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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> S (A Child: Adequacy of Reasoning), Re [2019] EWCA Civ 1845 (31 October 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/1845.html Cite as: [2019] EWCA Civ 1845 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE FAMILY COURT AT WATFORD
HHJ Mellanby
WD18C01428
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PETER JACKSON
and
LADY JUSTICE ASPLIN
____________________
S (A Child: Adequacy of Reasoning) |
____________________
Shiva Ancliffe (instructed by Hertfordshire County Council) for the Respondent Local Authority
The Intervenor appeared in person
Malek Wan Daud (instructed by Collins Solicitors) for the Respondent Child by his Children's Guardian
Hearing date: 24 October 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Peter Jackson:
Introduction
(1) Had the local authority proved that the injuries were inflicted as opposed to being accidental?(2) If the injuries were inflicted, who had the opportunity to cause them?
(3) Of those people, could one person be identified on the balance of probabilities as having inflicted the injuries (a conventional 'known perpetrator' finding)?
(4) If only two people (the mother and Mr C) could have caused the injuries, but the one responsible could not be identified it necessarily followed that there was a real possibility that each of them may have caused the injuries (an 'uncertain perpetrator' finding).
(5) Once these questions had been answered, had it been proved that the mother had failed to protect S from being injured or covered up what she knew about how he was injured?
The background
The medical evidence
Other matters
The judgment
"I am satisfied that the broken forearm occurred prior to the departure for nursery, in all likelihood in the flat when both [adults] were present." [para. 3]
"I cannot with any certainty say the injury to the arm occurred the previous afternoon/evening. It could just as easily have happened in the early hours of the morning. I find it had certainly occurred whilst he was in the flat before leaving for the nursery." [85]
As to the mother's suggestion that the injury had occurred on the way to nursery:
"I consider that to be extremely unlikely given S's presentation [on arrival]. He was not crying or screaming in pain. His fingers and hands had become swollen." [79]
"It could have resulted from a genuine accident eg fall over, arm out. I am unable to determine whether the fractures where as a result of a significant blow such as a karate chop or blow with a weapon. No eyewitness account how and when it occurred. Compatible with karate chop or one that might be caused when raising an arm to deflect blow. Could have occurred when fell, some other trauma to his wrist which neither [adult] witnessed, or if they did, not telling court about it." [4]
"There are details of their evidence which I find quite incredible." [11]
In relation to the mother:
"… she was totally unable to account for S's welfare or well-being from the time she went to bed around midnight until she woke at 8.53 as S and Mr C were leaving the flat. I do not believe her. I was left with the distinct impression that she was not being honest or forthright with the court." [78]
In relation to Mr C:
"I completely reject Mr C's evidence that S was fine when he dropped him off with no sign of injury. He suggested that teachers would notice something that he had not because they were experts. He would certainly have known there was something wrong and I believe he is hiding his knowledge and not being honest with either himself, the court or [the mother] about what had happened earlier in the morning or late at night." [62]
"I found his evidence to be inconsistent and unreliable and I attach little weight to his account of the events of the 21st and 22nd November 2018. He was a mass of contradictions and at times lies." [84]
"I am satisfied it is limited to them both. I do not find evidence S sustained injuries by either nursery or grandmother. S definitely sustained his injuries whilst in the care of both [the mother and Mr C]. I am not in a position to say that they were deliberately inflicted injuries with malice but I am in a position to say S suffered the injuries in particular his broken arm when in care of one or both of them and one or both of them knows how he sustained a broken arm and have withheld that information from the court." [10]
"I cannot determine whether either or both together injured S. It is just possible that when unsupervised he sustained an injury but I consider on the balance of probabilities and in the light of all the evidence that one or both of them caused the break to his arm, the injuries to his neck and the bruise to his clavicle. S certainly is convinced his arm hurt because Mr C hit him." [11]
"I am at a loss to discover, through the course of this hearing, how the injury was actually sustained but it was an injury and it was sustained. On that basis I find that it was an injury caused to S by either the mother or Mr C or both." [33]
"It is tempting to rely on Mr C's demeanour, previous convictions and personality traits, observed in court, to reach the conclusion that it was he who caused the injuries to S. However, I would be straining to reach a conclusion based on the evidence as I have assessed it to be. I cannot, on the balance of probabilities, determine who caused which injuries. I do NOT find that S met with a genuine accident between 3 o'clock on the afternoon of 21 November and 9 am on the morning of 22 November 2018. The adults are lying over the details of the evening and following morning. They know how the injuries occurred and who was responsible. One or both would have heard him crying out in pain and notice the injury to his arm. They are protecting themselves over and above a vulnerable child. They are covering up and protecting their own backs rather than that of S." [87]
The judge also said in her oral judgment, but not in the approved note of judgment:
"I would dearly like to be able to conclusively find that Mr C caused the actual break."
