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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 >> Birmingham City Council v LB & Ors (Rev 2) [2013] EWHC 4646 (Fam) (21 March 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2013/4646.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 4646 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION SITTING IN THE
BIRMINGHAM REGISTRY
33 Bull Street Birmingham, B4 6DW |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Birmingham City Council |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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LB |
1st Respondent |
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- and - |
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CL |
2nd Respondent |
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- and - |
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Others |
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Miss Foulkes (instructed by Birmingham City Legal) for the Applicant
Mr. Weston QC (instructed by DM Partnership ) for the 1st Respondent
Miss Lakin (instructed by DM Partnership) for the 1st Respondent
Mr. Vater QC (instructed by Greens Sols) for the 2nd Respondent
Mr. Garrido (instructed by Greens Sols) for the 2nd Respondent
Ms Hayward (instructed by The Family Firm Sols) and Mr. Bean (instructed by Anthony Collins Sols ) for other parties.
Hearing dates: 25th February 2013 - 21st March 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was delivered in private. The judge has given leave for this version, which has been redacted and re-edited to ensure the confidentiality of certain information, to be published. The judge has also given permission for this judgment to be reported, but on condition that any published report names only those who are identified by name in the judgment, and ensures the anonymity of all others, although relationships, where given, may be reported. All persons, including representatives of the media, must ensure that these conditions are strictly complied with. Failure to do so will be a contempt of court. For the avoidance of doubt, reports of this judgment may refer to criminal proceedings involving the mother and step-father of KB which took place at Birmingham Crown Court in April 2014.
Mrs. Justice Eleanor King DBE :
The Law
(1) The burden of proof lies on the Local Authority.
(2) The standard of proof is the simple balance of probabilities, neither more nor less (Re B UKHL 35 [2008] 2 FLR 141).
(3) The same test applies when seeking to determine the identity of the perpetrator of proven non-accidental harm; the seriousness of the allegation does not affect the standard of proof.
(4) The inherent probabilities or improbabilities are simply something to be taken into account, where relevant, when deciding where the truth lies. Whilst the court should endeavour to identify the perpetrator, it should not strain unduly to do so.
(5) The court will bear in mind that a witness may lie for many reasons, such as shame, panic, fear or distress. The fact that he or she has lied about one thing does not mean that they have lied about everything (R v Lucas [1981] QB 720). A so-called Lucas direction is a matter of particular relevance in the present case and one which I have borne in mind throughout my consideration and throughout this judgment.
(6) Medical evidence needs to be considered in the context of all the evidence and against the backdrop of all the circumstances, often called the broad canvas.
Medical evidence
(1) Dr J McCarthy, consultant pathologist and ophthalmic pathologist from the Gloucester Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust;(2) Professor Freemont, consultant osteoarticular pathologist, based at the School of Biomedicine at the University of Manchester;
(3) Dr Daniel du Plessis, consultant paediatric neuropathologist, based at the Greater Manchester Neurosciences Centre; and
(4) Dr Neil Stoodley, consultant neuroradiologist of the North Bristol NHS Trust.
Each of these specialists are well known and highly-regarded experts in their respective fields.
(1) There was devastating global hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy and mylopathy as a consequence of a severe injury to the whole of the brain and spinal cord as a consequence of significantly impaired blood supply to the brain which represented an unsurvivable insult, the immediate cause of which was the prolonged period of cardiac arrest (45 minutes) following his sudden collapse on 19th June. The cause of the arrest has to be inferred from clinical, radiological and pathological findings
(2) Bilateral acute subdural haemorrhages.
(3) Older bilateral subdural haemorrhages with possible chronic subdural haematoma. The MR scan on 17th May, he said, established no chronic subdural bleed or acute bleed and so they must have followed the low-level partly arrested fall described by the father – that is to say, the impact on the shoulder before the head. That he regarded as an unlikely explanation for the older bleeds that he saw.
(4) Spinal, epidural and subdural bleeding.
(5) Spinal nerve root bleeds and spinal nerve root axonal injury.
(6) Intraventricular haemorrhage.
(7) He regarded highly significant the collective negative finding of the absence of any natural disease process which would have caused or contributed to the child's cardio-respiratory arrest and ultimate death.
Dr du Plessis, therefore, concluded:
"The clinical and pathological findings so far in this case, both positive and negative, support traumatic craniocervical (head and spine) injury as the cause of death. The character of the variety of positive and negative findings furthermore supports non-accidental rather than accidental injury as the underlying mechanism of injury, particularly in the absence of a plausible account of accidental injury."
"This child has sustained compressive fractures of the two thoracic vertebrae by forceful compression of the spine, most probably by being dropped from a significant height or being slammed forcefully on to his bottom or locked outstretched legs."
