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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Sunderland City Council, R (on the application of) v SF & Anor [2012] EWCA Civ 1232 (09 October 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1232.html Cite as: [2013] PTSR 549, [2012] EWCA Civ 1232 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
MR JUSTICE LANGSTAFF
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS
and
LORD JUSTICE ELIAS
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF SUNDERLAND CITY COUNCIL |
Claimant Appellant |
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- and - |
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SOUTH TYNESIDE COUNCIL |
Respondent |
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(1) SF (2) LEEDS CITY COUNCIL |
Interested Parties |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
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for the Appellant
Nathalie Lieven Q.C. and Christopher Mitford (instructed by South Tyneside Council)
for the Respondent
The Interested Parties were not present or represented
Hearing date: 10 July 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lloyd:
Introduction
The material facts
The cases of JM and Hall
The judgment below
"I conclude that her admission to Rose Lodge was not compulsory, but it was closely analogous to a compulsory admission. There were powers to detain by compulsion in the background, which it is reasonable to assume that SF, the staff of the lodge and those concerned with her and South Tyneside Council were well aware of."
From that, when he came later in his judgment to review the factors relevant to the issue of residence, he said this at paragraphs 24 and 25:
"24. … In examining voluntariness, though I conclude that SF might have exercised a choice formally not to be present in hospital and then at Rose Lodge, in my view I am entitled to, and do, take into account that the circumstances within which I have to categorise and evaluate the question of residence came close to being involuntary; in the same way as the person in hospital having had a serious injury, present there for treatment, might say colloquially that they had no choice but to stay where they were, although legally they were not present under compulsion.
25. Here, SF was not compelled, save by the force of circumstances, to be at Rose Lodge; but it is part of the facts and circumstances of the whole case that there was force in the circumstances surrounding her situation. Secondly I take into account the nature of Rose Lodge, intended to be short term accommodation, and indeed from its description not ideally suited to her since she did not have a formal learning disability."
"I shrink, in the context of section 117(3) from making the decision turn critically upon whether SF had "lost" her previous accommodation, in the sense that her stay away had continued for so long and in such circumstances that she was no longer to be entitled legally to return there. This was not a voluntary surrender, as had been the case in [the JM case]. It was not the case when she entered Rose Lodge that she had no right of return. The idea that she could be for a period of time in Rose Lodge and, not then under compulsion, be regarded as resident in Sunderland and then by the actions of a third party become no longer resident in Sunderland, without any material change in her personal circumstances or her own volition, does not seem to me a sensible answer to the question as to which local authority should be identified as required to provide for her after-care."
"In applying the words of Lord Scarman from Barnet v Shah, I asked whether the evidence showed here that SF was present in Rose Lodge for a settled purpose; I cannot sensibly so conclude. Was it part of the regular order of her life for the time being? I do not think it can be said to be. It seems to me therefore that the test of residence which that distillation implies is simply not satisfied by SF's presence in Rose Lodge; she was not here to be equated with the homeless person of Mohamed. I take into account the purposes of the statute, and the flexibility inherent in the word resident. I was impressed by an example of which Mr Mitford gave in argument, in which he suggested that if one were in hospital for, for instance, treatment following an accident, and having been there for some weeks so mentally overcome by the after effects of the accident than to require thereafter to be compulsorily detained in the same place, it could not sensibly be said that the period of admission prior to detention made the person resident in the hospital, as opposed to resident in the place from which they had come and in which it was accepted that person was resident previously."
The grounds of appeal
Statutory provisions as to residence
The meaning of "resident" in MHA section 117(3)
"where the patient ordinarily resides with or is cared for by one or more of his relatives (or, if he is for the time being an in-patient in a hospital, he last ordinarily resided with or was cared for by one or more of his relatives)"
"If effective after-care services are to be provided, it is necessary for them to be planned and arranged before the patient leaves hospital. The joint nature of the duty on the health authority and the social services authority emphasises that this is so. Effective after-care, as this case illustrates, takes time to prepare and arrange.
…
It seems to me that the whole purpose of section 117 is that there should be a working together to ensure that when a patient is released he is given the kind of support that gives him the best prospect of settling in the community."
"Although the section 117 duty does not bite on local authorities or health authorities until after the tribunal decision, they do not at that point start entirely from scratch. Most such authorities will be faced fairly frequently with circumstances in which they are expected to exercise their section 117 duty to help to rehabilitate mental patients within the community. It is reasonable to suppose therefore that they have procedures in place for coping with situations of this kind. Also, they certainly have the power, in appropriate cases, to start making plans before the tribunal sits. Kennedy LJ in Hall referred to them as plans in embryo."
"It is clear that words like 'ordinary residence' and 'normal residence' may take their precise meaning from the context of the legislation in which they appear but it seems to me that the prima facie meaning of normal residence is a place where at the relevant time the person in fact resides. That therefore is the question to be asked and it is not appropriate to consider whether in a general or abstract sense such a place would be considered an ordinary or normal residence. So long as that place where he eats and sleeps is voluntarily accepted by him, the reason why he is there rather than somewhere else does not prevent that place from being his normal residence. He may not like it, he may prefer some other place, but that place is for the relevant time the place where he normally resides. If a person, having no other accommodation, takes his few belongings and moves into a barn for a period to work on a farm that is where during that period he is normally resident, however much he might prefer some more permanent or better accommodation. In a sense it is 'shelter' but it is also where he resides. Where he is given interim accommodation by a local housing authority even more clearly is that the place where for the time being he is normally resident. The fact that it is provided subject to statutory duty does not, contrary to the appellant authority's argument, prevent it from being such."
The relevance of a place of residence ceasing to be available
Suggested anomalies and unsatisfactory outcomes
Alternative formulations
Conclusion
Lord Justice Richards
Lord Justice Elias