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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 >> J (Children: Reopening Findings of Fact) [2023] EWCA Civ 465 (28 April 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2023/465.html Cite as: [2023] 2 FLR 1206, [2023] WLR(D) 201, [2023] EWCA Civ 465, [2023] 1 WLR 3348, [2023] 2 FCR 683, [2023] WLR 3348 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE FAMILY COURT AT TAUNTON
Her Honour Judge Skellorn KC
TA22C50037
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE NICOLA DAVIES
and
LADY JUSTICE ELISABETH LAING
____________________
J (Children: Reopening Findings of Fact) |
____________________
Claire Wills-Goldingham KC and Steven Howard (instructed by Alletsons Solicitors)
for the 1st Respondent Local Authority
Aidan Vine KC and Victoria Hoyle (instructed by Daniells Family Law Ltd.) for A
Ellen Saunders (of Porter Dodson) for the Children's Guardian (by written submissions)
Hearing date: 20 April 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Peter Jackson:
Overview
The legal framework
"It is rare for findings of fact to be varied. It should be emphasised that the process of reopening is only to be embarked upon where the application presents genuine new information. It is not a vehicle for litigants to cast doubt on findings that they do not like or a substitute for an appeal that should have been pursued at the time of the original decision. In Re E at [16] I noted that some applications will be no more than attempts to reargue lost causes or escape sound findings. The court will readily recognise applications that are said to be based on fresh evidence but are in reality old arguments dressed up in new ways, and it should deal with these applications swiftly and firmly."
The relevant background
The application to reopen
The judge's decision
"71. … In my assessment, the truth or falsity of A's allegations would be an integral, important component of the global Threshold exercise the LA now intends to place before the court. It would not be possible to achieve clarity on the various, interlinked issues without returning to them. It is technically possible, as Mr Travers maintains, for the court to hear a fact finding to determine D's allegations and the secondary questions about the aetiology of those allegations without reopening A's allegations, but in my assessment that would be an incomplete enquiry and carry with it the potential for skewing as a result. I have no doubt that a partial trial would repeatedly run headlong into the issues I am considering in this judgment. The one thing that all parties in this matter are agreed about is that there should be an alternative-basis threshold criteria before the court in order to consider all of the competing cases. M says A and D have suffered significant sexual and emotional harm at the hands of F2 and that future unrestricted contact would pose an ongoing risk of the same. F2 does not assert a positive driver for what he says were false allegations by A but he clearly does not rule out M having been part of the aetiology. Insofar as C and D are concerned, it has been F2's stated case (for years) that his relationship with C and D has been marked by hostility, negative influence and alienation. A's allegations are at the very heart of the parental separation and the dysfunctional dynamics which have, on any reading of the papers impacted upon C and D over the years leading up to D's apparent complaints. On balance I am not able to accept Mr Travers' submissions that the exploration of an alternate basis threshold is amply achievable without reopening A's allegations. I am sceptical about that suggestion and favour Ms Smith's submission that to take that approach would result in the case circling round a fixed tether point (the position at law that F2 has not abused A in circumstances where doubt is cast on the accuracy of that).
72. The paper or intellectual merits of a new, wide fact-finding exercise cannot, of course, be determinative of the application; something further would be necessary. As Mr Travers rightly submits, litigation finality should not be overridden by the fact that the LA (or a later court) may consider it forensically preferable to approach new litigation on a basis which required reopening. The wide powers of "issue management" are irrelevant here. Instead, focus must fall upon on [sic]: whether there is any reason to think that a rehearing of the issue will result in any different finding from that in the earlier trial. Although many decided cases on reopening, especially those relating to alleged inflicted injury are predicated upon new evidence, the test does not strictly require new 'evidence'. Evolving or emerging information or knowledge can suffice. Hence the Re B list contains (the third prompt of three): whether there is any new evidence or information casting doubt upon the accuracy of the original findings. That is one item on a list of potential features which I assess to be (i) guidance and (ii) non-exhaustive. I therefore understand the Re CTD concepts of reason to think and solid grounds to be capable of being established with or without new evidence but – in either scenario – there must be a proposed, changed litigation landscape with identifiable and tangible markers of something new 'to hear' or 'to be factored into' the assessment and that must show prospects of yielding a different outcome (again, this does not have to be an entire reversal of outcome). If those features exist, they are enough to cast doubt upon the accuracy of the original finding and without them, a reopening would be the mere re-hashing of a case and would offend justice.
73. Considering (a) whether the previous findings were the result of a full hearing in which the person concerned took part and the evidence was tested in the usual way. There was certainly a full hearing. If 'the person concerned' is the applicant for reopening, then I record that the LA did not participate in the original hearing. I accept Mr Howard's characterisation of a LA as a party with a unique status in the bringing of care proceedings (an authorised applicant and the emanation of the State). If, alternatively, I consider the complainant, A, to be 'the person concerned' in the above extract then it is a matter of fact that, without her consent, A was discharged as a party shortly before her allegations were determined and she was not represented. Nor was all of the evidence tested: in the normal way (which I interpret as meaning an adversarial process which afforded interested parties the opportunity for cross examination, to receive advice and to take instructions on the evolving evidence and to have submissions advanced on their behalf at the close of the evidence). Here, the complainant A was (i) a potential child witness and (ii) initially, a child party with litigation capacity. Insofar as a Re W analysis determined that A would not give further evidence under cross examination, that was not an unusual order in this context; it was consensual and no party criticises it here. It was therefore a standard variation for a case involving the allegations of a child, but it did not represent the full trial process I consider is envisaged within the test.
