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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> X, Y, Z (Minors), Re [2011] EWHC 1267 (Fam) (18 May 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2011/1267.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 1267 (Fam), [2011] Fam Law 933, [2011] 2 FLR 1088 |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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KENT COUNTY COUNCIL |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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A MOTHER | 1st Respondent | F | 2nd Respondent | X, Y, Z (Minors) | 3rd - 5th Respondents | IR | Intervenor |
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Sandria Murkin (instructed by Gill Turner Tucker) for the 1st Respondent
Isabelle Watson (instructed by Clarke Keirnan) for the 2nd Respondent
Alison Ball QC and Margo Boye (instructed by Davis Simmonds and Donaghey) for the 3rd Respondent
Jo Delahunty QC and Christopher Poole (instructed by Messrs Reeves & Co) for the Intervenor
Hearing dates: 8th April 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
This judgment is being handed down in private on 18 May 2011. It consists of 15 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.
MR. JUSTICE BAKER :
THE LAW AS TO COSTS IN CARE PROCEEDINGS
"Where the debate surrounds the future of a child, the proceedings are partly inquisitorial and the aspiration is that in their outcome the child is the winner and indeed the only winner. The court does not wish the spectre of an order for costs to discourage those with a proper interest in the child from participating in the debate. Nor does it wish to reduce the chance of their co-operation around the future life of the child by casting one as the successful party entitled to his costs and another as the unsuccessful party obliged to pay them. The proposition applies in its fullest form to proceedings between parents and other relations; but it also applies to proceedings to which a local authority is a party …. But the proposition is not applied where, for example, the conduct of a party has been reprehensible or the party's stance has been beyond the band of what is reasonable."
"The order for a bespoke fact-finding hearing was surely to consign the determination of the mother's allegations into a separate compartment of the court's determination of the father's application for an order for contact …. [T]he effect of the direction for a separate fact-finding hearing was that the costs incurred by the mother in relation to that hearing can confidently be seen to be wholly referable to her allegations against the father. There was, in that sense, a ring fence around that hearing and thus around the costs referable to it. Those costs did not relate to the paradigm situation to which the general proposition in favour of no order as to costs applies."
"I am well aware that, in most disputed cases in relation to children, whether in private or in public law, parties justify their proposals for the future arrangements for the child by reference, at any rate in part, to past events, of which another party or other parties will often present a different version. Thus, to a greater or lesser extent, issues of historical fact arise, in probably the majority of these proceedings, I would be concerned if our exercise of discretion in relation to the mother's costs in this case today were to be taken as an indication that it was appropriate in the vast run of these cases to make an order for costs in whole or in part by reference to the court's determination of issues of historical fact."
"[i]t was and is common ground that it was appropriate for the local authority to invite the court to determine the allegations against the grandparents, and that … the way in which the local authority conducted themselves during that hearing cannot be criticised."
However, he concluded that the judge had erred because he had purported to apply the general proposition in favour of no order as to costs. He explained (at paragraph 18):
"… where in care proceedings a local authority raises, however, appropriately, very serious factual allegations against a parent or other party, and at the end of a fact-finding hearing the judge concludes that they have not established them, the general proposition is not in play. Neither of the reasons for the proposition which I ventured in the Sutton case fits such a situation."
He then added (at paragraph 19):
"It does not, however, follow that the judge should automatically have ordered the local authority to pay the costs of the grandparents. The general rule that costs should follow the event did not apply. Nor however did the general proposition that there should be no order for costs in proceedings relating to children. In truth the judge should have started with a clean sheet".
But then he quoted from another judgment in Baker v Rowe [2009] EWCA Civ 1162, [2010] 1 FCR 413 in which he had observed:
"Even where the judge starts with a clean sheet, the fact that one party has been unsuccessful, and must therefore usually be regarded as responsible for the generation of the successful party's costs, will often properly count as the decisive factor in the exercise of the judge's discretion."
On the facts of Re T, Wilson LJ concluded:
"In my view, the facts that the grandparents were faced with allegations of the utmost severity, that accordingly it had been reasonable for them to stretch their economy to the utmost in order to secure for themselves a professional defence against them and that, in the event, the result was an exoneration, were all matters which should have been of great, indeed in my view of decisive importance to a judge who was about to write on a clean sheet."
(1) An application by the five Respondents – the mother, F, and X, Y and Z through their guardian – for an order that the local authority should pay a proportion of their costs occasioned by the failure of the local authority to comply with its duties of disclosure, and
(2) An application by IR for an order that the local authority should pay all or part of his costs on the grounds, inter alia, that he (unlike the mother and F) has been completely exonerated of all allegations made against him.
THE APPLICATION BY THE FIVE RESPONDENTS
IR's APPLICATION FOR COSTS
"the judgment of 29 October 2010 placed the local authority and its legal advisors in a quandary. Either the local authority held out and stuck to its findings of fact document dated 21 May 2010, or it respected the court's assessment that the new material was (potentially) manifestly relevant to the issues and should be properly investigated. It adopted the latter course, and we submit, should not be criticised, still less condemned in costs, for its decision."
Mr Kirk proceeds to remind me that
"whilst W was called by the local authority, it was made plain to all by leading counsel on its behalf that it had absolutely no idea as to what she would ultimately say or whether any reliance could be placed upon what she was about to say. She was, most certainly, not called as a 'witness of truth' on behalf of the local authority".
"that IR was only properly a party from 28 October 2010 when he was joined as a further respondent until 6 January 2011 when he should have been discharged from the proceedings. His representation thereafter by leading and junior counsel was deemed by the court to be warranted, but there is no reason why the local authority should be condemned in any of his costs after that date".
CONCLUSION