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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 >> T (Children), Re [2010] EWCA Civ 1644 (17 November 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/1644.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Civ 1644 |
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ON APPEAL FROM NEWCASTLE-UPON-TYNE COUNTY COURT
IS HONOUR JUDGE CARTLIDGE
LOWER COURT No. GH08P00367
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(THE RT. HON SIR NICHOLAS WALL)
LORD JUSTICE WILSON
and
LORD JUSTICE AIKENS
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In the matter of T (Children) |
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Mr Stephen Ainsley (instructed by Hathaways) appeared on behalf of the First and Second Respondents, the paternal grandparents.
The Third Respondent, the father, did not appear.
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Lord Justice Wilson:
"After listening to mother and Mr [O] I became extremely concerned at their ability to cater in a sensitive way to a child's emotional needs."
He then gave examples of his concern. He criticised the fact that, about a year previously, the mother had told L about her true paternity (and apparently about the deficiencies of her true father) in circumstances in which she had not informed the grandparents in advance that she proposed to do so. He criticised an insensitive text message which the mother had recently sent to D after he had run away from her during a period of contact. He criticised the failure of the mother and Mr O to arrange for the children to speak by telephone to the grandparents during a period of contact. The judge concluded:
"I suspect that sooner or later, and probably before too long, mother's views will force her to limit or cancel contact if the children were to reside with mother."
Although it was expressed in terms only of suspicion, his conclusion was on any view of substantial importance. He then went on to appraise the grandparents as having a greater understanding of the needs of the children than the mother or Mr O. In the end he stated that he disagreed with the recommendation of Miss Elliott, which, in his view, had, when first advanced, attached too much importance to the biological status of the mother and from which, in her oral evidence, Miss Elliott had, at least in terms of emphasis, substantially retreated. The judge concluded that in his view the welfare of the children required that they should not change residence.
"At present [D's] and [L's] physical, educational and emotional needs are being met by paternal grandparents… there are no concerns regarding the care [which they] have received from their paternal grandparents." (Italics supplied)
It was, of course, the mother's management of the disclosure to L of her paternity which was criticised by the judge as having been of disservice to her in emotional terms, and, at the end of all the evidence, it was the concern of the judge that the mother and Mr O generally lacked an ability to serve the emotional needs of the children which figured prominently in his judgment.
"Whilst [the grandparents] have experienced problems with the anti-social behaviour of their son, there is no evidence to suggest that they pose any direct risk to the children, and professionals agree that they have been meeting the children's needs appropriately."
Lord Justice Aikens:
Sir Nicholas Wall:
"It is, of course, not enough for the wife to establish that this court might, or would, have made a different order. We are here concerned with a judicial discretion, and it is of the essence of such a discretion that on the same evidence two different minds might reach widely different decisions without either being appealable. It is only where the decision exceeds the generous ambit within which reasonable disagreement is possible, and is, in fact, plainly wrong, that an appellate body is entitled to interfere."
"There was not really a right solution: there were two alternative wrong solutions. The problem for the judge was to appreciate the factors pointing in each direction and to decide which of the two was the least dangerous having regard to the long term interests of the children, and so he decided the matter.
Whether I would have decided it in the same way if I had been in the position of the trial judge I do not know. I might have taken the same course as the judge and I might not, but I was never in that situation. I am sitting in the Court of Appeal deciding a quite different question: has it been shown that the judge to whom Parliament has confided the exercise of discretion, plainly got the wrong answer? I emphasise the word 'plainly'. In spite of the efforts of [counsel] the answer to that question clearly must be that the judge has not been shown plainly to have got it wrong."
Order: Appeal dismissed