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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Re : Francis Dolan [2008] IEHC 264 (29 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2008/H264.html Cite as: [2008] IEHC 264, [2009] 1 ILRM 173, [2011] 1 IR 47 |
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Judgment Title: Re : Francis Dolan Composition of Court: Judgment by: Sheehan J. Status of Judgment: Approved |
Neutral citation Number: [2008] IEHC 264 THE HIGH COURT 2008 No. 118 MCA [WOC 1679] IN RE FRANCIS DOLAN A RESPONDENT JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Garrett Sheehan delivered on the 29th day of July, 2008 1. On the 4th December, 2007, the President of the High Court directed in accordance with the decision of the Supreme Court in these proceedings on the 4th July, 2007, that the following preliminary issue was to be tried by this Court:-
2. Mr. Salafia, counsel for the respondent, contends that this Court does have the necessary jurisdiction while Mr. Clarke for the Attorney General and Mr. O’Donnell for the Office of the General Solicitor for Minors and Wards of Court both say that the answer to the question should be in the negative. 3. The background is comprehensively set out in the Supreme Court judgment of Mr. Justice Geoghegan delivered on the 4th July, 2007, In the Matter of Wards of Court and In the Matter of Francis Dolan [2007] IESC 26, [2008] I.L.R.M. 19. 4. Francis Dolan Junior was born on the 26th April, 1982. He suffers from cerebral palsy and is diagnosed as suffering from spastic quadriplegia with moderate mental handicap as a result of which he requires full-time care. His parents have provided this full-time care for his entire life and wish to continue to do so. Francis Dolan Junior has three sisters. In the introduction to the submissions on behalf of Francis Dolan Junior his legal team state that they are made on behalf of Francis Dolan Junior and his immediate family. 5. Francis Dolan Junior received a judgment for damages for IR£3m for injuries suffered at birth. Of that sum IR£200,000 was paid out and the remaining IR£2.8m was paid into court and placed on deposit with the Accountant General. 6. The respondent’s parents do not believe that it is in the best interests of their son and their family that Francis Dolan Junior be made a Ward of Court and perceive wardship as an unnecessary and unwarranted interference in their family life. They further object to their son being declared of unsound mind and to the social connotations which they claim arise from adjudication under the Lunacy Regulation (Ireland) Act 1871. The parents did not petition the court in accordance with s. 15 of the Lunacy Regulation (Ireland) Act 1871, and this question arises in the context of their principled resistance to their son being made a Ward of Court. 7. The matter then proceeded under s. 12 of the Act of 1871. This procedure is commenced by the President of the High Court’s medical visitor examining the respondent and furnishing a report for consideration by the President of the High Court. If the view of the medical visitor is that the respondent is of unsound mind then an inquiry order is made directing that inquiry must be had as to the soundness of mind of Francis Dolan Junior. 8. On the 21st November, 2003, the solicitors for Francis Dolan Junior requested the General Solicitor for Minors and Wards of Court to ask the President of the High Court to consider the creation of a trust for the management of the funds in court. The President of the High Court refused this request on the basis that he had no authority to create such a trust and this was communicated to the respondent by letter dated the 28th November, 2003. 9. On foot of the requisite reports of the medical visitor, the wardship proceedings were initiated by the President of the High Court pursuant to ss. 11 and 12 of the Act of 1871. A notice of objection to an inquiry was subsequently filed by the respondent’s parents and by the respondent on the 8th October, 2004. The notice of objection contained, inter alia, constitutional objections to the procedure under ss. 11 and 12 of the Act of 1871. The respondent claimed that these objections should be heard prior to, or at least during, the course of the s. 12 wardship proceedings. 10. By order of the President of the High Court dated the 20th December, 2004, (amended by further order dated the 21st January, 2005), the President directed that the issue as to whether or not the respondent Francis Dolan Junior was of unsound mind and incapable of managing his person and property was to be tried before a judge of the High Court and a jury sitting in Dublin. 11. A notice of trial was served on the solicitors for Francis Dolan Junior on the 27th January, 2005. 12. The respondents lodged a notice of appeal to the Supreme Court on the 31st January, 2005, on the grounds that the President of the High Court had erred in law and/or in fact and/or in the exercise of his discretion in regard to the orders made in the wardship proceedings. 