Tuesday 7 December
2004
Members present:
Mr A J Beith, in
the Chair
| Peter
Bottomley |
Mr
Clive Soley |
| Ross
Cranston |
Keith
Vaz |
| Mr
Hilton Dawson |
Dr
Alan Whitehead |
CONTENTS
Examination of
Witnesses Question Number 98 to 186
Christina Blacklaws,
Chairman, Family Law Committee, and Hilary Lloyd, Head of Strategic
Policy (Research), The Law Society; Kim Beatson, Chairman, and
Christopher Goulden, The Solicitors Family Law Association; and
Philip Moor QC, Chairman, The Family Law Bar Association, examined.
7 DECEMBER
2004
CHRISTINA
BLACKLAWS, HILARY LLOYD,
KIM BEATSON, CHRISTOPHER GOULDEN AND
PHILIP MOOR QC
Chairman:
Good morning and welcome everyone. We have got a splendid
team of witnesses and we are very glad to have you with us. We
have Philip Moor, from the Family Law Bar Association; Kim Beatson
and Christopher Goulden from The Solicitors Family Law Association;
and Christina Blacklaws and Hilary Lloyd from The Law Society.
You are all very welcome. I think we had just better declare any
interests.
Mr Cranston:
I am a barrister.
Keith
Vaz: My wife holds a part-time judicial post and I am a non-practising
barrister.
Chairman:
Please do not feel obliged to answer every question. Between
you I think we can have a very good source of ideas and comments.
On the other hand, if something is said which you feel does not
reflect your own standpoint by all means feel free to indicate
that you want to contribute on that point as well. Mr Soley?
Q98
Mr Soley: I would like to know about the feeling of dissatisfaction
by parents with family courts generally. We are told that there
is quite a high level of dissatisfaction. First of all, do you
think that is correct? Secondly, what do you think the cause of
it is? Bearing in mind the Chairman's comments that you do not
all have to answer, but in a way it crosses all your expertise,
so who wants to start?
Christopher
Goulden: If I could comment first. I feel sure that most
people would agree that what parents particularly object to about
the family justice system is the length of time it takes to get
anything done, and there are a number of reasons for that, but
delay is a great source of dissatisfaction.
Q99
Mr Soley: Okay, that is delay. What about process?
Christopher
Goulden: The process itself to an extent they would have
objections to because they find it an uncomfortable process but,
ultimately, they have an idea of what they want and they have
an idea of when they want it and so long as those two are met
I do not suppose they would actually object to the actual process
itself.
Q100 Mr Soley: What do they find uncomfortable about it,
apart from the fact they are talking about deeply personal issues?
Christopher
Goulden: Well, the court process of giving evidence is
an extremely uncomfortable one and they feel disempowered by the
idea of decisions which reflect very closely their most deeply-held
personal feelings being dealt with in a relatively public way
and dealt with by strangers.
Q101
Mr Soley: So it is the discomfort of talking about relationship
issues?
Christopher
Goulden: Yes, in a formal setting.
Q102
Mr Soley: What about the issue of bias, have you come across
a feeling of bias about mothers or fathers as parents?
Christina
Blacklaws: No, I do not think that there is any bias that
can be evidenced in the court process or in the family justice
system itself. A lot is talked about it, I know, and I am aware
of that, however, in my experience and I think probably the anecdotal
experience of everybody on this bench, I have always found the
courts to be gender blind in the way that they deal with the cases
that are before them. However obviously many, many children do
live with their mothers and if that is the status quo that will
often be upheld by the courts. The courts will not change that
status quo unless there is good reason to do so. Hence sometimes
there may be a perception that the courts are biased towards mothers
in these circumstances.
Q103
Mr Soley: Could that bias go back to the position of separation
where for other reasons in a sense a man might often be the one
who leaves the home and then the mother is with the children and
that possession puts them in a stronger position at the beginning.
Is that right or not?
Christina
Blacklaws: It may well be the case but I think what we
are doing with family law always is that we are dealing with the
situations that face us. If the father has left the home and a
status quo has been established with the children
living successfully perhaps with the mother then it would be difficult
for the courts to overturn that just because that is what the
father wanted.
Q104
Mr Soley: It there not a difference though in the sense, if
you take the gender issue out of it, it is about the non-resident
parent, is it not, so the parent who leaves the home in the sense
of leaving the other parent with the children, does that parent
who has got the children not start off a court process with an
advantage in the sense there is a presumption that that is where
custody will end up? Do you think that happens or not?
Christina
Blacklaws: I think that there is an element of truth in
that and one of the reasons because of—and we have already mentioned
this before and I think you will find this is going to be a theme
of our evidence—the delay which is endemic in the family court
process is if you as a non-resident parent who has with good cause
an application to make before the court, whether it is for residence
or for contact with their child, have to wait 14 or 16 weeks before
you can even get to the first stage, and that is assuming that
you have the funds to be able to make an application to court
on the day that you wish to, then of course you are going to be
disadvantaged. This status quo which I have already mentioned
will have been established. That is without looking at the difficulties
of getting public funding and the processes that you have to go
through to obtain a legal aid public funding certificate to take
a matter to court. If you are a self-employed person
the Legal Services Commission quite often have great difficulty
in assessing your eligibility for public funding. I have had a
case that took six months for the Legal Services Commission to
say, "yes, this person is eligible for public funding" so, yes,
you can be terribly disadvantaged, I think, as a non resident
parent or even as a parent who just wishes to see your child.
Q105
Mr Soley: Are you saying that it is the time factor then that
might distort the situation in that the non-resident parent slowly
loses out? Is that what you are saying?
Christina
Blacklaws: Yes, I think in terms of residence that is
the case. If a status quo has been established with one set-up
of the family then it is unlikely that the court will change that,
unless there is very good reason. With regard to parents seeing
their children, then obviously the longer that they go without
seeing their children the more difficult it is to re-establish
their contact.
Q106
Mr Soley: Is not the assumption in society that the male role
is actually to withdraw in that situation and leave the mother
with the children? Is that not a general assumption? Leave aside
whether it is right or wrong, does the court not reflect that
to some extent and that is where the feeling of bias comes from?
