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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> JVW v KT [2007] EWHC 2312 (Fam) (11 October 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2007/2312.html Cite as: [2008] 1 FLR 826, [2007] EWHC 2312 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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J A V W |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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K T |
Respondent |
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The Respondent was unrepresented and appeared in person
Hearing dates: 16, 17, 19 and 27 July 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Sumner :
Introduction
Synopsis
The father's case
The mother's case
Decision
The background August 2001 to December 2006
Comment
December 2006 to April 2007
CAFCASS Report
Dr Berelowitz's Report
The hearing 19 and 20 April
Dr Berelowitz
"The time I spent with C and his father was absolutely lovely. He was so happy to see its father. He had a wonderful time with him
He did not find his father in the least bit annoying so where does the annoying come from? Well, C says there are two teams. He is on mum's team and dad is on another team.
But I'm obviously not happy with him having such a clear knowledge firstly of there being a court battle, secondly of it having been started by his father, and thirdly of mother having to defend herself every little boy is going to root for a mum who seems on the defensive and needing help. So if he feels that his mum is being beleaguered by father most little boys will be worried about mum and wanting to support her."
"It will not remain in that state. Either he will be able to demonstrate his affection and talk about it, or he will neither be able to talk about it, nor demonstrate it. But he can't remain as it is, because it's psychologically impossible. At this stage, it can certainly go either way. Both avenues are entirely open .
I don't need to say that it is wrong and unhelpful (to say negative things to C). What I do need to say is that if it goes on, unless C is having a huge amount of contact with his father, this sort of atmosphere is going to undermine his ability to enjoy a relationship with his father, because you need more than a few hours a fortnight to outweigh that sort of atmosphere, if it exists."
"The very good research in my field could not be clearer firstly children are significantly affected and often psychologically damaged by exposure to discord between their parents, whether in marriage or divorce. Secondly, children do better psychologically following marital breakdown, if they have full and rich relationships with both parents, and this applies not only to the time spent, but also to the atmosphere and activities.
I am confident that most of my colleagues would agree with me, it does not do a child any good whatsoever to have a denigrated view of a parent ...That is what attachment theory would allow one to argue, that loss of a key figure through denigration is the hardest kind of loss to mourn."
"If the mother's view remains unchanged, and if the mother doesn't really believe that C firstly can enjoy a very good time with his father and, secondly, does not feel free to articulate this to his mother, then, if C stays in DeV, and nothing else changes, his relationship with his father is highly likely to wither and die.
He then considered the alternative of him remaining in London. "The other is to use the time between now and July to see whether the mother, and her household, can allow father's relationship with C to blossom and extend and grow and become unencumbered. Whatever the rights and wrongs, the latter proposal has better predictive validity than some eight sessions of mediation.
What people actually do is much more powerfully predictive of how they behave in mediation and what they promised to do. So if the court agrees with me that the move to DeV should be conditional on its certainly not damaging and, in fact, needing to enhance father's relationship with C, well, run the next term as a trial period. I struggled to think really what the alternative is
I mean moving to DeV, seeing how it works, and taking into account how it works in making the final decision the mother is going to have to make quite a lot of changes if the little boy's relationship with his father is to survive."
"Mother, I think, has had the belief that in terms she's a right to move to DeV; maybe through this process the mother will learn that actually this move is a highly conditional one. And maybe mother will respond to that. But if the mother won't then C is in a ghastly win/lose situation, either his relationship with his father is very much at risk, and/or the discord between his parents gets worse, or his relationship with his mother is at risk."
The father
The mother
Resolution
April July
"I was impressed by both parties' tolerance to this intervention, and their willingness to engage in it. On the whole it was my impression that (the mother) has developed a style of communication, which is one largely dominated by complaint and counter complaint with the focus predominantly on previous experience of what has not been right. It was my impression that (the father) has developed a style of communication, which is largely dominated by trying to persuade Ms T to hear and validate his position."
Dr Berelowitz
"C told me that he is enjoying school, and that his parents are getting on well ... he no longer has a sense of there being teams, and he feels that the situation has "sort of changed" now he sees dad on his time, and mum on hers. It is going fine ... there are no problems about his time with either parent ... neither parent says negative things about the other ...
He firmly believes that mum and Mr M want him to call Mr M "dad", he says he likes seeing his father, and his mum is fine with it. Mum is definitely fine about him seeing dad, more fine than she used to be."
"If C were to return to London now to live with his father, he would find it very difficult, at least initially. The distribution of time with his parents would become more unequal than it is now. C I believe would be acutely upset. On the other hand, that there is still a real risk that if he stays in DeV, and nothing else changes, he could suffer not an acute loss, but a slow and steady undermining of his relationship with his father."
The mother
The father
The hearing 16, 17, 19, and 27 July
Dr Berelowitz
Mr M
The father
Mrs T - the maternal grandmother
The mother
Oral submissions on behalf of the father
The father's written submissions
Comment
The mother's closing submissions
Findings and conclusion