![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> RMM v HW & Ors [2010] EWCA Civ 1467 (17 December 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/1467.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Civ 1467 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE WOLVERHAMPTON COUNTY COURT
HER HONOUR JUDGE WATSON
LOWER COURT NO: VP10C00035
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WILSON
and
LORD JUSTICE STANLEY BURNTON
____________________
Re M (A Child) RMM |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
HW - and - SANDWELL METROPOLITAN BOROUGH COUNCIL - and - ESM (by his Children's Guardian) |
First Respondent and Cross-Appellant Second Respondents Third Respondent |
____________________
Miss Margaret Hodgson (instructed by Anthony Collins Solicitors LLP, Birmingham) appeared for the First Respondent and Cross-Appellant, the mother.
Mr Sylvester McIlwain (instructed by their legal department) appeared for the Second Respondents, the local authority.
There was no appearance on behalf of the Third Respondent, the child by his Children's Guardian.
Hearing date: 10 December 2010
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Wilson:
(a) E had low oxygen saturation: this means that there was a reduced amount of oxygen in his blood. It led him to appear cyanosed: this means that he exhibited the blue discolouration associated with insufficient oxygen.(b) E had a raised respiratory rate and a fast pulse.
(c) E had a capillary refill time of more than four seconds, i.e. it was unduly long. A basic test for capillary refill time is, with a finger, to press hard against an area of skin at the periphery of the body, such as on the feet, until it is white and then, having removed the finger, to measure the time until the skin returns to its previous colour.
(d) Blood was smeared around E's nose and mouth: it is agreed that he had suffered epistaxis, i.e. a nose-bleed.
"… there is one particular feature of this presentation which calls for careful consideration: the presence of a nose-bleed … Nose-bleeds are extremely unusual in young babies; a recent study (see Appendix 2) states that most cases have a benign explanation …, some will have no explanation but that physical abuse, especially partial suffocation, should be considered."
Later he wrote:
"This was a significant event and the presence of nasal bleeding combined with the absence of any other explanation must raise a serious question as to whether this episode was abusive and, indeed, partial suffocation."
"Mr Lopez: There may be an entirely innocent explanation for the nose-bleed …
The doctor: That's possible.
Mr Lopez: … and that has to be put into the account when looking at the nose-bleed with the ALTE does it not?
The doctor: They could both have completely innocent explanations … but a combination is, as I have said, very suspicious.
Mr Lopez: … the judge cannot decide things on the basis of suspicion. She has to decide on a completely different basis to that.
The doctor: I understand that."
"Mr Lopez: The symptoms that you describe would have been similar if it was a serious event, whether somebody tried to obstruct the child's breathing or whether there was some innocent explanation?
The doctor: That's correct. But the problem is that there isn't an obvious other explanation.
Mr Lopez: No.
The doctor: Coupled, as I said, with the epistaxis. Both of those. As I say, with ALTEs we do not always find a cause. We don't always find a cause for epistaxis. The two together, you are making a pattern. … It's not mathematical, but doctors work very, very much on patterns.
Mr Lopez: … What you are saying is this, each one by themselves make me worried?
The doctor: Yes.
Mr Lopez: The two together make me more worried?
The doctor: Absolutely."
"It is suggested that he did not apply his mind to the legal test of the balance of probabilities but I remind myself that experts advise, and judges decide on the basis of all the evidence. I am satisfied that Dr Hinde was referring to clinical possibilities and that his evidence amounted to a clear statement that on the balance of probabilities the most likely cause for the ALTE and epistaxis on 17 October 2009 was an imposed upper airway obstruction. In the absence of an explanation which I find the father should have and could have given the doctors if this was an accidental event, then this was on the balance of probability an abusive event, probably partial suffocation, perpetrated by [the] father …"
"I was left with the distinct impression that there was something which father was not telling the court, whether through fear of the consequences or self-protection. I was struck by what was described as his candour in giving evidence and in every respect he was an impressive witness but there was this missing link in his oral evidence to the court. In cross-examination he candidly said that only he was there and only he knew what had happened but he did not expand further."
"Counsel: … The causation of that was that [E] had been held down.
The father: That's nonsense.
…
Counsel: Are you sure about that?
The father: I am 100% sure."
The judge described those answers on the father's part as not only emphatic, which they obviously were, but "quite defensive". She said that he had not held E down but "declined to say what had in fact happened." Her verdict was that the father did have an explanation but was choosing not to give it to her. The judge's adverse inference from this exchange is the subject of particular criticism on the part of Mr Lopez. In his oral submissions it ranks as his first point. What more, asks Mr Lopez, can an innocent man do than firmly to deny the allegation that he had partially suffocated his baby by holding him down? How can that particular exchange possibly be placed in the scales against him? The problem – and it is one which permeates every aspect of our role in hearing an appeal of this character – is that I and my colleagues were not in Wolverhampton to listen to the exchange. As we study the words in the transcript, we follow Mr Lopez's point. But what was the emphasis or tone of voice adopted by the father in giving those answers? The judge, I deduce, listened to his answers and sensed that they were those of a father who – between the lines – was saying: "Well, whatever else I did, I did not hold E down". I am sure that it would have been dangerous for the judge to attach substantial weight to the point. But her description of it was that it was "significant" and I feel unable, from this vantage-point, to conclude that she was not entitled to attach some weight to it.
Lord Justice Stanley Burnton:
Lord Justice Rix: