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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 >> D (A Child) [2017] EWCA Civ 196 (29 March 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/196.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Civ 196 |
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ON APPEAL FROM Coventry District Registry
His Honour Judge Cleary sitting as a S 9 Judge of the High Court
CV16C00513
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE KING
and
MR JUSTICE MOYLAN
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D (A Child) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
____________________
John Vater QC and Elizabeth Walker (instructed by Brendan Fleming Solicitors) for the Second Respondent
Hearing date: Wednesday 15 February 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice King :
Background
i) Dr Ann Callaghan, Consultant Paediatrician, referred to subdural haemorrhages of different ages and concluded that ML had sustained a "violent assault" immediately prior to becoming unwell. Dr Callaghan concluded that it was most likely that ML had been "violently shaken" on more than one occasion.ii) Dr Khaled Sherlala, Consultant Neuroradiologist, reported subdural collections of different ages (i.e. chronic and acute). He was of the view that what he observed was "highly suspicious of non-accidental injury".
iii) Ms Dean, Ophthalmologist, found there to be acute retinal haemorrhages consistent with those found in abusive head trauma.
i) Dr Neill Stoodley: Consultant Paediatric Neuroradiologistii) Dr Patrick Cartlidge: Consultant Paediatrician
iii) Mr Peter Richards: Consultant Paediatric Neurosurgeon
iv) Mr William Newman: Consultant Paediatric Ophthalmologist
v) Dr Russell Keehan: Consultant Paediatric Haematologist
"In the absence of an episode of major accidental trauma, or an underlying medical condition, and in the knowledge that not everything in medicine has a clear explanation, then the intraocular haemorrhages remain unexplained and in my opinion are most consistent with a shaking or a shaking with impact injury."
The approach of the parents
The Medical Evidence
"[20]…..The evidence of each of these clinicians, in their written reports appeared to me to be well researched, soundly based, and well expressed. Each of them, at the stand, was refreshingly open and honest. They each acknowledged the presence of research in their respective fields, and the existence of cases of which they were aware or in which they appeared, when differences between them and their colleagues (in those cases) were exposed or when evidence at the hearing was established to provoke a change of opinion."
i) Each of Mr Richards, Dr Stoodley and Dr Cartlidge was of the view that the imaging was more likely to represent fresh blood and acute traumatic effusion rather than fresh blood and a chronic collection
ii) Mr Newman's opinion in relation to the retinal haemorrhages was that:
"In the absence of an identifiable medical condition or history of significant trauma, the retinal haemorrhages identified in ML remain unexplained but in my opinion would be most consistent with those found following a shaking or shaking with impact injury"
iii) It was common ground and was, and is, accepted by Mr Vater that a chronic injury could not account for the retinal haemorrhages.
iv) All of the experts remained of the view that there was nothing in the parents' accounts that explained ML's collapse, the encephalopathy, and the injuries subsequently found.
v) The court appointed experts were of the view that the combined effect of: ML's presentation, the injuries themselves and the absence of a plausible explanation, meant that it was most likely that ML had been injured by a shaking/shaking impact injury in a manner that one or more of her carers had chosen to conceal.
The Judgment
"Thirdly, there is no room for a conclusion which consists of only a possibility or suspicion. The test is binary. Either the local authority succeeds in the task it sets itself or it does not. The court is not permitted to shroud its judgment in uncertainties, and thus it must either declare that it is satisfied, on the balance of probabilities, at the occurrence of an event or that it is not. And if it is not, then the assertion is rejected. There is no room for 'maybe' or 'possibly'."
"[23] It is necessary therefore to establish where each of them were challenged, and on what basis, and to conclude whether or not the skilful interrogation by counsel for the respondents produced doubt or uncertainty into their respective conclusions."
i) such an approach imports the criminal standard of proof, namely "satisfied so that you are sure"ii) is a scientific impossibility in any event given that, as Mr Richards puts it in evidence, doctors "never say never"
"[61] It appears to me to be uncontroversial to conclude that retinal haemorrhages by themselves prove nothing – they are part of the wider canvas. As Mr Newman volunteered, their existence is not a trump card and it has to be taken in the context of paediatric and radiological evidence. But I ask myself, if we look at the local authority's hand, where are the trump cards? Which cards are of low or high value, and if taken together, and there are discrepancies, should the value of one be reduced by the undervalue of another?"
"Q… And you would be the first, I think, to accept that the presence of retinal haemorrhages should not be regarded, as it were, as the trump card. Do you understand what I mean by that? "
A… That is correct."
