to make it is really necessary to look back through that history. First and foremost, it will be essential for anyone considering this case further to have sight of the transcript of my finding of fact which followed a two day hearing concluding on 24th June of 2003, - the transcript is 13½ pages long – what I found has been misunderstood by almost everybody who has since read it. I am not going to go over all that old ground which is set out in the transcript of my judgment. It was a finding of fact hearing which led from the breakdown of this marriage following upon father's application for contact, and no doubt mother felt that, if I came to certain conclusions as a result of that hearing, it would be the end of the matter with his daughter H, born on 8th April 1999.
3. Each party seems, wrongly, to have believed that they were effectively vindicated by my findings. I emphasise that I dismissed as untruth as many allegations made by mother as I found proved. I found both parties had lied to me. What preceded the final incident of serious violence as a tragically loveless marriage in which mother treated father throughout with contempt and arrogance and her family were also involved in that process of humiliation of father, a stranger to this country, whereas she was a relatively sophisticated young woman, and all this should have been self-evident from my finding of fact and the transcript of the judgment.
4. In the final analysis, therefore, but for one minor incident in March of 2001, there was one serious incident of assault after extreme provocation, mother having commenced a relationship with a boyfriend during the course of her marriage to father, and, as I say, father having been treated in, I regard, as an almost inhuman way.
5. The sad fact is that that serious incident of violence has been seized by mother and by the Cafcass officer and by a psychologist who was once involved as being the cause of the breakdown of this marriage; it was nothing of the sort. It was one incident out of character by a man who is not given to outbursts of temper and, generally speaking, save under extreme provocation, has little difficulty in controlling himself. He has throughout the many proceedings in which I have been involved presented as an abject figure, far from being in any way "cocky" which is the word that Mrs Kilner, the Cafcass officer, used of him in one context."
"6. Mrs. Kilner has consistently and in good faith been unsympathetic to any contact at all, but the reality is, having acknowledged the one serious incident of violence out of context and out of character, there is no reason now, and there has not been for some time, which emphatically points to an order that there should be no contact. This is a difficulty for mother and her advisers. This is not a case where there has been a history showing a consistent tendency towards loss of temper or serious violence. This is not a case where father is a drug taker or a child abuser; and so those exceptional cases where one can say that the child cannot benefit from contact with a non-resident parent do not apply here. The starting point of the court must be that, other things being equal, there should be contact, and one looks to see what there is on a fair reading of the history of this marriage and a fair reading of my transcript, what prevents the ordinary course of events from taking place here."
"7. There are formidable logistical difficulties, quite apart from the objections that mother has raised and persists in, despite pretending that she is exhausted now and resigned to whatever course the court is minded to take. She is still vigorously fighting against any contact because she wants her daughter to have nothing to do with her father because she has nothing but contempt for that man and probably never had any other attitude than that."
"8. In January of this year the matter came before me for a final hearing but it was manifestly not ready for such at that time. Mrs Kilner's then current report was against all contact and it seemed to me, before any such draconian step were taken, it was necessary to explore and exhaust every realistic possibility. I now have Mrs Kilner's report, and she has given oral evidence before me in the course of this review hearing to supplement it, but that report seems to me to take as a starting point that there should be no contact and, as between no contact and some contact, Mrs Kilner comes to the conclusion now that there should be an order for indirect contact consisting of the usual exchange of photographs and school reports, albeit only on an annual basis. What I meant her to investigate was the possibility of direct contact and of course, having considered direct contact, she was free to come to the conclusion as an alternative that there should be indirect contact. So one comes to today's hearing then without there having been much investigation of what direct contact should consist of if there should be any such. That has been resolved during the course of this morning, during which there was an adjournment for telephone conversations to be made. I will come to the details of the order in due course, but first of all I have to explain the reasons why it is that I differ from Mrs Kilner and notwithstanding the very able submissions that have been made by Mrs Cohen on behalf of the mother."
In my judgment, this is a misrepresentation of the work Mrs. Kilner had attempted to carry out.
