B e f o r e :
Charles J ____________________
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Frances Oldham QC and Carolyn Jones (instructed by Parrans & Co) for the mother Robin Rowland (instructed by Goodger Auden) for the father Michael Keehan(instructed by Grindeys) for the guardian ad litem Guy Spollen (instructed by Local authority solicitor) for the local authority ____________________
HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT ____________________
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CHARLES J : This case concerns triplets, one girl and two boys all born on 8 November 1997. Their names are N, A and A.
Their guardian ad litem has made an application, which is supported by the local authority and the mother of the three children that the father be ordered to disclose in these proceedings (a) the identity of, and (b) copies of, the reports and notes of the medical experts the father is proposing to instruct in connection with the preparation and presentation of his defence to criminal proceedings. The criminal proceedings have been brought against him under s 18 of the Offences against the Person Act 1861 in respect of injuries suffered by N. It is this application that is the subject of this judgment.
Background
N suffered serious injuries, including a skull fracture, limb fractures and haemorrhaging. These care proceedings were commenced in July 1998 and since 11 August 1998 interim care orders have been in force in respect of all three children.
At the time of the hearing before me the father's criminal trial was fixed for a 3-week hearing starting on 13 September 1999, and these care proceedings were fixed for hearing in October 1999. However, N's condition is very serious and her prognosis is very poor. This has had the result that a summons has been issued seeking (inter alia) a declaration that it will be lawful to administer treatment to N, notwithstanding any refusal of her parents or either of them to give their consent to any such treatment, including treatment involving non-resuscitation in the event of aspiration, cardiac arrest, respiratory arrest or palliative care to ease her suffering and permit her life to end. At the time that the application for disclosure was before me, the hearing of that summons was fixed to take place on 14 June 1999. I mention this because very sadly N may die. If she does this may affect the criminal charges brought against her father and cause a delay in the criminal proceedings with the result that they will probably not take place until after the care proceedings are heard.
The disclosure issues and the positions of the parties and the Crown Prosecution Service
These raise questions relating to legal professional privilege and the need to consider two recent cases in the House of Lords namely R v Derby Magistrates' Court ex parte B; Same v Same ex parte Same [1996] AC 487 , sub nom R v Derby Magistrates' Court ex parte B [1996] 1 FLR 513 and Re L (A Minor) (Police Investigation: Privilege) [1997] AC 16, sub nom Re L (Police Investigation: Privilege) [1996] 1 FLR 731.
The father alleges that his communications with the experts he instructs through his solicitors in connection with the criminal proceedings are subject to legal professional privilege and that he therefore has an absolute right to refuse to disclose, and to prevent the experts and anyone else from disclosing, those communications and the reports of those experts. He relies (inter alia) on the Derby Magistrates case.
The guardian ad litem (with the support of the other parties) maintains that (a) the father does not have such an absolute right and has a duty to disclose such communications and reports, (b) alternatively, that any right the father has to prevent disclosure is based on 'litigation privilege' and is thus a qualified right in that it can be overridden by the court if the balance of the competing public interests is in favour of disclosure, and (c) in the further alternative, that the father should disclose the identity of the experts he instructs in the criminal proceedings. They rely (inter alia) on Re L and the duty in family cases to disclose all relevant material concerning the welfare of a child.
The father further submits (a) that if he is wrong and he does not have an absolute right to refuse to disclose, he still does not have to disclose the communications and reports because the balance of the competing public interests is against disclosure, and (b) that he does not have to, and should not be ordered to, disclose the identity of the experts he instructs in the criminal proceedings.
Both sides, in my judgment correctly, accepted that the private interests of the father in maintaining confidentiality would not enable him to resist the disclosure that is sought (see, for example, Alfred Crompton Amusement Machines Ltd v Customs and Excise Commissioners (No 2) [1974] AC 405 and Science Research Council v Nassé; Leyland Cars (BL Cars Ltd) v Vyas [1980] AC 1028 ).
In advancing his argument on behalf of disclosure, counsel for the guardian ad litem sought to make a distinction between legal professional privilege relating to communications between a solicitor (or a lawyer) and his client and 'litigation privilege', which he submits covers the material he seeks. This was an important part of his argument because in my judgment it was correctly accepted by counsel for the guardian ad litem that the combination of the decisions in the Derby Magistrates case and Re L preclude the guardian ad litem from obtaining disclosure of discussions between the father and his solicitor in the criminal proceedings, or in these care proceedings. Naturally, I shall return to this argument.
Further parts of the argument advanced on behalf of the guardian ad litem concern points expressly left open in Re L and other points which are not expressly dealt with in Re L .
