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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 >> K (A Child) [2010] EWCA Civ 478 (23 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/478.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Civ 478 |
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ON APPEAL FROM LEEDS COUNTY COURT
(LOWER COURT No: WF06F00056/WF05P00225)
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE CLIFFE)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE WILSON
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IN THE MATTER OF K (a Child) |
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Mr Philip Booth (instructed by Henry Hyams Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Respondent Mother.
Ms Jane Curnin (a solicitor in JWP Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the child by her Guardian ad Litem.
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Lord Justice Wilson:
"I may only be able to give a judgment in a short-hand form today but I think the parties deserve to have an answer to the questions that are raised."
Then the judge said to the advocates:
"Can I limit you to five minutes each?"
In his grounds of appeal Mr Taylor made a passing suggestion that it was unreasonable to limit the final submissions of the parties, in particular of the unsuccessful party, upon two applications to only five minutes; but I would not have accepted that submission. The issues had been very fully ventilated in oral evidence that day and, more importantly, Mr Taylor did not respond to the judge's enquiry by suggesting that such was an unfairly restricted time for his final submissions. Nor, in the event, does Mr Taylor press any complaint along those lines today. It was at 6.35 pm that the judge embarked on delivery of his judgment. It took only a few minutes and the transcript runs to five and a half pages, double spaced. In the light of the volume of evidence which he had heard, it was indeed, as he had foreshadowed, a short-hand judgment. Every reasonable allowance must be made for the uncomfortable time constraint under which the judge decided to place himself in the interests of bringing the proceedings to an end.
a) M had had a good relationship with the father;b) M had lived with the father for a period of more than a year;
c) the two occasions of supervised contact in 2007 had proceeded well;
d) since his release from prison in the Spring 2008, there was no evidence that the father had again infringed any of the injunctions and orders with which, in order to protect M and the mother, the court had surrounded them;
e) according to the guardian, who had visited her monthly in order to deliver them (and that therefore had an exceptional opportunity to gauge her wishes and feelings), M really appreciated the presents and cards which, since that time, the father had been sending to her;
f) until about June 2009 M had been pressing the guardian to secure arrangements under which she would see the father again;
g) in and from about June 2009 M's attitude in that regard had become, in the guardian's word, "flatter", perhaps (so the guardian suggested) because M had become frustrated at the absence of response to her earlier requests for a resumption of direct contact with him; and
h) to put it at its lowest, M had never indicated that she did not wish that direct contact be resumed.
Nor did the judge advert to the court's starting point in any inquiry into contact, namely the need in principle for a child to have some sort of a relationship with both her parents and at least an informed sense of her own identity.
Lord Justice Pill:
Order: Application granted; appeal allowed