13. The respondents argued that they were entitled to have objections tried in advance of the wardship issue and in particular certain constitutional challenges to the wardship jurisdiction. A central part of the Supreme Court hearing was concerned with the question as to whether the High Court had jurisdiction to establish a trust to protect Francis Dolan’s funds outside wardship. 14. Plenary proceedings challenging the constitutionality of the Act of 1871 were instituted in 2004 by Francis Dolan Junior’s parents on their own behalf and on behalf of their son. These proceedings sought, inter alia, an injunction restraining the medical visitor from examining Francis Dolan Junior. His parents claimed that the process should be halted as it will inexorably lead to the making of a wardship order, which they allege is in breach of the constitutional rights of their son. 15. On the 19th March, 2004, Kelly J., refused to set aside the order of the President of the High Court regarding the proposed examination by the medical visitor and refused to grant the injunction sought. 16. In the course of the Supreme Court judgment Geoghegan J. directed that the matter be returned to the High Court for consideration of the question that is now before this Court. 17. The respondent’s submissions regarding the court’s jurisdiction to establish a trust as a means of protecting the interests of Francis Dolan Junior as an alternative to wardship fall under a number of headings. 18. The respondent first of all submits that the correct starting point in considering the question before this Court must be that the High Court has jurisdiction to create a trust in the particular circumstances of this case, and that it is then for a legitimus contradictor to establish that such jurisdiction is removed by the Constitution or by legislation. The respondent argues that full original jurisdiction of the High Court may be invoked to ensure that justice is done in a particular case and relies on the judgment of Gannon J. in R. v. R. [1984] I.R. 296 . 19. In addition the respondent placed particular emphasis on the judgment of Finlay C.J. In re D. [1987] I.R. 449, where he held that the exercise of the jurisdiction under the Lunacy Regulation (Ireland) Act 1871 is discretionary. The respondent submitted that this case supported his contention that the court had an inherent jurisdiction to deal with the circumstances of this case in a manner outside the Act of 1871 by the establishment of a trust. He further submitted that a Practice Direction excluding persons from wardship whose assets did not exceed €30,000 was an example of the court exercising an inherent jurisdiction alternative to wardship. 20. He also relied on the judgment of Costello J., in H.L. v. The Governor and Company of the Bank of Ireland [1978] I.L.R.M. 160, as supportive of his submission that the courts had an inherent jurisdiction in the circumstances of the present case to establish a trust. In that case it was held by Costello J. that since the creation of a discretionary trust appeared to be the most fitting way of making provision for the testator’s eldest son the court was empowered to create such a trust by virtue of the provisions of s. 117 of the Succession Act 1965. 21. Mr. Salafia also submitted that an examination of the sixteen cases, disclosed by the Solicitor General as a result of the investigations directed by the Supreme Court, demonstrated an existing practice whereby vulnerable people, both inside and outside the remit of the Lunacy Regulation (Ireland) Act 1871, had been encouraged to settle a trust to ensure the safe and wise administration of the estate. According to the supplemental submissions filed on behalf of the respondent five of the cases involved persons who were described by doctors as being of unsound mind and unable to manage their affairs. Mr. Salafia went on to submit that these sixteen cases constituted evidence of a practice that was sufficiently established for the Registrar for Wards of Court to be able to refer to a standard draft trust which had been approved by the President of the High Court. He contended that this demonstrated an existing practice whereby vulnerable people, both inside and outside the remit of the Act of 1871, have been encouraged to settle a trust so as to ensure the safe and wise administration of their estates. 22. On behalf of the Solicitor General, Mr. O’Donnell submitted that if the court were to answer the question in the affirmative it would effectively be creating a shadow jurisdiction parallel to the existing wardship jurisdiction which would continue irrespective of what other statutory provision the Oireachtas saw fit to put in place for vulnerable adults. He dealt at length with the judgment of Finlay C.J. in the case of In re D. and concluded that that case, while authority for the proposition that the jurisdiction of the High Court in wardship matters was broader than the Act of 1871, as a result of the parens patriae jurisdiction formerly exercised by the Lord Chancellor, that case still only extended the jurisdiction so as to admit to wardship a person who has no property but whose person requires protection and management. He further submitted that the Succession Act cases were of no assistance in finding an inherent jurisdiction to create a trust since the trusts established in those cases were created pursuant to the Act itself. 23. He further submitted that the Practice Direction relating to estates under €30,000 paralleled s. 68 of the Act of 1871, and pointed out that in none of the sixteen cases researched by the Solicitor General and referred to by Mr. Salafia did the High Court establish a trust. He also submitted that if the court were to find that it could intervene and create a trust without a determination that the person lacks capacity then the court would be interfering with that person’s constitutional rights. 24. Mr. Clarke submitted that the Attorney General considered that he had a very limited role in respect of the matter before the court, and rightly pointed out that it did not involve the determination of any question relating to the constitutionality of the wardship system. He urged the court to be careful that issues sought to be raised in the plenary proceedings were not adjudicated on and that the participation of the Attorney General in the context of this hearing, was without prejudice to the position of Ireland and the Attorney General in those proceedings. 25. He also emphasised that nothing that was said on behalf of the Attorney General was in any way intended to be critical of the family and in this he was endorsing an earlier submission made by Mr. O’Donnell on behalf of the Solicitor General. 26. Mr. Clarke further submitted that a core component of the case made on behalf of the respondent was that the existing legislative framework was inadequate to vindicate the respondent’s constitutional rights and/or those of his family, and accordingly, the court had an inherent jurisdiction which would vindicate those rights. 27. While adopting Mr. O’Donnell’s submissions on the In re D. case he also submitted that the court would be breaching the constitutional doctrine on the separation of powers were it to find that it had an inherent jurisdiction to create a trust. Decision 28. I have considered the draft deed of trust between the respondent’s family and the court and hold that this document envisages the court establishing a trust. 29. I now propose to address four matters which the respondent relied on as supportive of the proposition that this Court has jurisdiction to create a trust in the circumstances of this case. 1. The Practice Direction
2. Sixteen cases reported on by the Solicitor General
It is also of some relevance here to refer to a letter of the 6th June, 2008, from the Office of the General Solicitor for Minors and Wards of Court to Mr. John Costello, Solicitor for the respondent which enclosed a copy of the correspondence between the Solicitor General and Mr. Brian E. Spierin, then B.L. The Solicitor General sought Mr. Spierin’s advice regarding the establishment of a trust. In the course of his advice Mr. Spierin noted as follows:-
It is sufficient to note that the President did not become a party to the deed. 3. In re D. [1987] I.R. 449
4. H.L. v. The Governor and Company of the Bank of Ireland [1978] I.L.R.M. 160 As the discretionary trust in this case was established by Costello J. pursuant to s. 117 of the Succession Act 1965, it does not lend support to the respondent’s case. In his opening which I have already referred to, Mr. Salafia submitted that the High Court has jurisdiction to hear every kind of justiciable matter and that the only exceptions to this are those matters removed from its jurisdiction by the Constitution or by statute. He submitted that the correct starting point must be that this Court does have jurisdiction to create a trust in the circumstances of this case and went on to place reliance on the judgment of Gannon J. in R. v. R. [1984] I.R. 296, where he held at p. 309:-
In this case the Supreme Court had to address the question of the court’s jurisdiction to join the Attorney General in proceedings brought pursuant to s. 29 the of the Family Law Act 1995. One of the issues which arose in that regard was whether the courts can be called upon to exercise an unspecified inherent jurisdiction delineated by the Oireachtas in s. 29 concerning the Attorney General as a party. In addressing that question Murray J. (with whose judgment Barron J. and Hardiman J. agreed) stated, inter alia, as follows at p.26:-
30. I accept the submission of Mr. Clarke that the reasoning of Murray J. in the above case is directly applicable to the issue before this Court. 31. I also accept Mr. O’Donnell’s submission that the full and original jurisdiction of the High Court is to deal with justiciable controversies and that the creation of a trust is not a justiciable controversy. 32. While it is clear that the respondent’s family have a principled objection to wardship which they find intrusive and are also totally committed to the respondent’s well-being, I am nevertheless obliged to conclude that this Court has no jurisdiction inherent or otherwise to create the trust scheme they require. Accordingly I answer the question in the negative. |