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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 >> K (Children) [2006] EWCA Civ 1205 (27 July 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1205.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 1205 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CHELMSFORD COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE NEWTON)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WALL
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K (CHILDREN) |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
THE RESPONDENT DID NOT APPEAR AND WAS NOT REPRESENTED.
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Crown Copyright ©
"It may be that this case is going to be resolved in submissions in due course, but as your Honour would know, it is a case of a client hearing it and feeling that he has had an input."
To which the judge replied:
"I confess that I had not expected there to be evidence. I am not suggesting there should not be, in any way. But I have obviously read the statements filed by the mother and by the step-father and I am aware of the law."
"I shall hear the case, I shall hear your submissions, and I shall give a judgment."
"I am told that your client is about to arrive or has just arrived at court, or is arriving shortly."
He then said to Mr Chippeck:
"I do not know whether you want me to break or you want me to finish off? What do you want me to do?"
"Your Honour, in these circumstances I think I should ask your Honour to break. I think I should inform him immediately of what has happened and then report back to you with what the position is. Can I say, there may be, and I know your Honour has been put in a very difficult position by this, but there may be other arguments that I may be instructed to put forward, and it may be that one may need to consider what has been said in your Honour's judgment in a preliminary sense because your Honour has not had the advantage of hearing my submissions based on instructions."
"Well, I am afraid I do not accept that and I should say that in the course of my judgment I have obviously had to have regard for the human rights under Articles 6 and 8, both your right to family life and a fair hearing but also of course the children's and the mother's, and I have had to balance that. I take the view that somebody is instructed to put forward a case, you clearly have been properly instructed. I am well aware that you have not met your client before today but it seems to me that the court is entitled to take the view that if you are represented by counsel, albeit you are not there to give detailed instructions, on an issue where the matter is well set out in the papers in any event – well, we will see where we go. I will break for a short while, allow you to meet your client and then you can make such application as you wish."
"Your Honour had reached a point in time when your Honour had, as it were, given judgment. Then it became apparent to your Honour that my client being brought, and it is a rather unusual position. There are some factual matters I would like to address the court about."
The judge replied:
"Yes of course."
"However, it seems to me the position is as follows. Even if I accept, and I do for the purposes of this second and subsidiary judgment, that the submissions made to me on Mr M's behalf are that he has tried to see his half-siblings and in addition that he has had a relationship albeit with his mother but less frequently, nonetheless, it seems to me that I must direct my attention to section 10(9) of the Children Act and I remind myself that this is really an application for indirect identity contact, if you like, at least in the first instance, so far as these three children are concerned, with whom I am primary concerned, their welfare being my primary consideration not Mr M."
"The connection with those three children is that he is not a parent but he is a half-brother, so the situation is somewhat different from that which is frequently before the court. However, it seems to me that the relationship of a fractured relationship that exists between Mr M and his mother and his family generally, which he feels even more keenly now than he probably ever has, is not something which is going to be put right by this application. Indeed, in my judgment it seems to me that there is a very high risk of the existence of an application being corrosive to the children's welfare. It seems to me that it is entirely likely that they will be harmed, and significantly harmed, by it because of the way in which this has come about and the position as far as the family generally is concerned."
"It is submitted to me that he, 'loves his mother to pieces' and I have commented that this forum is not the forum, that [it] is not the way to mend fractured relationships. He knows where his mother is as I understand it. There is nothing to prevent some form of communication taking place, albeit that is going to be difficult from the circumstances in which he currently finds himself. With a bit more time and a bit more trust, it may be, and I hope it will be, that Mrs K takes to heart what I have said about my uncomfortableness of secrets, she may or may not, but it is her interests as much as the children's interest that she does so. It seems to me that in the circumstances, notwithstanding the change of factual situation, which I take into account, it is not appropriate and I do not give permission in these circumstances. So my order remains the same. I am not insensible to the difficulties which Mr M faces, but it seems to me as I said earlier having regard to Articles 6 and 8, I have tried to deal with this matter fairly in relation to all parties and having regard to each party's right, my primary consideration being of course the welfare of A, S and B."
The reference to "secrets" is as I indicated earlier that the three girls are not aware I think even of Mr M's existence, and they are certainly not aware that he is prison serving a life sentence for murder.
Order: Application refused.