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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 >> A, B And C (Children), Re (Rev 1) [2021] EWCA Civ 451 (01 April 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2021/451.html Cite as: [2021] EWCA Civ 451, [2022] 1 FLR 329 |
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& B4/2021/0073 |
ON APPEAL FROM EAST LONDON FAMILY COURT
Recorder Posner
ZE20C00089
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BAKER
and
LORD JUSTICE ARNOLD
____________________
A, B and C (CHILDREN) |
____________________
James Presland (instructed by Atkins Hope Solicitors) for the 2nd Appellant
Jacqui Gilliat and Bronach Gordon (instructed by London Borough of Croydon) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 10 March 2021
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Macur LJ:
Introduction
Background
Findings of fact and threshold conclusions
1. D had anally raped A on multiple occasions during January and February 2019 at his home and once in April 2019 in the garden of A's home when he had also orally raped her and ejaculated into her mouth.
2. H did not know or suspect that D was sexually abusing A at the time, but once he became aware of A's allegations he did not take any protective action. His response to the allegations, as indicated above, had been inappropriate.
3. If A knew that H had been living with D since April 2020, this message would be 'potentially emotionally harmful'.
1. The relevant date was 18 December 2019, when the children were taken into police protection.
2. A had suffered significant physical, emotional, and sexual harm at the hands of D.
3. H was likely to fail to protect A, B and C from future sexual abuse by a person or persons unknown and was likely to cause them significant emotional harm.
4. The threshold was crossed in respect of B and C, 'by virtue of them being in their parents' care at the relevant time'.
Decision under appeal
"[164] The first is his claim in his interview that [G] says [A] tells lies. In her oral evidence the mother emphatically denies this. In his oral evidence [D] says that it was not her who said this to him, it was [H] who said [G] says [A] tells lies when he came round on the Tuesday evening. As I have said, [H] gave evidence last and he denies saying any such thing. The second is starting to say that [A] had grabbed his penis and then saying when she dropped her hand from her eyes during hide and seek it accidentally hit his groin area over his clothes.
[165] The third instance is what he says about using the toilet in front of [A] and [B] when his aunt was bathing them. When I first read the papers, I was surprised given what I had read about the mother worrying about sexual abuse that she had allowed [D] to do this. However, in her oral evidence she agrees that she did, but that she pulled the shower curtain round so that the girls could not see him. In his oral evidence [D] said [A] did see his penis and he demonstrated her pulling back the curtain with 2 fingers and peeking. That is not the account he gave in his interview or witness statement where he makes no mention of a curtain.
[166] [D's mother E] said she did not know about [D] using the toilet when the mother was bathing the girls and said she was very surprised the mother had allowed that to happen. [F] said she knew about the incident. On probing she said she only found out about it from [D] in October 2020 after she had gone back to university which suggests that they had been discussing her evidence and he was telling her things she might be asked about.
[167] The fourth instance is what he says about being asked to wash the girls in the bath. I believe the mother when she says that she did not ask [D] to do this because it seems so out of character and moreover is reinforced by [his mother] who did not know about it and said that she thought it was highly improbable the mother would ask [D]. [F] said it had happened and she had gone to check on [D] that the water was the right temperature, and everything was OK.
[168] I am afraid that I did not believe either [D] or [F]about this. If the mother was busy with [C] and needed to ask somebody to bath the girls and [F] was available, she would have asked her. Everybody says that the mother saw to all the girls' needs and managed successfully on every other day to juggle these without asking anyone else to step in. [D] suddenly said that he remembered they had Sanex soap because [G's] evidence reminded him of this, which I consider to be a detail he added to bolster his story but had the opposite effect because the mother had quite clearly said that he did not bath them.
[169] The fifth and most striking instance is the story about going to the toilet in the garden at [A's address], which was so convoluted and nonsensical that it has to be a lie. Essentially, [D] said in his oral evidence that after they had been in the living room for a while it was boring, and he asked [G] for the key to the door to the garden (which is in the living room) and they went out in the garden to play. That part I do believe. Later on when questioned by Ms Brown about going to the toilet he says that had happened first, he had gone to the downstairs toilet, started to urinate, realised it would not flush, stopped urinating mid-stream, asked [G] for the key, told her he was going out to play with the girls, opened the door, left the girls in the living room, went into the garden, urinated by one bush, came back inside and then went out with the girls later on and they played hide and seek by another bush but the game only lasted for 5 seconds."
"[170] 'Were it not for those instances of [D] being untruthful, his demeanour and / or the inferences I can draw from the circumstances as described by him and [A] would carry little weight. However, there are four considerations which lead me towards the conclusion that the only explanation that exists for his lies is guilt."