"[68] I am not convinced one way or the other. Equally, however, I am troubled by some of the uncertainty presented by the clinicians whose evidence I found to be candid and open. And I remind myself that I am not exercising criminal jurisdiction and I do not have to be satisfied so that I am sure of the picture which they present, a picture which is unanimous in its conclusion, namely that ML suffered a shaking injury. Nonetheless, I am left with doubts. . . ."
" First, whether all of the subdural collections were recent in origin or whether they represented acute re-bleeding into chronic collections of uncertain origins; secondly whether ML's collapse was as a consequence of acute injury or alternatively a seizure caused by pre-existing subdural collection; and thirdly whether the causes of any or all of these things might simply be unknown. Notwithstanding the unanimous conclusions reached by the clinical experts, and given that Mr Newman acknowledges that retinal haemorrhages do not represent a trump card (and thus their existence does not assist me in resolving this uncertainty), I have then to turn to the lay evidence to complete the jigsaw which I am endeavouring to put together in my overall analysis of the case. "
"[106] The candour and assistance which all the experts have provided to this court has left me with the doubts which I have no doubt clumsily attempted to set out in this judgment. None of the experts, by themselves or collectively, persuade me that these doubts do not exist. They are not removed by the lay evidence and indeed they are reinforced."
"[100] It will be observed that none of these questions have been answered by me in a way which points towards the father's responsibility for the calamity which befell his daughter. My answers reveal that I am in doubt. . . . ."
"[108] Consequently, given the binary test to which I no doubt inelegantly referred at the outset of this judgment, I conclude that I cannot hold the father responsible for the injuries suffered by his daughter. . . ".
The judge accordingly declined to make the findings sought against the father. This was a single issue case, there being no other basis for intervention by the local authority; therefore absent the judge making findings of non-accidental head injury the threshold criteria were not established and the care proceedings were dismissed. The local authority indicated to the court in submissions that it no longer pursued findings against the mother and accordingly, shortly after the judgment, ML returned to her care where she remains.
The Appeal
"The learned judge's conclusion that he could "not hold [the father] responsible for the injuries suffered by his daughter" was wrong in that:
(i) He wrongly directed himself in law that he could not find the local authority case to be proved if he had "doubts" about the case or if "uncertainties" remain.
(ii) He failed sufficiently to explain why he was departing from the unanimous opinion of four independently instructed experts who advised that, on the balance of probabilities, the injuries were non-accidental or inflicted.
(iii) He failed sufficiently or at all to consider the effect of the ophthalmological evidence.
(iv) He failed sufficiently or at all to analyse the weight of the medical evidence when viewed as a whole."
i) The judge having heard the lay evidence was entitled to reject the medical evidence. To interfere with his conclusions at the end of a long finding of fact hearing would go dangerously close to saying that where medical evidence was unanimous it was also conclusive.ii) The judge had not in any event rejected the medical evidence but had concluded, as he was entitled to, that the local authority had not discharged the burden of proof.
Discussion
"The second point follows from the first. The exigencies of daily courtroom life are such that reasons for judgment will always be capable of having been better expressed. This is particularly true of an unreserved judgment such as the judge gave in this case but also of a reserved judgment based upon notes, such as was given by the district judge. These reasons should be read on the assumption that, unless he has demonstrated the contrary, the judge knew how he should perform his functions and which matters he should take into account. This is particularly true when the matters in question are so well known as those specified in s 25(2). An appellate court should resist the temptation to subvert the principle that they should not substitute their own discretion for that of the judge by a narrow textual analysis which enables them to claim that he misdirected himself." [p784]
"Notwithstanding the unanimous conclusions reached by the clinical experts, and given that Mr Newman acknowledges that the retinal haemorrhages do not represent a trump card (and thus their existence does not assist me in resolving this uncertainty), I have then to turn to the lay evidence to complete the jigsaw which I am endeavouring to put together in my overall analysis of the case."
"[39] I regard the following as trite propositions of law:
(1) Experts do not decide cases. Judges do. The expert's function is to advise the judge;
(2) The judge is fully entitled to accept or reject expert opinion;
(3) If the judge decides to reject an expert's advice, he or she:
a. Must have a sound basis upon which to do so; and
b. Must explain why the advice is being rejected;
(4) Similar considerations arise when a judge prefers one expert's evidence to that of another. Judges must explain why they prefer the evidence of A to that of B"
Conclusion