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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> H (A Child), Re [2005] EWCA Civ 1059 (28 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/1059.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 1059 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM SHEFFIELD COUNTY COURT
(HER HONOUR JUDGE CARR QC)
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MRS JUSTICE BLACK
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H (A Child) |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
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MISS LUCY THEIS QC and MISS P STANISTREET (instructed by Legal Services, Doncaster Metropolitan Borough Council, Doncaster) appeared on behalf of the Local Authority
MR ANDREW SCOTT appeared on a Pro Bono basis on behalf of the Mother
MS SARAH JANE LYNCH (instructed by Wake Smith & Co, Sheffield) appeared on behalf of the Guardian
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"It seems plain given my earlier findings that there must be a real possibility in the North Yorkshire County Council sense that father could be a potential perpetrator. I am bound to say that there seem stronger candidates for committing the abuse but given T's general lack of warmth towards her father and the observations of [the social worker] and the likelihood that the abuse is more likely to be committed by a male than female, father falls within the North Yorkshire CC case."
"The judge's findings in paragraphs 46 and 47 to justify leaving the Appellant within the pool of possible perpetrators of abuse seem somewhat thin. She does not distinguish between physical and sexual abuse. Nor does she deal with the issue of the Appellant's failure to protect T. Paragraph 2 of the skeleton argument says that clarification was sought from the judge of her reasons for finding that he had 'failed to protect' T, but no indication is given of whether there was any response."
"It is apparent that the relationship having started off well disintegrated shortly thereafter and the parties in fact lived together for only a very short period of time. I am satisfied on all the evidence that father on the breakdown of the marriage behaved in an appalling manner towards mother and indeed her family. I am satisfied that an injunction had to be obtained to try and control his behaviour. The other evidence would suggest that since the birth of his second daughter ... and his responsibility for bringing her up that father had settled down and is now a different man."
Paragraph 47 is the all important paragraph. The judge says:
"I remain very concerned that notwithstanding T has had contact with her father for some months now, that her attention seeking behaviour was apparent during the course of her contact with him, her continued dislike of going to contact to him and his attempt to distance himself from the frequency of contact does not do him any credit. I further accept the observations of [the social worker] as to T's desire not to live with her father on any account. It is noteworthy that his sister Claire Hollingsworth (and also the maternal grandmother) were aware of and had seen some of T's distress at having to visit her father. I do accept the submissions made by various parties that father would be an unlikely person to collude with mother. There is no strong relationship between the two and of course father had to learn of the abuse T had suffered from the Social Services Department. Given that I do not find that the physical and sexual abuse are necessarily committed by [the] same person I find it impossible to rule father out. It seems plain given my earlier findings that there must be a real possibility in the North Yorkshire County Council sense that father could be a potential perpetrator. I am bound to say that there seem stronger candidates for committing the abuse but given T's general lack of warmth towards her father and the observations of [the social worker] and the likelihood that the abuse is more likely to be committed by a male than a female, father falls within the North Yorkshire CC case."
In relation to that, in paragraph 36 of her skeleton argument Mrs Hamilton breaks the judge's finding down into (a) sexual abuse prior to 9 July 2004; (b) physical abuse prior to 9 July 2004 comprising of (i) a group of old bruises and (ii) a large new bruise on her arm; (c) physical abuse between 9 June and 29 July; (d) absence of finding as to whether there was sexual abuse between 9 June and 29 July. Mrs Hamilton's subsidiary point is that it was common ground that her client could not have been responsible for either the abuse found in paragraph b(ii) or the abuse found in paragraph (c). As a further subsidiary point, Mrs Hamilton leans on the open door indicated by Scott Baker LJ: her client could only have been at risk of a finding that there was a possibility - a real possibility - that he was a perpetrator. He was either that or he was nothing. This was not a case in which if he was not a perpetrator, it could be said that he had failed to protect T. His wrongs were either wrongs of commission or they were nothing.
(Appeal allowed in part; matter remitted to County Court for retrial; the Guardian's costs to be the subject of a detailed assessment; transcript of judgment to be made available to all parties at public expense; the disbursements in relation to the appeal shall be shared between the Appellant, the Local Authority and the Guardian. The Guardian's share of these costs shall be a proper expense on the Guardian's public funding certificate).