"9. As I say, the starting point must be that, given that the one incident of violence, now four years old, was out of character and exceptional and after extreme provocation by mother and her family, putting therefore that on one side, there is no clear reason why the court should begin to look at this case from a starting position of making no order for contact. Therefore, this case does not fall within those exceptional cases where that is the rule. I recognise the difficulties that long delay, which is not father's fault, have lent to this already difficult case, but it seems to me that the passage of the years itself should not now lead the court to throw up its hands helplessly and conclude that the opportunity for direct contact has been missed for all time. Courts proceed on the basis that, generally speaking, unless the contrary is clearly demonstrated, children have much to benefit from in having contact with a non-resident parent. I do not despair of a meaningful and constructive relationship developing in this case. It strikes me that, before any such despair could set in, there needs to be an experiment which has not yet been embarked upon in this case. Of course when I say "experiment" I am not, I hope, irresponsibly playing with the best interests of H, but I look at father and I see his commitment over years and I believe he loves his daughter and may have something to offer her. If it turns out not to be the case, if he has no means of relating to her, if he raises matters in the course of contact sessions which are negative towards mother, the main carer, all this will become apparent and it will be clear that this contact is going nowhere. (The father) has a difficult task which he must approach with care and sensitivity. Clearly, these two are going to start as strangers but with patience there is a relationship which might be built upon. There is no question, after all this time, and against this difficult and negative background, of introducing H unsupervised to her father, who, sadly, is a total stranger to her, without whom she has been doing perfectly well for the last few years. So any contact to be attempted must be supervised. That means to say in reality it has to take place at a local contact centre. Shipley is a possibility but the Buttershaw Family Contact Centre, I am told, may be ideal for just such a purpose as I have in mind. I have indicated that an interpreter should initially be present, though father and daughter may find they have sufficient common understanding, either in English or Punjabi, to dispense with an interpreter in due course. I am told that Lubna Kamil or Fawzia Ali should be available to perform this task. If they alternate then once every four weeks is not too great an imposition upon them. It may be that in a city as multi-cultural as Bradford other Punjabi interpreters might come forward to assist if necessary. The sessions should be supervised, at least initially, by someone whom H trusts. That someone is Mrs Kilner. I am very conscious that she and I have in good faith differed as to the issue of direct contact in this case and she approaches her task believing, no doubt, that I am wrong. If that causes a conflict of interest such that she cannot do her duty she will have to arrange for a replacement, but I have higher hopes of her than that and I believe that she should be able to put aside our differences and work wholeheartedly for the success of this contact. Mother too will need to indicate to H that, when she goes to contact, it is not with mother's disapproval. This is a duty which has been imposed upon her by the court, in the hope that H may come to recognise her father and any opportunity to pull down that experiment for selfish purposes will soon be exposed. If the contact sessions do not work for genuine reasons then the experiment, clearly, will not be persisted in and father will have to wait, no doubt many years hence, when H has a mind of her own to seek out her father. One hopes that she will not turn against mother, as children often do in these situations, who have been deprived of knowing the non-resident parent. But I believe that, when faced with the alternative of saying today this father and this daughter are not going to see each other directly, the order of the court is an appropriate order in H's best interests."
"11. I am conscious that, in a short judgment under pressure, I have not stated all my reasons and views. If I need to deal with any particular aspects that I have not done I will gladly do so, but I would urge anyone reviewing this decision to look back over months of occasions when this matter has come to court and I have spoken my mind. I should say that I continue to be concerned that, although, I think, father has demonstrated his commitment many times over, he has not taken advantage of Mrs Kilner's presence to enquire after H. It may be there is some cultural explanation for that, how it does not seem to him to be appropriate to be questioning Mrs Kilner about his daughter. I cannot, emphasise sufficiently, having made this order and kept the door open, how important it is for father to show the quality of his care and his commitment. Otherwise I shall be let down."