Generally, the arguments of the parties raise new points concerning the rights and duties of the parties to proceedings in the Family Division relating to children in respect of material covered by legal professional privilege in other proceedings. So far as I am aware, this specific issue has not been the subject of earlier reported authority.
I invited the Crown Prosecution Service (and thus the Crown) to attend to give them the opportunity to make submissions. They did attend but informed me that they did not wish to make any submissions. I had hoped that I would be assisted by the Crown Prosecution Service particularly as to the risks of (a) it being held that the criminal proceedings had been unfair, or (b) the criminal trial being aborted in this case and generally, if the material sought here, or similar material in other cases, was disclosed, and thus as to the alternative argument that I should carry out a 'balancing act'. I am disappointed that the Crown Prosecution Service decided not to do so. I record that in informing me that they were not going to make any submissions the Crown Prosecution Service did not say that they had considered the position and concluded that there were no such risks. Further, and in my judgment understandably, counsel for the father asserted that there were such risks and that there was a strong public interest in maintaining all aspects of legal professional privilege that arose in connection with criminal proceedings. I imagine that the Crown Prosecution Service would agree that there is such a strong public interest but I do not know their views as to whether, and if so how, it would or might be damaged if the disclosure sought by the guardian ad litem in this case was ordered.
The Crown Prosecution Service have, however, given undertakings to this court relating to the expert evidence filed on behalf of the father in these care proceedings and the disclosure of the identity of the experts instructed by the father in the criminal proceedings. As I understand it, the undertakings relating to reports filed by the father in these proceedings cover both the reports prepared for these proceedings and the reports of experts instructed by the father in the criminal proceedings if the guardian ad litem is successful and obtains an order for their disclosure. The undertakings are set out in the Annex to this judgment. In my judgment they show that:
The reasons why the disclosure is sought
There are already a number of medical experts instructed in these care proceedings and the criminal proceedings.
The father has obtained leave to instruct his own medical experts for the purposes of these care proceedings. The disclosure sought relates to different experts who it is understood he proposes to instruct in the criminal proceedings. The expert medical witnesses who will give evidence as prosecution witnesses will also give evidence in these care proceedings and the local authority will be relying on their evidence (a) to establish the existence of the threshold criteria at the first stage of these care proceedings, and (b) to inform the court as to matters listed in the welfare checklist at the second stage of these care proceedings when the welfare of the child is the paramount concern of the court.
It was not suggested before me that the experts instructed by the father in the criminal proceedings would, or might, cover different areas of skill and experience to those instructed by him, and others, in these care proceedings. Also, so far as I am aware, leave has not been sought for any experts the father instructs in the criminal proceedings to examine the children and it is not intended that they would do so. It follows that:
In my judgment, it follows that although counsel for the guardian ad litem submitted that it might be useful or material in these care proceedings to have the views of other experts in the same fields on the same subject matter, this is not the real reason why the guardian ad litem has made his application. In my judgment, the real reasons why he has made the application for disclosure are as explained by his counsel that:
In short, the main argument of the guardian ad litem is that the father has no right to, or should not be allowed to, keep such discussions to himself in these care proceedings and the main reason underlying his application is to try to ensure that such discussions are known to this court in these care proceedings.
A problem is of course that similar, or the same, discussions could take, or could have taken, place between the father and his solicitors in the criminal proceedings (or these care proceedings) and it is accepted that the father has an absolute right to decide whether or not to disclose them and (subject to issues relating to the court being misled) to prevent those solicitors from disclosing those discussions. An additional problem is that the solicitors in the criminal proceedings rather than the father personally may, or could, provide the information contained in those discussions to the experts instructed in the criminal proceedings.
The solicitors instructed by the father
The father has instructed the same firm in these care proceedings and in the criminal proceedings. However, different individuals are involved and different counsel are instructed in the two sets of proceedings.
It is accepted that the extent of the knowledge of the individuals in the firm of solicitors and counsel acting on behalf of the father in the two sets of proceedings is the same as would have been the case if separate firms of solicitors had been instructed. No criticism was made of the solicitors or counsel acting for the father in the two sets of proceedings.
Legal professional privilege and the Derby Magistrates case
Before I consider Re L and its effect, I shall consider legal professional privilege more generally and the decision in the Derby Magistrates case.
As can be seen from, for example, the notes to the Rules of the Supreme Court, Ord 24 and the speech of Lord Nicholls (who was in the minority) in Re L (A Minor) (Police Investigation: Privilege) [1997] AC 16, 33C-F, sub nom Re L (Police Investigation: Privilege) [1996] 1 FLR 731, 744G-745A:
As appears from the above classification, litigation privilege covers communications with third parties for two purposes, namely (i) obtaining legal advice in respect of litigation, and (ii) to conduct or aid in the conduct of litigation by, for example, obtaining evidence.
The communications with the medical experts instructed by the father in connection with the criminal proceedings could be in either, or both, of the above subclassifications of litigation privilege in that the experts could communicate (i) with the father's solicitors, or (ii) direct with the father, and their notes and reports could cover either, or both, such communications.
In my judgment correctly it was accepted by counsel for the guardian ad litem that the communications and reports sought by his application were clearly the subject of litigation privilege in the criminal proceedings. However, and notwithstanding that acceptance, in my judgment it is important to make the following points relating to legal professional privilege and in particular legal professional privilege that has been classified under the heading 'litigation privilege'. The points are:
(1) The question whether a communication and thus a document recording it is subject to legal professional privilege falls to be determined at the time of the communication. This is because the question is determined by reference to the purpose of the communication.
(2) A general rule is 'once privileged always privileged' (see Calcraft v Guest [1898] 1 QB 759 , 761 cited with approval in the Derby Magistrates case at 506H and 526 respectively).
(3) Both aspects of litigation privilege are now well established (see Waugh v British Railways Board [1980] AC 521 , in particular headnote 521D-E and 512H-522B, 529H-532B, 533B-D, 534E-H, 536A-D, 537G-538A, 539G-540A, 541G-545A and 545F-G; Re Highgrade Traders [1984] BCLC 151, where the headnote correctly summaries the decision and see in particular 152b/e, 154e, 155d-159d (the facts), 161g-162c, 164a/b, 165i-166d, 168c, 169h-175d; Guinness Peat Properties Ltd and Another v Fitzroy Robinson Partnership [1987] 1 WLR 1027 - see in particular headnote and 1033H-1039B where (inter alia) at 1034A-H Slade LJ cites with approval the test of dominant purpose to obtain legal advice or to conduct or aid in the conduct of litigation that is pending or in reasonable contemplation set out in Grant v Downs (1976) 135 CLR 674, 677 which, as Slade LJ points out, was approved by the House of Lords in the Waugh case; and Ventouris v Mountain [1991] 1 WLR 607, in particular headnote at
607G/H, 611A-612E, 613H-614A, 615A-F, 618A-D, 618H-619C).
(4) The cases cited in para (3) were considered by the Vice-Chancellor in Secretary of State for Trade and Industry v Baker and Others [1998] 2 WLR 667, where he decided that the reports in question were not covered by legal professional privilege because although the dominant purpose test had become established in English case-law (see 676F) the relevant authorities did not involve a statutory report and the issue of privilege therefore fell to be decided on whether there was a public interest which founded such privilege (see 681C and 682A). In considering that issue at 684C the Vice-Chancellor applied a test whether disclosure of the reports 'might tend to disclose the nature of legal advice the Secretary of State was seeking or was receiving'. In my judgment, and indeed as the Vice-Chancellor recognised at 679F, 680C-E and 681A this is not the only public interest, purpose and logic which underlies litigation privilege. That public interest, purpose and logic is not restricted to protecting the nature of the legal advice a litigant (or potential litigant) is seeking or receiving, and as Bingham LJ makes clear in Ventouris v Mountain [1991] 1 WLR 607:
(5) In making the points contained in para (4) I accept that the extent of the privilege has been extended since the cases at the end of the last century, and that in particular this development relates to the establishment of the dominant purpose test. This is shown by Bingham LJ's discussion of Anderson v Bank of British Columbia at 612E-613B in Ventouris v Mountain where he makes the point that the letter that was held not to be privileged in that case would now be covered by the privilege. Further, I make these points because in my judgment (i) the extent of the privilege and the reasoning that underlay it at the end of the last century, and (ii) the more recent extension of the privilege to cover, for example, the letter written by the bank's London manager in Anderson v Bank of British Columbia , and material that satisfies the dominant purpose test identified and accepted by the House of Lords in Waugh v British Railways Board , are relevant to the argument advanced in this case that different principles apply in respect of the disclosure of material covered by litigation privilege and material that is privileged because it comprises communications between a lawyer and his client.
(6) It is also of note that in the Barings case it was not argued that, and the Vice-Chancellor did not reach his conclusion on the basis that, litigation privilege did not give the client an absolute right. Indeed, the underlying assumption in the case and of the judgment was that litigation privilege did give the litigant an absolute right. This was notwithstanding the point that the Barings case was concerned with a report for which privilege was claimed on the basis of the 'dominant purpose test' and it could be said that if after the Derby Magistrates case a balancing act such as that undertaken in respect of material covered by public interest immunity could be carried out in respect of material covered by legal professional privilege, such reports were the most likely candidates.
(7) In the Derby Magistrates case at [1996] 1 AC 487 , 510B, [1996] 1 FLR 513 , 529F-G by adding an express reference to Bingham LJ's statement of the principle underlying legal professional privilege in Ventouris v Mountain [1991] 1 WLR 607, 611, Lord Lloyd is approving that statement.
(8) As is made clear by the House of Lords in Waugh v British Railways Board (see, for example, Lord Wilberforce at 531H-532B and Lord Edmund-Davies at 543C-D), and throughout the authorities relating to the establishment of legal professional privilege, there is a strong public interest that all material relating to the matters in issue in litigation should be disclosed. This is reflected by the approach taken by Bingham LJ at 611H-619E in Ventouris v Mountain based purely on principle.
(9) In my judgment, it follows from point (8) that in the establishment and development of legal professional privilege:
(10) I would add that:
I turn now to R v Derby Magistrates' Court ex parte B; Same v Same ex parte Same [1996] AC 487 , sub nom R v Derby Magistrates' Court ex parte B [1996] 1 FLR 513 . It was concerned with instructions given by the applicant to his solicitor before he changed his account of how a girl was killed. The request for disclosure expressly excluded advice given by solicitors and/or counsel (see, for example, 496E and 516B respectively).
It is clear that the request covered material that came into existence in connection with litigation that was in existence or was contemplated. However, because the request covered communications only between a solicitor and his client, it would on the classification I have referred to earlier be classified as legal advice privilege albeit that it relates to litigation. This is because, as I have explained, this classification is often used to describe legal professional privilege that arises whether or not litigation is contemplated, and litigation privilege is often used to describe communications with third parties in connection with litigation (see Re L(A Minor) (Police Investigation: Privilege) [1997] AC 16, 33C-D, sub nom Re L (Police Investigation: Privilege) [1996] 1 FLR 731, 744G-H).
In the Derby Magistrates case the House of Lords do not approach the issues by reference to any distinction between legal advice privilege and litigation privilege and regularly refer to the privilege attaching to communications between solicitor and client. This is what they were dealing with.
The position is different in this case because what is being sought are communications between the father and the experts he instructs in the criminal proceedings. However, as I have pointed out these might include communications between those experts and the father's solicitors orrepeat communications between the father and his solicitors, and thus include communications such as those that were the subject matter of the Derby Magistrates case.
Further in my judgment the real reason which underlies the application for disclosure in this case is the same as, or equivalent to, that which underlay the application in the Derby Magistrates case, namely a wish to obtain further, or contradictory, accounts of events.
In the Derby Magistrates case the House of Lords held that (with the possible qualification that the position might be different if the litigant no longer had any interest in continuing to assert the privilege, and I mention that in my judgment it was correctly common ground that this possible qualification did not apply in this case) no exception should be allowed to the absolute nature of legal professional privilege, once established, and that therefore R v Barton [1973] 1 WLR 115 and R v Ataou [1988] QB 798 should be overruled (see Lord Taylor at [1996] 1 AC 487 , 508H-509B and 508D-E, [1996] 1 FLR 513 , 528E-G and 528B, Lord Lloyd at [1996] 1 AC 487 , 509D and 510A, [1996] 1 FLR 513 , 528H and 529D-E, and Lord Nicholls at [1996] 1 AC 487 , 510D-H and 512D, [1996] 1 FLR 513 , 529H-
530D and 531H-532A).
As can be seen from the passage at 508H-509A and 528E-G respectively, Lord Taylor puts this conclusion in general terms by reference to legal professional privilege and says that his reason for reaching this conclusion is the wider interest of all those hereafter who might be deterred from telling the truth to their solicitors, and as I have said there are consistent references throughout the speeches to communications between a solicitor and his client.
The question therefore arises whether the decision in the Derby Magistrates case is confined to legal professional privilege relating to communications between a solicitor (or a lawyer) and his client. Leaving aside for the moment the passage in Re L relied on by the guardian ad litem in this case to support this conclusion, in my judgment although the actual decision in the Derby Magistrates case relates only to communications between a client and his solicitor the effect of the decision is not so confined. Rather in my judgment it is authority for the proposition that when material is subject to legal professional privilege the person who can claim that privilege has an absolute right to do so and thus to refuse disclosure. My main reasons for this conclusion are:
In my judgment, all these points support the conclusion that all heads of legal professional privilege are based on the development and application of the same underlying public interest and reasoning and thus the conclusions I have reached in paras (9) and (10) above as to the establishment and development of legal professional privilege.
Further in my judgment they show that in the Derby Magistrates case the House of Lords was considering the privilege or rights conferred on a person who consults a lawyer and on a litigant in respect of material to which that public interest and reasoning against disclosure applies. In other words, in my judgment the wider interest referred to by Lord Taylor should be interpreted and applied to include the wider interest of litigants in having and maintaining litigation privilege.
