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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> G v E [2010] EWHC 2042 (Fam) (30 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2010/2042.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 2042 (Fam), [2010] MHLR 407 |
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This judgment is being handed down in private on 30th July 2010. It consists of 11 pages and has been signed and dated by the judge. The judge hereby gives leave for it to be reported.
The judgment is being distributed on the strict understanding that no report shall identify: (a) the person M respect of whom the proceedings have been brought, (b) the parties (save for the Second Respondent, Manchester City Council), (c) all witnesses (save for Christopher Read and Dr. Berney), (d) any other persons mentioned in the judgement (save for judges, counsel, their instructing Solicitors, Official Solicitor and Mr. Mike Dodd), and (e) any company, organisation or establishment or location mentioned in the judgment, save for the Press Association and the Care Quality Commission.
MR. JUSTICE BAKER
Manchester Civil Justice Centre
B e f o r e :
____________________
G |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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E (By his litigation friend the Official Solicitor) |
First Respondent |
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- and - |
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Manchester City Council Second |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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F |
Third Respondent |
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Miss Amy Street (instructed by Irwin Mitchell) for the First Respondent
Miss Gillian Irving QC and Mr David Maekley (instructed by the Local Authority's Solicitor's Department) for the Second Respondent
Mr Neil Allen (instructed by Linder Myers) for the Third Respondent
Hearing dates: 19 - 23 July 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE BAKER
"90 - General rule – hearing to be in private.
(1) The general rule is that a hearing is to be held in private.
(2) A private hearing is a hearing which only the following persons are entitled to attend (a) the parties; (b) P (whether or not a party); (c) any person acting in the proceedings as a litigation friend; (d) any legal representative of a persons specified in any of the sub paragraphs (a) to (c), and (e) a court officer.
(3) In relation to a private hearing, the court may make an order
(a) authorising any person, or class of persons, to attend the hearing or a part of it; or
(b) excluding any person, or class of persons, from attending the hearing or a part of it.
91 - Court's general power to authorise publication of information about proceedings
(1) For the purposes of the law relating to contempt of court, information relating to proceedings held in private may be published where the court makes an order under paragraph (2).
(2) The court may make an order authorising (a) the publication of such information relating to the proceedings as it may specify; or (b) the publication of the text or a summary of the whole or part of a judgment or order made by the court.
(3) Where the court makes an order under paragraph (2) it may do so on such terms as it thinks fit, and in particular may
(a) impose restrictions on the publication of the identity of
(i) any parties;
(ii) P (whether or not a party);
(iii) any witness; or
(iv) any other person;
(b) prohibit the publication of any information that may lead to any such person being identified;
(c) prohibit the further publication of any information relating to the proceedings from such date as the court may specify;
(d) impose such other restrictions on the publication of information relating to the proceedings as the court may specify.
92 —Court's power to order that a hearing be held in public
(1) The court may make an order (a) for a hearing to be held in public; (b) for a part of a hearing to be held. in public; or (c) excluding any person, or class of persons, from attending a public hearing or a part of it.
(2) Where the court makes an order under paragraph (1), it may in the same order or by a subsequent order
(a) impose restrictions on the publication of the identity of
(i) a party;
(ii) P, whether or not a party;
(iii) any witness; or
(iv) any other person;
(b) prohibit the publication of any information that may lead to any such person being identified;
(c) prohibit the further publication of any information relating to the proceedings from such time as the court may specify; or
(d) impose such other restrictions on the publication of information relating to the proceedings as the court may specify.
93 Supplementary provisions relating to public or private hearings
(1) An order under rule 90, 91 or 92 may be made (a) only where it appears to the court that there is good reason for making the order; (b) at any time; and (c) either on the courts own initiative or on an application made by any person in accordance with part 10.
(2) A Practice Direction may make further provision in connection with
(a) private hearings;
(b) public hearings; or
(c) the publication of information about any proceedings."
"7. Section 12 (1) of the Administration of Justice Act 1960 provides that, in any proceedings brought under the Mental Capacity Act 2005 before a court which is sitting in private, publication of information about the proceedings would generally be contempt of court. However, rule 91 (1) makes it clear that there will be to contempt when the court has authorised the publication of the information under rule 91. Where the court makes such an order, it may (at the same time or subsequently) restrict or prohibit the publication of information relating to a person's identity. Such restrictions may be imposed either on an application made by any person (usually a party to the proceedings) or of the courts own initiative.
8. The general rule is that hearings will be in private and that there can be no lawful publication of information unless the court has authorised it. Where reporting restrictions are imposed as part of the order authorising publication, they will simply set out what can be published and there will be no need to comply with the requirements as to notice which are set out in Part 2 of this Practice Direction. But if the restrictions are subsequent to the order authorising publication, then the requirements of Part 2 should be complied with."
"27. The aim should be to protect P rather than to confer anonymity on other individuals or organisations. However the order may include restrictions on identifying or approaching specified family members, carers, doctors, or organisations or other persons as the court directs in cases where the absence of such restriction is likely to prejudice their ability to care for P, or where identification of such persons might lead to identification of P and defeat the purposes of the order. In cases where the court receives expert evidence, the identity of the experts (as opposed to treating clinicians) is not normally subject to restriction, unless evidence in support is provided for such a restriction.
28. Orders will not usually be made prohibiting publication of material which is already in the public domain, other than in exceptional cases."
"11... [B]efore 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) 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.
....
18. The jurisdiction is regulated exclusively in accordance with the new Act. The result is that the affairs of those who are incapacitated for the purposes of the Act are examined before a judge in court. The affairs of those who are not incapacitated are, of course, decided and handled privately, usually at home, sometimes with, but usually without, confidential professional advice. None of these decisions is the business of anyone other than the individual or individuals who are making them. And that, as we have emphasised, represents an entirely simple, and we suggest self evident aspect of personal autonomy. The responsibility of the Court of Protection arises just because the reduced capacity of the individual requires interference with his or her personal autonomy.
19. The new statutory structure starts with the assumption that just as the conduct of their lives by adults with the necessary mental capacity is their own affair, so to the conduct of the affairs of those adults who are incapacitated is private business. Hearings before the Court of Protection should therefore be held in private unless there is good reason why they should not. In other words, the new statutory arrangements mirror and rearticulate one longstanding common law exception to the principle that justice must be done in open court. "
"This judgment is being handed down in private.... The judge hereby gives leave for it to be reported on the strict understanding that in any report no person mentioned in the judgment may be identified by name or location except for (a) the advocates and the solicitors instructing them and (b) Mr Christopher Read and Dr Berney [two experts instructed in the proceedings]. In particular the anonymity of the applicant, the first respondent and the third respondent must be strictly preserved.
"The Press Association submits that this is clearly a case of great public interest, and one which should be reported. This is not because of some prurient interest in the awful disabilities and difficult realities of E's life, but because of the public interest in the local authority and its elected members and managers being held to account for [the] way in which the case has been handled — or mishandled, as the applicants can doubtless argue. This is an authority run by elected members, the managers and staff of which are paid out of public funds, both in council taxes and central government funds raised by general taxation. It is only right and proper that an authority which has behaved in the manner in which Mr Justice Baker has already found this one to have done should be held to public account and made to answer for its actions. The judge has criticised the authority for "grave and serious" errors and "blatant errors" the responsibility for which "clearly lies higher up the line of management" than individual .social workers. Without the ability to identify the authority, its members, managers and staff, the media – and the wider public – will be unable to call them to account. "
"This case involves serious, potentially devastating, intrusion into the lives of E, F and G by the local authority. The authority's actions have, as Mr Justice Baker pointed out, made reaching a decision on what is in E's best interests much harder than would have been the case had it acted properly in the first place either by following the Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards or by seeking a court's authorisation for its actions. Mr Justice Baker's criticisms of the local authority are detailed and devastating. But they will be to all and intents and purposes pointless if the local authority continues to remain anonymous."
"Such cases, by definition, involve interference, intrusion, by the state, by local authorities, into family life. It might be thought that in this context at least the arguments in favour of publicity – in favour of openness, public scrutiny and public accountability – are particularly compelling."
Similar views have of course been set out in other cases in which local authorities have been subject to judicial criticism, notably Re B: X Council v B [2007] EWHC 1622 (Fam), [2008] 1 FLR 482 per Munby J and the other cases cited therein at paragraph 14 of his judgment.
"upon hearing leading and junior counsel for the Second Respondent and counsel for the Applicant, first and Third Respondent, and upon reading written submissions prepared on behalf of all parties and the Press Association, it is ordered that there be permission to publish the .text of the judgments delivered in these proceedings on 26th Match 2010 and 30th July 2010 on condition that no such publication shall identify:
(a) the person in respect of whom the proceedings have been brought;
(b) the parties (save for the Second Respondent, Manchester City Council),
(c) all witnesses (save for Christopher Read and Dr Berney),
(d) any other persons mentioned in the judgment (save for judges, counsel, their instructing solicitors, Official Solicitor and Mr. Mike Dodd), and
(e) any company, organisation or establishment or location mentioned in the judgment, save for the Press Association and the Care Quality Commission".