OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
[2006] CSOH 122
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F32/05
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OPINION OF LORD McEWAN
in the cause
McG
Pursuer;
against
McG
Defender:
ญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญ________________
|
Pursuer:
Mundy; Balfour & Manson, WS
Defender: Ms Dowdall;
Mathieson Ritch, Glasgow
8 August 2006
[1] The
pursuer in this action is the father of two young children. He is hereinafter referred to as "the
father". He is aged 35 and lives at an
address in Wallyford with his partner, SQ, who is aged 37. The two children are a girl, T, now aged 7
and a boy, C, aged 5. The father's
partner was formerly married and has a female child, M, who is aged 5. The father and SQ have a son, R, born on 3 June 2006. The children T and C live with their mother (hereinafter
referred to as "the mother") at an address in Crookston near Glasgow. The mother is aged 26 and lives with her
partner, WM, who is aged 42. The mother
and father remain married to each other but divorce proceedings are
pending. The only issue before me is
whether the father should have a residence order to both his children and if
not, what should be the proper arrangement for contact. The parties are very much at arm's length and
unable effectively to communicate. The
evidence disclosed an atmosphere of hostility and distrust. Although both parties had parents alive, the
older generation had been forced to take sides and could not mediate in the
best interests of the children.
[2] The
evidence divided fairly easily into chapters viz the breakup of the marriage in July 2004 and a subsequent
arrangement for joint caring; the disappearance of the mother and the children
in November 2004; the resumption of contact in May 2005 and events following
the first diet of proof in April 2006.
Most of the facts were either agreed or not seriously disputed. The father and SQ gave evidence, as did the
mother and WM. There were affidavits
from two grandparents (somewhat dated now) and a school teacher and a very
comprehensive report from Miss Stirling, the Court Reporter.
[3] I
found it established from the evidence of both the father and mother that the
marriage became unhappy in 2004. The
reason for this was not clear and was not explored in any detail. In July 2004, the mother left the matrimonial
home in Wallyford and did not return.
She left the children with the father.
I find that at this time she was already associating with WM. Two weeks after she left the father, the mother
wrote the letter No 6/4 of Process. He
found it in his home. I need not narrate
the letter here. Part of it is averred
on the Record. Suffice to say that it is
fulsome in praise of the father as a parent.
The mother said she had written it two weeks after the separation and
when she was very unhappy. It must have
been a bitter blow for the father to receive it, whatever it said. As the summer went on, the parties split
their time with the children. During the
week, the father would have them two days one week, three the next and the
mother the same. Weekends were taken
alternately. The mother was living with
her parents in Wallyford and their home is only five minutes walk from the
father's. For a time, this arrangement
worked well. The father then met SQ whom
he had known many years before. She had
been married and divorced and had recently returned from Italy
to Gullane. They began a relationship a
few weeks after meeting in September 2004.
[4] It
is convenient here to look at what is averred on Record in Condescendence 3.1
and 3.2. It is said that some of the
difficulties in the marriage were related to the need to discipline the child
C. The system of discipline (which resulted
from a medical referral and which endures to this day) was described by the
father as a two warning regime and then if C continued to misbehave; he was
made to sit on the stairs as a "time out".
It may seem strange and unusual but it appears to work. It is my impression from his evidence that
the father took this discipline more seriously than the mother, but I doubt
that it really contributed in any way to the end of the marriage. That was probably due to the appearance of
another man in the mother's life.
[5] This
uneasy arrangement with the children continued until November 2004. I held it proved (evidence of the father,
mother and WM) that at some point WM lived with the mother at her parents'
house in Wallyford. His presence
exacerbated an already difficult situation.
The Record (Article 3.4) avers that on Thursday 18 November 2004, there was an incident
involving the father and WM when words and threats were exchanged and the
father's car was damaged. The police
were called. The father gave detailed
evidence about what he said had happened and when WM gave evidence he was only
asked about it in cross-examination.
There is no independent evidence to support either conflicting
account. I do not consider it necessary
to make any finding about this matter.
In the first place, I do not think that it is important in itself or to
what I have to decide. The following day
a more important event occurred.
[6] On
Friday 19 November 2004,
the pursuer said that both T and C were delivered to him later than usual. Now the normal arrangement would have been
for the father to drop them off on the Monday following at their grandparents
before he went to work. The mother,
however, sent a text message to say she wanted them back on the Sunday. The father refused by text. According to his evidence, which I accept,
the children were fighting and C was on "time out". Shortly thereafter, the mother came back to
the home and a row developed on the doorstep.
On Record and in her evidence, she alleged that the father pushed her
and punched her. I do not believe
this. The father said that the mother
was shouting and swearing and tried to push open the door. The child C was crying. He said, and I believe him, that he closed
the door on her to end the argument. SQ
was in the house and saw what happened.
Her evidence supports the father and I believe it. It is not disputed that the police were
called and statements taken. Nobody was
charged.
[7] On
the Monday, the father took T and C to their grandparents. He never saw them again for six months, and
in spite of his many efforts, the mother refused to say where they and she
were. From her own evidence, I hold that
she planned all of this. What happened
thereafter is not disputed and I take from the mother's own evidence.
[8] WM
was unemployed. He and the mother were
living in homeless accommodation in Port Seton.
After school on Monday 22 November, the mother took the children to Northern
Ireland for three weeks to stay at the home
of WM's sister. Thereafter all returned
to Glasgow, living first in Ibrox
for some months. Thereafter they lived
in the Shieldhall area and finally moved to their present rented address (noted
on the amended Record) in 2005. The
present house is newly built. The mother
did not tell the father that she intended all of this, far less where she was. She did not even tell her own parents, at
first, but soon told them she and the children were safe and well. One cruel consequence of all of this was that
the father spent a very unhappy Christmas in 2004, not knowing where T and C
were. I am strongly critical of the
mother's behaviour over all of this and her intransigence continued in 2005 as
she had to admit in evidence.
[9] What
then happened is even more extraordinary.
The father said that he had to report his wife and the children as
missing. He made inquiry of the school
in case their records had been requested.
In March 2005, the father received notice of an action of divorce raised
by the mother in Glasgow Sheriff Court. The police also made him aware that the
mother had taken the children to a police station to show that they were alive
and well. By this time, the father was aware
they were in Strathclyde (see Nos 6/7 and 6/8 of Process). The father's mental welfare had deteriorated
and he was unable to work. He had to raise
the present action in the Court of Session with the mother's address as
unknown. It only became known to me when
I insisted upon its disclosure at the first diet of proof and it was finally
amended on to the Record at the hearing on evidence.
[10] On 21 April, the father enrolled for contact and Lord Brodie
heard the motion. A Reporter was
appointed and I have read and considered her very full report. Moving slightly ahead, a detailed residential
contact order was made by Lord Hodge on 30 June effectively for alternate
weekends. The father, however, had to
collect and redeliver the children at a neutral point in Glasgow. This he duly did and contact took place. Accordingly, the children have to make the
round trip from Govan Cross to Wallyford and back every other weekend. The father has to do all the driving. I will return to this matter shortly.
[11] However, before contact was regularised, the father was allowed
to see the children on 7 May 2005
at the Glasgow Contact Centre in Renfield Street. Contact was for a short time and was
fraught. He took about six other
relations with him. No doubt they were
all anxious to see T and C but in my opinion so many was unwise. The mother and WM were of course there and
when the father and the others took the children for a walk, he thought WM was
following him. The mother and WM denied
this and said they went away in a bus.
What happened next was that the father received a threatening call on
his mobile phone to the effect that he would never see his children again. The pursuer's mother overheard the threat
(see her affidavit - No.6/6 of process) and the parties then reported it to the
police. The father considered the threat
had been made by WM but he and the mother denied it. I think that the pursuer has proved that
somebody made the threat but on the evidence I cannot hold that it was WM on
the other phone.