74. Considering (b) if so, whether there is any ground upon which the accuracy of the previous finding could have been attacked at the time, and why therefore there was no appeal at the time. If my consideration of parties who may be 'the person concerned' is accurate then, technically, this guideline may not even be engaged as it is a secondary enquiry contingent upon participation in the trial process. I will address it in any event. Whilst reiterating the caveats expressed in paragraph 63 above, I have formed the view that there are prima facie features of the case management and the fact finding judgment which may have had the potential to have founded an appeal.
(a) I say this firstly in relation to the decision to discharge A's party status and her subsequent inability to participate at the hearing. I accept the submissions that representation for A may have made a considerable contribution to the hearing in June 2021. A's advocate would have been using both the child's 'static' complainant evidence and any 'dynamic' instructions received during the hearing. This is not an unusual situation in family cases and a court is always able to categorise any information received (it does not mistake submissions for evidence). Both adults could have been cross-examined; submissions directed to the quality of the processes during ABE and the criminal trial and submissions directed to the considerable volume of evidence from several sources which came relatively late into the fact-finding bundle. I do not accept Mr Travers' argument that it was a standard course to end the party status (and representation) of a competent child party upon the making of a Re W determination against oral evidence. Participation directions for children and vulnerable witnesses under FPR r.3A and PD 3AA are not restricted to the giving of oral evidence. The attendance note from 26 May 2022 does not suggest that those issues were canvassed at that hearing. I also note the consensus that the application to discharge A was raised in the face of the court and had to be opposed by counsel without the benefit of notice, or a formal application or the opportunity to take instructions. I refer to my judgment dated 6 November 2022 which recited at some length the issues engaged in a Re W assessment, a number of which reflect the manner in which the evidence can be explored and critiqued should there be no cross examination of the child. It seems highly likely that A's team would have advanced her Re W position on the assumption that their representation would continue and they would be able to balance the absence of live or pre-recorded cross examination of their client with a detailed exposition of her account and her case during the trial.
(b) The criminal trial transcripts raise indisputable points of procedure in respect of A's evidence as a child and vulnerable witness (pursuant to YJCEA 1999). Questions that were poorly formulated by reference to the Advocates' Gateway (TAG) are self-evident. Neither counsel nor the Crown Court intervened when A stated that she had not been afforded a chance to refresh her memory. The previous version of ABE was in force at the time. It provides: [the judge then quoted the passage from the ABE guidance saying that witnesses are entitled to read their witness statement before giving evidence and that viewing the recording ABE interview is the equivalent of that].
(c) The June 2021 judgment suggests that the analysis (rejection) of A's evidence did rely, in part, upon:
(i) the criminal transcripts;
(ii) the initial account given by M that A was not a truthful complainant;
(iii) allegations made by M and/or F2 about A's character, experiences, motivations and veracity that would have been capable of challenge and/or analysis by use of material in the bundle to cross examine and make submissions.
75. I emphasise that I am not effecting an appeal decision. I have accepted the LA's (carefully boundaried) submissions that there are discernible and tangible flaws within the 2021 fact finding material and that this occurred in conjunction with A not having representation to consider and address those matters by the date of trial. Each problem is potentially more significant in the presence of the other. There are other points arising from the 2021 papers but they are less precise than the ones collated above and, therefore, require more speculation. I do not take them into account for the purposes of this judgment. A had no locus to appeal the non-findings (unless by harnessing them to a procedural appeal on discharge of her party status). An appeal was not therefore, impossible, but there were features of this case that sets it apart from cases where a party who has played a full role in a trial may seek to use a reopening remedy having been well placed to make a timely appeal but having failed to do so. I do not consider that this case chimes with the descriptive warning in Re W that reopening should not be: a vehicle for litigants to cast doubt on findings that they do not like or a substitute for an appeal that should have been pursued at the time of the original decision [old arguments dressed up in new ways].
