![]() |
[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 >> L-B (Children) [2012] EWCA Civ 984 (18 July 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/984.html Cite as: [2012] WLR(D) 240, [2012] EWCA Civ 984 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [View ICLR summary: [2012] WLR(D) 240] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM Manchester Civil Justice Centre
Her Honour Judge Penna
DK10C00068
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
and
SIR STEPHEN SEDLEY
____________________
L-B (Children) |
____________________
Karl Rowley (instructed by Bolton Borough Council) and Linda Sweeney (instructed by AFG Law) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: Thursday 14 June 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Thorpe :
"Those, in what I know are very broad terms, are the findings of the court. If any party would be assisted by the provision of detail in relation to specific points, I would by all means address those points. However, I was concerned for you to know my view in broad terms at the earliest possible date".
"It may assist you to know that this matter is back here for directions on 23rd January and the parties, no doubt, will have reflected upon their positions and if you wish to make further application, do come on that date."
"What Miss Sweeney is politely not saying in terms is that you need to know that I have found the injuries were caused by the father."
"PRELIMINARY OUTLINE JUDGMENT APPROVED BY THE COURT."
"2. The Local Authority is advocating a placement of Summer with the maternal Grandparents and in light of their current care of Thomas does not believe that such a placement needs to await the Special Guardianship Report provided for below.
"3. The Mother is supportive of a placement of Summer with the maternal Grandparents and half sibling Thomas.
4. The Father would agree to the maternal Grandparents caring for Summer on a long term basis only in the event that the court does not deem it appropriate for Summer to be placed in his care. Father may reflect further on this position following receipt of the perfected judgment.
5. The Court will utilise 3 days of the hearing commencing 20th February 2012 in order to determine if Summer should be placed in her Grandparents care.
1. The Court will distribute a perfected judgment at the request of the Father by 4pm on 9th February 2012. The judgment will be deemed to have been handed down on the day of distribution.
2. The Local Authority shall file and serve an interim care plan and any updating evidence (if so advised) setting out detailed rehabilitation plan to facilitate Summer's placement in her Grandparents care and the support which will be provided to that placement by 4pm on 6th February 2012.
7. This matter is listed for hearing on the issue of placement before Her Honour Judge Penna on 20th February 2012 at 10.30am (Elh 3 days). All advocates shall attend at 9.30am for prior discussion. The remaining hearing dates which had been allocated to this matter during that week are hereby vacated."
"You thought the position was made clear in December and there has been a change which you have all had to accommodate, which has been particularly unpleasant for some; so I'm sorry that you've had that to go through."
"2. However the decision I reached had to be reached on the balance of probabilities and when I considered the matter carefully I could not exclude the mother because I was not sufficiently satisfied that no time had arisen when she had not been alone with the child and might not have caused some injury.
3. I would be reluctant to expand further than that. I hope that will, in fact, constitute the clarification which you seek and I am reluctant to take time now to produce something further in writing, given that I have already given you my decision twice, the second time changing direction, but, as I say, I do not view it as incompatible with what I said the first time; it is simply a reconsideration of the point I reached on the balance of probabilities led to my second expressed view."
"1. The Local Authority had, in accordance with the direction of the Court on 20/2/12, filed its proposed Social Assessment Plan in respect of the father. Having considered the same, the father, through his counsel, indicated that he was content with the Plan and was not seeking a direction for an independent social work assessment. The Guardian, through his counsel, also expressed his contentment with the Plan.
2. The Court too had carefully considered the Local Authority's Plan and it was satisfied that it was an appropriate way forward in respect of assessment of the father.
3. The mother, through her counsel sought permission to appeal the judgment of 15/2/12, which the Court granted."
"It is well established that it is open to a judge to amend his judgment, if he thinks fit, at any time up to the drawing of the order"
"21. But there is a wider and more fundamental point. As Baroness Hale of Richmond explained in In re B (children) (Care proceedings: Standard of Proof) (CAFCASS intervening) [2008] UKHL 35. [2009] 1 AC 11, para [76], a split hearing "is merely part of the whole process of trying the case. It is not a separate exercise. And once it is done the case is part heard. The trial should not resume before a different judge". Consistently with this, the findings at a fact finding hearing are not set out in stone so as to be incapable of being revisited in the light of subsequent developments as, for example, if further material emerges during the final hearing: see Re M and MC (Care: Issues of Fact: Drawing of Orders) [2002] EWCA Civ 499, [2003] 1 FLR 461, paras [14], [24]. Thus in such a case the judge is entitled at any time, including at the final hearing, to reconsider his earlier findings. Arden LJ's statement in Re T needs to be read with this point in mind. The relevant order for this purpose is the final order made at the end of the care proceedings."
