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England and Wales Family Court Decisions (other Judges) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (other Judges) >> X (A Child : Fact Finding And Welfare) [2020] EWFC B27 (OJ) (24 February 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/OJ/2020/B27.html Cite as: [2020] EWFC B27 (OJ) |
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SITTING AT LEEDS
IN THE MATTER OF THE CHILDREN ACT 1989
AND IN THE MATTER OF X (a child)(Finding of fact and Welfare)
13-15 East Parade Leeds LS1 2BH |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
X (a child : Fact finding and Welfare) |
____________________
Aidan Vine QC and Neil Murphy for the Mother
Kama Melly QC and Catherine Mason for the Father
Clare Garnham and Kate McNally for the child
Hearing dates: 8,9,10,14,15,16,17,18,21,22,23,24,25 October 2019, 17 December 2019 and 8 January 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Background
Relevant Law
Burden and standard of Proof
Expert evidence
Hearsay evidence
Pool of perpetrators
"The law: only two possible perpetrators
19. The proper approach to cases where injury has undoubtedly been inflicted and where there are several possible perpetrators is clear and applies as much to those cases where there are only two possible candidates as to those where there are more. The court first considers whether there is sufficient evidence to identify any of them as a perpetrator on the balance of probabilities; if there is not, it goes on to consider in relation to each candidate whether there is a real possibility that they might have caused the injury and excludes those of which this cannot be said: North Yorkshire County Council v SA [2003] EWCA Civ 839, per Dame Elizabeth Butler-Sloss P at [26].
20. Even where there are only two possible perpetrators, there will be cases where a judge remains genuinely uncertain at the end of a fact-finding hearing and cannot identify the person responsible on the balance of probabilities. The court should not strain to identify a perpetrator in such circumstances: Re D (Care Proceedings: Preliminary Hearing) [2009] EWCA Civ 472 "In what Mr Geekie described as a simple binary case like the present one, the identification of one person as the perpetrator on the balance of probabilities carries the logical corollary that the second person must be excluded. However, the correct legal approach is to survey the evidence as a whole as it relates to each individual in order to arrive at a conclusion about whether the allegation has been made out in relation to one or other on a balance of probability. Evidentially, this will involve considering the individuals separately and together, and no doubt comparing the probabilities in respect of each of them. However, in the end the court must still ask itself the right question, which is not "who is the more likely?" but "does the evidence establish that this individual probably caused this injury?" In a case where there are more than two possible perpetrators, there are clear dangers in identifying an individual simply because they are the likeliest candidate, as this could lead to an identification on evidence that fell short of a probability. Although the danger does not arise in this form where there are only two possible perpetrators, the correct question is the same, if only to avoid the risk of an incorrect identification being made by a linear process of exclusion."
Lies
Memory
Failure to protect
Social media and texts
42. In Monroe v Hopkins [2017] EWHC 433 (QB); [2017] 4 WLR 68, Warby J at para 35 said this about tweets posted on Twitter:
43. "The most significant lessons to be drawn from the authorities as applied to a case of this kind seem to be the rather obvious ones, that this is a conversational medium; so it would be wrong to engage in elaborate analysis of a 140 character tweet; that an impressionistic approach is much more fitting and appropriate to the medium; but that this impressionistic approach must take account of the whole tweet and the context in which the ordinary reasonable reader would read that tweet. That context includes (a) matters of ordinary general knowledge; and (b) matters that were put before that reader via Twitter."
43. I agree with that, particularly the observation that it is wrong to engage in elaborate analysis of a tweet; it is likewise unwise to peruse a Facebook posting for its theoretically or logically deducible meaning. The imperative is to ascertain how a typical (ie an ordinary reasonable) reader would interpret the message. That search should reflect the circumstance that this is a casual medium; it is in the nature of conversation rather than carefully chosen expression; and that it is pre-eminently one in which the reader reads and passes on."
