A judge has refused Paul Worthingtons bid to have sexual abuse removed from his daughters official death record.
His lawyers claimed a coroner had overstepped the mark when he said Poppi Worthington had been abused before she died.
Coroner David Roberts ruled in January that Poppi was anally penetrated in her fathers double bed at the family home in Barrow-in-Furness in the early hours of December 12, 2012, but this did not cause her death.
He concluded the 13-month-old suffocated as she slept next to her father in an unsafe sleeping environment.
Worthington claimed that as the abuse did not cause her death, it should not form part of the official record because according to the law, this should only detail how the child died.
However, a High Court judge rejected a bid to remove details of her sexual abuse, and ordered him to pay costs for bringing a judicial review.
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Mrs Justice Farbey, sitting at the High Court in Manchester, ruled the coroners approach cannot be faulted and in a 17 page legal judgment, ordered Mr Worthington, who is on Legal Aid, should pay the court costs, subject to his ability to pay.
Mr Worthington, 50, a former supermarket worker, last week took his case to the High Court, where he was represented by barrister Leslie Thomas QC before three Law Lords.
His lawyers had applied for a judicial review of the coroners record of inquest, the final two pages of his 87-page ruling, where the coroner must complete boxes in writing, detailing how the death occurred.
The ruling mirrored the findings of two earlier High Court judgments.
During the inquest, Mr Worthington refused to answer questions about his daughters death 252 times, so as not to incriminate himself.
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