Christina
Blacklaws: I think it is a bit of a chicken and egg. That
is what often happens in our experience. Often as the family that
is left behind, for whatever reason, and sometimes on the part
of the father very good reasons—to ensure that the children have
stability, that they can continue to attend their school, that
their housing needs are put first—yes, that is often the situation.
Then we as lawyers and the courts themselves have to deal with
the reality that we are given. So of course that is often reflected
in the courts' decision-making.
Q107
Mr Soley: My colleagues will want to come in in moment but
could I just ask you a final question. Would it be your assumption
that the Government ought to reduce the use of courts in these
situations if possible, if you like, to try and discourage it
so that you get a settlement prior to the court or outside the
court without invoking a court procedure?
Christina
Blacklaws: Yes, but I need to qualify that slightly. Obviously
I think you have heard before that only about 10% of cases actually
come to court so 90% of families settle their matters without
coming to court. Of those 10%, there are inevitably going to be
perhaps quite a large number who have to have a judicial decision
and the reason is that they have, for example, very serious allegations
of perhaps sexual abuse or domestic violence, or there are intractable
problems in terms of the parents coming to some form of agreement.
Obviously there are a number of family cases—for example child
care cases and adoption cases—and these sorts of matters have
to be determined by the court. I do not think we can aim to get
every single family case out of the court process. However, having
said that, then, yes, there is a core group of cases which can
rightly be diverted into other dispute resolution processes and
we very much at the Law Society welcome the pilot projects that
have been set up over the country to look into how this can be
achieved. Obviously it is at its early stages yet but we look
forward to seeing how the evidence from those pilot projects pans
out.
Q108
Mr Dawson: I think we have started to veer slightly into public
law there but in terms of private law entirely, are you happy
that the courts actually do recognise evidence of domestic violence
and respond to it appropriately?
Christopher
Goulden: That is certainly much improved. Going back some
years it could be said that courts did not recognise them sufficiently
but there is a much more heightened understanding of the implications
of domestic abuse and so I think generally the answer to your
question would be yes.
Q109
Mr Dawson: Despite the wide prevalence of domestic violence,
courts still are very, very reluctant to refuse contact orders,
are they not? Does that imply that they are very good at making
arrangements for safe contact for children?
Christina
Blacklaws: Is the Committee aware of the new forms that
have been developed? Yes. I think that there are real problems
in domestic violence issues being brought to the fore at a very
early stage. It is very important that this is recognised right
at the outset. It is an allegation and it may not be true, it
may be that (archetypally) the mother is trying to prevent contact
for no other reason than her own, but the allegation itself needs
to be taken very seriously, needs to be investigated early on
and a judicial decision made as to whether those facts are made
out and then the court can go on to determine what is in the best
interests of the child on that basis. It is very important that
that is identified and dealt with at the earliest stage in the
case as possible.
Q110
Mr Dawson: These are new procedures which come in early next
year and they respond to Section 120 of the Adoption and Children
Act, I believe?
Christina
Blacklaws: That is right so at the very outset of the
case the court will be aware if there are any allegations of any
sort of abuse of the children and any possibility of the children
being adopted, so these two issues are very clear at the beginning.
Q111
Mr Dawson: You are confident about that? Domestic violence,
I hardly need to stress, the point is something that is hidden
and that has taken decades, or centuries even to achieve the prominence
that it has. Surely there are many occasions on which women are
reluctant even now to give evidence of the abuse that they have
suffered?
Christina
Blacklaws: Yes, absolutely. I think that there has been
great progress, certainly in the courts' approach to this issue
of domestic violence, and a greater awareness and understanding
of its prevalence, and the court and the lawyers need to be vigilant
to ensure that the issue of domestic violence is not something
that is just addressed at the beginning of the case because actually,
as you have said, a lot of victims of domestic violence take some
time to be able to tell their story and that is something that
needs to be checked all the way through.
Q112
Mr Dawson: So when you said, as you said earlier when you
talked about women wilfully refusing contact (and certainly the
Family Law Bar Association talk about a small group of women who
are obdurately refusing contact) is it not likely that domestic
violence underpins a great deal of those women's position to contact?
Christina
Blacklaws: It may well be the case. Having had these cases
myself sometimes it is very difficult to get to the bottom of
why contact is being so very forcibly rejected but, yes, it certainly
has to be in every lawyer's mind, "Is this because of a threat
of harm either to (archetypally) the mother or the children themselves?"
and that needs to be carefully and with a lot of sensitivity explored
with the client.
Q113
Chairman: Can I just clarify whether it is your view that
a past experience of violence between the parents is in all circumstances
a bar to contact with the children?
Christina
Blacklaws: No, not at all, sir. It is something that needs
to be carefully looked at and then what I would say is that contact
needs to be safe. As long as safe contact can take place and as
long as it is always in the children's best interests then, of
course, it is no bar.
Q114
Mr Dawson: Experience of domestic violence is now acknowledged
as a factor of significant harm, is it not, under the same procedures
we are talking about?
Christina
Blacklaws: Yes.
Q115
Mr Dawson: Can I just ask how well you feel the voices of
children are heard in private law proceedings?
Philip
Moor: I think they are heard pretty well. In fact, in
the Principal Registry in London, when an application is made
and a child is over the age of nine, the child comes along to
the first conciliation appointment and the CAFCASS officer will
see the child, usually privately without the parents, then if
it is still impossible on that occasion to reach a sensible compromise
in the interests of the child then the CAFCASS report will be
directed, and my experience certainly is that the voice of the
child is heard during that process. Of course it can be very difficult
for the child because the one thing the child wants is for the
parents to stay together in general. They want the situation to
carry on as though there was nothing wrong. It is very difficult
for children to choose between parents and we have to recognise
that.
Kim
Beatson: Philip has described the arrangement in the Principal
Registry which involves children over nine attending conciliation
appointments. It is the view of the Solicitors Family Law Association
that children should not be obliged to attend conciliation appointments
on court premises and that there is a better way of hearing children
without the shadow of the law children who are effectively being
taken out of school with one parent, knowing that they may have
to speak against the other parent, and we find that not the best
way of hearing children.
Philip
Moor: I would agree with that.