The attack on the judgment
"In the final analysis, therefore, but for one minor incident in March of 2001, there was one serious incident of assault after extreme provocation, mother having commenced a relationship with a boyfriend during the course of her marriage to father, and, as I say, father having been treated in, I regard, as an almost inhuman way."
"Although the assault caused the injuries which are described in the medical record, there has been some further exaggeration on the part of mother as to her life being in jeopardy and so on. This was just an ugly and sustained assault for which, on a balance of probabilities, I find he is responsible."
"…. he did not try to brazen it out or insist that somebody else was responsible, he had nothing to add or explain, and that weighs with me in coming to the conclusion that sadly he did behave in most of the ways that are alleged on that particular day."
The father had, of course, denied responsibility in his oral evidence before the judge, and maintained his denial to Mrs. Kilner throughout her investigation.
Re L, the Sturge Glaser report and the CASC Guidelines
"In each case the judge, having found proved the mother's allegations that the father had committed acts of domestic violence, refused the father's application for direct contact with his child or children and made an order for indirect contact.
On appeal by the father in each case –
Held, dismissing the appeals, that on a contact application in which domestic violence was alleged the court should investigate the allegations and make findings of fact on them; that, if proved, the effect of the violence on the children and on the residential carer were highly relevant factors, along with the past and present conduct of both parties and the motivation of the parent seeking contact, in considering orders for contact and their form; that in assessing the relevance of past domestic violence the ability of the offending parent to recognise the wrong he had done and to be aware of the need for change, and any steps taken to correct the deficiency in his character, were likely to be important considerations; that there was no presumption against contact simply because domestic violence was alleged or proved, although it was one factor amongst many which might offset the assumption in favour of contact when the judge carried out the balancing exercise applying the paramount welfare principle; and that, in each case, the judge's approach had been correct and he had been entitled to make the orders which he had made. (emphasis added)"
"There are however a number of general comments I wish to make on the advice given to us. The family judges and justices need to have a heightened awareness of the existence of and consequences, (some long-term), on children of exposure to domestic violence between their parents or other partners. There has, perhaps, been a tendency in the past for courts not to tackle allegations of violence and to leave them in the background on the premise that they were matters affecting the adults and not relevant to issues regarding the children. The general principle that contact with the non-resident parent is in the interests of the child may sometimes have discouraged sufficient attention being paid to the adverse effects on children living in the household where violence has occurred. It may not necessarily be widely appreciated that violence to a partner involves a significant failure in parenting—failure to protect the child's carer and failure to protect the child emotionally.
In a contact or other application under section 8 of the Children Act 1989, where allegations of domestic violence are made which might have an effect on the outcome, those allegations must be adjudicated upon and found proved or not proved. It will be necessary to scrutinise such allegations which may not always be true or may be grossly exaggerated. If however there is a firm basis for finding that violence has occurred, the psychiatric advice becomes very important. There is not, however, nor should there be, any presumption that, on proof of domestic violence, the offending parent has to surmount a prima facie barrier of no contact. As a matter of principle, domestic violence of itself cannot constitute a bar to contact. It is one factor in the difficult and delicate balancing exercise of discretion. The court deals with the facts of a specific case in which the degree of violence and the seriousness of the impact on the child and on the resident parent have to be taken into account. In cases of proved domestic violence, as in cases of other proved harm or risk of harm to the child, the court has the task of weighing in the balance the seriousness of the domestic violence, the risks involved and the impact on the child against the positive factors, if any, of contact between the parent found to have been violent and the child. In this context, the ability of the offending parent to recognise his past conduct, be aware of the need to change and make genuine efforts to do so, will be likely to be an important consideration. Wall J in re M (Contact: Violent Parent) [1999] 2 FLR 321, 333 suggested that often in cases where domestic violence had been found, too little weight had been given to the need for the father to change. He suggested that the father should demonstrate that he was a fit person to exercise contact and should show a track record of proper behaviour. Assertions, without evidence to back it up, may well not be sufficient…
In expressing these views I recognise the danger of the pendulum swinging too far against contact where domestic violence has been proved. It is trite but true to say that no two child cases are exactly the same. The court always has the duty to apply section 1 of the Children Act 1989 that the welfare of the child is paramount and, in considering that welfare, to take into account all the relevant circumstances, including the advice of the medical experts as far as it is relevant and proportionate to the decision in that case. It will also be relevant in due course to take into account the impact of article 8 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (1953) on a decision to refuse direct contact. The propositions set out above are not, in my view, in any way inconsistent with earlier decisions on contact. The fostering of a relationship between the child and the non-resident parent has always been, and remains, of great importance…"
The Guidelines
(d) the capacity of the parent seeking contact to appreciate the effect of past and future violence on the other parent and the children concerned;
(e) the attitude of the parent seeking contact to past violent conduct by that parent; and in particular whether that parent has the capacity to change and / or to behave appropriately."
