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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 >> W-P (Children) [2009] EWCA Civ 216 (19 February 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/216.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Civ 216, [2009] Fam Law 479, [2009] 2 FLR 200 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM COVENTRY COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE HOOPER QC)
(LOWER COURT No CV08C00095)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(SIR MARK POTTER)
LADY JUSTICE SMITH
and
LORD JUSTICE WILSON
____________________
IN THE MATTER OF W-P (CHILDREN) |
____________________
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Mr Nicholas Goodwin (instructed by Penmans, Coventry) appeared on behalf of the First Respondent, the mother.
Mr Lawrence Messling (instructed by Rotheram & Co, Coventry) appeared on behalf of the Second Respondent, the father of K.
Ms Claire Howell (instructed by Bate Edmonds Snape, Coventry) appeared on behalf of the Third Respondent, the father of J.
The Children's Guardian did not appear and was not represented.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Wilson:
"I accept that I said to [the hospital] that these were caused when [J] fell on [K]. This was speculation on my part. I accept that it was unlikely that they were caused during that accident. I have no alternative explanation."
In cross-examination the father continued to maintain that he could not explain the bruising and he accepted that it was non-accidental. One area of his questioning in that regard now carries significance. He was asked when he had first noticed the bruising and, in that respect, was asked whether, during the period when the mother was out at bingo on the evening of 5 April, he had changed K's nappy and thus might then have noticed it. His response was that he had not changed K's nappy during that period.
"In his evidence Dr Kanabar confirmed that the account given by [the father] was a possibility but was highly unlikely. In my judgment the approach to the issue which I am by these circumstances required to decide must be first to strip out from Dr Kanabar's opinion and reasoning certain elements of factual speculation, namely as to [K's] precise position before [the father] got up if [the father] did get up, [K's] movement, if any, while the father was up, [K's] position when [the father] sat down, and precisely where [the father] sat down. I must reduce Dr Kanabar's opinion and reasoning in this way because these features of his evidence are either some usurpation of my function of finding fact or at least anticipation of findings of fact or speculation or some combination of these.
Performing this exercise I judge this evidence of Dr Kanabar … as not excluding the possibility of [the father's] account. So far as concerns one particular aspect of it which I will summarise as the diffusion of force represented by the impact of [the father's] posterior on the limb in question, if indeed the incident happened at all, I deduce sufficient possibility of fracture mechanism as again not to exclude this. What I have achieved, in my judgment, is that I have, as I said a moment ago, reduced Dr Kanabar's opinion and reasoning so as to remove what ought not to form part of the expert opinion which it represents or which anticipates findings of fact which I may not make."
(a) there was no evidence that the father had changed K's nappy at any time when he had been alone with the boys that evening;
(b) the father himself expressly denied that he had changed K's nappy at any time that evening;
(c) there was no evidence that the father was prone to rough handling of the boys (as opposed to the perpetration of domestic violence upon the mother);
(d) indeed both the father and more significantly the mother expressly averred that he had never handled either of the boys roughly;
(e) the father accepted that he had no explanation for the bruising and that, in the light of the medical evidence, it was non-accidental;
(f) the judge did not ask Dr Kanabar to comment on the hypothesis that the bruising and the scratch had been sustained in the course of nappy-changing;
(g) the judge did not ask counsel, whether in final submissions or at any earlier stage, to comment on the hypothesis; and
(h) in insinuating his finding of a nappy-change into a central part of the history, the judge did not even advert to any of the factors to which I have adverted in (a) to (g) above. It follows that how he felt able to overcome the problems for his finding which each of them presented remains entirely unexplained.
Lady Justice Smith:
Sir Mark Potter:
Order: Appeal allowed