[12] Before returning to contact, there is another matter which I
should note, as it was not disputed. It
concerns the matrimonial home in Wallyford.
By 2005, the pursuer and SQ were living together there. The house had to be sold and the pursuer
wanted to sell it to the Local Authority who would have allowed him to remain
as a tenant. The defender would not
agree to that and as a result the house was sold on the open market late in
2005. This had two consequences. The pursuer and SQ became homeless and had to
live in temporary accommodation until their present house was built. They were only able to move there in March
2006. The other consequence is that
there remains a sum of money which both parties will eventually have to
share. There exists, unsurprisingly, a
dispute about it.
[13] I now resume consideration of contact. It has to be appreciated that the only
communication the parties have with each other is through solicitors. This is depressing and leads to continual
problems over dates of residential contact and other necessary
arrangements. Late in the day, both
acknowledged that they would have to seek the help of the mediation
services. The burden of the contact
arrangement fell on the father and he is to be commended for making the
arrangement work. There were
problems. At times traffic was heavy and
he might run late. I hold it established
that he kept the mother informed about this.
I also accept the father when he said that there were some cold and
hostile exchanges at Govan Cross, especially when WM was present. I am sure the children were aware of
this. While the mother did not frustrate
contact, she did very little actively to encourage anything beyond what the
court allowed. That was the situation
faced by me at the first diet of proof in April 2006. I indicated that I was not content with the
existing arrangement having heard the evidence I have just described. For example, the pursuer said that he often
returned the children to Glasgow on
Sunday evening only to find on Monday that the defender had brought them back by
car to Wallyford to see their grandparents.
At the end of the second day of proof, the pursuer moved a variation to
request that the mother deliver them to Wallyford and he would return
them. The defender did not willingly
agree to this proposal which would have shared the burden. Through her counsel, she said that she did
not want the pursuer coming to her home and that she could not afford to take
the children by road or rail. I found
all of this unconvincing. The defender
had chosen to go to live in Glasgow
away from her own family and most of the children's relatives. I accordingly varied the contact arrangements
to make her responsible for delivery in Wallyford. I also indicated that I wanted to be told on
4 July that the arrangement was working.
[14] On four occasions contact has happened. Since all of these are recent events there
are no averments on Record as to what happened.
I only heard from the parties SQ and WM.
The evidence was conflicting and it would have helped to have had an
independent view. Witnesses who could
have been called were not. I suspect
that any difficulties were more apparent than real and the ongoing hostile
exchanges soon forgotten. On 5 May,
contact took place. I am prepared to
accept that when the children were handed over in a kind of "no man's land" at
the end of a vennel that voices were raised.
The pursuer and SQ said WM was there and swore and issued threats. The defender and WM denied it. I have no independent corroboration and can
form no view. It is something and
nothing. There was contact on 19 May but
again the pursuer had to do all the driving.
The defender said her car had broken down. On 2 June, there was an alleged incident with
the defender's father involving the Wallyford Gala day and a problem with what
shoes T was to wear at the Gala. Once
more a number of independent people must have heard and witnessed events but
were not called. Again it is something
and nothing. That night the baby R. was
born. On 16 June, contact was
successful. I hold it proved that the
defender refused the pursuer contact to C on his birthday. The father was, however, allowed to phone his
son.
[15] There is one final matter over contact which needs mentioned as
it is illustrative of the attitude of the parties, especially the
defender. During the continued proof in
July, it became apparent that the defender and the children were living in
Wallyford at her parents' home. The
father was not offered any contact by the mother. I insisted that some contact take place and
this happened without difficulty on Thursday 7 July.
[16] I now move to consider the accommodation each party can offer
and the respective merits of Wallyford over Crookston. The defender's home is recently built. It is in a cul de sac. There are three bedrooms and each child has
their own bedroom. It has a secure rear
garden. Both children have friends of
their own age in the area. The defender
and WM spend time with the children and share cooking, cleaning, playing with
and reading to the children. They are
taken to parties and a nearby park. They
also have a new extended family. WM has
a mother and sisters who have children.
Obviously, when the defender takes the children to her parents in
Wallyford, they see her sister and brother and cousins. The girl T, has started brownies and dancing
classes. WM has a child, G, (now 12 years
old) from a former relationship, whom he brought up. He has contact with her regularly.
[17] Something should be said here about the suggestion made by the
pursuer that the children have been in betting shops and public houses. The pursuer blames WM for this. However, the source of this belief is chance
comments made by the children. For
example, C is alleged to have been somewhere where there were televisions
showing horses. I attach little
importance to the alleged remarks of the children to either party. Such remarks are hearsay, uncorroborated and
cannot be cross‑examined. At best,
they are unreliable. Also, it is well known
especially in cases like this that children can be "coached" to pass on the
opinion of a parent or to say what the other party does not want to hear. At other times, children of that age can
simply have a vivid imagination. In this
case, I do not accept what the pursuer has said. I am certain that it stems from his intense
dislike of WM. I believed the defender
and WM who said that the children have only been on licensed premises when all
were there for a meal. C has, it was
accepted, been in a snooker hall when he may coincidentally have seen horse
racing on TV.
[18] The accommodation in Wallyford is comparable but in some ways
less satisfactory. The pursuer's house
is newly built and is in a safe environment.
There are three bedrooms. The
pursuer and SQ share one with the baby R.
M sleeps in another one. When
contact takes place, T shares with M and at present C has his own room. When R is old enough, he will also have that
room. Should the children go to
Wallyford, the sleeping arrangements on a permanent basis would be cramped as
the children grow up. I have no doubt
they work well at contact time.
[19] I accept that the playing and social facilities in Wallyford
are good. C and T would be closer to
most of their extended family. The
pursuer strongly emphasised this in his evidence, yet the proof disclosed at
least two unfortunate features. He is
estranged from his own father and has some ongoing problem with one of his
sisters.
[20] What of education? The
children have not been to school in Wallyford since they left. However, the evidence shows that there is a
perfectly good primary school there and I do not doubt that they would both
settle there (see 6/18 of Process). At
present they go to a primary school and nursery in Glasgow (see Nos 6/13, 6/15
and 6/20 and 6/21 of Process; also 7/8, 7/1 and 7/5). It is clear that both children are doing well
at school. Something was made about
school absences. They do appear to be
significant but in the context of a disrupted family and the problems of
contact, I do not think it is demonstrated that they are excessive or causing
any problem with ongoing education.
[21] There was a short hearing on evidence and the arguments of the
parties may be summarised thus.
[22] Mr Mundy moved me to grant a residence order and then put the
case out By Order for a further hearing on contact. He suggested, and I agree, that both children
are too young to be interviewed. Counsel
took me to the Children (Scotland)
Act, 1995 Section 11, and referred me to the case of White v White 2001 SC 689
at 698/9. Past events were only relevant
insofar as they reflected on the parent's capacity. The behaviour of the mother in going to Ireland
was wholly irresponsible and even now she would not accept that she had been
foolish to disappear for so long.
Counsel said that there had to be a change now for the children; the
mother should move back to Wallyford and shared care be reinstated. That would obviate all the travelling. The father was the more likely to act in
their best interest. All of their family
were in the Wallyford area and a better life was to be had there. The mother had shown that she would only obey
court orders and when forced to do so viz
the arrangement imposed on her in April.
At one stage she wanted contact to cease (see No 16 of Process at page
32). She had shown herself to be
untruthful or at least deceitful in the letter No 6/4 of process. The Court Reporter had disbelieved her in
part. The school attendance figures in Glasgow
were not satisfactory. The defender was
mainly to blame for any recent access problems in Wallyford.
