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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> LLBC v TG [2007] EWHC 2640 (Fam) (14 November 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2007/2640.html Cite as: [2009] 1 FLR 414, [2007] EWHC 2640 (Fam), (2008) 11 CCL Rep 161, [2009] Fam Law 18, [2009] 2 FCR 428 |
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The judgment is being distributed on the strict understanding that in any report no person other than the advocates or the solicitors instructing them (and other persons identified by name in the judgment itself) may be identified by name or location and that in particular the anonymity of the children and the adult members of their family must be strictly preserved.
FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
LLBC |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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TG [1] (by his litigation friend the Official Solicitor JG [2] KR [3] |
Defendants |
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JG and KR appearing in person
Helen Knott (instructed by WLBC)
Katie Scott (instructed by Official Solicitor) for the First Defendant
Hearing dates: 10th September 2007, 11th September 2007, 12th September 2007, 13th September 2007, 14th September 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice McFarlane:
Introduction
The Issues
(1) The issues placed before the court in June 2006
(i) Their accommodation was unsuitable, being a one bedroom flat;
(ii)The claimant believed that TG returned from visits with JG and KR in a volatile state as a result of having been fed sweets, fizzy drinks, and crisps;
(iii) TG, it was said, needs a much higher level of support than that which can be provided by JG and or KR;
(iv) JG and KR removed TG from hospital on the 19th June 2006 and took him to their home.
(2) Subsequent issues
(3) Human Rights Issues
a) TG was unlawfully detained in breach of Article 5 as a result of the court orders requiring him to go to and remain at Tower Bridge care home;
b) That the proceedings have been conducted in such a way as to breach the family's rights to a fair trial under Article 6; and
c) That this forced separation of TG from these family members has been in breach of his, and their, Article 8 rights to family life.
[1] The basis of the case in June 2006.
a) A full 'mini mental state examination' was not carried out in September 2005 owing to the conduct of JG and KR;
b) TG had been in residential accommodation since July 2003 and the owners of his previous home, L Care Home, had terminated the placement owing to the conduct of JG and KR who were verbally abusive and threatening to the staff;
c) In May 2006, during TG's stay in hospital, he was assessed by social services and the medical staff as requiring 24 hour care in a nursing home;
d) 'At about 2.00pm on 19th June JG and KR took TG from St George's Hospital' to their home (later described as 'removing him' from hospital);
e) JG and KR live in a one bedroom flat 'which is clearly not suitable' for them to occupy with TG;
f) TG has complex care needs;
g) 'Most problematic' TG's diabetes requires careful control and his blood sugar level requires regular testing. TG's behaviour and very high blood sugar levels have been observed when within the care of TG and KR and it is understood that they fed him with sweets, fizzy drinks and crisps;
h) All in all the claimants considered that TG was at risk of 'serious harm' in the care of JG and KR.
(a) Unable to carry out a 'full mini mental state examination'.
(b) L Care Home terminated TG's placement as a result of JG's and KR's conduct
'The reason for the requirement is that a considerable period of effort and time has been unsuccessfully spent attempting to meet the expectations of this family. The numerous complaints and concerns from his family are proving detrimental to our service users, visitors to our home and morale and effectiveness of our staff group. We have over the last two months tried to arrange a multi-disciplinary meeting with relevant stakeholders to discuss our growing concerns but to our disappointment, although all concerned are aware of the continuing care problems caused by the conduct of the family, no meetings have been agreed'.
'The papers in the bundle show that JG is a highly confrontational individual and that she has been critical of each and every professional that she has encountered in relation to Mr G's care.'
' the whole tenor of her written presentation to the court and to the professionals and her oral presentation in court is of an angry and confrontational individual. The members of the family who gave evidence indicate that that aspect has always been part of JG's personality and presentation. PJ, the seasoned social worker, who gave very measured and sympathetic evidence to the family's position, nevertheless told me, and I accept, that some professionals feel physically threatened by the ferocity of JG's speech.'
'PJ [social worker] said that JG needs to get her point across without being seen as argumentative and abusive. The impression that any professional is likely to gain from JG's current presentation is one of unrelenting and forcefully expressed criticism. It will be very hard work for professionals to work with her.'
(c) Assessment showed that TG requires 24 hour nursing home care.
(d) TG's discharge from hospital
i. The hospital did indeed call a meeting at which the family and the social workers were expected to attend to resolve the impasse;
ii. The social worker did not attend, but, instead, opted for court action rather than discussion;
iii. In the event no attempt was made to apply to a court for an injunction that day;
iv. The hospital asked the family to go home and await TG's arrival. He was then discharged by the hospital in an ambulance to the family home.
v. This was an entirely lawful activity and presents the events of that day in an entirely different light to that given to the court on 20th June.
(e) TG, KR and JR all living in a one bedroom flat.
(f) TG has complex care needs
(g) TG's diabetes
Justification for 'without notice' process and orders in June 2006
i. The claim that the family's conduct prevented a 'mini mental state examination' being carried out is not made out;
ii. The claim that the L Care Home placement was terminated as a result of JG's and KR's conduct is made out only in the general sense that such an allegation is supported by the overall view of the approach of those two ladies to professionals that is in part the subject of the court's judgment in May 2007;
iii. The claim that the assessment of TG's needs showed that he needed 24 hour care home care is fundamentally flawed by the Claimant's admitted failure to prioritise an assessment of JG and KR as alternative carers. However, JG and KR's subsequent failure to engage in the court's assessment process calls into question whether, if it had been properly offered, they would have engaged in the assessment process;
iv. The important claim (in the context of an urgent without notice application) that JG and KR 'took TG home from St George's hospital' is without foundation. The true position is that the hospital discharged TG in an ambulance to JG's home after the social services failed to attend a meeting to discuss the issue of TG's discharge and failed that day to come before a court to seek an order preventing his discharge to the family;
v. The second important claim in this context, namely that the accommodation was a 'one bedroom flat' and therefore unsuitable, was untrue;
vi. TG does have complex needs, but there had been no proper attempt to assess whether or not JG and/or KR could meet those needs;
vii. The claimant has failed to produce evidence, either on paper or orally, to substantiate the claim that the family compromised TG's diabetic health by feeding him inappropriate foods 'despite being asked not to'.
Failure of the family to apply to set aside the without notice order
Without notice hearings generally
[37] There is a natural temptation for applicants to seek, and courts to grant, relief to protect vulnerable persons whether they are children or vulnerable adults. In my view this can lead (and experience as the applications judge confirms that it does lead) to practitioners making without notice applications which are not necessary or appropriate, or which are not properly supported by appropriate evidence. Also there is in my view a general practice of asking the court to grant without notice orders over a fairly extended period with express permission to apply to vary or discharge on an inappropriately long period of notice (often 48 hours). It seems to me that on occasions on this practice pays insufficient regard to the interests of both the person in respect of whom and against whom the orders are made, and that therefore on every occasion without notice relief is sought and granted the choice of the return date and the provisions as to permission to apply should be addressed with care by both applicants and the court. Factors in that consideration will be an estimation of the effect on the person against whom the order is made of service of the order and how that is to be carried out.
[38] Inevitably on a without notice application the court hears only from the applicant. Good practice, fairness and indeed common sense demand that on any such application the applicant should provide the court with:
(i) a balanced, fair and particularised account of the events leading up to the application and thus of the matters upon which it is based. In many cases this should include a brief account of what the applicant thinks the respondent's case is, or is likely to be;
(ii) where available and appropriate, independent evidence;
(iii) a clear and particularised explanation of the reasons why the application is made without notice and the reasons why the permission to apply to vary or discharge the injunction granted should be on notice (rather than immediately or forthwith as in the standard collection and location orders) and why the return date should not be within a short period of time. As to that I accept and acknowledge that a reference to notice being given if practicable, or for a short period of notice (say 2 working hours or just 2 hours if a weekend or holiday period is imminent), may often provide an appropriate balance to avoid a sequence of effectively without notice applications, and that in some cases a longer period of notice may be appropriate; and
(iv) in many cases an account of the steps the applicant proposes concerning service, the giving of an explanation of the order and the implementation of an order. This is likely to be of particular importance in cases such as this one where emotional issues are involved and family members of a person who lacks capacity are the subject of the injunctions and orders. In such cases, as here, information as to those intentions is likely to inform issues as to the need for, and the proportionality of, the relief sought and granted.
[39] As to point (ii), I pause to mention that, in my view it is surprising and disappointing how many times a without notice application for relief is made in the Family Division based only on largely unparticularised assertions by one side of serious allegations without any third party material to support them, or more generally the basis of the relief sought. I appreciate that in many instances there is a very real urgency and there will not be third party evidence of allegations of abusive behaviour that are readily available but in others there will be. A classic example, which occurs regularly, is that an applicant who seeks a return of children to his or her care fails to provide any third party evidence (eg from a school, a GP or records in their possession) to confirm that he or she is indeed the primary carer of the relevant children.
[40] Guidance has often been given on the information to be provided and the procedure to be followed in seeking without notice relief (see at first instances Re S (Ex parte orders) [2001] 1 WLR 211, [2001] 1 FLR 308, W v H (Ex parte injunctions) [2001] 1 All ER 300 (by analogy X Council v B (Emergency Protection Orders) [2004] EWHC 2015 (Fam), [2005] 1 FLR 341 and Re X (Emergency Protection Orders) [2006] EWHC 510 (Fam), [2006] 2 FLR 701) and in the Court of Appeal Moat Housing Group South Ltd v Harris [2005] EWCA Civ 287, [2006] QB 606, [2005] 2 FLR 551 in particular at paras [63]-[69], and see also the notes to Part 25 of the Civil Procedure Rules 1998 (CPR) Practice Note (Official Solicitor, CAFCASS and the National Assembly for Wales: Urgent and Out of Hours Cases in the Family Division of the High Court) [2006] 2 FLR 354).
[41] Naturally I endorse that guidance and do not seek to add to it save to emphasise the points made above and to record my own observations that practitioners: (a) too regularly do not follow and implement that guidance; and (b) by such failure show an insufficient appreciation of the exceptional nature of without notice relief and the impact it has (or potentially has) on the rights, life and emotions of the persons against whom it is granted.
[42] As to this I acknowledge that the courts must take part of the blame for such failures by granting relief without notice in cases when: (a) the guidance has not been followed; and (b) the impact on the person against whom the relief is granted could be considerable.
'Liberty to apply'
'If any person served with this order disagrees with any part of this order and wishes to seek to set aside or vary it, they should make an immediate application to this court to do so.'
[2] Post June 2006
Alleged Financial Impropriety
Police Visit
Breakdown in relationship with Holistic Care agency in July 2007
TG's future and future care plan
(a) Placement at home
(b) Care package at home.
(c) KR's pregnancy
(d) WLBC
(e) Contact
(f) Monitoring by the local authority
(g) General Practitioner
(h) Adjourn for six months or report to court
Human Rights Claims
a. The order requiring that TG be placed in Towerbridge Care Home was such as to deprive TG of his liberty in breach of ECHR, Art 5;
b. The procedure conducted under the inherent jurisdiction of the High Court failed to meet TG's rights under Art 5(4) to determine the lawfulness or otherwise of his detention;
c. Detention to the extent that it was in breach of Art 5 was neither justified nor appropriate;
d. The enforced removal of TG from the care of his family (JG and KR) amounted to a breach of ECHR Art 8 which requires respect for rights to family life. That breach, on the evidence now available, was neither justified nor proportionate;
e. TG has not been afforded a fair trial as is required by ECHR, Art 6 in that the Official Solicitor, who acts for TG, has consistently backed the position of the Claimant, despite there being (in JG/KR's view) insufficient evidence to support that course.
Article 5
1. Everyone has the right to liberty and security of person. No one shall be deprived of his liberty save in the following cases and in accordance with a procedure prescribed by law:
e the lawful detention of persons of unsound mind ;
4. Everyone who is deprived of his liberty by arrest or detention shall be entitled to take proceedings by which the lawfulness of his detention shall be decided speedily by a court and his release ordered if the detention is not lawful.
i. Towerbridge was an ordinary care home where only ordinary restrictions of liberty applied;
ii. The family were able to visit TG on a largely unrestricted basis and were entitled to remove him from the home for outings;
iii. TG was personally compliant and expressed himself as happy at Towerbridge. He had lived in a local authority care home for over three years and was objectively content with his situation there;
iv. There was no occasion when he was objectively deprived of his liberty.
i. authorised by the court;
ii. in the context that TG lacked capacity to determine the issue of his own residence;
iii. made under initial orders that gave the family the ability to apply to the court to vary or discharge the order;
iv. continued at the first on notice hearing by consent, at a time with JG and KR were represented by solicitors and counsel;
v. continued in the context of a genuine dispute within the family as to where TG should live and in the context that, save for three days, he had never lived in the care of JG and KR and in the context that for much of the initial period JG and KR were not willing to take part in any assessment process;
vi. despite the earlier findings to the effect that the Claimant has failed to establish that the without notice application was justified and that the without notice orders were justified, it is, for the reasons already given, likely that following an 'on notice' process a period of residential placement would have been sanctioned by the court.
Article 6
Article 8
i. The interference was in accordance with the law, in that it was sanctioned by two court orders;
ii. Was for the protection of TG's health;
iii. Was necessary given JG and KR's refusal to engage with the statutory services; and
iv. It was proportionate in that it effectively preserved the status quo in so far as that was possible given the termination of the placement at Limetrees and it permitted free and flexible contact arrangements to family members during the interim period.
Conclusions
Declarations
i. That it is in TG's best interests to remain in the care of JG and KR;
ii. That TG is a vulnerable adult and, as such, it is lawful, being in TG's best interests, for the relevant local authority (at present being WLBC) and its agents to have such access to TG from time to time as they may reasonably require to secure his welfare and health;
iii. That it is in TG's best interests for there to be cooperation and partnership between JG and KR as TG's carers and the relevant local authority. Save in an emergency or in default of reasonable endeavours to achieve agreement, it is in TG's best interests for such access as the relevant local authority may exercise to him in accordance with declaration (b) to take place in accordance with a care plan that has been discussed and agreed with JG and KR in advance;
iv. That in the event of a disagreement with regard to a major element in TG's care plan, an application may be made by any party to the Court of Protection for further directions;
v. It is in TG's best interests to remain on the lists as a patient of his current GP unless and until that GP recommends a transfer to another doctor.