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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> R (A Child) [2019] EWCA Civ 895 (24 May 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/895.html Cite as: [2019] EWCA Civ 895 |
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ON APPEAL FROM LEEDS COMBINED COURT CENTRE
Her Honour Judge Anderson
LS17C00672
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE BAKER
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R (A Child) |
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Simon Wilkinson (instructed by Leeds City Council) for the Respondent Local Authority
Written submissions were received on behalf of the other Respondents (the Mother, the Father and the Children's Guardian).
Hearing date: 22 May 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Peter Jackson:
Introduction
The judgment
"230. An analysis of these circumstances has assisted me in trying to identify how the injury to LR was caused, and by whom. It has been necessary for me to assess the reliability of the evidence of witnesses, particularly where evidence is inconsistent or contentious, and to establish whether it provides me with any insight into the likelihood of those who are in the potential pool of perpetrators behaving in ways that they have denied. In this case, that includes not only by denying that they have injured LR but also by denying that they have allowed contact that was not authorised with a person who has injured LR."
This approach was entirely correct.
"The grandmother as a possible perpetrator
339. The grandmother as a trusted carer of LR had the opportunity to injure LR. She is a grandmother of 8 children and has been closely involved in their care. There is no evidence that she has caused harm to her own [four] children or any of their children in the past. However, once LR was placed with the aunt, and the father became unhappy with the arrangements for his own contact, the grandmother became conflicted. I am confident that the father will have made his unhappiness with the altered arrangements clear to his mother. He had stressed to the authorities and to his mother that he wanted his mother to show him how to look after LR. She will have been under a great deal of pressure. As a result, it is likely she allowed unauthorised contact to the father and, I find, to the mother. In doing so, the grandmother, conflicted and under pressure, behaved in a manner which is at odds with the history of how she had cared for children in the past. She has failed to put LR first by allowing the unauthorised contact and then by lying about her son's visits, and the unauthorised contact she has offered, since.
340. On the evidence, it appears that the amount of time the grandmother was spending caring for LR did increase over the time LR was at the aunt's home LR spent short periods of time in her grandmother's sole care, to assist the aunt. On 8th November 2017, the grandmother was in charge for up to 6 hours. I am not satisfied that she was assisted by [her other daughter] for any significant time, and in any significant way, on that day. I consider it likely that the grandmother facilitated unauthorised contact to the parents. The grandmother's ability to calm the father down when he loses his temper and becomes aggressive has been evidenced but I cannot be satisfied that she would be able to calm him down in the event of him becoming agitated and frustrated in the presence of LR, or if there was an altercation between him and the mother in the presence of LR, or that she would not lose control herself."
a) What evidence has the court relied upon when concluding that it cannot be satisfied that the grandmother would not lose control of herself?
b) What weight has the court given to the submissions made on the grandmother's behalf in respect of the likelihood of someone other than the parents having inflicted LR's injuries, given that the court has found that one or both of those individuals inflicted injuries on LM?
"I have considered this submission made on behalf of the grandmother. However, I have also taken into account that I've not been able to identify the perpetrators of the injuries inflicted on LM; that the injury suffered by LR occurred to a child of a very different age and in a completely different placement. I take into account that, sadly, injuries can sometimes be inflicted by individuals who have no history of having inflicted injuries to children (or more generally), but who find themselves unable to cope. I have in relation to each party/intervener considered whether there is a real possibility that he/she caused the injuries."
- She had suffered from long-term depression.
- She was playing a larger role in the care of LR than had been anticipated and on 8 November she was also caring for one other young grandchild: "Her ability to care for two children at this age alone for a prolonged period is unknown."
- Her emotional state was not under professional scrutiny in the way that the aunt's was. "I take into account that looking after a very young baby may be a demanding task for a lady who suffers from depression, and from a level of anxiety which sometimes made it difficult for her to leave her house."
- The grandmother was under a stressful conflict of loyalties. "This will not have been an easy role for someone who experiences acute anxiety."
- "The grandmother has been described as someone who lives on her emotions, which the family have attempted to portray in a positive light. However, the grandmother herself describes a loss of temper, albeit with her adult child and in an emotionally charged situation. In her police interview she describes the occasion at the medical centre when the family were shown bruising to LR's back. She describes that her first response to being shown the bruises was to wonder whether she had done it by 'patting' or 'jiggling' LR followed by her "bursting into tears", and then, after the father had "lost his rag", she "obviously, lost (her) temper with [him]" before attempting to calm him down."