The parties' positions at the close of the evidence
Local Authority
The mother
The father
The evidence
The Expert evidence
The video
The oral witness evidence
Maternal grandmother, C
'Hand over mouth' comment
The 21st
The 22nd
The 23rd
The 30th
PND
The relationship between the parents
The mother's friend A
Photograph of X in the cupboard.
Hand over the mouth comment
The first social worker R
The mother's friend B
Hand over the mouth comment
The outreach worker S
Visit two months later
The second social worker T
Visit on the 4th
Visit on the 6th
Visit two months later
Further visit two weeks later
The maternal great aunt G
The maternal great aunt D
The maternal great-grandmother E
The maternal great aunt H
The mother
The father
Analysis
Medical evidence
Relationship between the mother and the father
The mother's parenting of X
The father's parenting of X
The marks on X on the 18th
The allegation that the father farted on X on the 19th
The pressures on the couple around the time between the 19th to the 23rd
Bath time on the 20th
The morning of the 21st
The change upstairs was there a 'cry'? If so, was it of an unusual nature?
The father putting X in the baby bouncer.
Did X go floppy/ appear dead when the mother picked him up?
Was X 'normal' after the parents left for town?
What happened during the afternoon and evening of the 21st?
What happened after the mother and the father had gone to bed?
What happened between the mother going to her own mother's house and the presentation at the GP?
Why did the father go shooting on the 24th whilst his son was in hospital?
Did the father make admissions to C on the 30th at the hospital and if so what did he admit?
The texts between the parents the14th -16th the following month.
The texts between the parents 21-31 December.
The allegation that the father grabbed the mother in the car on 24 December
Withheld accounts
Inconsistency and Retraction
Lies
Conspiracy/collusion
Perpetrator
Failure to protect
- Failure to act during the reckless handling of X during the video taken on the 13th
- Failing to respond to the "alarming cry" when the father changed X on the morning of the 21st
- Failing to act following the "bouncy chair" incident on the morning of the 21st and the 'floppy' incident
- Failing to tell medical professionals about what had happened on the morning of 21st
- Prioritisation of her relationship over the needs of her son.
Welfare outcome
Summary of findings:
At the time proceedings were issued X (dob) had suffered and was at risk of suffering significant physical and consequent significant emotional harm attributable to the care given to him by his parents in satisfaction of the threshold criteria under section 31 of the Children Act, his parents not providing him with the level of care a reasonable parent should give.
External injuries
( a ) 2 bruises to the left forearm, 1.5 x 0.5 cm and 0.5 x 0.5 cm
( b ) 1 bruise to the left shoulder 1 x 0.5 cm
Head injuries
The mother failed to intervene to stop it happening, instead recording the events on her camera. A reasonable carer would have stopped the father conducting this activity with X.
( a ) The mother did not reveal the following to the doctors when X was admitted to hospital on the 21st:
i. The Second Respondent's handling of X during the video taken on the 14th ;
And that she did not initially reveal the following to the doctors either:
ii. That she heard an alarming cry when the Second Respondent changed X upstairs on the morning of the 21st;
iii. That the Second Respondent then put X in his bouncy chair with vigour when he came back downstairs that morning.
( b ) The mother failed to respond to the "alarming cry" when the father changed X's nappy on the morning of the 21st .
( c ) The mother failed to act following the incident involving the bouncy chair and afterwards when he went floppy.
For the avoidance of doubt the court did not find the mother was the perpetrator of any of the injuries or that she failed to protect X from sustaining them.
ORDER
I make a Child Arrangements Order as follows:
X shall live with his mother. It shall be a condition of the order that he shall reside at [ address] with his mother and C.
X shall have supervised contact with his father on dates and times to be agreed with the mother. The supervisors shall be approved members of the paternal family and/or the father's partner once approved by the local authority.
I make a 12 month supervision order in favour of the local authority, on the basis that there will be a formal, minuted consideration as to whether the authority should apply to extend the order by no later than 8 January 2021
I reserve any future applications in respect of X to myself if available
HHJ Hillier
24 February 2020