Christina
Blacklaws: I think that ideally children's voices should
be heard much more clearly in the private law context as they
are in the public law context. However, we come up against the
problem of resources time and time again. There are perhaps not
the resources to be able to effect the Rule 9.5 Practice Direction
from the President that you probably heard about on the last occasion
whereby children can be separately represented so they are not
just caught between their two warring parents, they have some
support, and their voices can be heard, as Kim has said, without
putting them before the court and making them say what they want
in those circumstances. It is a problem of resources and there
are not sufficient CAFCASS officers to be able to properly offer
that service at the moment.
Christopher
Goulden: Possibly behind why the children are asked to
go to the Principal Registry is because it is a lot easier for
the courts administration.
Q116
Mr Dawson: Indeed. The President of the Family Division certainly
spoke strongly about the system of tandem representation a"
la the situation in public law. Is that something that you
would like to see operated more in the private law field?
Christina
Blacklaws: It is certainly not necessary in every case
but in those cases which are the ones that hit the headlines that
concern the judiciary and the lawyers the most, the intractable
cases that go on and on and on, and children's voices are not
heard and their best interests are not seen to, in those circumstances,
I think it would be most welcome if they had that sort of protection
to ensure that their rights were protected as well.
Christopher
Goulden: If I could say the experience of Lord Justice
Wall when he gave evidence to you, the fact that you can so quickly
crack an intractable case, is certainly my experience of 9.5 appointments.
As Christina has said, the last thing you want is children being
represented in every case or indeed in a lot of cases, but for
those few it can be a magic wand.
Q117
Chairman: In your written evidence you suggested that there
should be a statutory presumption that the children should have
contact with both parents following separation. How would that
relate to the existing presumption that the court must act in
the best interests of the children?
Christopher
Goulden: I have to deviate slightly from the SFLA line
on that. We have had subsequent discussions about that. I do not
think that that is as well put as it might have been, with all
due respect to my organisation. I think a better way would be
perhaps to follow what the President said which is to have it
as part of the welfare check-list and then it would get over that
problem of there being, as it were, two conflicting presumptions.
There is nothing wrong with having a presumption which is rebuttable,
as was the recommendation in our written evidence, but as long
as it came in perhaps by means of being part of the welfare check-list.
Q118
Chairman: When Dame Elizabeth was before us she said that
she could see a case for something slightly less than the legal
presumption such as "that the courts should have regard to the
importance of a relationship between the children and a non-residential
parent."
Christopher
Goulden: I think that is well put and that is more or
less what we were saying.
Q119
Chairman: That is generally supported across the table, is
it?
Christina
Blacklaws: Yes, it could go into the welfare check-list
which is what guides the court in its decision-making process
on all of the issues that it needs to take into consideration
when making any decision about children.
Q120 Chairman: Do you think that should be embodied in
Section 1 of the Children Act?
Christina
Blacklaws: I do not think that any of us could see that
that would do any harm at all and if it supports families and
children then yes.
Q121
Mr Cranston: Mr Soley raised the issue about reducing the
role of the courts. Could I ask you about reducing the role of
lawyers and in particular the impact of legal aid. Casual observation—and
there is some academic writing about this—makes the contrast between
our system and the system, say, in some parts of North America
or Australasia where lawyers seem to have a lesser role, where
there is more do-it-yourself activity and that has happened for
quite a long time; could you give a general view of that before
we move on to legal aid.
Kim
Beatson: From the point of view of the solicitors organisation
we do not feel possessive at all about these cases. We are talking
now about contact cases, are we not? In our own proposals we suggest
there is an intervention appointment as soon as an application
is made to court. The intervention appointment would not involve
us, it would involve a CAFCASS officer acting in an assertive
capacity. I do not think that most of us have any enjoyment out
of difficult contact cases and I think that is something you really
have to understand. We are as frustrated about the difficulties
in enforcing orders as the applicants tend to be.
Q122
Mr Cranston: What about on the public law side?
Christopher
Goulden: I can speak as a practitioner who uses public
funding for contact cases and I understand that what you may be
saying is that you think there is an overuse of lawyers using
public funding—
Q123
Mr Cranston: —I have got no presumptions, I am just asking
questions.
Christopher
Goulden: —Because there seems to be a myth going round
that these cases are unnecessarily prolonged by practitioners
using public funding. I do not think in my experience over some
20 years that that is something which I recognise. They are not
well remunerated. The delays in being paid are such that it is
not good for your cash flow and therefore I do not again recognise
this idea of these cases being abused simply because they have
public funding.
Christina
Blacklaws: I can add to that to say that given that so
many family lawyers are stopping undertaking publicly-funded work,
those of us who continue to do so are flooded with cases, more
cases than we can possibly handle, and in those circumstances
again it does not make any sense that we would be "milking" those
cases of publicly-financed work. It is quite important for the
lawyers—we run our own private businesses—that we get those cases
dealt with as expeditiously as possible because, as Chris has
said, it can take nine months from the end of the case until we
are actually paid.
Q124
Mr Cranston: I was more asking the question, in a previous
session I put Professor Eekelaar and his colleagues' research,
namely that family lawyers are very caring and often mediate in
situations and do not generate conflict and so on, but there is
still this more general issue that we have more lawyers involved
in family law work than other comparable jurisdictions and, query,
should we?
Christina
Blacklaws: I think we cannot ignore the fact that 81%
of people who have a family law problem go to see a solicitor
so we are often the first point of call for people who have just
experienced family breakdown.
Q125
Mr Cranston: But that is the culture. Should we have a different
culture?
Christina
Blacklaws: I would say that one of the benefits about
that (and this is something that is very much part of the FAInS
programme which might have been mentioned to you) is that the
solicitor is the point of call for the client, the service user,
to be able to access all the other services that they may need,
so effectively the middle of the wheel with you as a solicitor
being able to signpost your clients to—and obviously there are
often a number of problems associated with family breakdown—debt
counselling, welfare benefits, housing issues, all of these social
welfare issues, to ensure that all of that person's problems are
dealt with by the right people in the right way so as a sort of
manager of the process. That is a model that actually works very
well. It is not "lawyering up" the process in any way but it is
ensuring that somebody holds that so that that person is assisted
to access all the things that they need to solve their problems.
