Ratio Decidendi and Detailed reasons for the decision
What does Ratio Decidendi means in the case of R (on the application of McConnell) v Registrar General [2020] EWCA Civ 559
What is the detailed reasons for the judgement in this McConnell's case?
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| You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> McConnell & Anor, R (On the Application Of) v The Registrar General for England and Wales [2020] EWCA Civ 559 (29 April 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/559.html Cite as: [2020] WLR(D) 254, [2020] HRLR 13, [2020] 3 WLR 683, (2020) 173 BMLR 1, [2020] 2 All ER 813, [2020] 3 FCR 387, [2021] Fam 77, [2020] EWCA Civ 559, [2020] 2 FLR 366 |
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| Neutral Citation Number: [2020] EWCA Civ 559 | ||
| Case Nos: C1/2019/2730 C1/2019/2767 |
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION) ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE FAMILY DIVISION AND ADMINISTRATIVE COURT Sir Andrew McFarlane P [2019] EWHC 2384 (Fam)
| Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
| 29 April 2020 |
B e f o r e :
THE RT HON THE LORD BURNETT OF MALDON LORD JUSTICE CHIEF JUSTICE OF ENGLAND AND WALES THE RT HON LADY JUSTICE KING and THE RT HON LORD JUSTICE SINGH ____________________
Between:
| THE QUEEN (on the application of (1) ALFRED McCONNELL (2) YY (by his litigation friend Claire Brooks)) | Appellants | |
| – and – | ||
| THE REGISTRAR GENERAL FOR ENGLAND AND WALES | Respondent | |
| – and – | ||
| (1) SECRETARY OF STATE FOR HEATH AND SOCIAL CARE (2) MINISTER FOR WOMEN AND EQUALITIES (3) SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | Interested Parties | |
| – and – | ||
| THE AIRE CENTRE | Intervener |
____________________
Ms Hannah Markham QC and Ms Miriam Carrion Benitez (instructed by Laytons LLP) for the First Appellant Mr Michael Mylonas QC, Ms Susanna Rickard and Ms Marisa Allman (instructed by Cambridge Family Law Practice) for the Second Appellant Mr Ben Jaffey QC and Ms Sarah Hannett (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the Respondent and Interested Parties Ms Samantha Broadfoot QC and Mr Andrew Powell (instructed by Pennington Manches Cooper LLP) for the Intervener Hearing dates: 4 and 5 March 2020 ____________________
HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT APPROVED ____________________
Crown Copyright ©
- Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email, release to BAILII and publication on the Courts and Tribunals Judiciary website. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:30 a.m. on Wednesday, 29 April 2020.
- Mr McConnell has made no secret of his identity. Indeed he has sought to raise public awareness of the situation in which he finds himself as a man who gave birth to a child by making a documentary called 'Seahorse', which has been shown at a number of film festivals and was broadcast by the BBC in September 2019. His anonymity order was varied in a separate judgment issued by the President on 11 July 2019: [2019] EWHC 1823 (Fam).
- On behalf of the Appellants it was urged upon us that we should give an interpretation to the legislation which is in keeping with contemporary moral and social norms. Reliance was placed on the well-established principle of statutory construction that statutes are "always speaking": see Owens v Owens [2018] UKSC 41; [2018] 3 WLR 834, at para. 30 (Lord Wilson JSC), citing R (Quintavalle) v Secretary of State for Health [2003] UKHL 13; [2003] 2 AC 387, at para. 9 (Lord Bingham of Cornhill). As Lord Bingham put it there:
- In principle the Explanatory Notes to an Act of Parliament are an admissible aid to its construction: see R (Westminster City Council) v National Asylum Support Service [2002] UKHL 38; [2002] 1 WLR 2956, at para. 5 (Lord Steyn). However, as Lord Steyn said, this is in so far as the Explanatory Notes "cast light on the objective setting or contextual scene of the statute, and the mischief at which it is aimed". We do not consider that the Explanatory Notes to the GRA are inconsistent with what we regard as the correct interpretation of sections 9 and 12 but, in any event, if they were, those Notes could not alter the true interpretation of the statute. Our task is to construe what Parliament has enacted, not what the Explanatory Notes say it enacted.
- At one time it was intended by Mr Michael Mylonas QC, on behalf of YY, to take the Court to statements in Parliament, in accordance with the rule in Pepper v Hart [1993] AC 593. During the course of the hearing, however, he abandoned any such intention, so we need say no more about that save for this. We would observe that the provisions of sections 9 and 12 of the GRA are not ambiguous nor do they otherwise fall into one of the gateways in Pepper v Hart which would have justified reference to statements made in Parliament.
- The true nature of the exercise which the courts must perform when assessing the compatibility of primary legislation with Convention rights was set out by the House of Lords in Wilson v First County Trust Ltd (No. 2) [2003] UKHL 40; [2004] 1 AC 816, in particular at paras. 61-67 (Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead). The following propositions are apparent from that passage. First, the court's task is an objective one, to assess the compatibility of the legislation with Convention rights, by reference to the well-known criteria, such as whether it has a legitimate aim and whether it conforms with the principle of proportionality. Secondly, that task has to be performed at the time when the issue comes before the court, just as it would be performed by the Strasbourg Court at the time when a case comes before it. Thirdly, the court is not concerned with the adequacy of the reasons which were put forward by ministers or others for the legislation as it proceeded through Parliament; indeed that would infringe the principle in Article 9 of the Bill of Rights 1689, that a court may not question proceedings in Parliament. It follows that the court is not concerned with the adequacy or otherwise of what may have been said by civil servants advising ministers at the time of the legislation being considered, still less subsequently. What matters is whether the legislation enacted by Parliament is or is not compatible with the Convention rights.
- The traditional rule of English law was the subject of challenge under the European Convention on Human Rights in a series of cases beginning with Rees v UK (1986) 9 EHRR 56. Initially the Court found that English law was not incompatible with the Convention, because there was no consensus in Council of Europe states and the matter fell within the margin of appreciation afforded to those states. The margin of appreciation, however, narrowed. The series of cases culminated in the decision of the Grand Chamber of the Strasbourg Court in Goodwin v UK (2002) 35 EHRR 18, in which for the first time that Court held that there was a violation of the Convention, in particular Article 8. It was that decision which led to the enactment of the GRA.
- It is also important to appreciate that Goodwin itself did not concern the position of a child. It concerned the law relating, for example, to the birth certificate of the trans person. The only case in which the Strasbourg Court has considered the position of a child born to a trans person is X, Y and Z v UK (1997) 24 EHRR 143. Even that case was not directly analogous to the present because the trans man (X) did not give birth to the child (Z). Rather it was Y who gave birth to Z, after treatment by artificial insemination by donor. Y was entered on Z's birth certificate as being the mother. The Registrar General refused to enter X on the birth certificate at all. The part of the register where the father could be put was therefore simply left blank. We note that, as a result of legislative changes in this country since that case, X would now be registered as the "parent" although not as the "father". This would certainly be so if X and Y were married to each other or were civil partners: see section 42 of the HFEA 2008.
- Furthermore, the decision in X, Y and Z has been cited with approval by the Strasbourg Court more recently, and after the decision in Goodwin: see Hamalainen v Finland (2014) 37 BHRC 55, in particular at paras. 67 and 75. In that last passage the Grand Chamber the Grand Chamber of the Strasbourg Court said:
- The next question is whether the interference complies with the principle of proportionality. The requirements of proportionality in the human rights context are now well established: see e.g. the decision of the Supreme Court in Bank Mellatt v HM Treasury (No. 2) [2012] UKSC 39; [2012] AC 700, at paras. 20 (Lord Sumption JSC) and 74 (Lord Reed JSC). There are four questions to be asked:
- Furthermore, as Mr Jaffey submitted, it cannot simply be a question of this Court substituting a word such as "parent" for the word "mother". This is because the word "parent" has a distinct meaning which has been given to it by Parliament in other legislation. This has been the product of considered legislative change over several decades, in various statutes, including the HFEA 1990 and the HFEA 2008. The legal position under the HFEA 2008 was succinctly summarised by Helen Mountfield QC (sitting as a deputy High Court judge) in R (K) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2018] EWHC 1834 (Admin); [2018] 1 WLR 6000, at para. 51:
- The legal position was summarised by Baroness Hale of Richmond in Whittington Hospital NHS Trust v XX [2020] UKSC 14, at para. 9: "the surrogate mother is always the child's legal parent unless and until a court order is made in favour of the commissioning parents."
- The third fundamental feature of the case is that there is no decision of the Strasbourg Court which suggests the interpretation advanced by the Appellants. The approach which the courts take under the HRA is in general to keep pace with the jurisprudence of the Strasbourg Court but not to go beyond it: see R (Ullah) v Special Adjudicator [2004] UKHL 26; [2004] 2 AC 323, at para. 20 (Lord Bingham of Cornhill) and R (Al-Skeini) v Secretary of State for Defence [2007] UKHL 26; [2008] AC 153, at paras. 105-106 (Lord Brown of Eaton-under-Heywood).
- That point is relevant to what the Strasbourg Court describes as the "margin of appreciation" to be afforded to the Contracting States in the application of the Convention. The concept of a margin of appreciation is not directly relevant when courts in this country apply the HRA. This is because it is a concept of international law and not domestic law, governing the relationship between an international court and Contracting States. Nevertheless, it is well established that there is an analogous concept which does apply in domestic law under the HRA, which has been variously described as a "discretionary area of judgement", a "margin of discretion" or in other ways, for example to refer to the appropriate weight which is to be given to the judgement of the executive or legislature depending upon the context: see e.g. R v Director of Public Prosecutions, ex p. Kebilene [2000] 2 AC 326, at 381 (Lord Hope of Craighead); and A v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2004] UKHL 56; [2005] 2 AC 68, at para. 39 (Lord Bingham of Cornhill). For convenience we will refer here to the "margin of judgement".
- Although the CRC has not been incorporated into domestic law by Parliament, and therefore cannot directly found rights in domestic law, both the Strasbourg Court and domestic courts will have regard to it when interpreting Article 8 of the Convention. Furthermore, the views of the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child are "authoritative guidance" on the CRC: see e.g. R (DA) v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2019] UKSC 21; [2019] 1 WLR 3289, at para. 69 (Lord Wilson JSC). But, as Lord Wilson emphasised in that passage, a General Comment is no more than guidance, which is not binding even on the international plane, so that it may "influence" but never "drive" a conclusion that the CRC has been breached.
The Lord Burnett of Maldon CJ, Lady Justice King and Lord Justice Singh:
Introduction
Factual background
Decisions under appeal
i) At common law a person whose egg is inseminated in their womb and who then becomes pregnant and gives birth to a child is that child's "mother".
ii) The status of being a "mother" arises from the role that a person has undertaken in the biological process of conception, pregnancy and birth.
iii) Being a "mother" or "father" with respect to the conception, pregnancy and birth of a child is not necessarily gender-specific, although until recent decades it invariably was so. It is now possible, and recognised by the law, for a "mother" to have an acquired gender of male, and for a "father" to have an acquired gender of female.
iv) Section 12 of the GRA is both retrospective and prospective. By virtue of that section the status of a person as the father or mother of a child is not affected by the acquisition of gender under the GRA, even where the relevant birth has taken place after the issue of a GRC.
Relevant provisions of the Births and Deaths Registration Act 1953
Relevant provisions of the GRA
"9 General
(1) Where a full gender recognition certificate is issued to a person, the person's gender becomes for all purposes the acquired gender (so that, if the acquired gender is the male gender, the person's sex becomes that of a man and, if it is the female gender, the person's sex becomes that of a woman).
(2) Subsection (1) does not affect things done, or events occurring, before the certificate is issued; but it does operate for the interpretation of enactments passed, and instruments and other documents made, before the certificate is issued (as well as those passed or made afterwards).
(3) Subsection (1) is subject to provision made by this Act or any other enactment or any subordinate legislation.
[…]
12 Parenthood
The fact that a person's gender has become the acquired gender under this Act does not affect the status of the person as the father or mother of a child."
Ancillary matters
i) The correct interpretation of the GRA, in particular sections 9 and 12.
ii) If the Court would otherwise reach an interpretation of that legislation which would be adverse to the Appellants, whether it is required to give a more favourable interpretation from their point of view as a result of an incompatibility with the Convention rights, in particular Article 8. If there would otherwise be an incompatibility with the Convention rights, the obligation in section 3 of the HRA is clear: so far as possible, the legislation must be read and given effect in a way which is compatible with the Convention rights. If a compatible interpretation is impossible, then the Court has the power (although not a duty) to make a declaration of incompatibility under section 4 of the HRA.
The issue of interpretation
"If Parliament, however, long ago, passed an Act applicable to dogs, it could not properly be interpreted to apply to cats; but it could properly be held to apply to animals which were not considered as dogs when the Act was passed but are so regarded now."
"This provides that though a person is regarded as being of the acquired gender, the person will retain their original status as either mother or father of a child. The continuity of parental rights and responsibilities is thus ensured."
Ms Markham emphasised that the evident purpose of section 12 was thus to ensure "continuity" but no more.
The development of the case law in the European Court of Human Rights
"In the absence of a European consensus and taking into account that the case at stake undoubtedly raises sensitive moral or ethical issues, the Court considers that the margin of appreciation to be afforded to the respondent State must still be a wide one …"
In that context, it cited X, Y and Z, at para. 44. It went on to state:
"This margin must in principle extend both to the State's decision whether or not to enact legislation concerning legal recognition of the new gender of post-operative transsexuals and, having intervened, to the rules it lays down in order to achieve a balance between the competing public and private interests."
"… There is no consensus in Europe on this issue: where the establishment or recognition of a legal relationship between the child and the intended parent is possible, the procedure varies from one State to another … The Court also observes that an individual's identity is less directly at stake where the issue is not the very principle of the establishment or recognition of his or her parentage, but rather the means to be implemented to that end. Accordingly, the Court considers that the choice of means by which to permit recognition of the legal relationship between the child and the intended parents falls within the State's margin of appreciation."
Against that background of the case law we turn to the issue of compatibility with the Convention rights in the present case if what would otherwise be the correct interpretation of sections 9 and 12 of the GRA were adopted.
The human rights issue
i) Is there a sufficiently important objective which the measure pursues?
ii) Is there a rational connection between the means chosen and that objective?
iii) Are there less intrusive means available?
iv) Is there a fair balance struck between the rights of the individual and the general interests of the community?
"… under the 2008 Act, at birth a child always has one mother, who is the woman who bore her; may also have a female or male co-parent; may never have more than one male parent; and may not have more than two parents by birth."
"The woman who is carrying or who has carried a child as a result of the placing in her of an embryo or of sperm and eggs, and no other woman, is to be treated as the mother of the child."
"'Surrogate mother' means a woman who carries a child in pursuance of an arrangement –
(a) made before she began to carry the child, and
(b) made with a view to any child carried in pursuance of it being handed over to, and parental responsibility being met (so far as practicable) by, another person or other persons."
The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child
Article 14 of the Convention
Conclusion
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LSM ASSESSMENT 2021-22
Case note: R (on the application of McConnell) v Registrar General [2020] EWCA Civ 559
Statute: Dealing in Cultural Objects (Offences) Act 2003
GENERALLY The Legal system and method (LSM) module will be assessed entirely by written examination in May 2022 or October 2022. The examination is divided into three parts: A, B and C. All parts are compulsory.
Part A (25% of the overall marks) relates entirely to the case of R (on the application of McConnell) v Registrar General [2020] EWCA Civ 559. There will no longer be any multiple-choice questions in this section.
Part B (50% of the overall marks) consists of six essay questions from which candidates much choose two; and
Part C (25% of the overall marks) is a multi-part question about the statute.
THE CASE NOTE You are required to write a case note based on the report of R (on the application of McConnell) v Registrar General and to submit the case note – via the VLE – by the due date.
The case note submission deadline is Thursday 10 March 2022 for those intending to sit the examination in May 2022 and Monday 5 September 2022 for those intending to sit the examination in October 2022.
The process for submitting the case note is explained on VLE course pages for LSM. Candidates encountering problems with the submission process should log an enquiry
through the student portal at least two days before the due date. Failure to submit the case note by the due date will result in failure of Part A of the examination. The case note cannot be taken into the examination.
Guidance on writing the case note is provided below.
THE STATUTE Part C will test understanding of Dealing in Cultural Objects (Offences) Act 2003. You should be familiar only with the modified version of the Act as provided on the VLE. A clean copy will be provided in the examination.
GUIDANCE ON WRITING YOUR CASE NOTE Your case note should be as short and as comprehensive as possible. You want it to be a case note – that is substantially shorter than the original – but you also need it to be comprehensive – that is to cover all the points you need to understand and recall. How long, or short, any piece of writing should be depends on your reasons for writing. The reasons for writing a case note on R (on the application of
Page 2 of 4
McConnell) v Registrar General are different to the reasons for making a note, perhaps only of a paragraph or two, of the many cases you will study in subjects like Criminal or Contract law.
It follows that your case note should be as long as you need it to be to help you fully understand the case and to help you when you are revising for the examination. You are expected to be very familiar with the judgment in McConnell and to be able to explain the judicial reasoning in the case.
Your case note should include: Case name and citation Court and judges Parties Material facts Question(s)of law/issue(s) Decision Detailed reasons for the decision The ratio decidendi
EXAMPLE CASE NOTE Here is an example of a case note based on Carlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Company [1893] 1 QB 256. Note that the comments in the right hand column are not part of the case note but explanatory notes included to assist you in understanding the case note. Your case note should not include explanatory notes. If you are unfamiliar with the case you can find the Law Report using the online library or find the judgment Carlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Company [1893] 1 QB 256 on Bailii.
CASE NAME AND CITATION Carlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Company [1892] EWCA Civ 11, [1893] 1 QB 256.
COURT AND JUDGES Court of Appeal (Civil Division): Lindley, Bowen and A L Smith LJJ.
PARTIES Appellant: The Carbolic Smoke Ball Company. Respondent: Carlill.
MATERIAL FACTS The defendants advertised2 their product promising a reward to purchasers, who, after using the product according to the instructions, subsequently caught the influenza (at 261).
The defendants placed a significant sum on deposit to show their ‘sincerity in the matter’ of the reward (at 261).3
The plaintiff, relying on the advertisement, purchased and used the product in the prescribed manner and contracted the influenza.
QUESTION OF LAW/ISSUES The issues before the court are:
(i) whether the 100l reward was intended to be an offer (A L Smith LJ at 272)4 and, if it was an offer (ii) whether it constituted a binding promise (Lindley LJ at 262) which (iii) required notification of acceptance
1 The neutral citation, [1892] EWCA Civ 1, is not original. Neutral citations were introduced in 2000 but BAILII now includes some significant historic cases and has assigned them neutral citations. Including the citation will make it easier to find the law report or judgment later. 2 The name of the newspaper is immaterial. 3 The fact that they placed money on deposit is material; it is part of Lindley and Bowen LJJs’ reasoning as to whether it was a promise or ‘mere puff’ (at 261 and 268) and A L Smith LJ states (at 272-3) that it shows the sincerity of the offer and was not ‘was mere waste paper’. 4 It is important to refer to the case explicitly by citing the judges and giving the relevant page (or in modern cases the paragraph number).
Page 3 of 4
to create a binding contract (Ibid) and, additionally, (iv) whether the plaintiff provided consideration for the promise (at 264).
DECISION Unanimously, (Lindley LJ at 265; Bowen LJ at 272 and A L Smith LJ at 275) the court upheld the decision of Hawkins J at first instance and dismissed the appeal.
DETAILED REASONS FOR THE DECISION The reasoning found in the judgments of the Lords Justices of Appeal is fairly consistent. All three agree that the advertisement is ‘an express promise to pay 100l in certain events’ (Lindley LJ at 261). This conclusion is reached by interpreting the language of the advertisement ‘in its plain meaning, as the public would understand it’ (Bowen LJ at 266). The security of 1,000l deposited with a bank is material5 to their Lordships’ conclusion that the advertisement was an offer ‘intended to be acted upon and when accepted and the conditions performed constituted a binding promise’ (A L Smith LJ at 273).
On the question of whether the promise was binding and not an offer made to the whole world or no one in particular, Lindley (at 262) and A L Smith (at 274) LJJ rely upon Williams v Cawardine 4 B & Ad 621 as authority that advertisements offering rewards are open to any person who performs the conditions of the advertisement. Bowen LJ6 (at 269) reaches the same conclusion relying on the judgment of Willes J in Spencer v Harding Law Rep 5 CP 561.
All three reject the defendant’s claim that acceptance offer should have been notified. Lindley LJ cites Lord Blackburn in Brogden v Metropolitan Railway Co in support of the view that notice of acceptance, if it is required, is given ‘contemporaneously with… notice of performance of the condition’ (at 262) but prefers the view that no notice is either expected or required ‘apart from notice of performance’ in the present case (at 263). Bowen LJ concludes that the nature of the offer ‘impliedly indicate[s] that [it] does not require notification of acceptance of the offer’ (at 270). He refers to Brogden and Harris’s Case Law Rep 7 Ch 587 and explains his reasoning with an example of a lost dog. A L Smith LJ does not consider this point in detail but concurs with the others (at 274).
A L Smith LJ is of the opinion that consideration for the contract was provided (i) by the inconvenience suffered by the plaintiff in using the smoke ball in the required fashion and (ii) the monetary benefit to the defendant through sales of the smoke balls (at 275). On the first point Bowen LJ (Ibid) refers to three cases and Selwyn’s Nisi Prius, an academic work, to reach the conclusion that ‘inconvenience sustained by one party at the request of another is sufficient to create a consideration’. On the question of the benefit to the defendant in terms of sales, Bowen and Lindley LJJ agree with A L Smith LJ, reasoning on the facts that the advertisement could lead to public confidence in the remedy and hence increased sales which would be of benefit to the defendants.
RATIO DECIDENDI7 The advertisement8 as expressed in terms publicised by the defendant was an offer; ‘a distinct promise expressed in language which is perfectly unmistakeable’ (Lindley LJ at 261). The promise was not ‘mere
5 According to Goodhart the material facts aid the identification of the judges’ reasoning in a case. The 1,000l reward persuades the judges here that the promise is genuine and is clearly seen in the reasoning of A L Smith LJ (at 273). 6 When examining the reasoning in a case where there is more than one judgment identify the points on which the judges agree and disagree but also note the different ways in which they reach the same conclusion. 7 This is the descriptive ratio; it describes what is binding in the court’s decision based on reading only this report. 8 The material facts plus the decision based on those facts help you formulate the ratio. For example, the material fact that the defendant advertised the smoke ball promising a reward to those who used it and subsequently caught the influenza plus the decision (based on this material fact) that this amounted to ‘a distinct promise’ provides the first component of the ratio here.
Page 4 of 4
puff’ (Lindley LJ at 261) but constituted a binding promise guaranteeing protection from the influenza while the smoke ball was in use (Bowen LJ at 267).
Notification of acceptance of the contract was not required in this situation; ‘performance of the conditions is sufficient acceptance’ (Bowen LJ at 270).
‘Ample consideration to support [the] promise’ (A L Smith LJ at 275) was provided by (i) the inconvenience the plaintiff endured, at the defendant’s request, in using the smoke ball three times each day for a fortnight and (ii) the benefit the defendant would gain in promotion of sales of the smoke balls (Lindley LJ at 265, Bowen LJ at 271 and A L Smith LJ at 275).
- GENERALLY
- THE CASE NOTE
- THE STATUTE
- GUIDANCE ON WRITING YOUR CASE NOTE
- EXAMPLE CASE NOTE
- CASE NAME AND CITATION
- COURT AND JUDGES
- PARTIES
- MATERIAL FACTS
- QUESTION OF LAW/ISSUES
- DECISION
- DETAILED REASONS FOR THE DECISION
- RATIO DECIDENDI6F

