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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 >> X (A Child) (No 5) [2018] EWHC 3442 (Fam) (14 December 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2018/3442.html Cite as: [2019] 1 FLR 1161, [2019] 2 FCR 379, [2018] EWHC 3442 (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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In the Matter of X (A Child) (No 5) |
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Ms Martha Cover and Ms Katy Rensten (instructed by Goodman Ray) for the birth mother
Ms Deirdre Fottrell QC (instructed by Russell Cooke) for the adoptive parents
Mr Andrew Norton QC (instructed by Creighton & Partners) for the child X
The birth father was neither represented nor present
Hearing date: 30 November 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir James Munby (sitting as a judge of the High Court) :
"The case put forward by the birth parents is simple and compelling. They have been, they say … the victims of a miscarriage of justice. They seek to clear their names, both so that they may be vindicated and also so that there is no risk of the judge's findings being held against them in future, whether in a forensic or in any other context."
I went on (para 22):
"… the claims of the birth parents, the best interests of X, and the public interest all point in the same direction: there must be a re-opening of the finding of fact hearing, so that the facts (whatever they may turn out to be) – the truth – can be ascertained in the light of all the evidence which is now available."
"16 [Counsel] drew attention to the stress for the adoptive parents brought about by these proceedings and to the need to ensure that this did not cause disruption or detriment to X … [Counsel] submits that, whatever the outcome of any proceedings, X must be protected from exposure and intrusion, whether direct or indirect. X is entitled, she says, to respect for X's right to private life. Both on a micro level – in the day-to-day world in which X lives – and on the macro level of the public at large, X should not be identified or identifiable. [She] recognises the public interest in the court being transparent and open about what is going on in this case. But, she submits, this objective has been properly achieved by the publication of my earlier judgment which, she says, provides sufficient detail to allow for public discussion and debate. Despite the extensive reporting of the criminal proceedings and the amount of material which is, in consequence, in the public domain, there is, she submits, no need for either X or the adoptive parents to be identified and every reason why they should not be.
17 I agree … So too does X's guardian. So too, as it happens, do Mr Dodd and Mr Farmer [of the Press Association], who recognise – I quote the language used by Mr Dodd in his written submission – that the protection of the anonymity both of X and of the adoptive parents is 'completely acceptable'."
"18 … Their names, after all, are in the public domain. They were tried in the Crown Court … they have talked to the media about their 'fight'. They were instrumental in the launch of the proceedings which are currently before me. In these circumstances, Mr Dodd and Mr Farmer submit, it is contrary to principle to make any order requiring that they now remain anonymous.
19 I can well see the force of the points made by Mr Dodd and Mr Farmer. And I have to say that, whereas the arguments in favour of perpetual (or at least indefinite) anonymity for both X and the adoptive parents are extremely compelling, I am very sceptical as to whether anonymity for the birth parents can last beyond (at the very latest) the conclusion of the rehearing, if indeed that long. But there is, in my judgment, a principled and well-founded reason for maintaining their anonymity at least for the time being.
20 If the media are permitted to identify the birth parents and to publish photographs of them, the resulting publicity will, in the nature of things, have an impact very considerably greater than if the story is reported without those details: see the well-known words of Lord Roger of Earlsferry in In re Guardian News and Media Ltd and others [2010] UKSC 1, [2010] 2 AC 697, paras 63-64. In the unusual circumstances of this case that impact will fall, albeit indirectly, on the adoptive parents, and therefore X, as well as on the birth parents. There is, as it seems to me, and for the reasons articulated by Mr Dodd and Mr Farmer, no principled basis for protecting the anonymity of the birth parents in their interests or for their sake; the only justification for preserving their anonymity in the short term, and I accept that there is such justification, is the pressing need to protect X, and also the adoptive parents, from the enhanced glare of publicity in the interim."
"making any assumptions, let alone coming to any conclusions, as to why the birth parents have decided as they have. I have set out – deliberately without any comment – what they say about their reasons and motives, and what the other parties say in response. These are matters for another day, after I have heard all the evidence."
I made clear, as I had previously, that the local authority had to prove its case.
"We know it is going to be tough but we are going to try. We have to. We want our child to see when they are grown up that if we don't win, we did everything that we could to get [our child] back.
People need to know this goes on and be told the truth – you can take your baby into hospital scared they might be ill and the hospital can steal your baby away from you."
Their Leading Counsel in the criminal proceedings was quoted in the article:
"Every step of the way when people had the opportunity to stand back, look at things again and say 'we have made a mistake', they ploughed on instead.
These innocent parents have been spared a criminal conviction and a prison sentence for a crime they never committed.
But they have had their child stolen from them. Their life sentence is that they are likely never to see their baby again."
"How many other families have had their children removed from them wrongly and been imprisoned on the basis of flawed science?
… How many other deaths and miscarriages of justice must take place before action is taken; and what of the savage legal aid cuts, rushed adoptions and restrictions on expert funding in the family courts leading to such skewed evidence being the only evidence presented to the family courts."
The parents' junior counsel was quoted as saying:
"This tragic case highlights the real dangers of the Government's drive to increase adoption and speed up family proceedings at all costs."
"We were accused of causing harm to our own child, something that we did not do."
Later in the same statement she said:
"We made the decision to tell our story to the public so that there could be a public awareness of the fact that there are innocent parents who have been accused of wrongdoing which has ripped families apart.
… The whole family court process left us feeling that we were presumed guilty until proven innocent and that is just so very wrong."
"When we made this decision [to tell our story to the public], we did not for one minute think it would have as much press interest as it did. What had been a genuine act to raise awareness slowly become too much to handle. We had reporters turning up at our home address, as well as at my parents' house. It started to feel like harassment. We were constantly bombarded with messages from magazines and TV shows wanting us to talk about our experience … It became too much to cope with."
In their written submissions on her behalf, they describe the birth mother as:
"a vulnerable woman, lacking in formal education and certainly lacking in sufficient sophistication to negotiate dealing with the press. In the aftermath of the criminal hearing, [she] quickly came to regret having been forthcoming to the media. She experienced a level of interest and unwelcome attention that she had not anticipated and with which she could not easily cope. She withdrew from any further such involvement. She learned her lesson after the damage was done, but this socially disadvantaged young woman could never have been expected to have understood the ramifications of 'going public' and should not now be held responsible for the actions of others, who could have been expected to have such understanding."
"throughout the time [the birth parents] have been peddling the false narrative they have of course known it to be false … It was not a miscarriage [of justice] it was a lie."
Ms Cover and Ms Rensten submit that this goes too far insofar as it alleges knowledge of falsity on the part of the non-perpetrator (if, indeed, either of the birth parents was a non-perpetrator) throughout the entire time they were asserting that there had been a miscarriage of justice. They add to this by pointing out, correctly, that the local authority never sought (see Re X (A Child) (No 4) [2018] EWHC 1815 (Fam), paras 4-9) any finding of failure to protect by either of the birth parents and that there has been no finding that the birth mother was the, or a, perpetrator. They submit that the birth mother may well have believed that her narrative was true at the time she spoke to the media immediately following her acquittal in the Crown Court.
"Even if someone was neither the perpetrator nor present at the time when injuries were inflicted, that person must have realised, even if only as time went by, that something was seriously wrong and that X required medical attention. Yet, until the final episode of oral bleeding, neither of the birth parents made any real attempt to obtain medical assistance for X, let alone to protect X from what was going on. Whoever was, or were, the perpetrator or perpetrators, both of the birth parents carry a high measure of responsibility for what on any view were serious parental failures."
Secondly (para 123) I said this of the hearing before me:
"Neither of the birth parents was genuinely trying to assist the court on this or on any other issue. Much of their evidence was evasive; some was simply lies, designed to obscure and cover up the truth."
"Given what I have just said there are three implications which need to be spelt out very clearly:
i) It follows, and I find as a fact, that in all significant respects Judge Nathan's findings of fact have withstood scrutiny and stand firm. The additional expert evidence which has become available since Judge Nathan gave his judgment on 1 March 2013 far from undermining his findings is, I find, entirely supportive of them.
ii) It follows, and I find as a fact, that the process before Judge Nathan has been vindicated.
iii) It also follows, and I find as a fact, that the birth parents have not been the victims of any miscarriage of justice, nor has X."
"The truth, as it seems to me, is that, faced with the overwhelming weight of all the expert evidence which by then had been marshalled, they realised that 'the game was up' and cynically sought to withdraw, hoping that this would stymie any attempt to re-visit Judge Nathan's original findings and thus prevent those findings being vindicated. I agree with Ms Morgan and Ms Segal's evaluation: given the totality of the evidence now available, it is little wonder that the birth parents did not wish the court to examine it and that they sought by their actions immediately before the final hearing to ensure that it did not."
i) There is no need to identify the birth parents in order to maintain the reputation of the family justice system. That important objective has, they say, been properly achieved by the publication of my previous four judgments. Nothing additional, from this perspective, is achieved by the identification of the birth parents. As they put it, "The alleged 'miscarriage' having been a 'miscarriage that never was' can be fully and robustly corrected" – as, indeed, it has. This, is a very powerful point to which, in my judgment, there is no effective answer.
