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England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) >> Leicestershire County Council v AB & Ors [2018] EWFC 58 (31 August 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/HCJ/2018/58.html Cite as: [2018] EWFC 58 |
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SITTING AT THE ROYAL COURTS OF JUSTICE
B e f o r e :
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LEICESTERSHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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AB (by her Litigation Friend, The Official Solicitor) |
1st Respondent |
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- and - |
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CD |
2nd Respondent |
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- and - |
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EF AND GH (CHILDREN THROUGH THEIR CHILDREN'S GUARDIAN) |
3rd & 4th Respondents |
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- and - |
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IJ |
5th Respondent |
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- and - |
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KL |
1st Intervener |
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Mr B Roche (instructed by RP Robinson Solicitors) for the 1st Respondent
Ms K Brown (instructed by Dodds and Partners Solicitors) for the 2nd Respondent
Ms P Thomas (instructed by Emery Johnson Astills Solicitors) for the 3rd and 4th Respondent Children
Ms S Haider-Shah (instructed by Northampton Family Law Group) for the 5th Respondent
KL, the 1st Intervener appeared in person
Hearing dates: 20th – 24th August
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Keehan :
Introduction
i) whether some or all of EF's injuries were non- accidental inflicted injuries;
ii) if so who is the perpetrator or who are the perpetrators of the same; and
iii) with whom should the children live, with whom should they each have contact and how often.
i) all or the majority of EF's identified marks and bruises are non-accidental inflicted injuries; andii) the only possible perpetrators are the mother and/or KL.
The mother and KL, however, both deny they caused EF's injuries. Further neither of them seeks to care in the future for EF or GH.
KL
i) he accepted the expert medical evidence that all or the majority of EF's injuries were inflicted non-accidental injuries;ii) he did not wish to give evidence or to seek to exonerate himself;
iii) he accepted the court making a Lancashire finding against him and the mother; and
iv) he fully understood the potential adverse consequences of such a finding in respect of his relationship and/or contact with his child.
The Law
"The repeated reference to a right for a child to be brought up by his or her natural family or the assumption that there is a presumption to that effect, needs to be firmly and clearly laid to rest. No such right or presumption exists. The only right is for the arrangements for the child to be determined by affording paramount consideration to her welfare throughout her life (in an adoption case) in a manner which is proportionate and compatible with the need to respect any Article 8 rights which are engaged."
Background
(i) "In a report dated 5th May 2015, commissioned as part of the civil action against the MIB, Professor Norris, Neurologist, stated that AB would be unable to live on her own. He also suspected that she may have suffered damage to the frontal lobes of the brain.(ii) In a report dated 20th May 2015, Dr Christopher Plowman, Consultant Clinical Neuro-psychologist, described AB as a poor historian, who had considerable difficulty recounting her own history and also some difficulty regarding current circumstances. AB told him that she got easily confused and would pretend to understand things so that she did not look stupid. He referred to concerns regarding AB's medication regime, epilepsy and ability to care for young children in the absence of a partner.
(iii) In a report dated 16th June 2015, Dr Lachlan Campbell, Consultant Forensic Neuro-psychiatrist, wrote that AB's persistent cognitive problems, particularly forgetfulness, were likely to be permanent and would impair her quality of life and her capacity for independence.
(iv) In her report dated 28th September, the care expert, Susan Lewis RGN, noted that AB had been fitted with bilateral hearing aids that she was extremely reluctant to wear. She also noted that AB was a poor historian who found it difficult to stay on task.
(v) In the certificate of incapacity dated 30th April 2018 Julie Leather, psychologist, wrote that AB presents with poor emotional self-regulation and impulsivity; there are limitations to working memory which compromise her ability to retain or retrieve information; there are difficulties associated with verbal reasoning, memory, conceptualisation and comprehension, such that she is unable to weigh information in order to make informed decisions. Difficulties making considered judgments also arise due to her short attention levels, low tolerance for frustration and tendency for impulsive responding. If matters of discussion need to address the potential loss of her child then she may become distressed and may act impulsively.