The judge's attitude to the evidence of Dr Ali and Mrs. Kilner
"Mrs. Kilner has consistently throughout and in good faith been unsympathetic to any contact at all, but the reality is, having acknowledged the one serious incident of violence out of context and out of character, there is no reason now, and there has not been for some time, which emphatically points to an order that there should be no contact."
"One only needs to look at the two today to see the chasm in their culture and their background: mother with black leather trousers, a sophisticated liberated young woman, and father a peasant, unable to communicate even now in English, needing the help of an interpreter. He cuts a dejected figure."
"I discussed the Judgment with (the mother). She was upset that the fact she affirmed rather than took an oath on the Koran was interpreted as her being less devout than she describes. She was, in fact, menstruating on the day of the Hearing and was prevented from touching the Koran for that reason.
I was puzzled by the fact that the judgment referred to (the mother) wearing leather trousers, which does accord with my experience of her. She states that she was, in fact, wearing a traditional Shalwar Kameez that has black satin trousers and that she does not possess leather trousers, not would she see it as appropriate to wear them."
The evidence of Dr Ali
"A. Where the clinical aspects are concerned it has not altered my view in the presentation that she gave. All the symptoms that I have outlined in my report, I do not think that that would really have changed by reading the report, because I was, as I say, trying to identify what the clinical issues were rather than what the reality of the situation was. It was how she was experiencing or perceiving her experiences, how she was sort of reacting to her experiences, whether they be, you know, in the way you have outlined them or with the way she is describing them, it really is an individual situation where a person, how they react to various circumstances and how they therefore develop clinical symptoms according from that circumstance."
Making an order on a one hour review
"it was plainly wrong to make such an order at the listing of a review hearing where there were before the court reports from the CRO and from Dr Ali, both of which recommended no contact. The judge should not have departed from their views and made an order without hearing evidence from the CRO and from the parties. By making the order in these circumstances the judge failed to indicated properly why he did so, and also failed to afford the representative of the mother sufficient time to put the authorities he appeared to be ignoring before him."
The case for the father
The management of the case
Commentary
"…. I freely concede the error was ultimately the court's if a clinical psychologist were to be involved at all appropriately in this case, in not giving her proper terms of reference. If we now ask for opinions which are not expert opinions and which are not foreshadowed in any written reports, who knows what might emerge, reliably or otherwise."
"…. Yes, thank you very much Dr Ali. I say again, you are not to be criticised by approaching this case on the basis of the terms of reference you were given. I think we have all learnt a lesson as to how important those terms of reference are and how important it is to tie-in the finding of fact hearing and the transcript from it with the expert assessments that follow."
(1) Judicial availability: the identification of gatekeeper district judges to undertake early First Hearing dispute resolution appointments
(2) Judicial Continuity: the allocation to the case of private law family judiciary and the identification of dedicated court and CAFCASS practitioners
(3) Continuous case management by the allocated judiciary and identified court officers which shall include a listing scheme in each hearing centre that describes local listing arrangements to ensure judicial availability, continuity and access to the court for review and/or enforcement
(4) The avoidance of unnecessary delay by the early identification of issues and timetabling of the case from the outset
Lord Justice Dyson:
Lord Justice Thorpe: