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England and Wales Court of Protection Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Protection Decisions >> London Borough of Hillingdon v Neary & Anor (Rev 2) [2011] EWCOP 413 (28 February 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCOP/2011/413.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 413 (COP), [2011] EWCOP 413 |
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Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE LONDON BOROUGH OF HILLINGDON |
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- and - |
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STEVEN NEARY (by his litigation friend, the Official Solicitor) - and - MARK NEARY |
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Mr Hilton Harrop-Griffiths (instructed by Hillingdon Legal Services) for the Applicant
Ms Aswini Weereratne (instructed by Miles & Partners as agents for the Official Solicitor) for the First Respondent
Ms Amanda Weston instructed by Conroys Solicitors) for the Second Respondent
Hearing date: 28 February 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Peter Jackson:
Introduction
(1) The organisations named above shall be permitted to send designated representatives to attend these proceedings, the permission being granted subject to any different direction made at any subsequent hearing.
(2) The media shall be permitted to identify the parties to these proceedings by their names, i.e., Mark Neary, Steven Neary and the London Borough of Hillingdon.
(3) The media shall be permitted to report any information already in the public domain when reporting these proceedings.
(4) Any application by the media for permission to report information disclosed in the course of any private hearing in these proceedings shall be determined by the court at the conclusion of the relevant hearing.
I now give my reasons for having made these orders.
The Court of Protection proceedings
The law
• Rule 90(1), which provides the general rule that a hearing is to be held in private
• Rule 90(3)(a), which allows the court to authorise any person, or class of persons, to attend the hearing or a part of it
• Rule 91(2)(a), which allows the court to authorise the publication of such information relating to the proceedings as it may specify
• Rule 91(3), which allows the court to impose restrictions on publication of information
• Rule 92, which allows the court to order a hearing to be held in public, subject to any restrictions it may impose
• Rule 93, which provides that an order under rules 90, 91 or 92, may only be made where there is good reason, and can be made at any time
"Accordingly the reality is that provided good reason appears, the court will then assess all the relevant considerations and make a balanced, a fact-specific judgement whether the specific authorisation should be granted. In other words, before the court makes an order under rules 90 to 92, a two-stage process is required; the first involves deciding whether there is "good reason" to make an order under rule 90(2) [sc. 90(3)], 91(1) or 92; if there is, then the second stage is to decide whether the requisite balancing exercise justifies the making of the order."
The balancing exercise of course involves consideration of Article 8 (right of respect for private and family life) and Article 10 (right of freedom of expression).
Good reason
(1) Firstly, there is a public interest in the work of the Court of Protection, and the way it uses its considerable powers to make orders which affect the lives of vulnerable citizens.
(2) Secondly, in this case it is alleged that the rights of Steven and of his father were seriously infringed for a prolonged period by the decision of the local authority to prevent Steven returning home after the intended period of respite.
(3) Thirdly, the issues now before the court have to some extent already been aired in the public domain, and the parties to the proceedings have been named. Steven's case was featured in his local newspaper, the Uxbridge Gazette, in July 2010. It was then covered by the BBC in August 2010 on Radio 4's "You and Yours" and on BBC London News. It has more than once been featured in Private Eye. An online petition for Steven's return, launched by Mr Neary, generated some 8000 signatures.
In consequence, the following information is already widely publicly available:
Submissions on the balancing exercise
Discussion and Conclusion
(1) Hearings before the Court of Protection should be held in private unless there is good reason why they should not be. The statutory arrangements reflect a long-standing exception to the principle that justice must be done in open court. The affairs of those who are not incapacitated are normally handled privately. People should not routinely have their lives exposed to public gaze simply because their affairs come before the court as a result of their incapacity. See Independent News and Media Limited v A (above) at paragraphs 18 and 19.
(2) On the other hand, the scheme of the rules explicitly contemplates cases where hearings will not be conducted in private, even to the extent that it specifically permits the court to sit in public, something that has not been suggested in this case. The rules allow for exercise of the court's powers to be calibrated to the needs of the particular case.
(3) Publicity can have a strong effect on individuals, particularly if they are not used to it, or if, like Steven, they are vulnerable to anxiety and to changes in their environment. Any evidence that suggests a real possibility of a detrimental effect from publicity must weigh heavily. On the other hand, there must be some proper factual basis for such concerns.
(4) There is a genuine public interest in the work of this court being understood. Not only is this healthy in itself – the presence of the media in appropriate cases has a bracing effect on all public servants, whether in the field of social services or the law – but it may also help to dispel misunderstandings. It is not in the interests of individual litigants, or of society at large, for a court that is by definition devoted to the protection of the welfare of disadvantaged people to be characterised (including in a report about this case, published as I write this judgment) as "secretive". It is part of our natural curiosity to want to know other people's secrets, and using pejorative descriptions of this kind may stimulate interest. The opportunity, in appropriate cases, to follow a process that has welfare, not secrecy, at its heart can only help the media to produce balanced reporting, and not fall back on clichés.
(5) The ability of the media to participate need not be limited to cases involving extraordinary individuals such as Mr Paravicini. Interesting and potentially important examples can arise wherever decisions have to be taken about people whose lives mirror those of large numbers of others in the same position. In considering whether good reason has been shown, the question is not whether the individual is exceptional, but whether the issue is one of genuine public interest.
(6) A distinction can be drawn between cases which have not been in the public eye and those which have, to a greater or lesser extent. In the former case, if the proceedings are conducted in private, there may very well be no story. In the latter case, the proceedings do not create the story, and the question is whether the media should be allowed to follow its continuation in court.
(1) Stories about particular individuals are much more attractive to readers than stories about unidentified people: In re Guardian News and Media Limited [2010] 2 WLR 325 per Lord Rodger at [63]. The potential for advantage or disadvantage from publication is therefore somewhat magnified by the personalisation of the proceedings.
(2) Once the parties' names are publicly attached to the proceedings, the court's ability to control that information is lost. Accordingly, parties should not be named at the outset where any real possibility can be foreseen of the balance falling the other way at the end of the proceedings.
(3) On the other hand, it is in no one's interests for proceedings to be stultified by the withholding of information that is already in the public domain.
(4) As stated above, there does not appear to be a precedent for parties to be named at the outset in the manner that has been proposed in this case. As the Official Solicitor points out, the usual practice in this relatively young jurisdiction is to refer to parties by initials. This indeed is what was ordered at an earlier stage of these proceedings.
(1) Steven's circumstances are already in the public domain to a considerable extent. If the claims made by Mr Neary and the Official Solicitor are made out, the facts deserve to be known to the public. If they are not made out, it may be right for the record to be corrected.
(2) I would unhesitatingly exclude the media if the evidence showed a real possibility of detriment or distress to Steven of anything other than a trivial nature. However, I do not find the evidence for such detriment. In particular,
(a) There is no evidence whatever that Steven has suffered from the publicity that has already been generated. His life has not been destabilised and he has not been made anxious by the coverage so far.
(b) I entirely reject the possibility that the media would exploit its presence at future hearings by irresponsible journalistic practices, such as door-stepping an autistic man. It certainly has not done this to Steven in the past.
(c) Any possibility of Steven being disadvantaged by a much less positive portrayal of his behaviour is unlikely, and the court can control what information from the proceedings is reported. For what it is worth, the reaction to the information that has so far been released, which includes descriptions of his sometimes difficult behaviour, has been sympathetic.
(d) While it is impossible to rule out some detriment to Steven if isolated members of the public were to take a hostile view of him or his activities, there is again no evidence that this has happened in the past or that it is likely to happen in future. One does not have to wear rose tinted spectacles to believe that a far more natural reaction to knowing more about the situation of Steven and his father is likely to be a desire to help and support them.
(3) I do not foresee any possibility of the court preventing the media from reporting the parties' names at the end of the proceedings, even if everything else that takes place in court were to remain unreported. Given the extent of the information already publicly available, it is frankly unreal for the proceedings to continue under initials, as if that offered any meaningful protection.