Although this argument does not arise in this case, as I have recognised in para (6) above, I would accept that it is perhaps arguable that such conclusion should be qualified in respect of material that comes into existence for a dual purpose and is only subject to litigation privilege because it satisfies the 'dominant purpose test' and thus that a balancing act such as that undertaken in respect of material covered by public interest immunity could be carried out in respect of such material. But in my judgment that distinction, or qualification, cannot properly be drawn in this case between (a) communications between the father and his solicitor for the purposes of receiving advice as to and preparing his defence to the criminal proceedings, and (b) (direct or indirect) communications between the father and medical experts instructed for the same purposes. This identity or overlap of the purpose of such communications leads to the conclusion that the public interest arguments that establish the existence of legal professional privilege in the context of adversarial litigation apply to both.
Re L [1997] AC 16, [1996] 1 FLR 731
This case was relied on heavily by counsel for the guardian ad litem. In particular, he relied on the passage in the speech of Lord Jauncey at 24G-25C and 736D-G respectively. Before returning to that passage, and the identification of the decision and reasoning of the majority in Re L , I make the following preliminary points:
As Re L comes after the Derby Magistrates case it is naturally important to identify what it decides and what effect it has on the earlier decision. Importantly here the following questions arise, namely:
In my judgment, the majority in Re L do not decide that either of the above is the case.
Before considering whether, in my judgment, like the Derby Magistrates case, the decision in Re L affects material in addition to that actually under consideration in that case (ie an 'expert's paper report'), I propose to identify what in my judgment is the essential reasoning and binding decision in Re L in respect of the report under consideration in that case. In my judgment it is that:
In my judgment, this reasoning extends to, for example, wardship proceedings and private law proceedings under the Children Act on the basis that they can also be described as essentially non-adversarial (see also Vernon v Bosley (No 2) [1999] QB 18 , 35H-36A, [1998] 1 FLR 304 , 318H).
In my judgment, that this is the reasoning and binding decision in Re L can be seen from, in particular, the following passages in the speech of Lord Jauncey:
In highlighting these passages, I naturally recognise that they have to be read in context and in particular that p 27 of the report has to be read as a whole. However, in my judgment these passages do identify the essential reasoning of the majority and that it is based on the conclusion that the proceedings are essentially non-adversarial (see also Vernon v Bosley (No 2) [1999] QB 18 , 61G-H, [1998] 1 FLR 304 , 344A-B where Thorpe LJ identifies the essential foundation of the decision in Re L as being that Children Act proceedings 'are not purely adversarial but quasi-inquisitorial').
Although not directly relevant to these proceedings questions then arise whether the reasoning of the majority in Re L also leads to the conclusion that legal professional privilege cannot be claimed in proceedings under the Children Act in respect of other material that would be material covered by litigation privilege if it had come into existence in connection with other proceedings (which were adversarial). Such material includes:
These questions relate to the fairness of a trial, or court proceedings, brought in reliance on the Children Act 1989 or the inherent jurisdiction where the interests of a child are the court's paramount concern. As Lord Nicholls explains in his dissenting speech in Re L at 31H-32E and 743E-744A respectively, procedural fairness arises in a number of contexts including adversarial proceedings and investigations. The need for it is also recognised and required by Art 6 of the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms 1950. The part that legal professional privilege has to play in court proceedings concerning children is an aspect of procedural fairness to the parties and the children concerned (if they are not parties).
Problems in this respect are that the majority in Re L through the speech of Lord Jauncey (i) make no specific reference to such material, but make specific reference to the point that the expert had no communication with the mother, (ii) recognise that what an expert or third party can be asked on the basis that there is 'no property in a witness' is limited (see 25B and 736G respectively), and (iii) expressly state that at 27H and 739E respectively that their conclusion: '? does not of course affect privilege between solicitor and client', but do not mention the possibility that communications between solicitor and client could be passed on to an expert.
The minority in Re L through the speech of Lord Nicholls at 35B-D and 746E-G respectively point out by reference to the judgment of Steyn LJ (as he then was, and who is a member of the majority in Re L ) in Oxfordshire County Council v M and Another [1994] Fam 151 , [1994] 1 FLR 175, where he took the view which in my judgment is the one taken by the majority in Re L , namely that the Children Act 1989 has impliedly abrogated litigation privilege in care proceedings at least so far as (some or all) experts' reports are concerned that:
It is to be noted that the reasoning of the other two judges in Oxfordshire v M was not the same as that of Steyn LJ and it is not as clear as in Re L that the reports, or the instructions, of the experts would not include discussions with the party or her solicitor.