[23] For the mother, Miss Dowdalls said that the children should
remain in Glasgow with the defender
and WM. They were settled in a new home
and progressing well at the same school.
In 2004, they were not at school and although shared care worked for a
few months it was not an option now. The
defender had no intention of leaving Glasgow
and the children had not now lived in Wallyford for almost two years. There was no evidence that the children were
suffering in any way or that they were not well cared for. They had more space in their present home; contact
was ongoing and of benefit to the children.
It had to be recognised that the pursuer's circumstances had changed
since 2004. Shortly after the defender
left, he began living with another woman and she would be the main carer of the
children if they were to reside in Wallyford.
SQ had two children of her own, one very young. T and C had not lived with that family. It was also likely that the pursuer would
resume work soon which would put an extra burden on SQ.
[24] The mother had been the main carer of the children since
birth. Although her parents lived in
Wallyford, the father now had no happy relationship with them as evinced by the
Gala day episode. Both parties were at
fault over contact, largely due to an unwillingness or inability to communicate. Summer contact had been resolved. The children should suffer no further
avoidable disruption. The mother should
not be punished for any past misdemeanours.
That would be to penalise the children and conduct an experiment on
them. Residence to the pursuer should be
refused, and the court should regulate contact with or without mediation.
[25] What then is to be done?
In my view, much of the evidence relating to the present is fairly
evenly balanced. For example, I am sure
schooling and general amenity comes out even between Glasgow and
Wallyford. Neither the pursuer nor WM
are working at present, although both indicated that they intend to do so when
matters settle down. It is a matter of
great concern that the parties do not communicate in a way which is to the
benefit of the children. Children apart,
and having seen them both in the witness box, I suspect that there is something
very deep seated wrong with their relationship.
The matter was not investigated in this process, and I can only hope
things will improve. The various
estrangements within Wallyford are unhelpful at the present time.
[26] I do not think I can or should attach great importance to past
events or the problems of contact. In
this latter respect, I am sure there have been faults on both sides. As I have stated earlier, I have only heard
conflicting accounts from both sides and without some independent witness, it
is almost impossible to make sensible findings on credibility. It is quite clear that other people witnessed
some of the events spoken about but were not called. I can only hope that the contact ongoing as
this opinion is being written will work; and I will review it later this
summer.
[27] Something was said about the Report No 16 of Process. It is an excellent report and I compliment
Miss Stirling. It is quite true that she
found the defender untruthful in part but the same could be said of the
pursuer. The report is now dated and,
for that reason alone, it cannot be decisive for present purposes. What is decisive, in my opinion, is the home
environment. The defender, for all her
faults, has been the principal carer of the children since birth. They are well looked after and are thriving. They appear to be fond of WM and he of
them. Their schooling is satisfactory. They do have better accommodation in Glasgow,
each with their own bedroom. The
defender intends to stay in Glasgow.
[28] On the other hand, if they were to move to Wallyford, they would
have less accommodation and T would have to share a bedroom. Also, they would be growing up in a new
family to which they would be unused. SQ
was a good witness, but I think caring for four children is not a burden she
should be asked to bear at this time, especially if the pursuer went back to
work. It is my opinion that it is in the
best interests of T and C to grow up together and remain where they are in Glasgow. I have been critical of the defender over her
behaviour in 2004/5. I have confidence
that no such wanton act will ever be repeated.
She must now be well aware of what would be the consequences.
[29] I will accordingly refuse the first conclusion of the summons
and find it unnecessary to deal with the second and fourth conclusions. I will repel the pursuer's first, third and
fifth pleas-in-law. I will sustain the
first, third and fifth pleas-in-law for the defender. Quoad
ultra I will put the case out By Order on a date to be fixed for further
discussion on contact and disposal of the remaining pleas-in-law.