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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (other Judges) >> Raza v Gall [2023] EWFC 181 (B) (04 October 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/OJ/2023/181.html Cite as: [2023] EWFC 181, [2023] EWFC 181 (B) |
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The Law Courts Windsor Road Slough SL1 2HE |
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B e f o r e :
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RAZA |
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GALL |
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291-299 Borough High Street, London SE1 1JG
Tel: 020 7269 0370
[email protected]
THE RESPONDENT appeared In Person
MS K FERGUSON (instructed by SBS Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Child through the Guardian
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Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was delivered in public.
HHJ CASE:
(1) If the Court considers that a contempt of court (including a contempt in the face of the Court) may have been committed, the Court on its own initiative shall consider whether to proceed against the defendant in contempt proceedings.
(2) …
(3) If the Court proceeds of its own initiative, it shall issue a summons to the defendant which includes the matters set out in rule 37.4(2)(a)-(s) (insofar as applicable) and requires the defendant to attend court for directions to be given.
(4) A summons issued under this rule shall be served on the defendant personally and on any other party, unless the Court directs otherwise...
"The mother stated to the Court that she will not make the child available to spend time with the father as she considers contact upsets the child. The Court informed the mother if she refused to abide by the terms of the Court [sic], she would be subject to enforcement proceedings which may result in a fine, community order and/or a prison sentence".
"Upon the Court having received notification from Thames Valley Police that the mother was arrested pursuant to the warrant dated 22 May 2023 at 18.10 on 4 June 2023, and upon Thames Valley Police having erroneously released the mother on bail on condition she attended the hearing listed on 16 June 2023 (warrant is not backed for bail), and upon the Court notifying Thames Valley Police of the error but considering it is not proportionate to issue a further warrant for the mother's arrest pending the hearing on 16 June 2023 but will review the same should she not attend on 16 June 2023, it is ordered:
(1) The arrest warrant dated 22 May 2023 is set aside.
(2) Any party affected by this order may apply to set it aside or vary it within seven days of receipt".
"The mother shall attend a preliminary meeting with the Wycombe Child Contact Centre at such time as they reasonably request".
A penal notice was attached to that paragraph.
"The mother must make sure that the child spends time with the father as follows:
a) Every other Saturday for two hours at Wycombe Child Contact Centre.
b) After two sessions, time shall increase from two hours to three hours per session.
c) The Children's Guardian shall make the referral to Wycombe Child Contact Centre forthwith and confirm the arrangements to each of the parents if required.
d) The interim child arrangements shall be reviewed by the Court at the next hearing.
e) The interim contact shall commence on the first Saturday arranged for by the Wycombe Child Contact Centre.
f) The mother shall ensure that the child is taken to the Wycombe Child Contact Centre, The Hub, Union Baptist Church, Easton Street, High Wycombe, HP11 1NJ, for the contact sessions once arranged. Mother may appoint a third party to take the child".
A penal notice was attached to that order addressed to the mother.
(1) All hearings of contempt proceedings shall, irrespective of the parties' consent be listed and heard in public unless the Court otherwise directs, applying the provisions of paragraph four.
Paragraph four then sets out whether the hearing should be in private or not. Nobody has applied for the hearing to be in private.
(1) If the Court finds the defendant in contempt of court, the Court may impose a period of imprisonment, an order of committal, a fine, confiscation of assets or other punishment permitted under the law.
(2) Execution of an order of committal requires issue of a warrant of committal. An order of committal and a warrant of committal have immediate effect unless and to the extent that the Court decides to suspend execution of the order or warrant.
"Failure to comply with direction included in the order of 21 July 2023 that the mother shall attend a preliminary meeting at Wycombe Child Contact Centre at such time as they reasonably request, there being a penal notice attached to the same".
Paragraph 7:
"Date of personal service of the order and, if the order was not personally served, the date and terms of any order dispensing with personal service of the order":
"23 July 2023, paragraph 12, respondent in court when order made".
"(1) On 21 July 2023, the Court made an order requiring the mother to attend a preliminary meeting at the Wycombe Child Contact Centre at such time as they reasonably request.
(2) The mother failed to attend the meeting as directed.
(3) The mother confirmed with the Guardian on 8 August 2023 that she had the details of the meeting with the contact centre but did not attend".
"Dear Isha,
Mum failed to turn up for the pre-visit on Saturday. As you will appreciate, there is nothing further I can do at this stage. Dad is aware of the situation.
Kind regards,
Maureen Rose (Centre Coordinator)".
Page C3, paragraph five:
"I telephoned the mother on 8 August 2023 and the mother confirmed that she had the details of the meeting with the contact centre. However, she did not attend. The child was on holiday with her family. The mother would not share where and did not know when the child would be coming back. The mother told me that she was not prepared to attend a meeting until the child was back from holiday but she did not know when that would be".
[Further submissions and adjournment]
"…I would not wish to suggest that there should be any general principle that the statutory provisions relating to sentencing in ordinary criminal cases should be applied to sentencing for contempt. The circumstances surrounding contempt cases are much more various and the objectives underlying the court's actions are also much more various. There are, however, some points which it may be worth making.
In making those points I would wish to emphasise that I do so only in the context of family cases. Family cases, it has long been recognised, raise different considerations from those elsewhere in the civil law. The two most obvious are the heightened emotional tensions that arise between family members and often the need for those family members to continue to be in contact with one another because they have children together or the like. Those two factors make the task of the court, in dealing with these issues, quite different from the task when dealing with commercial disputes or other types of case in which sometimes, in fact rarely, sanctions have to be imposed for contempt of court. Having said that:
(1) These cases have to come before the court on an application to commit. That is the only procedure which is available. Not surprisingly, therefore, the court is directing its mind to whether or not committal to prison is the appropriate order. But it does not follow from that that imprisonment is to be regarded as the automatic consequence of the breach of an order. Clearly it is not. There is, however, no principle that imprisonment is not to be imposed at the first occasion: see Thorpe v. Thorpe [1998] 2 F.L.R. 127, a decision of this court. Nevertheless, it is a common practice, and usually appropriate in view of the sensitivity of the circumstances of these cases, to take some other course on the first occasion.
(2) There is the difficulty, as Mr. Brett has pointed out, that the alternatives are limited. The full range of sentencing options is not available for contempt of court. Nevertheless, there is a range of things that the court can consider. It may do nothing—make no order. It may adjourn, and in a case where the alleged contemnor has not attended court that may be an appropriate course to take, although I would not say so in every case; it depends on the reasons that may be thought to lie behind the non-attendance. There is a power to fine. There is a power of sequestration of assets and there are mental health orders. All of those may, in an appropriate case, need consideration, particularly in a case where the court has not found any actual violence proved.
(3) If imprisonment is appropriate, the length of the committal should be decided without reference to whether or not it is to be suspended. A longer period of committal is not justified because its sting is removed by virtue of its suspension.
(4) The length of the committal has to depend upon the court's objectives. There are two objectives always in contempt of court proceedings. One is to mark the court's disapproval of the disobedience to its order. The other is to secure compliance with that order in the future. Thus, the seriousness of what has taken place is to be viewed in that light as well as for its own intrinsic gravity.
(5) The length of the committal has to bear some reasonable relationship to the maximum of two years which is available.
(6) Suspension is possible in a much wider range of circumstances than it is in criminal cases. It does not have to be the exceptional case. Indeed, it is usually the first way of attempting to secure compliance with the court's order.
(7) The length of the suspension requires separate consideration, although it is often appropriate for it to be linked to continued compliance with the order
underlying the committal.
(8) Of course, the court has to bear in mind the context. This may be aggravating or mitigating. The context is often the break-up of an intimate
relationship in which emotions run high and people behave in silly ways. The context of having children together, if that be the case, cannot be ignored. Sometimes that means that there is an aggravation of what has taken place, because of the greater fear that is engendered from the circumstances. Sometimes it may be mitigating, because there is reason to suppose that once the immediate emotions have calmed down, the molestation and threats will not continue.
(9) In many cases the court will have to bear in mind that there are concurrent proceedings in another court based on either the same facts, or some of the same facts, which are before the court on the contempt proceedings. The court cannot ignore those parallel proceedings. It may have to take into account their outcome in considering what the practical effect is upon the contempt proceedings. They do have different purposes and often the overlap is not exact, but nevertheless the court will not want, in effect, the contemnor to suffer punishment twice for the same events.
(10) It will usually be desirable for the court to explain very briefly why it has made the choices that it has made in the particular case before it. One understands all the constraints in a busy county court, dealing with large numbers of these cases these days, and one would not wish to impose too great a burden on the judiciary in this respect. Nevertheless, it would be appropriate in most cases for the contemnor to know why he or she was being sentenced to a period of imprisonment; why it was the length that it was; if it was suspended, why the suspension was as it was, but only very briefly.
An important part of the exercise is that the contemnor should understand the importance of keeping to court orders, of not breaking them and the likely consequences if they are so broken."
"In determining what is the least period of committal which properly reflects the seriousness of a contempt of court, the Court must of course give due weight to matters of mitigation. An early admission of the conduct constituting the contempt of court, before proceedings are commenced, will provide important mitigation, especially if it is volunteered before any allegation is made.
So too will cooperation with any investigation into contempt of court committed by others involved in the same proceedings or in other fraudulent claims. Where the Court is satisfied that the contemnor has shown genuine remorse for his or her conduct, that will provide mitigation. Serious ill health may be a factor properly taken into account. Previous positive good character, an unblemished professional record and the fact that an expert witness has brought professional and financial ruin upon himself or herself are also matters which can be taken into account in the contemnor's favour".
"The Court must also give due weight to the impact of committal on persons other than the contemnor. In particular, where the contemnor is the sole or principal carer of children or vulnerable adults, the Court must ensure it is fully informed as to the consequences for those persons of the imprisonment of their carer. In a borderline case, such considerations may enable the court to avoid making an order for committal which would otherwise be made. In a case in which nothing less than an order for committal can be justified, the impact on others may provide a compelling reason to suspend its operation".
"The Court must, finally, consider whether the term of committal can properly be suspended. In this regard, both principle and the case law to which we were referred lead to the conclusion that in the case of an expert witness, the appropriate term will usually have to be served immediately, and that one or more powerful factors justifying suspension will have to be shown if the term is to be suspended. We do not think that the Court is necessarily precluded from taking into account, at this stage of the process, factors which have already been considered when deciding the appropriate length of the term of committal. Usually, however, the Court in deciding the length of the term will already have given full weight to the mitigation, with the result that there is no powerful factor making it appropriate to suspend the term. If the immediate imprisonment of the contemnor will have a serious adverse effect on others, for example, where the contemnor is the sole or principal carer of children or of vulnerable adults, that may make it appropriate for the term to be suspended; but even then, as Bashir [2012] ACD 69 shows, an immediate term, greatly shortened to reflect the personal mitigation, may well be necessary".