It follows that this point made by the minority supports the argument that for the future a proper application of the reasoning of the majority in Re L is that it has the result that litigation privilege (excluding communication between legal adviser and client if it can be so classified) does not arise in respect of material coming into existence for the purposes of proceedings under Part IV of the Children Act 1989, or other proceedings thereunder or under the inherent jurisdiction, where the welfare of the child is paramount and the proceedings are essentially non-adversarial.
This conclusion can also be supported by the argument that the underlying basis of the decision of the majority in Re L is that the public interest and reasoning that founds litigation privilege is based on the public (and private) interests relating to purely adversarial litigation and therefore when considering proceedings that are 'essentially non-adversarial' (per Lord Jauncey), or which are 'are not purely adversarial but quasi-inquisitorial' (per Thorpe LJ in Vernon v Bosley (No 2) ) those interests and the reasoning underlying litigation privilege do not arise and the matter needs to be reconsidered. But this leaves open the question whether such a consideration would give rise to some litigation privilege in proceedings that are not wholly adversarial, but as the two quoted descriptions show have some adversarial ingredients or characteristics.
In my judgment, it is not necessary or appropriate for me in this judgment to try and answer the points that arise as to the extent of the effect of the majority decision in Re L . This is because in my judgment the point made by the minority in Re L to which I have referred, and the arguments based on the need to reconsider the creation of litigation privilege in essentially non-adversarial proceedings, do not support, or lead to, either:
These are the points that are relevant in this case.
However, before I deal with those points and the particular passage in the speech of Lord Jauncey relied on by counsel for the guardian ad litem in this case, I make the following observations on the effect of the majority decision in Re L . I do so because in my judgment questions as to the extent of the effect of the majority decision in Re L potentially have a wide impact, particularly in respect of issues relating to fairness to parents in public and private law proceedings under the Children Act 1989 and the impact of Art 6 thereon:
The passage in the speech of Lord Jauncey that was relied on particularly by counsel for the guardian ad litem to support his alternative submissions that either legal professional privilege cannot be claimed by the father in respect of the material the guardian ad litem seeks, or that the father does not have an absolute right to refuse to produce such material is at 24G-25C and 736D-G respectively, and is in the following terms:
My Lords, I reject this contention. There is, as Mr Harris for the city council and the police authority, pointed out, a clear distinction between the privilege attaching to communications between solicitor and client and that attaching to reports by third parties prepared on the instructions of a client for the purposes of litigation. In the former case the privilege attaches to all communications whether related to litigation or not, but in the latter case it attaches only to documents or other written communications prepared with a view to litigation: Waugh v British Railways Board [1980] AC 521 , 533B, 537G and 544B. There is this further distinction that whereas a solicitor could not without his client's consent be compelled to express an opinion on the factual or legal merits of the case, a third party who has provided a report to a client can be subpoenaed to give evidence by the other side and cannot decline to answer questions as to his factual findings and opinion thereon. There is no property in the opinion of an expert witness: Harmony Shipping Co SA v Saudi Europe Line Ltd; Same v Orri (Trading as Saudi Europe Line);
Same v Davis and Another [1979] l WLR 1380, 1386G, per Lord Denning MR.'
I accept that if this extract is read in isolation it provides support for the arguments advanced by counsel on behalf of the guardian ad litem, and for the contention that my conclusions as to the effect of the Derby Magistrates case, and more generally as to legal professional privilege, are wrong. However, in my judgment it should not be read in isolation and when it is read in context, and indeed when it is further analysed on its own, it does not lead to the conclusion that the arguments advanced on behalf of the guardian ad litem in this case are correct.
In my judgment, when read in context this passage is simply an introduction to, and does not form part of, the essential reasoning of the majority in the speech of Lord Jauncey. This is because:
In my judgment, it follows that in context the passage relied on by counsel for the guardian ad litem is not part of the ratio and further, or alternatively, it should be read as referring to the establishment and existence of the privilege rather than to its effect once established.
Further and importantly:
Further, if the passage relied on by counsel for the guardian ad litem is considered in isolation in my judgment it does not lead to the wide-reaching alternative results he seeks to establish. My reasons for this conclusion are:
In my judgment these points show that the majority in Re L , were not dealing with the points advanced by counsel for the guardian ad litem in this case, which as the questions I have set out earlier and numbered (A) and (B) show have several aspects.