Q126
Mr Cranston: I am not sure that Richard Moorhead's evidence
actually demonstrates that lawyers do that the best. I think his
evidence shows that CABs might do that the best. I do not know.
Mr Moor seems anxious to say something about this general issue.
Philip
Moor: There are a large number of areas that you have
problems with when your relationship breaks down and it is not
just contact. You have to sort out your housing arrangements and
that may give rise to applications for ouster injunctions. There
may be molestation issues or domestic violence issue that we have
already heard about. There may well be maintenance problems. This
is often the only time that these people will come into contact
with our courts in this country and, in my view, it is a harrowing
process to go through a relationship breakdown and you need expert
help to get you through that process and make sure that you come
to sensible solutions which are in the interests of your children
and the family as a whole.
Q127
Mr Cranston: Could I ask about delay. What, in your experience,
is the major cause? I think you have refuted the notion that it
is legal aid or the fact that these are publicly funded. In some
of the evidence CAFCASS was mentioned as a possibility. There
is also the operation of the courts. What is the major problem?
Christopher
Goulden: I do not know which of us said that but I do
not think either of us meant to give the impression that delay
was not caused by legal aid. I do not know if I heard you wrongly
there. We did not refute it. We said there was considerable delay
caused by the process of getting legal aid.
Q128
Mr Cranston: In getting legal aid, yes, sorry. The more general
allegation is that the fact there is public funding through legal
aid prolongs these cases, which in a way was the sort of proposition
I was putting to you. Incidentally, with no preconceptions at
all; I was just trying to get to the bottom of this since I do
not practise in the area. What is the major cause?
Christina
Blacklaws: We need to distinguish between what is good
delay, planned and purposeful delay as we say, that perhaps enables
a new regime of contact to be tried within the protective ambit
of the court process or an assessment to be undertaken, and what
is avoidable delay which is not in anybody's, particularly children's
best interests. I think you will see that there are some clear
reasons for this delay (which we all accept does occur in our
family justice system) and there are ways of resolving it. One
of the ways is, as we have already said, to take out of the court
process those cases which can be dealt with in another dispute
resolution forum, and we all support that. As Kim has said, it
does not give any of us—any family practitioner—any joy to try
and work through a case that should be a mediation case or should
be in family therapy.
Q129
Mr Cranston: Assuming it cannot be mediated, where is the
major problem or is it a series of problems in terms of the delay?
Christina
Blacklaws: I think there are maybe two or three reasons.
One of the major issues is about court management and that is
something that the judiciary has started to very successfully
address. One real problem there again is resources. This is my
major point about delay—that we do not have enough judiciary.
I phoned the Principal Registry yesterday to find out when the
first one-day hearing was—and this is for any type of family matter,
childcare, financial or private law children matter and the first
day available is 20 July 2005. We can manage ourselves in our
court process, we can have protocols, we can do all of that but
if we cannot get before a judge for seven or eight months, well
then, that is going to do untold harm to the family, and the same
applies with regard to the availability of CAFCASS or other experts
that we use in difficult family cases, for example child and adolescent
psychiatrists. It can take six months for us to be able to identify
a good one and get them to prepare a report, so those sorts of
delays—and I know I stray on to the public law arena but it is
just as bad in private law as well as the public law—are the real
things that we cannot actually do anything about. It would be
up to Government to put more resources in there.
Q130
Chairman: Your tone suggests that lawyers are always trying
to avoid delay but if a mother does not want contact to take place,
given what you said earlier that it is generally to the disadvantage
of the non-resident parent trying to get contact if delay takes
place, are you confident that lawyers advise their clients not
to pursue avenues which produce the very delay that might actually
reduce the likelihood that the contact will be granted in the
end?
Philip
Moor: The court does not or should not allow us to do
that. The problem is if you cannot get a hearing date for another
six months, it happens by default. In the last 30 years the number
of Family Division High Court judges has gone up by two from 17
to 19 whereas in the same period the number of Queen's Bench judges
has gone up by 28 from 45 to 73. It is absolutely awful to have
to tell your client that the first hearing date is next October
but it happens all the time.
Q131
Chairman: You have not answered my question which is are you
confident that lawyers acting for the resident parent, usually
the mother, in circumstances where the mother is resisting contact
will advise their clients against prolonging or delaying proceedings?
Philip
Moor: Yes, I am quite confident that the membership of
the Family Law Bar Association spends the vast majority of their
time trying to be sensible and trying to get people to come to
agreements and to avoid conflict unless it is absolutely necessary.
Christopher
Goulden: To add to what Philip said, the sort of thing
you are suggesting I suppose is an unnecessary request for an
expert report or something like that. There are two advocates,
as it were, in the field and you have to prove your case before
a judge if you want an expert. If the judge says ultimately, "I
need an expert in this case," then, yes, there will be delay.
It is difficult to see how that could be improper.
Q132
Mr Cranston: What about joint expert reports? Do we have too
many experts' reports?
Christopher
Goulden: There is very strong encouragement that there
should be a jointly appointed expert.
Q133
Mr Cranston: One of the theories in other areas of the civil
law where you have got problems of this nature where there is
a shortage of justice is that you push the cases down into lower
courts. What possibility is there of that? We heard from one magistrate
and I think he is the only full-time magistrate who does family
work. Is that a possibility?
Philip
Moor: It is an extremely good idea but when I started
practising, district judges just did the ancillary relief work,
the financial work. They now do all the injunctions, they do the
contact cases, they do the residence cases, and they are just
as busy in fact as the High Court judges are.
Q134
Mr Cranston: But if we want more judicial power, as it were,
is that the way to go, rather than increasing the number of High
Court family judges beyond 19?
Philip
Moor: We support a position in which the district judge
acts as the gatekeeper and decides which is the appropriate tier
of court to determine each particular case. Clearly delay will
be one of the factors in that, trying to get the case on quickly,
but there are certain cases that have to be heard by a High Court
judge and certain which are quite able to be dealt with in the
Family Proceedings Court.
Christina
Blacklaws: One thing that would really assist, and it
is part of our evidence from the Law Society, is a unified family
court system. If you had a dedicated family court system you would
have the expertise at all levels of the court, which would hopefully
assist in terms of efficiency but also in terms of quality of
decision-making and I think that is one of the worries Philip
has talked about High Court to county court and county court to
family proceedings court level, and there are some concerns that
if lay magistrates were dealing with a case of great complexity
and difficulty it might take them longer to deal with that case.
They might come up with a very good decision but in terms of Court
Service time then that might not be an effective way to deal with
it.
Q135
Mr Cranston: That is Law Society policy, is it, that there
be a unified family court? Maybe Ms Lloyd can say something so
she at least gets on the record.
Christina
Blacklaws: All family lawyers have been saying for a very,
very long time that is what is needed.
Q136
Mr Cranston: Of course this is the Australian system.
Christina
Blacklaws: Yes.
Mr Cranston:
Thank you, Chairman.
Q137
Keith Vaz: What is your experience of the family proceedings
court? Is judicial continuity a problem in the handling of cases?
Christopher
Goulden: Inevitably. Typically a case will be heard by
three magistrates and you have got to get three people together
instead of just the one you would with the district judge or a
district judge magistrates' court, like Mr Crichton you heard
from.
Christina
Blacklaws: The other problem is that district judges in
the magistrates' courts tend to be criminal district judges. My
point about the unified family system is there is no direct route
for an experienced family lawyer to become a district judge in
the family proceedings court. You have to become a district judge
in the magistrates' court and then get a family ticket. Those
people only tend to sit for approximately eight weeks a year in
the family proceedings court.
Q138
Keith Vaz: Sure. One of the things that has changed, of course,
is that this is one of the areas where legal aid has been in a
sense—and I know you would not agree with this—protected because
family cases are so important. Do you think the type of practitioner
going into family law work is different than it was 10 or 15 years
ago? Are there more people coming in?
Christina
Blacklaws: Can I say first of all I think there is a dispute
as to whether family legal aid is protected. There is one legal
aid budget and obviously last year we had a Ł100 million overspend
in terms of the criminal budget. That means that at the softer
end—the family and the civil budget—gets squeezed. I do not think
there is any protection per se for family legal aid.
Q139
Keith Vaz: Right. What about the type of people going in.
All of you have been practising in family law for many, many years.
Do you see a difference? Do you see people going out in droves
and all becoming commercial litigation solicitors at Linklaters?
Philip
Moor: When the family graduated fees came in lots of people
were not being attracted to our work and other people were trying
not to do the work and, yes, we did feel that there was a serious
problem.
Q140 Keith Vaz: Would a system of accreditation help?
Hilary
Lloyd: It has and it has not. The issue with family law,
unlike criminal law for example where the vast majority is legal
aid and therefore if you are a criminal lawyer you tend to need
to stay in the system, is that in family law because there is
so much opportunity for private work a lot of very experienced
solicitors move out of the legal aid type of work and into the
more lucrative financial dispute resolution area. The Family Law
Protocol that the Law Society developed with the support of the
SFLA the DCA, the LSC and generally everyone working in the family
field has, I think, changed the nature of the person going into
family law in that they are now working very much towards a less
adversarial approach and developing the right skills needed to
deal with difficult family cases. So the person is different but
we are not finding as many of them coming in and certainly not
as many staying in the legal aid arena when there are other opportunities
elsewhere.
Q141
Keith Vaz: Is this one of the areas where there are more women
practising than men? For example, if you looked at the percentage
of women at the family law Bar, would that be a bigger percentage
than other areas of law?
Philip
Moor: Yes I think it would, overall.
Q142
Keith Vaz: Is it a noticeable percentage?
Philip
Moor: I think it is noticeable in the sense that it is
at all levels of the family Bar whereas I think that the Bar as
a whole is becoming more representative of society as a whole
and therefore at the lower levels it is perhaps not so marked
in family law but overall, yes, if we have a conference we would
expect to get over 50% of women.
Q143
Keith Vaz: What about the solicitors?
Kim
Beatson: It is certainly true for the SFLA. The membership
is something like two-thirds women and I think probably that is
representative throughout practice.
Q144
Keith Vaz: Miss Blacklaws was quite emphatic that she did
not believe there is a bias against fathers in the family court
system. You were quite emphatic about that, were you not—
Christina
Blacklaws: Yes.
Keith
Vaz: And you were offering us anecdotal evidence to suggest
the opposite that actually everything is fine.
Christina
Blacklaws: Not exactly the opposite, just that the courts
often reflect what is the status quo. I have also mentioned that
sometimes that status quo develops not for good reasons but because
there is difficulty in getting before the courts to be able to
resolve these matters.
Keith
Vaz: The Solicitors Family Law Association sitting at your
side have come up with this proposal that there should be a presumption
in favour of contact—
Chairman:
We have covered that, could you move on to another question.
Q145
Keith Vaz: As part of that, enforcement becomes a pretty important
issue, does it not?
Christina
Blacklaws: Absolutely.
Q146
Keith Vaz: As part of that presumption that everything is
fair in the system that we have, how do you think the current
system is working as far as the defaulting parent is concerned?
Christina
Blacklaws: I think that there is a high degree of frustration
amongst everyone who works in the family justice system that there
is not the range of remedies on enforcement that is needed. At
the moment we have very blunt instruments. A defaulting parent
can be imprisoned, fined, or residence can be transferred, or
the courts can do nothing about it at all, and that is a real
concern. If there were a greater range of remedies, as is proposed
in the Green Paper, then that certainly would be very helpful
and would enable the judiciary to be much more creative in terms
of taking the family forward than, as I say, the very blunt instruments
that we have to punish recalcitrant parents.
Q147
Keith Vaz: But do you think that it is more likely to be a
deterrent against defaulting fathers as opposed to defaulting
mothers? The courts are very reluctant to send mothers to jail,
for example, if they default whereas as far as fathers are concerned
it is probably easier.
Christina
Blacklaws: As I said, I think it is probably rarely in
the children's best interests for any parent to be sent to jail.
Q148
Keith Vaz: Sure, I understand that.
Christina
Blacklaws: So if we could have a range of other measures
including softer measures they might be just as effective. I know
one of the proposals is if there has been loss financially that
the other parent compensates the parent who has had the financial
loss on default of contact.
Q149
Keith Vaz: Mr Goulden, does it have any effect on the intransigent
parent? Does the power to send somebody to jail for not turning
up on time have any effect?
Christopher
Goulden: I do not think anyone would seriously be making
an application to court to send a parent to jail for not turning
up on time. The enforcement measures are not effective. I do not
think anyone would argue with that. Yes, ultimately, being sent
to prison may be effective, I do not know, it only
happens in very extraordinary cases.
Q150
Keith Vaz: Do you know how many parents were sent to prison
last year?
Christopher
Goulden: I would think no more than a handful, no more
than that. Where I practise in Bristol I can think of one occasion
since I have been there and that was the talk of the town, it
is that unusual, but what would be much more effective would be
to be able to say if it does not happen on a Saturday then the
following week you are going to be back explaining. That is going
to be effective.
Kim
Beatson: It also envisages quite a different role for
CAFCASS whereby instead of lengthy report writing CAFCASS is there
as a facilitator. CAFCASS, not the father who has missed his contact
visit, will be phoning up the mother on Monday and saying, "Why
didn't this happen? I will collect the child on Friday and I will
make sure that he is taken to the father," and just playing a
more active role in making sure that contact works and that it
is not the father who is having to complain and take the case
back to court and suffer more delays in enforcement.
Q151
Keith Vaz: Both the FLPA and the Law Society raise the issue
of funding for the new range of enforcement powers. Do you think
sufficient consideration has been given towards these ideas by
the Government?
Christina
Blacklaws: The Law Society is very clear that any new
proposals, particularly any legislation, need to be properly costed
out in terms of their impact upon each and every budget. It is
a real worry that although everyone here and everyone we represent
fully support the proposals, how are they going to be funded?
Where are the resources going to come from? This is our concern.
CAFCASS as an organisation still finds difficulty, although there
has been great improvement, in meeting their fundamental obligations
in terms of representation in public law proceedings and the Rule
9.5 proceedings that we have already discussed. It is a real worry.
We would love to see CAFCASS as an organisation that assists families
pre the court process and post the court process to ensure that
these orders once made or agreements can be effected without hitting
hurdles, as often happens.
Q152
Keith Vaz: There seem to be plethora of pressure groups on
family issues, speaking on behalf of fathers, mothers and single
parents, et cetera. Do you think that there is enough contact
between these groups and the judiciary, for example? The people
who make the decisions are the judges and you just appear before
judges and put the case of your clients. Do you think that there
ought to be more contact and better understanding of what the
concerns of these groups are?
Philip
Moor: One thing we do welcome is to have more judgments
in open court. None of us wants to have the hearings in open court.
It is amazing how often the client will say to you as you are
on your way to court, "It is not going to be in public, is it?"
The vast majority are terrified of it being in public.
Chairman:
That is a question that will be debated in stages.
Q153
Keith Vaz: We will deal with judgments in open court later,
but what about contact between these various pressure groups?
We had the President of the Family Division here recently and
I put to her that she perhaps should meet Fathers for Justice
and some of these other organisations. She was dead against it.
Philip
Moor: We have contact with Families Need Fathers who have
an important role to play.
Q154
Keith Vaz: But do you think that there ought to be better
contact between the judiciary and whichever groups they are, not
just the fathers' groups but the children's groups and the mothers'
groups?
Kim
Beatson: We cannot speak on behalf of the judiciary; we
can speak for our own organisations and we have fairly close contact
with some of the fathers' organisations, but Fathers for Justice
are not here today for a reason and the same reason applies as
to why we do not have contact with them. Debate is turned into
a publicity stunt. Our members are intimidated and harassed and
we do not find it useful to focus on gender when we feel the main
problems in the system are delay and enforcement.
Q155
Keith Vaz: But there are other groups, are there not?
Kim
Beatson: There are and we are in close contact with them.
Q156
Keith Vaz: That contact is worth having?
Kim
Beatson: Very worthwhile.
Q157
Keith Vaz: Is there a forum that will bring together the Law
Society, the Bar Association, the Bar Council, the
Solicitors Family Law Association, the judiciary and groups together
on a regular basis that will explore these issues?
Christina
Blacklaws: We have the development of the Family Justice
Council now. That is a multi-disciplinary forum which is only
just established but the idea is that we will have local family
justice councils as well and that will be one way of ensuring
that this communication, which is absolutely essential, continues
outside of the court process as well. We are constantly sharing
committees and negotiating and discussing and developing ideas
with many of the other groups and individuals involved in the
family justice system. It is a very important part of the work
that the Law Society and SFLA undertake.
Q158
Mr Dawson: Would it not help to deal with delay and enforcement
and actually improve the whole mediation between parents and produce
more satisfactory outcomes if there was a compulsory referral
to mediation in the first place? Is not Mr Moor's idea that because
the legal profession can deal with a number of different issues
which might arise at the time of divorce or separation quite wrongheaded
because issues of family contact, residence and all the rest of
it are quite distinct and quite different from some of the other
issues that you might be faced with?
Philip
Moor: We have absolutely no problem with a mediation system.
To make it compulsory I think you would have to change the law
but effectively at the moment the one that operates in the Principal
Registry happens in every case, and we strongly support the Early
Interventions Pilot Project (which has become the Family Resolutions
Project). There is a slight problem with that and that is in our
view the parenting plans were a good idea and we liked the idea
that you have a sort of template for these cases and that the
parents that went into the system knew that unless there was something
pretty exceptional in the case the template was the sort of order
that the court would be thinking of making. We thought that set
things out pretty clearly for them at the beginning and that is
a project that we would like to see carried through.
Q159
Chairman: The present project does not in your view test all
of the innovations which the original proposal had in it?
Philip
Moor: That is right. We would like to see the parenting
plans in there and we would like it to be pretty well-known that
that is what the judges are going to do if the mediation breaks
down and there are no good reasons for a change from the parenting
plans.
Q160 Mr Dawson: But have we not talked previously about
the tremendous difficulties that judges must face in deciding
where there are real issues of safety in particular cases and
does not a presumption of parenting plans and a template work
against the idea that we should try and tailor solutions very
carefully to particular individual circumstances?
Philip
Moor: If there are serious issues such as domestic violence,
which you mentioned, then it would not go into the scheme in the
first place and it would have to go for determination as to whether
the violence is proved or not. So we are talking here about the
cases where there are not those serious issues. I would certainly
take the view that the vast majority of cases do not raise those
sorts of serious issues.