[171] Firstly, [D] is a boy now 16 facing very serious allegations when he was 15, and I would at some point in his police interview or in the courtroom have expected to have seen at least a glimmer of anger, outrage or indignation. I heard that from his mother who said with great feeling that she wished she had left [G] and her children out in the cold, but not from [D].
[172] Secondly, as Ms Brown pointed out, [D] declined to watch the ABE interview and when asked by DC Clifton at the end of the interview "Did you ever cause her any injuries by putting your penis inside her vagina or her anus?" he does not give a straight denial, but says "No, I've never put anything inside her."
[173] Thirdly, having said that he normally likes to sleep in if he can, why did he go to [A's home address] at 8.00am instead of going later and ringing to check if the food was ready before setting off? The inference is he was looking for an opportunity to abuse [A].
[174] Fourthly, why did he insist she sat on his lap in the lounge when they came in from the garden? The inference is that when the mother emerged from the kitchen with the food, he wanted to make sure that [A] did not say anything to her. "
The Appeals
i. D presented with difficulties in processing and retaining verbal information, particularly when it contained dense, precise detail.
ii. D found it difficult to challenge an incorrect statement phrased as a question. His ability to answer complex questions in court might be affected by their length and his emotional response.
iii. D sometimes answered questions in haste which led to him curtailing his utterance midway before re-framing his thoughts in a new sentence.
Analysis and conclusions
The Appeal of D
"The learned judge was wrong to find that the intervenor had lied to the court in the witness box on five occasions and did not make sufficient allowance before [sic] the fact that he is a child facing extremely serious allegations in the unnatural setting of a courtroom and the extent to which the process (albeit with the assistance of an intermediary) might cause him to react to probing questions. The learned judge failed to bring into play the learning in Lucas in her assessment of the relevance of the inconsistencies in the intervenor's accounts."
I also considered that the case "illustrates the delicate balance of assessing the evidence of juvenile intervenors" and provided a compelling reason why the appeal should be heard.
"that people lie for all sorts of reasons, including shame, humiliation, misplaced loyalty, panic, fear, distress, confusion and emotional pressure and the fact that somebody lies about one thing does not mean it actually did or did not happen and / or that they have lied about everything".
But this formulation leaves open the question: how and when is a witness's lack of credibility to be factored into the equation of determining an issue of fact? In my view, the answer is provided by the terms of the entire 'Lucas' direction as given, when necessary, in criminal trials.
"1. A defendant's lie, whether made before the trial or in the course of evidence or both, may be probative of guilt. A lie is only capable of supporting other evidence against D if the jury are sure that: (1) it is shown, by other evidence in the case, to be a deliberate untruth; i.e. it did not arise from confusion or mistake; (2) it relates to a significant issue; (3) it was not told for a reason advanced by or on behalf of D, or for some other reason arising from the evidence, which does not point to D's guilt.
2. The direction should be tailored to the circumstances of the case, but the jury must be directed that only if they are sure that these criteria are satisfied can D's lie be used as some support for the prosecution case, but that the lie itself cannot prove guilt. …"
"99 In the Family Court in an appropriate case a judge will not infrequently directly refer to the authority of Lucas in giving a judicial self-direction as to the approach to be taken to an apparent lie. Where the "lie" has a prominent or central relevance to the case such a self-direction is plainly sensible and good practice.
100 … In my view there should be no distinction between the approach taken by the criminal court on the issue of lies to that adopted in the family court. Judges should therefore take care to ensure that they do not rely upon a conclusion that an individual has lied on a material issue as direct proof of guilt."
"…. The key considerations for me which tip the balance so that I am satisfied that it is more likely than not that [A] was sexually abused by [D] are: firstly, I can find no propensity for [A] to lie and no motivation, secondly, I can find no explanation for [A's] materially consistent, cogent and graphic accounts apart from that the person whom she accuses of sexually assaulting her did so in the way she describes and thirdly, the person she accuses has been so materially dishonest in his evidence on oath as to cast doubt on the truth of his denials."
A is placed with J. The case against G and H does not depend upon the validity of the allegations against D, but rather their reaction to A's disclosure. I would direct that this hearing take place before another Judge nominated by the Family Division Liaison Judge. In coming to that view, I do not seek to suggest that the Recorder would do other than apply herself scrupulously to the task in hand and would wish to indicate here that the construction of her judgment indicates the care and attention she otherwise applied to this difficult case.
The Appeal of H.
' Put simply, my concern is that if the same thing happened all over again to [any of the girls] and it was another family member or a complete stranger the whole way …[H] dealt with things and treated [A's] allegations is indicative that [he] would not safeguard any of the girls from being sexually abused and / or suffering the consequences of being sexually abused and / or from suffering significant emotional harm.'
Baker LJ:
Arnold LJ: