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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> T v S [2013] EWHC 2521 (Fam) (25 July 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2013/2521.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 2521 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
B e f o r e :
(The President)
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Applicant |
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- and - |
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S |
Respondent |
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MISS H. MUSTAFA (instructed by Fitzhugh Gates) appeared on behalf of the Respondent (mother).
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Crown Copyright ©
THE PRESIDENT:
"I am not prepared to make any significant changes to [the division of time arrangements], either way, not least because, the moment I do, it is inviting the parties to continue to chip away at the arrangements, on one side or the other, so as to achieve, in the long term, a result more near to the one they would actually like. I am simply not prepared to be part of any such developments and I do not believe that the interests of [the boy] are remotely served by any such approach".
"Otherwise, the exercise of parental responsibility shall be in accordance with the schedule to A v. A [2004] 1 FLR, 1195 (appended herein), amended to incorporate or avoid conflict with any specific provision in this Order".
The schedule as attached to the Order, following the structure of the schedule prepared by Wall J. (as he then was) in the case of A v. A, divided the exercise of parental responsibility into three different categories. For present purposes I need refer only to the third category – namely, "Decisions that you would need to inform and consult the other parent prior to making the decision". One of the decisions under that heading was "planned medical and dental treatment". In other words, the court was devolving to the parents the ability to take decisions in relation to the medical and dental treatment of the child, thus in anticipation making provision avoiding the need to come back to court as would normally be required under the principle that no medical treatment can take place without the court's consent. Importantly, as will be appreciated, the mechanism which Mr. Justice Hedley put in place was that in relation to planned dental treatment, with which I am in part concerned today, the obligation on the parent proposing to embark upon such treatment was to inform and consult with the other parent prior to coming to a decision. There is no obligation to obtain the consent of the other parent, let alone the consent of the court, the consent of the court having been given in anticipation by the provisions to which I have drawn attention.
"I am satisfied that the court will, for the most part, simply never get at the truth of those allegations and counter-allegations, for the reasons explained in the two earlier judgments, and I see no merit whatever in the court expending yet further time in what, I am satisfied, would be a wholly futile quest ... it just seems to me that we are stuck where we are and the court must simply do the best it can in the circumstances which now confront it".
The reality is that the father seeks not merely a fundamental change to the arrangements set out by Mr. Justice Hedley but, moreover, implicitly on the basis that before deciding the way forward the court should investigate the allegations which he currently makes against the mother, which history would strongly suggest will be met, if not in equal measure, at least in measure, by counter-allegations from her.
"This is their child, nobody else's, and if they want to inflict that on the child, they answer for it in due course. I suppose, if common sense were to have any part to play in this, one might draw attention to the fact that there is a Brighton-bound platform at Clapham Junction (which is 13, I think) which may even have a small café on it, and that might make an altogether admirable place at which to effect the handover, but if the parties have other ideas and want to hand over on some empty platform or disused siding, that is a matter for them".
Those particular words may have been uttered by reference to that particular problem, but they have a much wider and much deeper resonance.
L A T E R
"The father shall collect the ward from school on Friday and deliver him to the mother at Clapham Junction on Sunday".
He raises the question as to what is meant by the phrase "the father" and, by implication, what is meant by the phrase "the mother", whether that means the father and no-one else and, correspondingly, the mother and non-one else, or whether it means the father or his agent and, correspondingly, the mother and her agent.