UK case law

R (Children) , Re

[2012] EWCA CIV 687 · Court of Appeal (Civil Division) · 2012

Get your free legal insight →Email to a colleague
Get your free legal insight on this case →

The verbatim text of this UK judgment. Sourced directly from The National Archives Find Case Law. Not an AI summary, not a paraphrase — every word below is the original ruling, under Crown copyright and the Open Government Licence v3.0.

Full judgment

Lord Justice Thorpe:

1. This is the second respondent father's appeal from the judgment of HHJ Walsh sitting in the Leeds County Court on 21 December 2011. The appeal proceeds pursuant to permission granted by McFarlane LJ. The simple issue is whether or not the appellant should be allowed to instruct an expert, Dr Markos, who deals with, amongst other areas of expertise, transmission or cross-transmission of sexually transmitted diseases such as genital warts and thrush.

2. HHJ Walsh refused to countenance the instruction, firstly on the ground of delay, which brought the application before him so close to the fixture of the preliminary issue trial as to jeopardise that fixture and to risk the eventuality that it would have to be adjourned and re-timetabled. He also in his reasoning could not see what relevance there would be in investigation and report given that the available evidence suggested that, although the child had at one stage suffered from HPV, that had been expertly treated and that as at summer of last year a consultant paediatrician had given a clean bill of health in relation to any condition capable of sexual cross-transmission.

3. Mr Jackson points out legitimately that the situation that confronted HHJ Walsh no longer applies since the imminent fixture that he safeguarded has been lost for other reasons and there is now no pressure of time in obtaining the opinion that the second respondent wants. However, it seems to me that Mr Hayes and Mr Myers are well founded in their submission that there is insufficient indication that a report from this expert is even tangentially relevant to the issues that a court will decide. The child's position as at summer of last year is authoritatively established by the consultant paediatrician's report and, as Mr Hayes points out, evidence as to the second respondent's condition depends upon self reporting after he had withdrawn from the family home. So I would simply dismiss the appeal on the grounds that the reasoning of the circuit judge was sound and the shift in circumstances relied on by Mr Jackson has no bearing at all on the reasoning as to relevance. Lord Justice Aikens :

4. I agree Lady Justice Black :

5. I also agree. Order : Appeal dismissed

R (Children) , Re [2012] EWCA CIV 687 — UK case law · My AI Health