Children should give evidence, says Supreme Court

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Thursday 11 March 2010 by James Dean

Children in family proceedings should be called to give live evidence in court if the advantage it would bring in deciding the case outweighs the risk of harm to the welfare of the child, the Supreme Court ruled last week.

In a unanimous decision, five law lords removed the presumption against a child giving evidence in family proceedings. Previously, the court would assume a ‘starting point’ that it was undesirable for a child to give live evidence without ‘particular justification’, and that cases where it would be right to make an order would be ‘rare’.

In Re W (Children), the lords decided that the existing approach ‘cannot be reconciled with the approach of the European Court of Human Rights’, as it did not balance the child’s right to respect for their private life with the respondent’s right to a fair hearing.

Giving the leading judgment, Lady Hale said that ‘an unwilling child should rarely, if ever, be obliged to give evidence’. She said that in most cases the risk of harm to the child was likely to outweigh the benefits to the trial.

Hale said that the issue should be addressed at the case management conference in care proceedings, or the earliest directions hearing in private law proceedings.

Christina Blacklaws, Law Society council member for child care, expressed concern at the prospect of alleged abusers trying to force children to give evidence in court, and warned that satellite litigation regarding children giving evidence could further slow the family justice process.

‘In the family justice system, children do not play an active role in the court process,’ she said. ‘If there are children who want to see the court building, the judge, and give evidence, and they are sufficiently well developed to do so, then they should be encouraged. But courts are not good places for children who do not want to be there.’

Comments

This does not help the

This does not help the children or babies that cannot speak for themselves, their are also judges with reputations that do not believe any parent should look after their own child, this leads to anything you address the court with they find an excuse for on the side of the appellant in plain, you are a liar, and these are judges that can not even get the childs name right, no existance,
no medical evidence, when this is placed before the court of appeal and win, you lose they do not bother that the appellant is made aware they have no case on the child