Lord Justice Rimer:
'Those, in what I know are very broad terms, are the findings of the court. If any party would be assisted by the provision of detail in relation to specific points, I would by all means address those points. However, I was concerned for you to know my view in broad terms at the earliest possible date.'
'Upon hearing the advocates for the parties
Recording
1) Court provided a summary Judgement in respect of the Fact Finding Hearing where the father was seen [sic] to have caused the injuries to [the child]
2) Upon hearing the Greater Manchester Police's application for disclosure …
The Court Orders
1. A transcript of the Judgement [of 15 December 2011] be made available to the parties at public expense
2. The Independent Social Work Assessment of the maternal grandparents be filed and served by 3rd January 2012
3. The Solicitor for the Children convene a Professionals meeting the week after the 3rd January 2012
4. Directions Hearing to be listed for 23rd January 2012 [with details of time and place]
5. The following documents are to be disclosed to the Greater Manchester Police [and four reports and two statements are listed]. The Police are invited to attend the Directions hearing on the 23rd January 2012 to make a further application for disclosure of the Judgement and transcript in respect of the Fact Finding hearing
6. The Final Hearing has been provisionally booked for the week commencing the 20th February 2012.'
'The parties have been waiting over an extended period for my judgment in this matter. I gave a preliminary indication of my view on 15th December. The parties asked for more detailed particulars and it follows that I have spent a considerable amount of time considering the evidence I heard, the documentation filed in the case, and the view which I initially gave.'
The judge then explained that she had reviewed her reasoning and changed her position. Her revised position, and finding, was that 'although one of the parents must have been the perpetrator of [the child's] injuries I am unable to identify with which parent that responsibility lies.'
'… view the development of this matter as a complete change of direction and the scenario which I posited when giving my view in December remains a possibility. … I do not view [that change of direction] as incompatible with what I said the first time; it is simply [that] a reconsideration of the point I reached on the balance of probabilities led to my second expressed view.'
I do not fully understand what the judge was there saying. The position appears to be, more simply, that she had found the facts one way in December 2011 and, following further consideration, another way in February 2012.
'It is recorded:
1. The mother through her counsel, supported by the other parties, sought clarification of the reasons behind the Court's determination that it could not identify a sole perpetrator as between the mother and the father in its Judgment of 15/2/12, compared with the conclusion indicated in the preliminary Judgment of 15/12/11.'
'… With one possible qualification it is in my judgment incontrovertible that until the order of a judge has been sealed he retains the ability to recall the order he has made even if he has given reasons for that order by a judgment handed down or orally delivered. That was established by two decisions of this court: Millensted v. Grosvenor House (Park Lane) Ltd [1937] 1 KB 717 and Pittalis v. Sherefettin [1986] QB 869. Such judicial tergiversation is in general not to be encouraged, but circumstances may arise in which it is necessary for a judge to have the courage to recall his order. If, as in Millensted and Pittalis, the judge realises that he has made an error, how can be true to his judicial oath other than by correcting that error so long as it lies within his power to do so? No doubt that will happen only in exceptional circumstances, but I have serious misgivings about elevating that correct description of the circumstances when that occurs as exceptional into some sort of criterion for what is required for the recalling of an order before it is sealed. The possible qualification to which I have referred is where the judgment handed down or delivered has reasonably been relied on by a party who has altered his position irretrievably in consequence. In such a case the interests of justice may require the judge not to resile from that judgment even if the order has not been sealed. But that is not this case, where it is not suggested that the claimant had altered her position as a result of the draft judgment.'
Sir Stephen Sedley
"Once a judgment has been handed down or given, the court should hesitate long and hard before making a material alteration to it. There may very occasionally be circumstances in which a judge not only can but should make a material alteration in the interests of justice. This necessarily means that the court would only be persuaded to do so in 'exceptional circumstances', but that expression by itself is no more than a relatively uninformative label. It is not profitable to debate what it means in isolation from the facts of a particular case."