In my judgment, for the reasons set out above, the decision in Re L :
The duty of disclosure in cases concerning the welfare of children
In my judgment it was correctly common ground that in proceedings in the Family Division concerning the welfare of children there is a high duty of full and frank disclosure of all matters within the knowledge, custody power or control of parties which are material to welfare whether those matters are favourable to, or adverse to, their own particular case (see Oxfordshire County Council v P [1995] Fam 161, 166E, [1995] 1 FLR 552, 557A). That case concerned disclosure by a guardian ad litem of information given to her in the preparation of her report to a duty social worker who in turn informed the police. It was therefore not concerned with information that was subject, or potentially subject, to legal professional privilege. Additionally, I comment in respect of this case that there is now later authority relating to disclosure of material to the police.
As to the accepted existence, of this duty, I was also referred to Essex County Council v R [1994] Fam 167, [1993] 2 FLR 826 in particular at 168-9 and 828-829 respectively, Re DH (A Minor) (Child Abuse) [1994] 1 FLR 679 in particular 704B. All these cases were referred to in the speeches in Re L . In particular, Lord Jauncey refers to them at [1997] AC 16, 28C-H, [1996] 1 FLR 731, 739G-740E, under the heading 'Voluntary disclosure' where he cites some of the passages from them that I was referred to and expressly states that in view of his conclusion on legal professional privilege he does not find it necessary to come to a decision on the point asserted that there was a duty to make voluntary disclosure of all matters likely to be material to the welfare of a child, and thus of the report in question in Re L .
The question, however, arises in this case whether the accepted existence of this duty of disclosure overrides a right of a party to Children Act proceedings where the welfare of the child is the court's paramount consideration to claim legal professional privilege which arises in, or in connection with, other proceedings. In my judgment, the existence of this duty does not do so. My reasons for this conclusion are:
Miscellaneous
Counsel for the guardian ad litem also referred me to, and relied on, Vernon v Bosley (No 2) [1999] QB 18 , [1998] 1 FLR 304 , and in particular passages in the judgment of Thorpe LJ at (i) 61G-H and 343H-344B respectively, the last sentence of which is in the following terms: 'The court's inquiry cannot be deflected, inhibited or disadvantaged by litigation privilege', and (ii) 63E-F and 34G respectively that: '? it is simply unconscionable for a litigant to run contradictory cases in simultaneous proceedings in the hope of gaining advantage in each'. However, in my judgment these passages do not provide authority for either of the alternative submissions relating to legal professional privilege made by counsel for the guardian ad litem in this case because:
Counsel for the guardian ad litem also sought to support his submissions and the guardian ad litem's case by reference to what he conveniently described as the 'Woolf' reforms, the 'abolition of the right of silence' by the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 and 'the requirement to disclose the defence case' pursuant to the Criminal Procedure and Investigations Act 1996. In my judgment, these points do not assist the guardian ad litem's case that legal professional privilege does not arise, or cannot be claimed, or is qualified.
As I have pointed out under the heading 'The duty of disclosure in cases concerning the welfare of children', legal professional privilege can be removed, excluded, overridden or qualified by statute, but this must be done expressly or by clear implication. I was not referred to any such statutory provision relating to these additional points made on behalf of the guardian ad litem which would have this effect in this case.
Overall conclusion on legal professional privilege
In my judgment, for the reasons I have given:
Disclosure of the names of the experts instructed by the father in the criminal proceedings
At an early stage of these proceedings it appeared that this was the relief sought against the father. Later it was put as an alternative. The only purpose for seeking and making such an order would be to enable the guardian ad litem and other parties to these care proceedings to approach such experts and seek evidence from them either voluntarily or pursuant to a subpoena.
The purpose of making such an order would therefore be to obtain from those witnesses the material that I have concluded is covered by legal professional privilege and which the father has an absolute right to refuse to disclose.
It was argued that such an order could and should be made because there is 'no property in a witness' and reliance was placed on the passage in the speech of Lord Jauncey in Re L [1997] AC 16, 25B, [1996] 1 FLR 731, 736G where he refers to Harmony Shipping Co SA v Saudi Europe Line Ltd; Same v Orri (Trading as Saudi Europe Line); Same v Davis and Another [1979] 1 WLR 1380, 1386G.
In my judgment a witness or potential witness should not volunteer material that is covered by legal professional privilege and should not be compelled by the court to provide such material unless of course the witness has the consent of the person who has the benefit of the privilege. In my judgment this flows from the nature of legal professional privilege and the rights it gives, namely that the privilege is the client's privilege and it gives him an absolute right to refuse disclosure.
Further, in my judgment this conclusion is supported by:
In my judgment it follows that the father can refuse to, and should not be ordered to, disclose the names of the experts he instructs for the purposes of the criminal proceedings.