Q161
Mr Dawson: But children are murdered on contact visits in
this country and clearly those are appalling circumstances.
Philip
Moor: Of course.
Q162
Mr Dawson: Clearly we are not 100% good at identifying circumstances
in which there are very, very serious risks of abuse and injury
and death. So does not a presumption work against the best interests
of the children? Would it not be better to look in close detail
at the circumstances of particular cases rather than simply trying
to apply a template to those very difficult and very individual
circumstances?
Christopher
Goulden: I think the Family Law Protocol asks practitioners
at an early stage to carry out a domestic abuse audit. We are
encouraged right at the very outset, even if the client does not
say "I am being threatened", to ask a client whether there are
any of these issues, and yes that must be looked at.
Q163
Chairman: Incidentally, that sometimes causes offence to some
clients, does it not?
Christina
Blacklaws: We are trained to ask them in a fairly oblique
manner so that we are not either putting words into people's mouths
or indeed offending them by the very suggestion that there may
be those issues, so it is quite a subtle interview but equally
a very, very important one. Can I just add on mediation, Kim and
I are both experienced mediators and it is an excellent way for
many people to resolve their matters but it is not for everybody
and it would be very difficult to see how it would be right to
force people into what is a voluntary process. It would not be
mediation, it would be something else then. One of the reasons
why it is not right thing for a lot of couples is because of the
power imbalance and that can be for a number of reasons. It can
be economic but it can also be about abusive behaviour and relationships,
so those sorts of cases would never be appropriate for mediation
and it is a worry that parents who are in the lower courts are
sometimes left to their own devises to come up with a solution
that the court then rubber stamps as an agreement and that solution
is (a) not in the children's best interest and (b) and, equally
worrying, not safe for that child or for that child's carer, so
yes it is something that needs to be properly managed.
Q164
Mr Dawson: Can I just ask about your experience because you
are obviously both skilled and experienced mediators; how does
that accord with your legal expertise? Does your legal background
and experience contribute to that mediation or is it completely
unnecessary? What is your experience?
Kim
Beatson: The Solicitors Family Law Association trains
lawyer mediators and we find it particularly helpful when dealing
with financial mediation to have the expertise to be able to give
legal information to the couple, and indeed they expect it, so
it is particularly helpful in that forum. What I think we have
to do, though, is be quite careful about the use of the word "mediation".
It is a voluntary process. We prefer to use the expression "family
intervention appointment" because I think that is essentially
what the SFLA is looking for in its proposals, not compulsory
mediation.
Mr Dawson:
You talk about financial mediation. Clearly people will be
mediating about close and intimate aspects of the couple's relationship,
the way that they deal with the children the way that they make
arrangements for the children. That is a social work task, is
it not?
Q165
Mr Cranston: Many commercial lawyers are now mediators, Hilton.
It is widely used in the law.
Christina
Blacklaws: Yes, there are social work aspects to it, but
as experienced family lawyers hopefully we have also developed
some of those skills that we could bring to it. I would say that
it is rare that you have a mediation case that is solely about
whether the children should be picked up at five o'clock or six
o'clock and that sort of thing. In family breakdown, as I said
before, there is often a range of issues that this family faces
and even if it is just about maintenance for the child it is very
helpful to have the legal knowledge and experience in the room
to be able to assist the couple.
Q166
Mr Dawson: The CSA.
Kim
Beatson: We are not suggesting that only lawyers can mediate.
You asked about the skills that lawyer mediators can bring to
the process.
Christina
Blacklaws: It is about financial matters as well. I just
wanted to make the point that it does take a very long time for
financial matters to get before the court. If I make an application
today I will not get an appointment for four months and that can
be just as disruptive and corrosive to a family breakdown situation
and really impacts, even though it should not, on contact and
relationships between the adults, so that is a real problem as
well.
Q167
Mr Dawson: Is it necessary to have lawyers mediating?
Kim
Beatson: No, it is not. At the moment there are mediators
from all backgrounds. It is a different skill but obviously members
of the public may choose a lawyer mediator knowing that that is
their background because there may be reasonably complex pension
issues, for example, that are better dealt with by a lawyer mediator.
Q168
Mr Soley: I was going to ask you, Ms Beatson, if you can tell
us in your view what are the advantages and disadvantages of the
collaborative law system and whether we ought to be promoting
that a bit more than we are at present?
Kim
Beatson: Do you all understand what the system involves?
It essentially involves the couple choosing two lawyers both of
whom have training in collaborative law. Then the four sign a
contract in which they agree to rule out any legal proceedings
and most of the case is dealt with by four-way meetings. It is
quite hard it explain how it works but probably the best thing
I can mention is the fact that neither of the lawyers must polarise
the client, so if you are giving advice about the range of outcomes
the lawyers would actually discuss what the range of outcomes
would be and then that would be presented to the client. There
is no "without prejudice". There is no, "Ask for A, but expect
to arrive at B". It is a very open process. It is equally applicable
to barristers, and we are training barristers as well. It is not
the cheapest process because four-way meetings are quite expensive
in terms of time. There is less correspondence, and most of it
is done face-to-face. If it all crumbles and you cannot reach
a solution then those lawyers have to drop out of the process
and the couple then instruct other lawyers in a traditional capacity.
There is some interest in it at the moment from the LSC. They
are trying to choose two areas in England to pilot. It is very
difficult at the moment to find enough collaborative lawyers willing
to do publicly funded work; but we are training more people in
March. I think it is probably going to be a fairly slow roll-out.
You have to have an optimum number of trained collaborative lawyers
for you to be able to refer work when it comes in.
Q169
Mr Soley: I asked you for the advantages and disadvantages
and you have given me two of the disadvantages—the expense and
the fact if it goes pear-shaped you have to start all over again—but
what are the advantages?
Kim
Beatson: The advantage is probably the expense compared
to litigation.
Q170
Mr Soley: This is cheaper?
Kim
Beatson: Yes, it is infinitely cheaper than litigating.
Q171
Chairman: With the likelihood of an accepted outcome?