(vi) In her report of 2nd May 2018, Julie Leather wrote:
She saw the mother on 27.4.18 and mother told her that she had thoughts of ending her life the day before and that she self-harms to take the pain away;She is taking three forms of medication. Mirtazapine antidepressant, Olanzapine antipsychotic for anxiety and PSTD and Lamotrigine anticonvulsant medication for epilepsy triggered after the RTA. Although some days she forgets to take them all;Her compensation is in a Trust as she cannot manage her money;She is supposed to wear glasses because of difficulties with her eye;She is supposed to wear two hearing aids;When she reads or is told information "I can remember one thing". She said this is usually the thing that "grates on me the most".She said that most days when she is on her own she cannot step outside of the house because she gets panic attacks. She said "I always have to have someone with me, glued to my hip".Her full-scale IQ is 72 which places her at the lower range of borderline ability, however there is 95% probability that her actual IQ falls between 68-77 which would indicate her being learning disabled;Her working memory is an area of weakness;Her tolerance for frustration when she becomes irritated by tasks that are difficult or becomes bored when at the limits of her concentration span, would be likely to compromise her in making sense of the information presented during Children Act proceedings and would make attendance during the court process effortful and both cognitively and emotionally challenging.She does not have capacity to litigate due to cognitive impairment almost certainly due to brain injury which appears most likely to be a permanent impairment;She would be unable to adequately understand written or verbal information relevant to the court process to sufficiently weigh that information to allow her to make informed decisions;In addition there are difficulties with emotional regulation and significant vulnerabilities to mental health which Julie Leather is not able to conclude is as a result of the brain injury or the effect of her life circumstances.Her acknowledgement of suicidal thoughts including a plan of how she might have ended her life using her medication highlights her emotional vulnerability and adds to my concerns, beyond matters of capacity, that it would not be in her best interests to maintain the responsibility for instructing her solicitor."
Evidence and Analysis: Fact Find
"In my opinion, the bruising at and near the genitalia is clearly an inflicted injury. I struggle to comprehend any possible accident which could cause such an injury, particularly in a child still in nappies.
Similarly, the injuries at the uppermost part of the thighs (Dr Hewertson injuries 11 & 12) in my opinion are clearly inflicted. It is difficult to see how a child could suffer, at much the same time, accidental injuries in both these locations, especially a child still in nappies.
In my opinion, the injuries to both ears on 07.02.2018 represent inflicted injuries. Bruising at the ears is not common as a result of an accident; it would be astounding if a child were so unlucky as to have an injury at one ear which was accidental, and, at the same time, an injury to the other ear which was also accidental.
The same applies, in my opinion, to the injuries to the cheeks on that date.
Regarding the other injuries; EF had only one, or a very small number, of these injuries, and no other injuries elsewhere, it would be reasonable to consider that that injury, or that small number of injuries, might be accidental.
The combination, however, of multiple injuries, including some clearly inflicted, makes it probable that all, or the great majority, of his injuries, seen of the two occasions in February, were inflicted.
The person or persons who inflicted the injuries can say how they were inflicted."
"However – if Dr Hewertson is clear that, when he saw EF, there was a clear demarcation on the shaft of the penis, separating more normal penis proximally, from swollen and more abnormal penis distally, then I would entirely agree with him that a ligature could cause that appearance and, further, that there is a clear likelihood that a ligature or similar was used.
In brief, therefore, my position is not that no ligature was used. A ligature may have been used. A ligature could not cause all of the genital injury.
If there is a clear demarcation, then a ligature is a very real possibility.
Other trauma was occasioned to the genitalia, as well as any ligature."
Evidence – Welfare
i) Mrs Sharpe, the author of the parenting assessments;ii) Ms McKenzie, the social worker;
iii) CD;
iv) QR;
v) IJ; and
vi) the children's guardian, Kailash Chudasama.
i) CD's past role in caring for EF and GH when they lived with their mother;ii) their failure to provide her with written details of their finances;
iii) their failure to provide her with written details of their proposed parenting plan;
iv) their need to move to a larger rented property – their current home only has two bedrooms;
v) QR's changing view about her ability to care for and connect to EF; and
vi) CD's initial response to QR's expressed view that she could not cope with the care of EF.
i) the extent of the harm either child might or would suffer on separation;ii) whether this would be short term or long term; and
iii) what the consequences of this harm might be for either child.