76. In considering (c) whether there is any new evidence or information casting doubt upon the accuracy of the original findings I have noted that in several passages of their written skeleton arguments, it has been suggested that the fact that A now wished to give evidence and was prepared to do may amount to new evidence. The arguments contemplate that A might, now, speak to her own allegations (and any points of challenge made by F2) and that this would represent evidence which had not been capable of being secured in June 2021. As explored during the hearing, and conceded by the LA, I do not accept that that scenario alone would satisfy the test for reopening. The evidence that a person might give in this scenario evidence at a future time is not new evidence. That analysis would fall foul of the mere hope/speculation barrier. As recorded above, the LA conceded orally that it would be unthinkable for the Family Court to entertain the reopening of judgments on the basis that a child witness had gained maturity, rejected a past Re W decision, or simply said they 'now' wanted to give evidence. Oral submissions on behalf of A, M and the guardian took no issue with Mr Howard's concession on this point. Similarly, some passages of the written skeletons sought to characterise the emergence of D's allegations as new evidence which could not have reasonably [sc. have been] discovered at the time (in relation to A's allegations). Again, I do not accept that characterisation. It would not be permissible for a court to take into account the two sets of allegations (similar or not) without more. To have any notional, potential relevance to A's allegations D's allegations would have to be proved to the civil standard and a court would have to be satisfied that they add something by way of propensity or similar fact evidence by reference to the caselaw as to what is permissible. Those are complex areas of law which are applied on a case-specific basis. It is very far from certain that the proof of either child's allegations would be accepted as having corroborative or probative value for the other. As Mr Howard conceded, a floodgates situation may arise should allegations post-dating a fact-finding become an acceptable reason for allowing the reopening of cases.
77. The LA's application does not raise those latter two points in isolation, however. It raises a composite application, as analysed throughout this section and suggests that, as parts of a whole, the issues should lead to the grant of permission to reopen A's allegations. On a fine balance and taking into account all relevant, permitted facts and matters visible in this case at the date of this judgment, I agree. There are grounds to consider that the non-findings need to be revisited. A reopening will allow an unhindered consideration of the alternative-basis threshold with a view to achieving a reliable global factual matrix for the children. This course of action brings similar degrees of advantage and risk to both adult protagonists and will provide a full judicial consideration of their competing cases. A would be afforded representation and participation directions and could present her full case including (i) advancing her own cross examination of F2 and M; (ii) taking cross examination herself and (iii) advancing submissions. This would not be restricted to her sexual allegations: A has standing in relation to the other issues the LA wishes to litigate as a whole alternative-basis Threshold. Moreover, A's own welfare is engaged as a subject child, alongside that of her sibling and half siblings."
The appeal
(1) To refuse a Re W assessment before determining the reopening application.
(2) To consider the discharging of A's party status to be a relevant issue.
(3) To consider criticism of how A was cross-examined in the criminal proceedings to be relevant.
(4) To conclude that a fact-finding exercise in respect of D's allegations and their aetiology would be incomplete without the reopening of A's allegations.
(5) To reopen A's allegations where no "new evidence had emerged which entirely changes the aspect of the case and which could not with reasonable diligence have been ascertained before": Mostyn J in RL v Nottinghamshire CC [2022] EWFC 13, [2022] 2 FLR 1012, [43].
"The court will want to know… (c) whether there is any new evidence or information casting doubt upon the accuracy of the original finding."
And in Re W at [28], referring to "genuine new information": see paragraph 9 above.
Conclusion
RL v Nottinghamshire County Council
"42. The authorities identify two types of case where justice provides an exception to an estoppel preventing re-litigation of the same issue between the same parties:
i) First, and obviously, an anterior judgment can be challenged on the grounds that it was fraudulently obtained: Takhar v. Gracefield Developments Limited [2019] UKSC 13, [2020] AC 450.
ii) Second, an anterior judgment can be challenged on the ground that new facts have emerged which strongly throw into doubt the correctness of the original decision. In Arnold v National Westminster Bank Plc [1991] 2 AC 93 at 109 Lord Keith of Kinkel stated:
"….there may be an exception to issue estoppel in the special circumstance that there has become available to a party further material relevant to the correct determination of a point involved in the earlier proceedings, whether or not that point was specifically raised and decided, being material which could not by reasonable diligence have been adduced in those proceedings. One of the purposes of estoppel being to work justice between the parties, it is open to courts to recognise that in special circumstances inflexible application of it may have the opposite result …"
This exception echoed the well-known decision of the House of Lords in Phosphate Sewage Company Limited v Molleson (1879) 4 App Cas 801 where Lord Cairns LC held that an anterior judgment can be challenged where additional facts had emerged which 'entirely changes the aspect of the case' and which 'could not with reasonable diligence have been ascertained before.' In Allsop at [26] the continuing validity of this exception was affirmed by the Court of Appeal.
43. It therefore seems to me that Jackson LJ's test of "there must be solid grounds for believing that the earlier findings require revisiting", ought to be interpreted conformably with these exceptions if a divergence from the general law is to be averted. This would mean that "solid grounds" would normally only be capable of being shown in special circumstances where new evidence had emerged which entirely changes the aspect of the case and which could not with reasonable diligence have been ascertained before.
…
45. For my part looking at the matter from first principles I cannot see any reason why the general substantive law of res judicata should not apply to children's cases. …
…
49. I naturally accept that Jackson LJ's test is binding on me. I completely agree that there should be a Stage 1 form of permission filter. I completely agree that on a rehearing application mere hope and speculation will never be enough to gain permission. I am merely suggesting an interpretative reconciliation between the solid grounds test and the general law such that solid grounds will normally only be demonstrated where either the fraud exception, or the special circumstances exception, is satisfied."
"whether I apply the general law test of special circumstances or a more liberal interpretation of "solid grounds"."
Outcome
Lady Justice Nicola Davies:
Lady Justice Elisabeth Laing: