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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 >> SF, Re [2015] EWCOP 68 (26 October 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCOP/2015/68.html Cite as: [2015] EWCOP 68 |
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42-49 High Holborn London WC1V 6NP |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Re SF THE PUBLIC GUARDIAN |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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MF |
Respondent |
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The respondent in person and unrepresented
Hearing date: 13 October 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Senior Judge Lush:
The background
The application
1. An order under paragraph 16(4)(g) of Schedule 4 to the Mental Capacity Act 2005 for the revocation and cancellation of the registered EPA made by Sheila on 23 October 2004 and registered by the Office of the Public Guardian on 7 August 2009 appointing Martin as her sole attorney.2. An order directing that a panel deputy is invited to make an application for appointment as deputy to make decisions on behalf of Sheila in relation to her property and financial affairs with powers given to investigate and report as to the past management of her affairs and to take such steps as are necessary to restore her estate to its correct level.
(a) Concerns had been raised on 27 November 2014.(b) Sheila's unpaid care fees totalled £29,000.
(c) Her property had been sold on 14 November 2006 for £189,000.
(d) Her son, Martin, rarely visits her.
(e) Martin believes that his mother's care fees should have been publicly funded under section 117 of the Mental Health Act 1983, but the Powys Local Health Board contends that, although Sheila was sectioned under section 2, she was never sectioned under section 3 of the Mental Health Act 1983 and is, therefore, not eligible for public funding under section 117.
(f) Martin had paid himself £49,143.19 (this figure was later extensively revised), which he claimed was for the time he had spent pursuing a legal action on his mother's behalf against Powys Local Health Board and for visits to Wales to check on her wellbeing.
(g) A Court of Protection General Visitor had visited Sheila on 18 December 2014. She showed no evidence of being able to understand anything at all.
Procedure
(a) the OPG to serve the papers on Martin by 15 May;(b) Martin to file and serve a response by 5 June; and
(c) the file to be referred to a judge on the first available date after 8 June 2015.
(a) the OPG to respond to Martin's witness statement by 21 August;(b) Martin to file and serve any additional evidence by 18 September; and
(c) the matter to be listed for an attended hearing on 13 October 2015.
The hearing
(a) Nadia Dhillon of the OPG and her colleague, Jonathan Barnes; and(b) Martin.
(a) Martin hadn't paid his mother's care fees;(b) he wasn't providing a personal allowance to pay for her toiletries, hairdressing and chiropody; and
(c) his charges for acting as her attorney were excessive.
Non-payment of care fees
"The Public Guardian believes, whilst Martin attempts to resolve the dispute, it would be in Sheila's best interests that he continues to pay her care fees. If it transpires that she qualifies for NHS Continuing Health Care and has been eligible for a period of time, then Martin will be entitled to claim a refund on overpayment of care fees."
"In June 2013 a claim for retrospective Continuing Health Care funding was considered for the period relating to 25/04/05 to 15/8/10. The clinical evidence supported that a reimbursement of fees should be made for the periods 29/12/05 to 23/6/06 and 05/01/07 to 18/11/09 only, which was accepted by the claimant. Calculations of reimbursement in respect of fees for these two periods were assessed as £82,007.63 and payment was made for this amount.The claim was pursued on behalf of the family by Hugh James Solicitors, Cardiff, and a cheque payment of £82,007.63 was made payable to the Hugh James account on 29 August 2013 which showed as being cashed on the bank statement on 4 September 2013.
There is an additional period that the claimant has requested a retrospective review on, this being 16/08/10 to 25/02/13. This period of care is currently being progressed but no recommendation on any reimbursement of care fees has been made as yet."
Non-payment of a personal allowance
"On 25 August 2015, I contacted [the nursing home] regarding any personal allowance they had received for Sheila. On 3 September 2015 I received a response enclosing a personal allowance account, which shows that a payment of £213 was made on 23 June 2014. Since June 2014 no payment has been made. The outstanding balance on 30 June 2015 was £496.50."
Excessive remuneration
"In my first witness statement dated 30 March 2015 I stated … that Martin had claimed a total of £49,143.19 since the EPA was registered on 7 August 2009. In Martin's witness statement he has stated that Hugh James Solicitors sent him a cheque for the amount of £68,146.26. Martin has stated he paid this into his own account in part payment for the costs he had incurred. This amount added to the £49,143.19 amounts to a total of £117,289.45. The Public Guardian believes the amount of £117,289.45 is an excessive amount to claim for out of pocket expenses.Martin states that he charged for the visits he made to Sheila when he would visit to check for signs of physical abuse due to her mistreatment at [her previous residential care home in Llandrindod Wells]. Martin is an attorney under the EPA, which covers property and financial affairs only. Therefore his visits to check for physical abuse, even if they were necessary to safeguard Sheila, were not part of his role as attorney. Therefore, the Public Guardian believes Martin was not entitled to claim expenses for these visits."
Martin's response
"Powys CC and Powys LHB do not appear to have any interest in resolving the dispute and from their correspondence and witness statements, I believe that the OPG knows this.It would be in Powys CC and Powys LHB 'best interest' to have care fees paid, not Sheila's.
If any payments are made to Powys CC before restitution by Powys LHB, then the chances of getting restitution from Powys LHB appear to be slim.
If my mother's care fees are paid from now on, Powys LHB will seek to avoid refunding monies owed."
"We get charged a lot for toiletries, whereas we were not charged at all at [her previous residential care home in Llandrindod Wells]. I also don't think she needs colour tinting. I know these are small points. I paid the charges in 2014 and I was going to pay them this year."
"In my view these are not excessive, considering I have been fighting this battle with Powys LHB since 2004. If I had not spent the large amounts of time on this case, then my mother's estate would still be illegally paying the full costs of care, and the 2013 compensation would never have been forthcoming. Finally, I have not taken any gifts from the estate (which could have been in the region of £33,000 from 2004 to 2015).
"I see no need to replace myself. I am the sole heir and because of my mother's dementia and current poor health, there is no need to protect the estate's financial interests, which are effectively mine.The OPG have now recommended that [a deputy] is appointed from their own panel. I would expect any appointed deputy from the OPG to seek to assist the Police in bringing criminal charges against Powys LHB, and to recover the monies owed from Powys LHB. If this is not part of the remit then appointing will be a waste of time and any costs incurred will be to the detriment of my mother's estate and my own financial interest in my mother's estate. However, it is apparent that the OPG do not want to pursue the recovery of monies owed from the Powys LHB. The OPG appears to be acting on behalf of Powys CC and Powys LHB, and as such is effectively colluding in their fraudulent behaviour. Consequently I believe that the OPG is not a fit or proper organisation to protect the interest of my mother's estate.
On the face of it, the OPG's desire for me to repay money from my mother's estate makes little sense. I am the sole beneficiary of the estate and any restitution I made would come straight back to me on my mother's death, which considering her present state of health, is likely to be sooner rather than later. "
The law relating to the revocation of an EPA
"The court must direct the Public Guardian to cancel the registration of an instrument registered under paragraph 13 in any of the following circumstances -
(g) on being satisfied that, having regard to all the circumstances and in particular the attorney's relationship to or connection with the donor, the attorney is unsuitable to be the donor's attorney."
"If the court directs the Public Guardian to cancel the registration of an instrument on being satisfied of the matters specified in sub-paragraph (4)(f) or (g) it must by order revoke the power created by the instrument."
"A fiduciary duty means attorneys must not take advantage of their position. Nor should they put themselves in a position where their personal interests conflict with their duties. They must also not allow any other influences to affect the way in which they act as an attorney. Decisions should always benefit the donor, and not the attorney. Attorneys must not profit or get any personal benefit from their position, apart from receiving gifts where the Act allows it, whether or not it is at the donor's expense."
Decision
"Your attorney(s) can recover the out-of-pocket expenses of acting as your attorney(s). If your attorney(s) are professional people, for example solicitors or accountants, they may be able to charge for their professional services as well. You may wish to provide expressly for remuneration of your attorney(s)."