This is a serious omission.
i) EF moved easily between the households to enjoy contact with the non-residential carers; andii) EF's needs were met.
I have no reason to doubt IJ's evidence on this issue.
"If EF and GH are separated there is a likelihood that they will be impacted on as they have a very close bond with each other"
And a little later
"If EF was placed with his biological father, there is a likelihood that it would impact on his relationship with GH as they would be separated. There is a clear bond between GH and EF hence there would be a need for EF to receive support to enable him to cope with the separation."
That is the extent of the analysis on this vital issue. There is no mention or reference to:
i) what would be the extent of the impact of separation on both children;ii) whether the adverse impact would be of short duration or long duration; nor
iii) the long term emotional and/or psychological effect on EF or on GH.
i) that the needs of the children appeared to be greater or, at least, different from that which she had understood when she wrote her report; andii) it was not clear what the adverse effect of separating EF and GH would be.
She advised that the court should adjourn the matter part heard to allow for the instruction of an independent expert, a psychologist, to report and advise on these issues.
i) she sought an adjournment for the instruction of an expert; and
ii) if I refused the instruction of an expert she stood by her original recommendations as set out in her report.
i) when asked whether she would agree with the social workers assertion that IJ had a right to care for his son and EF had a right to be cared for by his father, she replied she neither agreed nor disagreed. She appeared to be ignorant of the fact that no such right was recognised in law;ii) when first put by counsel for CD that no amount of contact could rectify the harm to EF of being separated from his sister, she agreed. Later when first put by IJ's advocate that regular contact between the children could ameliorate the risk of harm, she agreed. When I asked the guardian why she had given what appeared to be contradictory answers, she could not give a reason. When I said that absent an explanation I said I would find she has given contradictory evidence, she said, after a pause, that is what I would have to do; and
iii) when pressed why when having now identified a so called 'gap in the evidence', her recommendation remained as set out in her report if the court refused her request for an expert, as opposed to, for example, making no recommendation, the guardian could provide no coherent answer.
i) the guardian's written report was inadequate;ii) the reason for her request for an adjournment and the request for an expert report was unfathomable and totally without merit;
iii) an expert report is wholly unnecessary;
iv) the adjournment would have caused unconscionable delay;
v) the decision to stand by her original recommendation having identified 'a gap in the evidence' was irrational; and
vi) the guardian's oral evidence was woeful.
Analysis – Welfare
i) EF is a very lucky boy to now have IJ in his life as his biological father;ii) IJ greatly loves and is greatly committed to EF. The extent to which each has established a warm and accepting relationship over such a relatively short period of time is a testament to IJ's love for EF;
iii) I have no doubt that IJ and MN would care for EF very well and to beyond a good enough standard of parenting;
iv) EF is very lucky to have CD in his life as his psychological father and GH is very lucky to have him in her life as her biological father;
v) CD greatly loves and is greatly committed to EF and to GH;
vi) IJ and CD will do everything to facilitate contact between the family with whom EF is to live and the family with whom he is to spend time;
vii) the desire of both IJ and CD to care for EF is entirely sincere and genuine. The reference, at points in this hearing, to either of them adopting a 'tit for tat' approach towards the other is entirely misplaced and erroneous;
viii) EF and GH are very emotionally and psychologically close to each other. They have never, hitherto, spent a night apart in separate homes;
ix) whatever the outcome of the issue of where EF should live, it is agreed that GH should be involved in the contact arrangements made for EF; and
x) all parties are agreed that EF's and GH's foster carer has provided both children with a quite excellent standard and quality of care for which she should be thanked and congratulated.
Conclusions
i) what EF's new surname should be; and
ii) what contact EF should have with his father and his father's family.
In any event, in the first instance, it is right they should be afforded the opportunity to reach an agreement. If, sadly, they cannot do so then I will determine the outstanding issues.
i) The mother's difficulties, which cause her to exhibit behaviours and presentations which can distress EF; andii) The importance of EF enjoying and improving his positive contact and relationship with his father which must be accorded priority status,
I am satisfied it is in EF and GH's welfare best interests to have contact with the mother once per month which must be supervised. I do not consider it to be in either child's welfare to have contact with the mother separate from one another.