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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 >> C (A young person) [2018] EWHC 3834 (Fam) (02 July 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2018/3834.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 3834 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(In Private)
____________________
A |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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B |
Respondents |
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-and- |
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C (by her Children's Guardian) |
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THE FIRST RESPONDENT appeared in Person.
MRS D. MARSDEN solicitor, appeared on behalf of the Second Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE KEEHAN:
Introduction
Background
Law
Evidence
a. The father's relationship with C is fractured.
b. The father had a lot of work to do as to how he presents to C.
c. C is more attached to her aunt.
d. The aunt has a soothing maternal role for C.
e. C is a vulnerable young person.
f. C and the aunt have a very close relationship with the maternal family, whereas the father has no such relationship.
g. C and the father have no relationship with the paternal family.
h. C does not trust either the father or the aunt to have sole parental responsibility for her.
a. That the animosity between the father and the aunt will continue whatever order is made by the court, and that C will have to deal with this. She will have to struggle to maintain relationships with both.
b. The adverse and significant effect on C if the father is granted sole parental responsibility.
a. She feels very insecure in her relationship with her father.
b. She has just started to rebuild a relationship with father.
c. She finds it hard to believe that she will continue to see her aunt if her father has sole parental responsibility.
d. She has not felt able to speak openly about the issues of parental responsibility and the aunt with her father.
e. She fears that her father will get angry. She feels unsafe and scared of him, and she feared the hostility that there may be when she returned home after Friday's court hearing.
f. She therefore said she wants to rely on the aunt.
g. She told me she did not want to be berated or blackmailed, or to engage in an attempt to trust her father at this time.
h. She said, "I need security that my father will support my relationships."
i. She feared that he would not support her relationship with the aunt or her maternal family after this case is concluded.
j. She said, sadly, she really didn't know what will happen after this case is completed.
These were, if I may say so, a very clear and powerful expression of C's views, wishes and feelings.
Analysis
a. It related to my comments that I didn't wish to hear about the payment of school fees. I did make that comment. The issue with school fees was, and is, to my view irrelevant to the issues in this case.
b. That at the hearing on 20 April I had made the comment that C's wishes and feelings overrode those of the father. I did not make any such comment. I may have observed, as I am sure I did, that given her age, C's wishes, and feelings would carry significant weight with the court.
c. I was referred to the court order of 20 April where it was said, contrary to the agreement of the father, that I had made an order that Atkins Hope, a firm of solicitors, were to deal with the grant of probate of the late mother's estate. I made no such order. There were merely two recitals that related to the grant of probate, both of which I had been led to believe were agreed between the parties.
d. It was alleged that I had in some way pre-judged his application. There is no foundation for any such assertion.
e. It was asserted that I demonstrated effective bias and/or pre-judgment of the father's case by my frequent interruptions to counsel of father's presentation. I did not.
1) The aunt was a litigant in person. She is entitled to a certain latitude. I did not, in fact, have to give her any latitude because she kept her observations and submissions pithy. I did, however, on a number of occasions, stop her in her evidence when her answers to questions became prolonged and, if she'll forgive me for saying so, somewhat angry and incoherent.
2) In contrast to the father's case, C and her advocate played a minimal role, by which I do not intend to be critical, in the conduct of the hearing on Friday.
3) In contrast, counsel for the father made submissions which were wrong in law, sought to refer to matters which were irrelevant, or sought to introduce into evidence in cross-examination matters which were inappropriate (eg relating to matters which may have arisen prior to the birth of C) or misrepresented what I or others had said. In these circumstances it was entirely necessary and proportionate, to ensure the efficient and fair running of the hearing, that I commented on or corrected the same.
4) Finally, I observe no application was made for me to recuse myself. I am entirely satisfied that this submission is without any merit whatsoever.
a. C was flawed in her reasoning.
b. C had made it impossible for him, the father, to exercise his parental responsibility by her support of the aunt.
c. The father found it perplexing and bizarre that C wanted the aunt to have parental responsibility.
d. There was nothing that he could do to stop C spending time with the aunt.
Each and every one of these submissions graphically illustrates my assessment of the father as a man obsessed with his rights as a parent and not with the extremely important emotional and psychological needs of his daughter.
Conclusion