Court of Appeal (Family Division)
Appellate Psychiatric Expert Witness Reports
Specialist psychiatric and psychological evidence for the Family Division of the Court of Appeal. Our consultant psychiatrists and psychologists provide expert reviews, fresh evidence assessments, and litigation capacity evaluations for solicitors appealing decisions in care proceedings, contact disputes, and complex family law matters.
About Court of Appeal (Family Division)
The Court of Appeal (Family Division) reviews decisions made by the Family Court and the High Court. Appeals typically focus on whether the original judge was “wrong” or if there was a procedural irregularity. Psychiatric evidence at this level often addresses the admissibility of fresh evidence or challenges the original expert’s findings.
Permission to Appeal
- Review of original findings
- Procedural fairness checks
- Real prospect of success
- Compelling reason for appeal
Fresh Evidence
- Ladd v Marshall criteria
- New psychiatric diagnosis
- Recent change in capacity
- Material change in risk
Complex Care Cases
- Care & Placement Orders
- Secure accommodation
- Deprivation of Liberty
- International abduction
Family Court (First Instance)
- Finding of fact hearings
- Direct parenting assessments
- Welfare checklist application
- Initial Section 31 orders
Court of Appeal
- Review of the lower court’s law
- Fresh evidence admissibility
- Challenging expert methodology
- Remittal or substitution of orders
When Appellate Psychiatric Evidence Is Required
Psychiatric expert evidence is frequently instructed in Court of Appeal Family Division proceedings for the following purposes:
Ladd v Marshall Applications
Assessing whether new psychiatric evidence could not have been obtained with reasonable diligence for use at the original trial and would likely have a core impact.
Expert Finding Challenges
Reviewing the methodology or clinical reasoning of a first-instance expert where it is alleged their evidence was flawed or misconstrued by the judge.
Change in Clinical State
Assessment of significant improvement or deterioration in a parent’s mental health since the final order was made, relevant to the welfare of the child.
Litigation Capacity
Psychiatric assessment supporting a party’s capacity to conduct appellate proceedings, particularly where capacity has fluctuated or is contested.
Vulnerable Appellants
Assessing the need for intermediaries or special measures during oral appellate hearings for parties with significant psychological vulnerability.
Stay of Execution
Expert opinion on the psychological impact of immediate order implementation (e.g., removal of a child) pending the outcome of an appeal.
Types of Appellate Psychiatric Reports
Expert Review Report
Purpose: Critically review the psychiatric evidence relied upon in the lower court.
Key Questions: Was methodology sound? Were clinical conclusions justified? Was vital evidence missed?
Legal Test: Identifying “wrong” findings or procedural unfairness in expert instruction.
Fresh Evidence Assessment
Purpose: Provide new clinical data not available at the time of the original trial.
Contents: New diagnosis, recent treatment response, or material change in parenting capacity.
Disposals: Remittal for rehearing, Substitution of Order.
Litigation Capacity Review
Purpose: Determine if a party has the capacity to conduct appellate proceedings.
Requirements: Understanding legal issues, weighing risks, instructing counsel at appellate level.
Our Role: Detailed MCA 2005 assessment focused on the complexities of appeal.
Impact of Stay Assessment
Purpose: Support applications to stay the execution of a final order.
Covers: Risk of irreparable psychological harm to child or parent if order is enforced immediately.
Outcome: Evidence to maintain the status quo until the appeal is heard.
Vulnerability Review
Purpose: Evaluate the need for special measures in the Court of Appeal.
Covers: Capacity to give evidence, impact of court environment, need for intermediaries.
Context: Often required for appellants with neurodevelopmental or trauma-related conditions.
Need an appellate review?
Contact Triage TeamAppellate Outcomes in Family Proceedings
| Outcome | Description |
|---|---|
| Remittal for Rehearing | Sending the case back to the Family Court for a new hearing |
| Substitution of Order | The Court of Appeal replaces the original order with its own |
| Stay of Execution | Suspending the lower court’s order until appeal is concluded |
| Dismissal of Appeal | The original order remains in force |
Which Expert for Family Appeals?
Consultant Psychiatrist
Best for clinical reviews
- Review of medical evidence
- Parental mental health diagnosis
- Litigation capacity evaluations
Why: Medical expertise is required to challenge or support clinical findings.
Clinical Psychologist
For parenting & attachment
- Parenting capacity reviews
- Attachment evidence analysis
- Cognitive and IQ assessments
Why: Specialist in psychological formulation and behavioral evidence.
Child & Adolescent
For Child Welfare Appeals
- Impact of removal on child
- Child’s psychological needs
- Welfare checklist review
Our Process
Urgent Instruction
Contact us with case details — we understand deadlines
Expert Match
We identify available Section 12 approved psychiatrist
Rapid Assessment
Face-to-face or video assessment (often within days)
Report Delivered
Written report provided to meet court deadline
Court Attendance
Expert available for oral evidence if required
Appellate Liaison
For fresh evidence, we assist with court liaison
Turnaround Times
| Report Type | Standard | Urgent |
|---|---|---|
| Expert Review | 3–4 weeks | 1–4 days |
| Fresh Evidence | 2–3 weeks | 1–3 days |
| Capacity Review | N/A | Same week |
| Stay Assessment | N/A | 24–48 hrs |
| Vulnerability | N/A | Same day |
Funding Options
Legal Aid (LAA)
LAA rates accepted. Prior authority support.
Private Funding
Competitive fixed fees & deferred payment.
Court Ordered
Direct court billing available.
Legal Framework
All reports comply with Family Procedure Rules Part 25, addressing questions posed by instructing parties and including necessary declarations and statements of truth for appellate use.
Frequently Asked Questions
How quickly can you provide a report for a Court of Appeal deadline?
Appellate deadlines are often extremely strict. For urgent fresh evidence applications or capacity reviews, we can arrange assessments and deliver reports within 1–4 days. Contact our triage team with your hearing date for immediate confirmation of availability.
What is the criteria for fresh psychiatric evidence in family appeals?
The Court of Appeal applies the Ladd v Marshall test: 1) The evidence could not have been obtained with reasonable diligence for the trial; 2) The evidence would probably have an important influence on the result; 3) The evidence must be such as is presumably to be believed (credible).
Can your experts review the evidence of a previous expert witness?
Yes. Our experts frequently provide ‘review reports’ where they evaluate the clinical reasoning, methodology, and conclusions of the expert instructed at first instance. This is often necessary to support an argument that the original judge’s reliance on flawed evidence made their decision ‘wrong’.
Do you provide experts for international family appeals?
Yes. We provide experts for appeals involving international child abduction (Hague Convention) and jurisdictional disputes where psychiatric evidence regarding the ‘grave risk’ of return is central to the appellate review.
What if the appellant’s capacity has changed since the trial?
If there is a doubt regarding a party’s capacity to conduct an appeal, we can provide an urgent MCA 2005 assessment. Capacity to litigate at the appellate level can be more complex than at first instance, and the court requires specific expert evidence to appoint a litigation friend.
Can the assessment be done by video for an appeal?
Video assessments are common for appellate reviews, especially where the expert is primarily reviewing existing records or assessing a party’s current mental state. However, for fresh evidence applications, a face-to-face assessment is often preferred to ensure maximum clinical robustness.
What information do you need to begin an appellate instruction?
We require the original judgment, the previous expert reports, the grounds of appeal, and any new medical or social care records that have emerged since the final hearing. Clear instructions on the specific appellate questions (e.g., Ladd v Marshall criteria) are essential.
Do your experts give oral evidence in the Court of Appeal?
While the Court of Appeal primarily deals with written evidence and law, oral evidence from experts is occasionally required, particularly during remitted hearings or where the court is hearing a fresh evidence application. Our experts are experienced in high-level appellate testimony.
Need an Expert for a Family Court Appeal?
Urgent reports in 1–4 days. Fresh evidence specialists. LAA rates accepted. Expert methodology reviews.