"…I find as a fact there was an incident when S had urinated on the sofa and he was grabbed by Mr C and removed from the sofa. Professionals and investigators jumped to the conclusion that this was when the injury occurred. Based on the forensic analysis of timing of the injury to the arm that is possible. It is equally possible it could have occurred later that evening or in the early hours of 22nd November 2018 . If it occurred before he went to bed he would have had a dreadful night's sleep caused by the pain unless he had been medicated with pain relief. The sofa incident would not necessarily have accounted for the mark on the side of the neck or the clavicle. I believe the mark on the side of his neck was more recent than the night before given how quickly it resolved." [85]
As to the mother's evidence about the incident:
"In my opinion she was playing this incident down. In S's memory this incident… was a searing memory. I believe him when he told people his arm was hurt when he was pulled off the sofa but I cannot be sure even on the balance of probabilities that that was when the broken arm occurred. I am sure that S experienced the feeling of being hurt when Mr C shouted at him and pulled him off the sofa… I believe Mr C's short fuse came to the fore... I suspect there was an atmosphere, some shouting or disciplining of S which neither [adult] is prepared to acknowledge." [74]
"Either or both failed to protect. Find undoubtedly [both] failed to protect from injury. The mother says she delegated responsibility to [Mr C] from c.3 pm 21st November to 9.05 am the following morning 22nd November 2018 apart from feeding him pizza and chips. On any account she was careless as to his welfare.
Either or both failed to seek any immediate, timely and appropriate medical attention. Whoever was caring for him at the time he sustained the injury it would have been immediately apparent that he had sustained significant painful injury to his lower right forearm. S sustained that injury inside the flat, and not on the short journey to school. The mother was oblivious to S's welfare. Cannot be certain or even find on balance of probabilities that she knew the extent or severity of injury to his arm when Mr C left with S to take him to nursery. She may have been unaware or did not appreciate how serious. On any account significant injuries when she should have been caring and at times delegated care inappropriately." [13-14]
and this of Mr C:
"I am certain Mr C was aware of an injury to S's arm at the time they left for nursery." [15]
(1) Whether the court had concluded that the injuries were non-accidental on the balance of probabilities;(2) If so, whether the court had identified the perpetrator;
(3) What evidence from Dr Coren and Dr Watt had been accepted and what had not;
(4) What evidence of Mr C had been accepted and what had not.
"I accepted that very little if anything of what Mr C said I regarded as the truth. (sic)
I agreed that paragraph 16 of the local authority's summary of my judgment could be regarded as equivocal and provided the following clarification:
Something happened to S overnight. We will never know as the mother and Mr C have not helped us (ie the court). I said that the "likelihood" is that S injured his arm whilst in the care of Mr C.[4] By that I mean an independent observer based upon Mr C's demeanour, previous convictions and demonstrated personality together with remarks made by S would all suggest that Mr C was the more likely perpetrator. However I would be straining to reach that conclusion based on the evidence as I have assessed it above. It would be speculation. I cannot be satisfied on the balance of probabilities that each or any of the injuries was caused by Mr C in preference to the mother. They were both in the flat with him at the time the injuries occurred. They have both lied. They are both protecting each other.
On the balance of probabilities, I find that the injury to the arm was NOT an accident. It occurred either as S raised his arm to defend himself or as a consequence of a deliberate blow or excessively rough handling on the part of either Mr C and/or the mother. The injury to his neck, on the balance of probabilities, was similarly caused through rough handling. The bruise to the clavicle makes a third concerning injury occurring in the same time frame, which on the balance of probabilities was caused at the same time as rough handling or striking out at S by either Mr C and/or the mother."
The judge also indicated that she had accepted the evidence of Dr Coren and Dr Watt as recorded above.
The grounds of appeal
- The grandmother's evidence was that S had said to her in the car on the way to the hospital that Mr C had hurt his arm. He had repeated this on other occasions. S is a bright child, able to say who injured him.
- S made many statements to adults that he was scared of Mr C.
- In contrast, S has showed no anxiety when with his mother.
- As a result the inappropriate delegation of care to Mr C, he had a major opportunity to injure S.
- The judge assessed Mr C as a man with a short fuse.
- She was critical of his demeanour during the hearing.
- There was a manifest inconsistency in his oral evidence that there was nothing wrong with S when he dropped him at nursery and his statement in police interview that he had told the nursery that S was "going on about his arm".
Most of these matters were described in the judgment, but instead of being weighed and evaluated, they were ignored or discounted for no good reason.
Analysis
"30. The need for a judge to provide an adequate explanation of his or her analysis and the reasoning that supports the order that is to be made at the conclusion of a case relating to children is well established. Not only is the presentation of adequate reasoning of immediate importance to the adult parties in the proceedings (in particular the party who has failed to persuade the judge to follow an alternative course), it is also likely to be important for those professionals and others judges who may have to rely upon and implement the decision in due course and it may be a source of valuable information and insight for the child and his or her carers in the years ahead. In addition, of course, inadequate reasoning is a serious impediment to any consideration of the merits of the judge's decision within the appellate process."
"They were both in the flat with him at the time the injuries occurred. They have both lied. They are both protecting each other."
That takes one nowhere. What was required was an analysis of the factors that pointed towards and away from each adult as being the perpetrator. If the result was an inability to identify, so be it, but the attempt had to be made.
Outcome
Lady Justice Asplin
Lord Justice Davis
Note 1 She also made findings of emotional harm and neglect, which the mother admitted, but these are not relevant for the purposes of this appeal. [Back] Note 2 Counsel did not refer the judge to the guidance given in B (Children : Uncertain Perpetrator)[2019] EWCA Civ 575, where the proper staged approach is confirmed at [49]. [Back] Note 3 We have required an explanation from the court. [Back] Note 4 A statement made in the oral judgment that does not appear in the approved note. [Back]