The grounds of appeal and submissions
1. The conclusion that the grandmother was a possible perpetrator is not one that was open to the judge on the evidence. She was wrong:
(a) to rely on the grandmother's mental health without any real evidence about it, either by way of report, medical records, or questioning during the course of the evidence.
(b) to rely on the grandmother being an emotional person, or questioning her ability to look after two small children, when she had found the grandmother to have been closely involved with her eight grandchildren without any evidence of her harming them.
(c) to treat as relevant an isolated instance of loss of temper with her adult son.
2. The judge gave insufficient weight to her finding that the parents were responsible for injuring LM.
"[The father] had come back and was abusing the social workers and so I handed the baby to [the mother]. I got hold of [the father], shoved him out the door. Obviously, lost my temper with [him] because he was being abusive and, like I says to him, "This is not helping the situation at all." [The aunt] was on the floor crying as she was saying, "I'm sorry, they're going to take her." So we got [the father] out, who was kicking a few bins and throwing a few leaflets about in the waiting room, and we got him it was like a secure door, so I got him out of there But then when we went back, they locked the door of the social workers and [social worker] said she was in fear of her life, or something, and it just got really messy."
Not surprisingly, the judge heard evidence about this incident because of the light that it threw on the father's character. The grandmother was not asked about her description of losing her temper during the course of her evidence and nobody, including the social workers who were present, were in any way critical of her behaviour on that occasion. Accordingly, Mr Lord argues that there was nothing remarkable about that evidence that could support the possibility that the grandmother had injured the child.
1. The judge was uniquely placed to assess the credibility of the witnesses and the wide canvas of the evidence. There is a need for appellate restraint, epitomised by the Supreme Court in Re B (A Child) [2013] UKSC 33, where Lord Neuberger stated that:
"53. ... where a trial judge has reached a conclusion on the primary facts, it is only in a rare case, such as where the conclusion was one (i) which there was no evidence to support, (ii) which was based on a misunderstanding of the evidence, or (iii) which no reasonable judge could have reached, that an appellate tribunal will interfere with it."
Here, the judge was considering a complex case, which she had case-managed throughout. She understood the complex family dynamics and the link between credibility and perpetration. She herself said (at paragraph 24) that hearing the oral evidence had been of the greatest assistance to her. The court should be slow to interfere with her conclusions unless her reasoning was so wrong as to be unsafe.
2. The judgment must be evaluated as a whole. It includes the very serious finding that the grandmother was not a credible witness and had given directly untruthful evidence about her son's presence in her home, and evidence that there were additional pressures on the grandmother around the time of the injuries, culminating in a long period of care on 8 November. So, says Mr Wilkinson:
"The learned judge was thus left in a position where the appellant had not simply opportunity the sole care of the child but opportunity in different circumstances than which she had previously found herself, and against a background of an assessment of the appellant as a dishonest witness who had misled the court in respect of a number of crucial and important factual matters."
3. The judge received careful submissions on the law and applied it correctly. She did not equate opportunity with real possibility, or rely on the absence of alternative explanations. Nor did she make all the findings sought by the local authority. Instead, she carried out her own analysis. She considered all the evidence and was entitled to include within it the grandmother's mental health history.
4. The judge made a reasonable assessment of the probabilities, including the probability of LR being injured by her grandmother rather than by those who had injured LM.
Conclusion
The test for permission to appeal
a. the court considers the appeal would have a real prospect of success; or
b. there is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard.
"Real prospect of success There are two conflicting authorities on the meaning of a 'real prospect of success'. In NLW v ARC [2012] 2 FLR 129, FD, Mostyn J held that the 'real prospect of success' meant it was more likely than not that the appeal would be allowed at the substantive hearing: "anything less than a 50/50 threshold could only mean there was a real prospect of failure". Moor J, however, has held that a 'real prospect of success' is one that is realistic rather than fanciful, and does not mean a greater than 50/50 chance of success. The weight of current first instance authority follows the approach of Moor J. "
Lord Justice Baker: