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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> TH v RB [2008] EWCA Civ 539 (20 May 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/539.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 539 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM
MR RECORDER ROSE
29th November 2007
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WALL
and
LORD JUSTICE STANLEY BURNTON
____________________
TH |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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RB H (A Child) |
Respondent |
____________________
Taryn Lee (instructed by Messrs Stuart Gordons - Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 15th May 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Wall :
Introduction
On 10 November 2006 at [address given] the (appellant) administered to the respondent a harmful dose of medication with the intention of killing her or of causing her serious harm.
The background to the application
On 10th November 2006, the (mother) was admitted to hospital following her collapsing at home. There is no dispute but that she was diagnosed as suffering from an overdose, almost certainly of paracetamol. She alleged that she had been poisoned by (the father) in that he had made her a milkshake in which an excessive dose of paracetamol had been dissolved. Her allegation resulted in the arrest of the (father) who, when interviewed by the police and from then onwards denied that he had anything to do with the overdose and suggested that the (mother) had taken a voluntary overdose and was blaming it on him.
Other relevant background material
1. Yes, there is a previous history of taking overdose on 7th March 2002. She was seen at the time by the Rescue Management team and declined offers of input from psychiatric services, stating that she did not feel this would help her social problems.
2. Other than the above statement there is no record of her seeking or being subject to any psychiatric treatment.
3. There is no reference in her medical notes to her suffering from any form of mental illness, including depression.
There was an incident that has just come to my knowledge now when I have seen the doctor's letter back to the letter form my solicitor wrote to her that on that incident I was admitted to hospital. I was not aware of anything what has been said to them when I was admitted because I didn't speak to the doctor at first, I was unconscious, when I woke up they asked me if I needed any psychiatric treatment and what I had eaten and what I drank that day. I told them. I was on that occasion locked up in a room by my husband.
After an intervention by the Recorder, the mother added: -
Yeah, I was a bit shocked then why they asking me that because they didn't go into full detail as to what has happened, so I said no, I've got a bit of social problems but psychiatric treatment is hardly gong to help sort social problems. So I didn't have any psychiatric treatment for it then. The reason why I did end up in hospital then was I was locked up by my previous husband in the bedroom for two days and I was starved during that time so I passed out. As far as I am aware that is all what has happened to me and I have not done anything other than that. What has been said in the hospital when I have been admitted is something I can't comment on because I've never known that. I've never had any reason to ask for it until this has come to light.
The forensic evidence from the father's trial
The Recorder's findings
It is quite clear from this passage that (the mother) was being less than honest with the court when she claimed to have drunk the whole of the milkshake, and that she had done so because her husband had made her do so. I am further of the view that the (mother) sought to mislead the court in her effort to persuade me that her religious observance made it mandatory for her to consume all of the milkshake and throw none of it away.
Had (the mother) taken paracetamol tablets in the usual manner, washed down with water, there would be no reason for there to be traces of the drug in the glass from which she drank. There would be no reason for (the mother) to perform the task of crushing the tablets and ensuring that they had dissolved in the liquid of the milkshake before ingesting them. It seems to me that the only circumstances in which there would be traces of paracetamol in a glass would be if paracetamol tablets had been crushed and their powder placed into the glass, in solution, and the solution then drunk. Therefore the forensic findings in my view are consistent only with the paracetamol tablets being crushed into a solution which was then drunk.
I find that (the father) had crushed paracetamol tablets using the mortar and pestle but had then been able to wash these items thoroughly, removing any trace of the drug. The glass from which the (mother) had drunk was not washed as thoroughly, and the traces of residue demonstrate that there had indeed been paracetamol; in solution in the drink in that glass. The (father) had done this intending to kill his wife, to give him care of (FH) and to ensure that he would be allowed to remain in the United Kingdom, indefinitely, once the authorities understood he was the widowed father of this young child.
The grounds of appeal
That the court was in error in finding the allegation made out by reason of: -
1. Making the finding on less than cogent evidence
2. Making the finding that being inconsistent with other findings made by the learned judge
3. Making findings on the basis of speculation rather than evidence.
The development of the grounds of appeal in written and oral argument
Although the appellant's right to remain had been an issue since January 2006 there was nothing happening to cause him to believe that he was in imminent danger of being refused leave much less of being deported. Thus it played on his mind but without any sense of urgency." (counsel's emphasis)
However, the Recorder had found in paragraphs 39 of this judgment that the father decided to try to kill his wife because
"the (father) wished to be rid of her to ensure that he could obtain permanent leave to remain in the United Kingdom as the sole parent of FH".
The case for the mother
Conclusion