Legal
Piloting Through Choppy Waters To Open Justice

There has been growing pressure to relax reporting restrictions on private and sensitive matters such as family law issues. The author of this article considers the effects.
A pilot scheme, which allows family court proceedings to be reported, has just been extended; journalists can now report (with some restrictions) on 19 of the 42 family court centres in England and Wales. This could affect HNW/UHNW individuals using the courts, as the media frequently covers details which emerge about their private lives and finances during proceedings. To discuss developments is Philippa Dolan, who is a family partner at Collyer Bristow. The editors are pleased to share such insights; the usual editorial disclaimers apply to views of outside contributors. Jump into the conversation! Email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com
In recent decades there have been intermittent calls to allow
reporters into the family court. Unlike other courts, the family
court has been a private space for money as well as children’s
cases; the public (via the media) has only had access once there
is an appeal.
The pressure to ease reporting restrictions on these most private
and sensitive of matters has been growing. There is no doubt that
there has been an occasional “scandal” reported such as an expert
witness whose testimony is swimming against the tide of public
opinion, or victims of domestic abuse being cross examined by
their perpetrators. However, in order to solve this perceived
lack of confidence on the part of the public, an enormous
sledgehammer has been aimed at this particular nut and every
family lawyer I know has expressed serious concerns at this
attack on the privacy of families.
We should draw a distinction here, of course, between money and
children’s cases. There is both a greater need to protect
children from publicity, but also a stronger argument for
publicising anonymously the decisions that are being made about
their arrangements. This is particularly so in public law cases
where the state is imposing life-changing decisions in our name.
So what is the current position in this long-running saga? There
has been a pilot scheme running in relation to children’s cases
for the past year in three courts and it has just been announced
that this is being extended to a further 16 – nearly half the
total. In December it was announced that a pilot scheme in
respect of money cases will start at the end of this month in
Central London, Leeds, and Birmingham.
The president of the Family Division produced a report entitled
Confidence and Confidentiality back in October 2021
and, more recently, has given guidance for the new pilot scheme
dealing with money cases. The president has been at pains to
stress that it is not for the court to limit the reporters’
independence; the Transparency Reporting Pilot for Financial
Remedy Proceedings explicitly states: “The court should not
engage in enquiries that amount to editorial control or approval
or disapproval of proposed journalistic material.” There are some
caveats such as disclosing addresses, details of bank accounts,
business interests etc but it is clear that the judiciary has
given a green light to reporters to report as they see fit.
In the pilot, it is envisaged that the parties and any reporters
wishing to attend court will reach a compromise where there is
disagreement as to how much information should be disclosed. It
is frankly naïve to assume that the media is interested in legal
principles. With a few honourable exceptions, they will be there
for the gossip and other salacious information that will
titillate their audience and persuade them to spend more money on
the respective news outlet for which the reporter works. There
will inevitably be tension between the lawyers (whose job is to
protect their clients from embarrassment and distress) and the
reporters.
What do we remember from the divorce of Paul McCartney and
Heather Mills? Not the argument about the ringfencing of
non-marital assets against “needs.” Of course not. It was
Heather Mills throwing water over Fiona Shackleton.
The cynic in me wonders whether the current interest in
introducing transparency is a way of distracting attention from
all the truly dreadful aspects of our current justice system.
From virtually no legal assistance for court users (hence the
increase in cases going to trial with two unrepresented litigants
relying on the sense and sanity of the poor judge) to crumbling
buildings and ridiculously long court lists. There seems to be
too much concern on the part of the judiciary as to how the
family court is perceived and less on how to make it work better.
The vast majority of money cases are about a family’s personal
finances and lifestyles but with enough quirky and “interesting”
stories to secure media interest on a slow news day. How
mortifying for clients to have the interested public (with no
public interest element whatsoever) poring over how much they
spend on handbags and expensive golf paraphernalia, never mind
IVF treatments or therapy sessions.
Perhaps the most disturbing aspect is an openly acknowledged hope
on the part of the judges and their advisors that this
humiliating prospect will frighten enough people away from using
the court that the backlog will diminish without the need to
reinstate the eyewatering budget reductions that have been
introduced after the last decade or so.
Don’t get me wrong. Going to court is always a horrible prospect. Of course, settling the case away from court makes perfect sense. But that is not an ethical reason for making access to justice (open justice if you like) so completely unbearable that only showmen and sadists will want to engage with the process. Sometimes cases need to go to court and have a decision made by a judge. That is an important aspect of open justice, far more important than titillating the public or even providing patchy reassurance that the judges know what they are doing. They usually do.