Kim
Beatson: I think that is the main advantage of all, that
the couple own the outcome. It is a wholly different process to
mediation. Everyone is committed to working for a family-orientated
solution.
Q172
Mr Soley: Without putting words in your mouth, I am trying
get out what you think is the main advantage. Are you saying that
it actually is a better opportunity of reaching an agreement which
satisfies all the parties, including the children?
Kim
Beatson: Yes, that is absolutely right. Comparing it to
mediation, it is much more appropriate for a couple who may feel
they need the support of lawyers but are adamantly opposed to
litigating. Unlike mediation, where you have perhaps one lawyer/mediator
acting as a facilitator, in collaborative law both parties have
the support of their own lawyer but acting in quite a different
capacity looking for a family solution.
Q173
Mr Soley: How long does it take to train a lawyer?
Kim
Beatson: Two days.
Q174
Dr Whitehead: Could we move back to the notion of media coverage.
Mr Moor, you mentioned a little earlier you felt that greater
openness and general reporting of the proceedings in Family Courts
was something you think you would important?
Philip
Moor: Yes.
Q175
Dr Whitehead: Do you think that that openness should simply
be full reports of the proceedings or edited reports of the proceedings
or, where possible, judgments publicly handed down? Where would
you see the line being drawn?
Philip
Moor: I would see the line being drawn at edited versions,
because I do not think in the vast majority of cases it is at
all helpful to identify the children. I can see absolutely no
problem whatsoever in publishing the reasons why judges come to
a particular view: for example, the reason why someone was given
permission to take the children out of the country to go and live
in Australia. Because there is a great deal of ignorance as to
the way in which the family courts work I think it would be of
assistance.
Q176
Dr Whitehead: You think that would be the main advantage,
an educative advantage as it were, and the myths and misapprehensions
might be dispelled?
Philip
Moor: That would certainly be one important role of it,
yes.
Q177
Dr Whitehead: Who would then do the editing?
Philip
Moor: The judge would normally do that in coordination
with the lawyers.
Q178
Dr Whitehead: How would that then, as it were, add to the
idea that the way the process works would thereby be scrutinised,
if the purpose would be explicitly simply to say to people, "Well,
actually some of the things you are saying about us, the anecdotes
you are putting forward, are not right"? Do you think there is
a further issue here in terms of ensuring that the process is
seen to be done? Indeed, as one of our previous witnesses, Mr
Justice Munby, has described the court should no longer be perceived
as being a secret justice system?
Philip
Moor: As I understand it, there are also proposals to
enable people to have greater access, for example, to their Members
of Parliament if they have a problem in relation to the family
justice system. As I understand it at the moment the restrictions
make it very difficult for them. I would certainly support those
sorts of changes as well. I think this specific one is just so
people can see the reasons why decisions are taken in the way
that they are.
Q179
Chairman: Is there not a wider point within individual cases
that many of the fathers' organisations regard the system as a
whole as very secretive, and the only knowledge they have of it
is based on the experience of others who share their personal
experience of a case going against them? So we have no general
picture available to people of the range of reasons why particular
decisions are taken—reasons which do not have to be attached to
a named individual but which in any other area of court activity
are readily available. If you run through a string of cases, press
reports can compare how various judgments have been made; they
do not always do it accurately or well, but there are a number
of ways in which you get a general picture of why decisions are
taken. Instead, in this area, for a number of witnesses and potential
witnesses the whole thing is secret and their perception is entirely
based on similar experiences to their own.
Philip
Moor: Yes, I would agree with that.
Q180 Chairman: What
do you envisage being the outcome of the edited version you refer
to? In all cases, a section of cases, or what?
Philip
Moor: There were two cases earlier this year, were there
not? In one, Mrs Justice Bracewell giving judgment in open court
explained the reasons why she had moved some children from the
mother, who was implacably opposed to contact, to the father.
There is one good example. There was also the decision of Mr Justice
Munby, who explained how the system had let down one particular
father in his quest for contact. It is that sort of situation.
Q181
Ross Cranston: How did we get to the position where the family
courts are confidential and secret? Is that because it was in
chambers historically? Coming from the outside, at first blush
I find the notion that you can do all this behind closed doors
rather objectionable?
Philip
Moor: Of course originally all the defended divorces used
to be in public.
Q182
Ross Cranston: Of course. Why have we got to this situation?
Philip
Moor: I think it is just a perception, is it not, with
disputes about money and children it is in the interests of the
people concerned to keep that private in the interests of them
giving a full and frank account to the court. I do not know about
the experience of the others, but the vast majority of my clients
are extremely keen that it should be in private. They do not want
the newspapers—
Q183
Ross Cranston: That is the case with most litigants, is it
not?
Christopher
Goulden: From the child's point of view it must be right
that evidence regarding that child should not become public in
such a way that the child can be identified. I do not think anybody
would have any problem with that.
Mr Dawson:
That is an excellent point, but there is another point which
is, even where the child is not identified, the child knows who
they are; and sometimes cases which become public law cases are
reported as criminal cases. That child knows who they are. Given
the irresponsibility of the media in this country, they are sometimes
reported in the most grotesque and appalling terms, and that simply
compounds the abuse that child has experienced.
Q184
Chairman: We are asking our witnesses questions. We have other
opportunities to discuss the matter. Finally, could I establish
from you very briefly what your general perception of the Government's
Green Paper is? I know you have provided detailed submissions,
but is this heading in the right direction?
Christina
Blacklaws: Yes. I can probably speak for us all. We are
all very much in favour of it. We have concerns about how it is
going to be funded.
Q185
Mr Soley: The Green Paper or the general policy of the Government
which has been brought out?
Christina
Blacklaws: The Green Paper.
Q186
Chairman: That is obviously a general view?
Philip
Moor: That is the view of us.
Christopher
Goulden: It is essential that as much attention is given
actually to funding initiatives as coming up with them. They must
have that potential as well.
Christina
Blacklaws: They need to be analysed. We need to make sure
these initiatives actually work before we roll them out. What
we have is a situation where we do not have much hard evidence
about what works and what does not work, and we need to build
up that body of evidence through these pilot projects.
Kim
Beatson: It is also essential in the lead-up to a general
election that this does not become a political football.
Chairman:
That is a very wise note on which to end. Thank you very much.
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