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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> M & L (Children) [2007] EWCA Civ 1307 (30 October 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/1307.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 1307 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM KINGSTON-UPON-HULL COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE BARBER)
(LOWER COURT NO. KH07CO9041)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WILSON
and
MR JUSTICE HOLMAN
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IN THE MATTER OF M AND L (Children) |
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Miss J Pye (instructed by East Riding of Yorkshire Council) appeared on behalf of the Respondent Local Authority.
Mr J Sampson (instructed by Messrs Myer Wolf Solicitors, Hull) appeared on behalf of the Respondent Children by their Children's Guardian.
Miss E Shaw (instructed by Messrs Martin & Haigh Solicitors, Scunthorpe) appeared on behalf of the Respondent Mother.
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Lord Justice Wilson:
"I have to say that [at] the end of that tranche of evidence I have and continue to have a lingering doubt on that evidence alone about what [E] has to say. I have lingering doubt about feeling satisfied as to the appropriate standard to find these allegations proved on the appropriate standard, albeit I have to say that the doubt is only lingering."
Thereupon, however, the judge proceeded as follows:
"I ask myself at this juncture, "Is there anything else that helps me?" Well, there certainly is. I have seen and heard from both mother and father. I have heard evidence from witnesses and of course I have read the papers."
Then the judge went on to describe the overall impression which each parent had made upon him when they had been in the witness box.
"[Mr Comaish] says that, in the light of [the father's] stout denials, I cannot be satisfied about this child's veracity, credibility."
Finally Mr Heaton points out that in no subsequent part of the judgment did the judge expressly refer to such of the father's evidence as directly related to the allegations made by E. Thus, says Mr Heaton, if that part of the father's evidence was not referred to, however elliptically, prior to paragraph 15, it was not referred to at all. Of course Mr Heaton follows up with a complaint that, in that event, the judgment would indeed be faulty. The firmest submission for the contrary view comes from Mr Sampson on behalf of the three children, by the guardian. He points out in particular that it was only after the judge's reference to "that tranche of evidence" that he referred most explicitly to the evidence of the parents and other witnesses and to the impression which each parent had made on him when in the witness box.
(a) on an occasion in 1999 the father head-butted the mother, thereby causing her to lose her balance and consciousness, and that, in giving his version of the incident, namely that it was an accident, the father had been lying about it;
(b) on an occasion in 2000 the father had tied the mother to a bed and attempted to rape her;
(c) on 19 February 2000 the father had raped the mother and that in his evidence to the court the father had not told the truth about that incident;
(d) that on a Friday in 2004 the father had raped the mother.
"The person with the voracious and almost unstoppable [sexual] appetite was [the father]. One remarkable feature of this particular case is that [the father's] desire for oral sex was such that [the mother] bought for him a device shaped like a mouth which simulates oral sex. She did that in order to give him a hint that it was not something she enjoyed particularly, but there it is and nobody disputes that such a sex toy was bought albeit [the father] said he never used it."
"Did he have oral sex with [E]? So we are coming back to making a full circle. Revisiting the allegation that [E] made, I have to say having heard all the evidence, having decided about credibility, having remarked upon [the father's] desire for oral sex I have no doubt whatsoever that [E's] complaints are well-founded. They are not just proved to me on balance of probability bearing in mind the appropriate standard and the appropriate test they have to apply which I referred to at the beginning of this judgment. I have to say I am sure about it beyond doubt.
I also take into account the allegations made by … a 16 year old girl who on occasions babysat for [the father] and she is now 18. When she was 16 she developed a crush on him. I find that on her, initially, undisputed evidence, one evening, [the father] invited her to watch a DVD at his home. When there he plied her with drink, alcohol, sat next door to her on the sofa and kissed her and put his tongue in her mouth. She realised, albeit that she had a crush on him, that there was something further that may well happen and so she went home. She became nervous and left, in my judgment a very sensible decision. All this at the end leads me to conclude that [E] has indeed suffered significant sexual and emotional harm from [the father]."
"It is on the whole undesirable that the process of judicial decision-making on issues of fact should diverge more than it need from the process followed by rational, objective and fair-minded people called upon to decide questions of fact in other contexts where reaching the right answer matters."
Lord Justice Holman:
Mr Justice Ward:
"… having decided about credibility, having remarked on [the father's] desire for oral sex I have no doubt whatsoever that E's complaints are well-founded."
Order: Application refused