(1) There were two incidents of non-accidental injury: one on 28th May and one on 19th June.
(2) On the first occasion, in addition to the head injury caused by shaking or shaking and impact mechanism, there were –
(3) Two compressive fractures of the spine, one far more serious than the other. The degree of force required to cause this injury would have been less than that necessary in relation to a child who did not have a reduced bone mass, as KB did, but would nevertheless require a force beyond that seen even in inappropriate handling or rough play, and any third party observing it would regard it as inappropriate and as likely to harm the child.
(4) On the second occasion, KB sustained a further non-accidental head injury causing new subdural and retinal haemorrhages and a catastrophic ischaemic-hypoxic head injury which was not survivable and from which he died.
The Family
The Mother
The maternal grandmother, no doubt herself a victim of her own upbringing, gave evidence which I am sad to say revealed her to be self-centred and self-serving. In so saying I do not underestimate the difficulties in her own life and the challenges she faced in caring for SB. She told the court that, looking back, she would have made the mother be more open with her, but she (the maternal grandmother), had needed an escape route and that was bingo.
"Feel like a burden … Your family, the way my main family are with me, one minute they're nice and the next they're full of hatred towards me. Dealing with the nightmares I have most nights, feel like I let KB down as it's my fault, you know, he's so slow. I'm living with guilt and hurt and it's eating me inside."
The Father and the paternal Family
"Yes, I used to have a violent streak when I was drinking but I stopped the drinking and I stopped the violence."
The interview went on:
Q. And what did that… how did that manifest itself? How violent were you?
A. I'd push her a couple of times. I don't think I ever hit her. I think I pushed her to the sofa a couple of times and hit doors.
Q. And why was that?
A. Just her winding me up, getting me angry and things.
Q. All her fault?
A. Well, with the drink as well.
Q. Did you used to drink a lot?
A. Not so much then. It was more I drank more after she left, really.
Q. So at the time you were being violent, you weren't drinking a lot?
A. Not a great deal.
Q. And you don't drink a lot now?
A. No.
Q. And all this time when you didn't drink a lot but you had a violent streak?
A. Yes."
"I used to be violent when I was drinking. I'd drink a bottle of gin in a night and often on my own. On a Friday night on one occasion, I drank three litres of gin and twelve pints of Guinness when I was also doing cocaine as well. At that stage, there was no one around to be violent. It needed a trigger. I was more likely to react from the drink, as the coke mellows me out. I used to drink more then. The way it was, working away, I had to pay all the bills and then I came home and she'd be going on at me. I preferred to walk away and she wasn't letting me; so I was violent when it wasn't always the drink; it was the pressure of circumstances."
Events leading up to KB's death
28th May 2011
"I do wonder if we spoke about it so much that I began to believe that I was there."
The mother described her understandable distress in listening to the tape. She said she had never previously heard KB scream and cry to that extent and wished that she had listened to the recording earlier and that the police had played it to her in her interviews in 2010 which were "no comment" interviews. She concluded her statement by saying:
"I now have some doubts about what happened on that date to KB as a result of listening to the evidence from the doctors and SH and hearing the tape."
(1) The text messages on 18th and 19th May refer to KB as being "up and really vocal today and hyper" and as to him being "as good as gold" and him keeping shouting "dada" and "baba".
(2) The mother did not mention any reaction to the MRI scan to a physiotherapist who saw KB on 20th May or to any members of the hospital staff during the course of the admissions between 28th and 30th May or, indeed, to the health visitor, whom she trusted and spoke to regularly on 9th June.
(3) KB was well when he was looked after by his maternal grandmother overnight on 27th May.
(4) In the police interview on 14th July, the father himself reported that the real change in KB had occurred after the alleged fall on 28th May.
19th June 2011
We'll get him better, hon, and we'll give him the life he deserves. It will just take time."
The exchange finishes with the mother saying that she does not think the father will come to bed and the father replying that he would but he did not know when.
For any young couple such a diagnosis would be deeply distressing and disturbing, and rightly so. There was, however, in relation to this mother and father, a further factor; their personal knowledge of cerebral palsy was daunting in the extreme.
"My son was fine because my partner took him into the bedroom to get some clean clothes for me. Wet through his nappy … and he has come back. He's just lifeless; he's not even breathing properly."
The rapid response team quickly arrived at the house. The mother was standing on the pavement and directed them inside, saying that he was making funny noises.
a) something happened to KB in the absence of his mother and
(b) he had not been stripped for his bath and was still wearing his nappy when the ambulance arrived.
"I'm so sorry, son. Please forgive me. It's for destroying his photographs. I'm also hurting as I never, ever thought Craig would raise his hand to me, especially when I'm carrying his child."
Conclusion
That is the court's judgment.