ii) Similarly, they submit, there is no need to identify the birth parents in order to maintain the reputation of the local authority and to allay what it says is its "real concern", that it might struggle to recruit adopters if tainted by a slur of 'baby stealing'. Quite apart from the fact that, as they point out, the local authority has adduced no evidence of this difficulty having actually materialised since the outcome in the Crown Court, the reality, in my judgment, is that any reputational damage the local authority may have suffered is remedied by the publication of my previous judgments. Nothing additional, from this perspective, is achieved by the identification of the birth parents.
iii) They submit that publication of the birth parents' names may be prejudicial to the interests or lead to the identification of X and X's (adoptive) parents, either now or when X is older. I reject this as having any significant weight at all.
a) In the first place, and as Ms Fottrell, on behalf of the adoptive parents correctly submits, the reasons why this was a plausible argument when the RRO was originally imposed (see paragraph 6 above) were tied to circumstances at the time which no longer exist: the fact that at that time the allegation of a miscarriage of justice was still unresolved and the fact that a hearing was imminent which might expose everyone to the glare of publicity and where, as it seemed to me, that was likely to be all the greater if at that stage the birth parents had been identified.
b) Secondly, it is for X's adoptive parents to determine to what extent either their or his interests still require this form of protection, and the simple fact is that their view is that they do not (in fact, as we shall see, they wish to see the birth parents identified) and X's guardian does not take a different view: cf, A v Ward [2010] EWHC 16 (Fam), [2010] 1 FLR 1497, paras 136-137, and In re G (A Child) (Wider Family: Disclosure of Court File) [2018] EWHC 1301 (Fam), [2018] 4 WLR 120, paras 17-19.
c) The submission that, if the birth parents are named – and inevitably shamed – then X when older will have to deal with that shame and, it is said, "perhaps with the suspicion of others that, being biologically related, X may be cut from the same cloth," assumes that the identification of the birth parents will lead others to link them with the anonymous X, but given X's subsequent adoption, and the continuation of the RRO in relation to both X and the adoptive parents why should that be so?
iv) They submit that there is no need for the birth parents to be identified to enable X in due course to learn the truth, both about X and about the birth parents, (the published judgments being the crucial source for this purpose), including, in all probability, knowledge of their identity. There is, I accept, considerable force in this point.
v) They submit that the local authority's stance is that the birth parents deserve to be "punished" for having traduced the good reputation of the local authority and the family justice system. I do not think that this is, in fact, any part of the local authority's stance, but in any event I entirely agree that punishment and retribution (another word used by Ms Cover and Ms Rensten) have absolutely no part to play in the evaluative task upon which I am embarked.
vi) Because of her vulnerability, the birth mother will be particularly exposed to and potentially harmed by the renewed media attention which is bound to follow her identification. That is likely only to be exacerbated by the fact that the birth parents have now separated in circumstances where the media searchlight is more likely to fall on her rather than on him, so that, as they put it, the entire weight of any opprobrium that is generated will fall on her. It cannot, they say, be equitable or right that only one of them should have to face the glare of public scrutiny – "If [the RRO] cannot be lifted in a way that enables both … to share equally in their respective fates, it should not be lifted at all." They elaborate, that to do so would be a disproportionate interference with the Article 8 rights of one whilst, albeit by circumstance rather than design, protecting those of the other. That I accept is a powerful factor that has to be evaluated as part of the overall balancing exercise which I have to undertake.
"It may be that they are indeed the victims of a miscarriage of justice. If they are, then they have a powerful argument for saying that they should not be gagged. But it may be, for all I know, that the parents are not the victims of any miscarriage of justice and that they are indeed everything that Judge Barham found them to be. In that event there may be a powerful public interest in exposing them for what they are found to be: parents who falsely cast themselves in the role of victim and sought, by use of the media, to persuade the public that they were something which, in truth, they turn out not to have been."
In short, as the Press Association puts it, publicity sought by parents is a two-edged sword.
"What's in a name? "A lot", the press would answer. This is because stories about particular individuals are simply much more attractive to readers than stories about unidentified people. It is just human nature … Writing stories which capture the attention of readers is a matter of reporting technique, and the European Court holds that article 10 protects not only the substance of ideas and information but also the form in which they are conveyed."
i) of shielding the birth parents from condemnation which they have called upon themselves through their own actions, lies and evasions; and
ii) of inhibiting the media's ability to report what were public criminal court proceedings; an RRO would prevent the media reproducing, as part of a wider story about people who have been found to have hurt a child in a family court but have been cleared by a criminal court, what had been said, and reported, in criminal proceedings which took place in open court and were widely reported at that time, if linked in with the previous and subsequent family court proceedings.