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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> S (A Child), Re [2012] EWCA Civ 1031 (24 July 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1031.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 1031 |
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ON APPEAL FROM WANDSWORTH COUNTY COURT
HER HONOUR JUDGE KNOWLES
WT11P00181
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE NORRIS
and
SIR MARK POTTER
____________________
S ( Child) |
____________________
Miss Joanna Toch (instructed by Broadway Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 25th May 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir Mark Potter:
Introduction
Background and Procedural History
"The Applicant is deeply concerned and believes, if the Respondent moves B from London, he will lose contact with the child given the distance. The Applicant also fears for B's safety should the Respondent be allowed to solely care for B without assistance. The Applicant asks that the Court grant a Prohibited Steps Order to prevent the Respondent from moving B from London."
[N.B. the reference to "residency" was not a term of art. It simply referred to the arrangement set out in paragraph 7 above.]
"It is my opinion that any changes in their current circumstance would cause emotional upheaval for B as she is settled into a routine of travelling between [the father] and [the mother].
[The mother] told me that she wants [the father] to stop making such allegations and move forward with their lives. [The mother] is correct in stating that it is not good for B's emotional development."
"I am supportive of [the mother] and the current arrangements for [the father] to continue to have a shared residence in regards to B as it currently stands as this will ensure B continues to receive the consistency of care and stability from her mother.
It is vital that both parents engage with the mediation service as their relationship is acrimonious and if this is left to continue it will affect B's emotional development later on in life
I therefore summarise the main points as directed by the Court in the Orders of 27 April and 20 June as follows: I am recommending the Joint Residence Order continues, it follows that I recommend that residency for B during the holiday times is divided between [the mother] and [the father] this should be explored and agreed in mediation, as it is unclear at this stage what the holiday arrangements would be for both [mother] and [father].
[Again, it should be noted that despite the reference to a Joint Residence Order, none such existed; there was simply the arrangement offered by the mother and operated between the parties after they parted, whereby the father had contact from 9 a.m. on Saturday to 6 p.m. on Sunday.]
With regards to [the mother's] move to Norwich, this she states has been put on hold as she reiterates she does not have any such plans for the time being. If she were to move, she would not do so without consulting [the father] with regards to this.
Children's Social Care do not have any current role to play in B's life as we do not have any concerns for her welfare at present."
"1. I found no indications that [the mother] is currently presenting with a mental illness or personality disorder. I believe she was post-natally depressed in 2010 and in the longer term she is very likely to be presenting, and continuing to present with emotionally unstable personality features. I considered whether she meets criteria for an emotionally unstable personality disorder and do not believe her difficulties are of sufficient severity and there are too many positive aspects to her presentation as well.
2. My overall formulation is that her difficulties with [the father] should be understood in context and that it would be an incomplete explanation of what has gone on to single her out as the disturbed one.
3. An important difference between them seems to be that she is an externaliser and therefore expresses her feelings and 'lets it all out'. [The father] could have been just as angry and problematic but in a passive rather than active way. In this way, he looks less disturbed and she looks much more disturbed. With informed speculation I would suggest this is unlikely to be the whole story.
4. Despite [the mother's] history of aggression with [the father], the best way forward, is, of course, peace, and a new settlement that re-labels the situation as a challenge. This would be so that B doesn't grow up with parents locked in a messy battle with no winners. Both need to back down from trying to win and be right and instead re-centre B's needs. I suggest they go for mediation.
5. [The mother] has had psychological treatment which she views as having been helpful. I do not see her as having a pressing need for more at this juncture. In the medium term, however, she should seriously consider engaging in psychoanalytic psychotherapy to assist with her deeper characterological problems which are undoubted in my view.
6. [The mother] denied to me being violent with a previous partner although I have read Section G which suggests otherwise. If it is later confirmed that she had assaulted a previous partner this would not be entirely surprising. The context of that, too, would need to be understood."
"I believe that I can no longer make compromises where the emotional and physical wellbeing of my daughter is at stake. [The mother's] inability to face and deal with her problems poses a risk for evermore to B and Children's Services have proved absolutely incapable of assessing risk to B let alone dealing with it long term. The risks are still real, escalated and unaddressed, hence my position is modified in line with the provision in my first statement and my humble request is for sole residency to be awarded to me. This will allow me better authority to plan, assess and regulate B's environment for evermore."
The Judgment
"the amount of time that B should spend with each of her parents and whether that should be in the form of a Sole Residence Order to one parent with contact to the other, or whether there should be a Shared Residence Order. In reaching those decisions, I have to bring into play the existence of the current Prohibited Steps Order, bearing in mind that the Father's case is that B should continue to live in close proximity to him and in circumstances that she should then be able to move between each parent midweek and midway through the weekend, whereas the mother says that it is wrong that she should be forced to live her life around the father's wishes, given that she is anxious to return to the area of Norwich where she lived for some seven years before she met the Father. She feels that this would be a happier, safer and healthier environment in which to bring up B, rather than Tooting. In any event, she maintains that the majority of the time should be spent with her on the basis of B's young age and that B has bonded with her as her primary carer." (See paragraph 14 of Judgment.)
"64. Had he acted appropriately then the whole situation could have been totally avoided, or defused and the child reassured. To involve the police on the basis the father says that he was simply seeking advice is neither credible nor appropriate. The father is an intelligent, professional, man and, as such, would have known full well it is not for the police to mediate at contact handovers.
65. The only construction that I can put upon that incident is that the father was trying to maximise the impact that he says that the absence of the Mother makes on handovers and trying, again, to discredit the Mother and portray her in a bad light for not being there. The fact this incident follows on from the totally unacceptable behaviour of the father only two days before when he picked up B can only serve to reinforce my view that the father has had scant regard for his actions and their impact upon B's wellbeing."
"77. The father is determined at all costs, I find, to ensure that the mother must know nothing of B's activities whilst she is with him or who she may come into contact with. I am afraid that I can repose no confidence in the Father ceasing his overt aggression to the Mother manifested in those incidents and texts once this case is concluded.
78. My conclusion, therefore, having heard and read so much evidence is that Dr Campbell is indeed right to say (as he does at paragraph 2):
"My overall formulation is that the mother's difficulties should be understood in context and it would be an incomplete explanation of what has gone on to single her out as the disturbed one.""
"83. It is therefore abundantly obvious that these two parents do not see eye to eye about:
(a) Their part in what has occurred; and
(b) How their relationship should be regulated in the future.
The father has consistently refused to consider mediation saying repeatedly that he wants to be sure that he has a child to mediate about; a reference to the fact that, according to him, the mother continues to present a risk to her physical safety.
84. Recent events since the parties separated and evidenced very graphically demonstrate to me that the Mother has shown a great deal more insight into her behaviour and has taken steps to ensure that she does not repeat it. She has also, in my view, shown great forbearance in not reacting to those inflammatory and abusive texts messages. Conversely the Father still views himself at war with the Mother and a war that must be won at all costs. His focus is on that."
"lead me to believe that B would undoubtedly say that she did not want her parents to quarrel or to be angry with each other, and that she would simply wish to have a happy life and knowing that she is loved by them both. I am quite sure, too, that along with all children she would not want to see her Mother (who I do regard as her primary carer) upset. In older children, that is what we hear again and again in such cases."
"95. I say this because, I repeat, I have concerns that the Father is not prepared in any way to recognise the Mother as an appropriate caregiver to B, which she patently is, and where the Mother, I find, has been her primary caregiver. The Father, I find, has acted quite unreasonably in, not only the continued abuse of the Mother, but in his overwhelming desire to wrest B from her and to control the Mother's life. To summarise:
(a) He has sought to stop the Mother in pursuing her life vis a vis where she lives and works;
(b) He has sought to portray the Grandmother as being a violent and angry person when I find there is no substance to that and knowing that B is very attached to her Grandmother;
(c) He has refused to consider mediation and I do not accept his reasoning for that. His refusal clearly stems from his determination that he is not going to give any ground on what he perceives as his rights;
(d) He has refused to countenance the Mother's legitimate request for a holiday in Malaysia with B;
(e) There has been a lack of understanding and a failure to support the Mother's beliefs demonstrated in that incident over the book;
(f) He has sought to dictate what school/nursery B should attend from a date before B's second birthday. In the Father's Position Statement it is argued that because of the Mother's refusal to enrol the child that:
"She is missing out on early socialisation and the structured play enjoyed by her peers and because she cannot be enrolled someone has to care for her, which has professional and financial costs to the Father and therefore B during the periods she is with him."
This is despite the fact that B is taken to the One O'clock Club twice a week.
(g) He has sought to say that the Mother is not looking after the child properly by not having dressed her appropriately for contact;
(h) He has also sought to control the Mother financially by reducing the level of financial support for B to £75 per calendar month
96. All in all, I find a constant wearing down of the Mother by the Father and a desire to undermine her at every twist and turn. He has shown himself throughout these proceedings as wanting to dominate, even to the extent of demanding that the social workers in their core assessments and the s.7 Report should accede to his view of matters and has refused to accept the conclusions reached in the report of Dr Campbell. He simply will not countenance any view which does not accord with his own.
98. In reality, the Father has failed to consider the Mother's position in this at all. She is the one who has offered contact every weekend right from the point when the parties separated. She has readily agreed to him taking B abroad on holiday on two occasions. She has agreed additional time. She invited the Father to the child's birthday party, albeit in circumstances that she knew there would be a number of adults around and thereby minimising the opportunity for the Father to be abusive to her. She has consistently wanted the parties to try and reach some agreement through mediation. The Mother is entitled, as is the Father, to live and work where she chooses. She does have accommodation to which she can go provided not by Mr C, but by a girlfriend. She is confident that she can find employment in Norwich where she was formerly employed and she has volunteered to assist in the travelling between Norwich and the Father on contact visits.
99. The effect on her if she is not allowed to go is to place her in a position during B's minority in which she will feel controlled and manipulated, particularly as she says in her oral evidence to me that she adopted the role of the stay at home parent at the insistence of the Father. Other than that, she has always wanted to resume her career.
(a) To accede to the Father's request would mean that for the foreseeable future she would have no freedom as to where she can live and work; and
(b) be subjected to the Father's barrage of complaints which I am quite sure will continue once this case is over.
It could not possibly be argued that the Mother, in seeking freedom to be able to relocate to Norwich, is trying to frustrate contact with the Father. This is a mother who has shown herself willing to facilitate contact in a variety of ways. Therefore, as to the division of time, I say that this should be allocated so that the Father has the child as submitted by the Mother, on alternate weeks between 6 p.m. on Friday and 6 p.m. on Sunday plus half of the school holidays with Christmas and birthdays alternating. That will be on the basis that the Mother does indeed assist in the travel arrangements and the fine detail of those will no doubt need to be refined at the end of this judgment."
"Here it is the Father who seeks to dominate and control and a Shared Residence Order would be a weapon, I find, which I am quite sure that he would use in the pursuit of that goal. It is for that reason that I decline to make such an order, not simply to reflect any imbalance as between the time split between one parent and the other."
The Grounds of Appeal
Discussion
"Plainly the fact of a Shared Residence Order was an important factor, but it was not a trump card preventing relocation. In each case, what the Court had to do was to examine the underlying factual matrix and decide in all the circumstances of the case whether or not it was in the child's interests to relocate with the parent who wished to move. There might be relocations in which a Shared Residence Order was determinative of welfare, but there will be others in which, notwithstanding the existence of a Shared Residence Order, it would plainly be in the child's best interests to relocate. The critical thing was always the balance between the parents' freedom to locate and the welfare of the child which might militate against relocation."
"51. the correct approach, in my view, is to look at the underlying factual substratum in welfare terms, bearing in mind the tension which may well exist between the freedom to locate which any parent must enjoy against the welfare of the child which may militate against relocation. In my judgment it is this balance which is critical, and the danger of distinguishing the case as a matter of law is that the Court will either lose sight of, or give insufficient weight to the former consideration."
"52. In particular, a Shared Residence Order must not, in my judgment, be seen as an automatic bar to relocation, or as a trump card against relocation. There may be cases in which it is determinative of welfare, but there will be others where it will plainly be in the best interests of a child to relocate, notwithstanding the existence of a Shared Residence Order. Simply to distinguish the case on the basis of a Shared Residence Order is, in my judgment to run the risk of making it determinative in all cases and of distorting the welfare balancing exercise."
" When everything has been said, done and considered, the ultimate test remains the welfare of the child, which, in the last analysis, overbears all other considerations however powerful and reasonable they may be."
She then addressed the issues in the light of the s.7 Report and gave her own separate consideration to B's welfare interests under the various heads of the Welfare Checklist.
"It is too late for it to be permissible for this Court to rule that, in internal relocation cases, the analysis of the child's welfare, informed by consideration of the matters specified in section 1(3) of the Act, should not be conducted through the prism of whether the circumstances are exceptional."
It seems clear, however, that the Judge was not referred to that authority and it is plain that she proceeded, as already indicated, on the straightforward basis of the paramountcy of the welfare test.
"For the parties to be in such close proximity and the Father competing to prove that he is the better parent is not what any child needs and that must be so in a child as young as B."
Conclusion
Mr Justice Norris:
Lady Justice Black:
Potter.
"36. In my judgment, therefore it is wrong in principle to apply different criteria to the question of internal relocation simply because there is a shared residence order. Plainly, the fact of such an order is an important factor in the welfare equation, but I respectfully agree with counsel that it is not, in effect, a trump card preventing relocation. In each case what the court has to do is to examine the underlying factual matrix, and to decide in all the circumstances of the case whether or not it is in the child's interest to relocate with the parent who wishes to move."