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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 >> A Local Authority v AZ & Ors [2024] EWHC 1450 (Fam) (08 May 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2024/1450.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 1450 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
A LOCAL AUTHORITY | Applicant | |
and | ||
AZ (THE MOTHER) | First Respondent | |
and | ||
BX (THE FATHER) | Second Respondent | |
and | ||
(a Child, through their Children's Guardian) | Third Respondent |
____________________
Mr Paul McCandless (instructed by Hawley and Rodgers Solicitors) for the First Respondent
Mr Stephen Williams (instructed by Jackson Quinn Solicitors) for the Second Respondent
Ms Anne Buttler (instructed by Tallents Solicitors) for the Third Respondent
Hearing date: 29 April 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Lieven DBE :
"The case was called on at 9:30 am. Neither the court nor parents' solicitors had booked interpreters for their respective clients. In any event, Mrs Justice Lieven wanted to share her thoughts on the case to assist with out of court discussions. She said:
'I don't know whether there is any scope for movement. I have read the position statement filed on behalf of the Father and I am not convinced that there is a burden on anyone at the welfare stage. The burden goes to findings of fact. I don't think there is a burden in strict legal terms.
If the court sanctions the plan for the Father to keep away from the family home it will be a significant interference of the Article 8 rights of the parents and the children and I would need very clear justification for doing so. I share the Father's concerns about the risk assessment. I have made findings against the Father. There is a significant difference about him posing a risk to [DZ] and to [CX].
There's an impasse and there's no way of breaking it. The Father denies the findings made against him. He can't accept them because he'd be deported if he did. The LA and the Guardian are asking the court to sanction a plan which results in keeping the family apart for the next 15 years. I can't force the Mother to accept the findings and separate from the Father, although I had hoped the Mother would after the fact finding hearing. I am not making any pre-determinations. What am I going to hear at a final hearing that I don't already know? There may be some genius cross examination by Mr Williams of the social worker and the Guardian or by Ms Davis of the Father but where is that going to take me? I know the parameters of this case. I think that probably this Father needs to be allowed home. There is a massive difference in risk between a 10 year old girl and a 3 year old boy. I don't see how any court can justify keeping the Father out of the family home indefinitely and until [CX] is 16 or 18 years old.
If it can't be agreed it will have to wait to list for a final hearing. I can't force the LA and the Guardian to agree, but I invite the LA and the Guardian to search their consciences and consider what a final hearing will achieve. I don't say this with much pleasure but I need an answer as to what is going to change? Where does this case go if the Father is separated from the children for the next 15 years?' What I am saying can't come as a surprise. It's difficult to see what use a safety plan would be if the Father returns to the family home but some thought could be given to some safeguards.
I consider the Mother to be a safety factor, a protective factor. I made a finding that the Mother failed to protect [DZ] but she did try to protect her. Probably. The LA need to get its head round the difference between when something is going on under the surface and, like in this case, where clear findings of fact have been made. The Father comes home into a different environment.'
The case was stood down whilst instructions were taken and when it was called back on the judge was invited to timetable the case to a final hearing, which she did.
Mrs Justice Lieven asked Ms Davis: 'Have the findings I made against the Father been disclosed to the DBS? I made very serious findings about the Father's contact with a child and he's in a job where he is in contact with children.'"
The law
"The court must first ascertain all the circumstances which have a bearing on the suggestions that the judge was biased. It must then ask whether those circumstances would lead a fair minded and informed observer to conclude that there was a real possibility that the tribunal was biased."
"A fair minded and informed observer is neither complacent nor unduly sensitive or suspicious. They know that fairness requires that a judge must be, and must be seen to be, unbiased. They are someone who takes a balanced approach to any information they are given, takes the trouble to inform themselves on all matters that are relevant, is the sort of person who takes the trouble to read the text of an article as well as the headlines, who always reserves judgment on every point until they have seen and fully understood both sides of the argument".
"The root of the appeal is whether a party can have a fair trial. The basis of the application, bias or unfairness, will be different. The concern with fairness is the same. The definition of bias in Porter v Magill and ensuing cases is quite narrow. Accordingly, it cannot be the sole test for recusal. It is necessary to consider the whole of the proceedings to determine whether the judge's approach to the aggrieved party has been biased or more generally unfair."
"There is already a certain amount of authority on the question whether a judge hearing an application (or a trial) which relies on his own previous findings should recuse himself. The general rule is that he should not recuse himself, unless he either considers that he genuinely cannot give one or other party a fair hearing or that a fair minded and informed observer would conclude that there was a real possibility that he would not do so. Although it is obviously convenient in a case of any complexity that a single judge should deal with all relevant matters, actual bias or a real possibility of bias must conclude the matter in favour of the applicant; nevertheless there must be substantial evidence of actual or imputed bias before the general rule can be overcome. All the cases, moreover, emphasise, that the issue of recusal is extremely fact-sensitive."
And
"[32] Usually this court will be astute to support judges exercising what I have called "this delicate jurisdiction" of recusal. But it is also important that judges do not recuse themselves too readily in long and complex cases otherwise the convenience of having a single judge in charge of both the procedural and substantial parts of the case will be seriously undermined . Of course, if the judge himself feels embarrassed to continue, he should not do so ; if he does not so feel, he should."
a. "A judge hearing a family case has a duty to further the overriding object of dealing with cases justly (having regard to any welfare issues) by actively managing the case [FPR 2010 rr 1.1(1) and 1.4(1)] which include identifying the issues at an early stage and deciding promptly which issues need fully investigation and hearing and which do not." [44]
b. "Family judges are encouraged to take control of the management of cases rather than letting the parties litigate the issues of their choosing. In undertaking such a role, a judge must necessarily form, or at least a preliminary, view of the strengths and/or merits of particular aspects of the case. The process may well lead to parties reviewing their position in the light of questioning from the judge and, by agreement, issues being removed form the list of matters that may fall to be determined." [45]
c. "Despite having to adopt a 'pro-active' role in this manner, judges must, however, remain very conscious of the primary judicial role which is to determine, by fair process, those issues which remain live and relevant issues in the proceedings. As the IRH label implies, it is intended that some, if not all, of the issues will be resolved at the IRH stage. The rules are however plain [PFR 2010, PD12A] that 'the court resolves or narrows issues by hearing evidence' and 'identifies the evidence to be heard on the issues which remain to be resolved at the final hearing." [46]
d. "The task of the family judge in these cases is not an easy one. On the one hand he or she is required to be interventionist in managing the proceedings and in identifying the key issues and relevant evidence, but on the other hand the judge must hold back from making an adjudication at a preliminary stage and should only go on to determine issues in the proceedings after having conducted a fair judicial process." [47]
e. "There is, therefore, a real and important difference between the judge at a preliminary hearing inviting a party to consider their position on a particular point, which is permissible and to be encouraged, and the judge summarily deciding the point then and there without a fair and balanced hearing, which is not permissible." [48]
f. "Expressions of judicial opinion, given the need for the judge to manage the case and be directive, are commonplace and would not be supportive of an appeal to this court based upon apparent judicial bias. The question in the present appeal is whether the other observations made by the judge, and the stage in the overall court process that those observations were made, establishes circumstances that would lead a fair minded and informed observer to conclude that there was a real possibility that the judge was biased in the sense that he had formed concluded view of the mother's allegations and her overall veracity." [50]
g. "I am clear that a fair minded and informed observer would indeed have concluded that there was a real possibility that the judge had formed such concluded view at the hearing. I am also concerned that the process adopted by the judge during the hearing prevented there being a fair and balanced process before the judge came to his apparent conclusion." [51]
h. "I am keenly aware of the need to avoid criticising a judge who is doing no more than deploying robust active case management. There is, as I have described, a line, and it may be a thin line in some cases, between case management on the one hand and premature adjudication on the other. The role of a family judge in this respect is not at all easy and I would afford the benefit of the doubt to a judge even if the circumstances were very close to or even on the metaphorical line. Here, I am afraid, the words of the judge to which I have made reference, both separately and when taken together take this case well over the line and indicate at least the real possibility that the judge had formed a concluded view that was adverse to the mother's allegations and her veracity." [54]
i. "I am clear that the process conducted at the CMH on 20 March was seriously flawed, as it was, it was used by the judge to reach any conclusion as to the state of the mother's allegations. It was not a fair process and it was not an evidentially sound process." [56]
j. "The judge strayed beyond the case management role by engaging in an analysis, which by definition could only have been one-sided, of the veracity of the evidence and of the mother's general credibility. The situation was compounded by the judge giving voice to the result of his analysis in unambiguous and conclusive terms in a manner that can only have established in the mind of a fair minded and informed observer that there was a real possibility that the judge had formed a concluded and adverse view of the mother and her allegations at a preliminary stage in the trial process." [57]
The submissions
Conclusions
a. Bias is an attitude of mind by the Court that prevents objective determination, Locabail;
b. It is necessary to consider the whole of the proceedings and not simply one decision, Serafin;
c. A judge should not recuse themselves unless either they think they cannot objectively determine the case, or a reasonable observer would so think, Okrities;
d. There must be substantial evidence to support a finding of pre-determination, Okrities;
e. The necessary dynamic of Family Court cases means that judges need to manage and be directive, including at IRH, Re Q;
f. However, judges must hold back from making summary adjudications without hearing the evidence, Re Q.