This does not mean that the father has any 'property in those experts' and in this case there is no need to consider potentially difficult questions relating to what the position would be if one party approached an expert who had already given a report or advice covered by litigation privilege to another party on the basis that he was content that the expert should not disclose any of that material and should only give his expert view on material that is known to both parties. This is because as I have explained earlier:
Other issues: privilege against self-incrimination and a balancing exercise
If my conclusions in respect of legal professional privilege are correct these do not arise and I shall only deal with them shortly.
The issues relating to the privilege against self-incrimination introduce a consideration of s 98 of the Children Act 1989. This relates to the giving of evidence but in my judgment would directly, or indirectly, cover the disclosure sought by the guardian ad litem in these care proceedings.
There is plainly force in the argument that s 98 covers the issues raised by the father based on the privilege against self-incrimination with the result that he cannot successfully rely on it as a free-standing point to avoid making the disclosure sought.
However, in my judgment this privilege, and the extent of the protection given by s 98, are relevant if the father only has a qualified right to refuse to disclose on the basis of legal professional privilege, and therefore disclosure depends on the outcome of a balancing or weighing act performed by the court.
I did not hear full argument on the extent of the protection conferred bys 98(2). For example, no submissions were made to me on the recent decision of Johnson J in Re L (Care: Confidentiality) [1999] 1 FLR 165. At 167E-F he says that a concession that s 98(2) should be given a broad meaning and thus that it is not open to the police/prosecution to use statements or admissions in criminal proceedings in cross-examination or otherwise was one that seemed to him to conform to what he believed to be the intention of Parliament. I would respectfully agree.
However, Johnson J goes on to state that the concession is not one demanded by law and refers to authority including Re K and Others (Minors) (Disclosure) [1994] 1 FLR 377, 381, in which it was held that putting inconsistent statements to a witness in order to challenge their evidence or attack their credibility does not amount to those statements being used 'against' them. That was a case where the statements under consideration were made by the mother who was a witness in the father's criminal trial and who was herself unlikely to be charged. Effectively, therefore, it related to statements made in family proceedings by a witness in criminal proceedings and not to statements by a person charged with criminal offences in family proceedings. In Wallace Smith Trust Co Ltd v Deloitte Haskins & Sells at first instance ([1995] CLC 223, 226G-H) a similar conclusion was reached in respect of the similar words 'use in evidence against' in s 2(8) of the Criminal Justice Act 1987 (which section otherwise has a differently formulated prohibition on use). I confess that I find these conclusions as to what is covered by the statutory phrases 'admissible in evidence against' (s 98(2) of the Children Act 1989) and 'use in evidence against' (s 2(8) of the Criminal Justice Act 1987) quite surprising.
In the absence of argument on the extent of the protection given bys 98(2) as to the use of statements and admissions made in family proceedings at a criminal trial which dealt with (inter alia) the cases mentioned above and the criminal cases referred to by Johnson J, in this judgment I shall simply state that it seems to me that issues relating to the meaning and effect of the statutory phrase 'shall not be admissible in evidence against' warrants further consideration in the light of full argument. I am reinforced in that conclusion by the view which I share with Johnson J that some authority does not accord with what we believe to be the intention of Parliament in this respect.
Subject to any such reconsideration as Johnson J points out in Re L (Care: Confidentiality) the protection given by s 98(2) as to the use of statements and admissions in family proceedings at the criminal trial is a limited one.
Further, and in any event, it has been held in, for example, Re C (A Minor) (Care Proceedings: Disclosure) [1997] Fam 76, sub nom Re EC (Disclosure of Material) [1996] 2 FLR 725 that s 98 does not prevent disclosure to prosecuting authorities for use in their inquiries and preparation for a prosecution. Such use does not involve the admission of a disclosed statement 'in evidence - in proceedings for an offence' (s 98(2) of the Children Act 1989). It follows that notwithstanding the undertaking given by the Crown Prosecution Service in this case, this possibility of disclosure and use by the prosecuting authorities has the result that the protection given by s 98 is limited.
I now turn to the balancing or weighing exercise and in considering it I admit that to some extent my approach and conclusion must be affected by my conclusions on legal professional privilege. However, if those conclusions are wrong and the father only has a qualified right to claim legal professional privilege in respect of his communications with the experts he instructs for the purposes of the criminal proceedings, and their reports, in my judgment the balancing or weighing exercise comes down in favour of refusing the application of the guardian ad litem for an order that the father do disclose that material. As to that conclusion I have had regard to the following factors:
In short, having regard to the above factors in my judgment there are clear and strong public interests founded in the criminal process against disclosure being ordered which in the present circumstances of this case are not outweighed by the possibility that disclosure might (and I repeat might) assist the court in these care proceedings and thereby promote the public interest in promoting the welfare of children.
Annex
OrderOrder accordingly.
PHILIPPA JOHNSON
Barrister
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