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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> TF v RF & Ors [2007] EWHC 2543 (Fam) (02 November 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2007/2543.html Cite as: [2007] 3 FCR 832, [2007] EWHC 2543 (Fam), [2008] Fam Law 115 |
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THE HON. MR JUSTICE SUMNER
This judgment is being handed down in private on 2 November 2007. It consists of 31 pages and has been signed and dated by the judge. The judge hereby gives leave for it to be reported.
The judgment is being distributed on the strict understanding that in any report no person other than the advocates or the solicitors instructing them (and other persons identified by name in the judgment itself) may be identified by name or location and that in particular the anonymity of the children and the adult members of their family must be strictly preserved.
FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
TF |
(Applicant) |
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- and - |
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RF |
(1st Respondent) |
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- and - |
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DF and NMF |
(2nd & 3rd Respondents) |
____________________
Miss van Spall (instructed by dfa law) for the1st Respondent
Mr Bruce Coleman instructed by Borneo Linnells Solicitors) for the 2nd and 3rd Respondents
(through their Guardian ad litem)
Hearing dates: 3, 4 & 5 September 2007
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Sumner :
Introduction and outline
The mother's case | 8 |
The father's case | 13 |
Present applications | 15 |
Background | 16 |
The hearing in December 2006 | 37 |
January – September 2007 | 46 |
Hearing on 29 August | 58 |
Hearing on 31 August | 62 |
Email messages | 65 |
The hearing in September 2007 - | |
The father's evidence | 79 |
Mr Flatman's report | 95 |
Mr Flatman's evidence | 111 |
The mother's evidence and statements | 118 |
Miss Ward | 131 |
Mrs Burke | 133 |
The Guardian | 142 |
Written submissions – | |
The mother | 146 |
The father | 151 |
The Guardian | 158 |
Application to recuse | 170 |
Change of name | 190 |
Section 91(14) order | 198 |
Conclusions | 206 |
The mother's case
The father's case
Present applications
i) An application by the mother of 3 May 2007 for contact to be suspended and for the committal of the father. It is alleged that the father, in breach of an order and an undertaking, had taken steps to discover where the mother was. On 1 May he waited in his car outside their home before the children went to school.
ii) An application by the mother of 4 June 2007 for permission to change the children's surnames. This was to prevent the father discovering where the children were living and going to school.
iii) An application by the father of 11 June 2007 for the immediate custody of the children. This was based on the mother's neglect and physical abuse. She had previously abused the children, but now D had a fractured arm. Also the children were at risk of sexual abuse from the mother's partner.
iv) An application by the mother of 13 July 2007 under s.91(14) of the Children Act 1989, requiring the father to obtain the court's permission to make any application for the next 3 years. This was based on the number and nature of the applications made by the father and the need for her and the children to have peace and stability.
v) A further application by the father of 10 August 2007 for a residence order in respect of the 2 children. The grounds were that the mother had broken D's arm, deliberately burned him with hot oven gloves, and dislocated N's arm on a number of occasions. Also the children were in contact with her partner who has been investigated by the police for offences against children.
vi) An application by the father also of 10 August 2007 that I should recuse myself from the case. I had shown bias towards the mother, accepting her evidence when it was shown she was lying. I had also disregarded the legal process making an order as if it was on notice when I knew it was not. He enlarged on these grounds during the course of his submissions.
Background
The hearing in December 2006
"It is rare to read such a sustained diatribe even in family cases. I am satisfied there is no hope of contact being negotiated between father and mother without the mother becoming once more the victim of the father's aggression and contempt. The children will not be immune from it … the fathers sustained abuse, aggression, and criticism of all he sees as opposing him and in particular, the mother is remarkable… his insight is severely limited …".
"I share the view of the experts that at this stage it is not possible to see how contact could continue unless it is strictly supervised. I want that situation to come to an end. It has been clear during the hearing that my wishes have gone ahead of the sensible, careful, and justifiable views of Ms W."
January – September 2007
Hearing on 29 August
Hearing on 31 August
Email messages
The hearing in September 2007 – the father's evidence
Mr Flatman's report
"Personality disorder, usually coming to attention because of gross disparity between behaviour and the prevailing social norms, and characterised by:
callous unconcern for the feelings of others;
gross and persistent attitude of irresponsibility and disregard for social norms, rules and obligations;
incapacity to maintain enduring relationships, though having no difficulty in establishing them;
very low tolerance to frustration and a low threshold for discharge of aggression, including violence;
incapacity to experience guilt or to profit from experience, particularly punishment;
marked proneness to blame others, or to offer plausible rationalisations for the behaviour that has brought the individual into conflict with society.
there may also be persistent irritability, as an associated feature. Conduct disorder during childhood and adolescence, though not invariably present, made further support the diagnosis."
" Essentially Mr F is a person with a significantly reduced level of conscience, and therefore is unlikely to experience guilt or to profit from experience resulting from the consequences for others … this is one of the personality traits; experiencing shallow emotions, and being outraged by matters which are relatively insignificant to others."
"Mr F does have a callousness and a lack of empathy, and often does not even know from an intellectual standpoint when observing the behaviour of others that they may have been hurt or distressed by his behaviour. He has poor behavioural controls at Tes, when his emotions run high …
Another example (of this) was that Mr F wished to impress upon me was his complete indifference to Ms F as a person. He said that were he contacted to inform him she had died his next question (and therefore the only possible concern) would be to ask when he could pick up the children.
Obviously, under the circumstances that have pertained it is not surprising that Mr F does not have caring feelings for Miss F, but it was Mr F's desire to illustrate the complete absence of feelings which was so telling."
"Mr F cares intensely and passionately about the care and protection of his boys and part of this is said he considers it crucial that he and they have an ongoing and sustained relationship. Because of his lack of development of moral conscience and empathy, he does not see that despite the powerful nature of his intentions for his boys, that his contact can cause some significant harm, in certain areas of his life, particularly involving relationship and interactions with others. He can therefore seem to be disinhibited and simply not concerned about possible consequences of his behaviour where others would express deep concern...
Because of Mr F's personality characteristics, his perception of reality and his habitual modes of conduct, he does present as a risk to his boys with regard to absconding with them, or placing them at further risk of harm, through his contact with others, especially concerning high levels of emotional, behavioural and relationship discord …
Because of the above risk factors, my opinion is that contact will need to be supervised with this being kept under review ... indications of positive change in Mr F will need to be sustained over a significant period of time before changes to contact arrangements are made … within this context. I did not consider that there is a particular form of treatment or intervention, to be prescribed by others, which might assist Mr F."
"Despite the good quality of his contact time with the children, his conduct outside the contact sessions is such that the children had been placed at risk of emotional harm through having to move and change schools on three occasions, by presumably frequently experiencing situations of divided loyalty, by risk of abduction, and indirectly by causing their mother and primary carer undue stress and anxiety"
Mr Flatman's evidence.
The mother's statements and evidence
Miss Ward
Mrs Burke
The Guardian
"However they accepted that contact was to be stopped, and why and are aware that it may be decided that further contact in the near future may not be reinstated. Since all direct contact was suspended, they have e-mailed their father, and have been very upset that they have received nothing in return. They have always lived with that mother and would wish that this to remain the position."
Written submissions - the mother
Written submissions – the father
Written submissions on behalf of the Guardian
"This is a said case in which the father potentially has so much to offer his sons. But because of the extreme nature of his personality poses a severe risk to them. Mr F appears to be genuinely unable to see that his behaviour causes distress, and that this impact upon the boys in the number of ways and has led to their education and friendships being disrupted. In the absence of any attempt to address these problems, the Guardian considers that the orders sought by the mother are proportionate and necessary for the protection of the children."
Application to recuse myself
- I had taken bribes.
- I had rung the children's mother.
- I had allowed the mother to make applications on notice despite being aware that they were not in fact on notice.
- The temporary order to change the children's name was wrong as I had ordered and I knew it. The Court of Appeal had said so on 29 August.
- There was no chance ever of a fair hearing. He had been told by counsel outside that I was fair but she knew me socially and perhaps that is what had to happen.
- I had done nothing to protect the children.
- I had taken the mother's side on every single occasion regardless of the facts.
- I had been particularly restrictive and the children deserve better.
- He repeated the allegation that I had changed names knowing that he had not been served.
- He appeared to make an allegation that I had been offered sexual favours by the Guardian's solicitor.
- I had failed to make or to follow up an order in relation to telephone conversations.
- There was no way he could get a fair hearing.
"The nature of the allegations may, on occasion, be decisive although it does not follow that even if an allegation of wholly outrageous conduct, such as the taking of a bribe, were made, that would necessarily qualify as a ground for recusal, if it was manifestly fanciful or unfounded."
i) Justice must be seen to be done but that does not mean that judges should too readily accept suggestions of appearance of bias thereby encouraging parties to believe that they might thereby obtain someone more likely to favour their case.
ii) The fact that a judge had commented adversely on a party or witness or found them to be unreliable would not found an objection unless there were further grounds.
iii) A real danger of bias might well be thought to arise –
a) if there was personal friendship or animosity between a judge and any member of the public involved in the case,
b) if the judge was too closely acquainted with such a person,
c) if the judge had rejected the evidence of such a person or expressed views in such extreme or unbalanced terms such as to throw doubts on their ability to approach the person or the issue with an open mind,
d) or for those or other reasons cause doubt in the ability of the judge to ignore extraneous matters or prejudices and bring an objective judgment to bear.
iv) A judge should resist the temptation to recuse himself simply because it would be more comfortable to do so as for instance when the litigant appears to have lost confidence in the judge.
v) The test remains, having considered all the circumstances bearing on the suggestion that the judge could be biased, whether those circumstances would lead a fair minded and informed observer adopting a balanced approach to conclude that there was a real possibility that the tribunal was biased.
Change of name
Section 91(14) order
"a) The children's welfare is the paramount consideration.
b) The power to restrict applications is discretionary and in exercising its discretion the court must weight in the balance all the relevant circumstances;
c) An important consideration is that to impose a restriction is a statutory intrusion into the right of a party to bring proceedings before the court and to be heard;
d) The power should therefore be used sparingly and should be the exception and not the rule;
(even without the history)
e) The facts went beyond the commonly encountered need for a time to settle to a regime ordered by the court and the all too common situation where there was animosity between the parties (adults and/or local authority); and
f) That there was a serious risk that, without the imposition of the restriction, the child or primary carers would be subject to unacceptable strain."
Conclusions
- The father said right from October 2005 that the mother was not a fit mother and he would take the children away. (para. 17).
- He tried to take them from their school. (17).
- He stopped her leaving with the children apparently indifferent to their distress and screams. (19).
- He breached an undertaking returning the children on the following day. (19).
- He threatened to break down a door if the children were not returned to him on that day, returning twice to the mother's new home banging on the door. (20).
- Within 3 days the police were summonsed on 4 occasions because of the father's conduct. (19, 21, 22). Once it was by her solicitors when he attended because of his shouting and abuse with threats to punch them. It caused them to decline to act for the mother. (22).
- The father repeatedly called the mother and visited her home. His abusive and threatening behaviour became obsessional. (24, 27, 29).
- He was arrested when he parked opposite her home with his headlights on. (23).
- He caused the mother on 1 March 2006 on professional advice to go to a refuge by saying he would resolve matters in his own way, by telling his aunt that if the mother was successful in court he would have the children on a plane to Mexico by the weekend, and informing the school that he was collecting the children at the end of the day. (27, 28).
- He engaged in a series of further obsessive telephone calls to the mother with the direst of threats, including that he was going to have her raped and killed. (29, 30).
- A further series of these messages was transcribed from the mother's telephone in April and May 2006.
- He tried to obtain passports for the children by falsely saying they were lost (31).
- He was convicted of harassing the mother (33).
- The children were observed to be affected by his behaviour (35).
- Supervised contact between August and December 2006 showed the children with mixed and contradictory feelings about contact (36).
- The father displayed hostility to the mother which had a detrimental effect on her and her parenting ability, he was not open to considering the children's needs, and there was a substantial abduction risk (37).
- The experienced Guardian felt overwhelmed by the degree of hostility when the father gave evidence and asked questions at court in December 2006 (39).
- I refer to my conclusions in December 2006 set out at paragraphs 42 to 44.
- There has been no change in the father's attitude to the mother and her solicitors after the hearing (67).
- He repeatedly threatened to take the children from their home when he felt like it despite court orders which he announced did not matter (48).
- On 1 May 2007 he parked outside the mother's home, whether it was accidental or deliberate (49).
- The father supported a new application for a residence order with false allegations that the mother had neglected the children, physically abused them, and were at risk of sexual abuse from her partner who had been interviewed about sexual abuse of children (53).
- He misled me on an application without notice about the information he had received in relation to a fracture of D's arm (54).
- On a further without-notice application on 29 August, the father told me in such compelling terms that he was going to get the children that I phoned the mother's solicitors (59, 60).
- He said in evidence that he had seen them twice and was in regular telephone conversation (88).
- He accused the mother's partner of being a paedophile without any evidence (70).
- Extracts from his email messages show that he continued abuse and false allegations of an extreme kind against the mother, her solicitor, the Guardian and her solicitor (64).
- The father has not moderated his virulent and abusive attitude to the mother and to all with whom he disagrees. He has continued to be abusive and threatening to the mother's solicitors throughout. The extent of his abuse about the mother and her solicitors is of an extreme type and has not moderated.