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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Orange v West Yorkshire Police [2001] EWCA Civ 611 (1 May 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/611.html Cite as: [2002] QB 347, [2001] 3 WLR 736, [2001] EWCA Civ 611 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM LEEDS COUNTY COURT
HER HONOUR JUDGE FINNERTY
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL Tuesday 1st May 2001 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PETER GIBSON
and
LORD JUSTICE LATHAM
____________________
KAREN LESLEY ORANGE (Widow and personal representative of the Estate of Paul Alan Orange, Deceased) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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CHIEF CONSTABLE OF WEST YORKSHIRE POLICE |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Christopher G Johnston (instructed by West Yorkshire Police Force Solicitor for the Respondent)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE LATHAM:
"Paul did not smoke, he liked a drink, he was a daily drinker and when he was under pressure at work he drank more. I cannot be absolutely certain, but I would say he drank approximately 3 litres of cider a day If he wasn't drinking cider, he drank lager and lime. The last few weeks I had not seen him drinking at all. Very occasionally, on his birthday etc., he would go out and drink to excess."
"I saw him walking up the street, struggling to keep upright. It was obvious he had been drinking, but he was walking under his own steam. He was volatile when speaking to us but we understood one another. He was argumentative and swaying but made no attempt to get away from us, nor did he struggle."
"I have a great deal of experience in dealing with drunks. He was a drunken young man who gave me no undue cause for concern."
"Clothes and personal effects may only be seized if the custody officer
(a) believes that the person from whom they are seized may use them to cause physical injury to himself or any other person ........"
"Police Authorities and police officers are aware of the need to ensure that prisoners in cells should not provide opportunity for a prisoner to do himself injury. A recent case where a prisoner has hanged by a strip of material torn from his pillow case and looped around a protruding pin of the upper hinge of the cell door has emphasised the risk presented by unforeseen hazards, and Chief Constables are requested to arrange for early inspection of all police cells to ensure there are no projections or fittings which prisoners might use to cause themselves injury."
"It is clearly impracticable to bring all cells and detention rooms up to the standard currently laid down for new buildings, but it is desirable that any police cells or detention rooms should meet the following criteria:
a. Structure and fittings should be such as to minimise opportunities for a prisoner to do himself injury (see Home Office Circular No 92/68 ....."
"1. Mr Orange was subject to gross intoxication with alcohol at material time.
2. A person who is subject to extreme levels of intoxication cannot be said to be of "sound mind" in that such a person is unable to apply reason, his judgment is impaired, as is his emotional control.
3. The risk of self harm by person grossly intoxicated should have been evident to those charged with Mr Orange's care whilst he was in police custody.
4. Ensuring a person's safety whilst he is in custody requires a balance between a number of factors:
the environment in which a person is held,
the degree of observation afforded to that individual
the objects in that individual's possession.
In Mr Orange's case it appears there was a failure to provide a safe environment and the level of observation was ineffective.
5. It was foreseeable that an individual left with a belt in a cell where there was a point from which a person could hang himself, that was not observed by the CCTV provided could harm himself under such circumstances.
6. The condition which led to Mr Orange's arrest is one that should have alerted those responsible for his safe keeping to the risk of self harm.
7. The points made in this letter are amplified in the document appended which refers to specific research into death by hanging in custody. This research was well established in the 1980s. The knowledge arising from it was disseminated thereafter with the police and prison authorities becoming aware of it so as to guard against suicide in custody before the time Mr Orange met his death."
"So I would be inclined to hold that where a man of sound mind commits suicide, his estate would be unable to maintain an action against the hospital or prison authorities as the case might be. Volenti non fit injuria would provide them with a complete defence ..... But in the present case Mr Kirkham was not of sound mind."
"The police and prison service have long been aware that prisoners are more than usually likely to attempt suicide or self injury. In 1994 the Director of Prisons issued an instruction to Governors (IG 1/1994) which said "The care of prisoners who are at risk of suicide and self harm is one of the Prison Service's most vital tasks". The risk of suicide is particularly high among prisoners on remand facing a new environment and an uncertain future. Between 1972 and 1982 45% of suicides in prisons were remand prisoners, although they made up only 10 to 15% of the prison population, Report by Helen Grindrod, QC and Gabriel Black "Suicides at Leeds Prison: An Inquiry into the Deaths of Five Teenagers during 1988/89" (1989), page 5. As long ago as 1968 the Home Office sent a circular to Chief Constables drawing attention to the need to ensure that fittings in cells should not provide an opportunity for the prisoner to do himself injury ......."
"This argument is based upon the sound intuition that there is a difference between protecting people against harm caused to them by third parties and protecting them against harm which they inflict upon themselves. It reflects the individualist philosophy of the common law. People of full age and sound understanding must look after themselves and take responsibility for their actions. This philosophy expresses itself in the fact that duties to safeguard from harm deliberately caused by others are unusual and a duty to protect a person of full understanding from causing harm to himself is very rare indeed. But once it is admitted that this is the rare case in which such a duty is owed, it seems to me self contradictory to say that the breach itself could not have been a cause of the harm because the victim caused it to himself."
"He (the Commissioner) accepts that he owed a duty of care to Mr Lynch to take reasonable care to prevent him from committing suicide. Mr Lynch could not rely on a duty owed to some other hypothetical prisoner who was of unsound mind. The Commissioner does not seek to withdraw this concession on the ground that Mr Lynch has been found to have been of sound mind. For my part, I think that the Commissioner is right not to make this distinction. The difference between being of sound and unsound mind, while appealing to lawyers who like clear cut rules, seems to me inadequate to deal with the complexities of human psychology in the context of the stresses caused by imprisonment. The duty, as I have said, is a very unusual one, arising from the complete control which the police or prison authorities have over the prisoner, combined with the special danger of people in prison taking their own lives."
"The apportionment must recognise that a purpose of the duty accepted by the Commissioner in this case is to demonstrate publicly that the police do have a responsibility for taking reasonable care to prevent prisoners from committing suicide ..."
"My Lords, the problem with which this case is concerned is, sadly, all too familiar both to the police and to the prison authorities. It is well known that people are more likely to commit suicide when they are in prison or in a police cell than when they are at liberty. Research has shown that some prisoners are more at risk than others would be when detained in custody. Those who are mentally disordered, young persons on remand, and those who are serving very long sentences are thought to be particularly vulnerable. In some cases the prison regime may be a contributory factor in a prisoner's decision to end his own life. In others there may be no such contributory factor. The act of suicide may be both unforeseen and unforeseeable. But in the present case the act was foreseeable and it would not have occurred if reasonable care had been taken to prevent it."
"In my opinion it is necessary at the outset to identify the duty which was owed to the deceased by the Commissioner. There is no doubt that the Commissioner was right to concede that he owed a duty of care to the deceased while he remained in police custody. The deceased had been identified as a suicide risk, having on two previous occasions attempted to strangle himself with a belt after being placed in a cell. It was the Commissioner's duty to take reasonable care not to provide him with the opportunity of committing suicide by making use of defects in his cell door. The risk was not that he would injure himself accidentally if given that opportunity, but that he would do so deliberately. That is the nature of an act of suicide by a person who is of sound mind. It is a deliberate act of self destruction by a person who intends to end his own life. So I think that the Commissioner's duty can most accurately be described as a duty to take reasonable care to prevent the deceased, while in police custody, from taking his own life deliberately.
It is unusual for a person to be under a duty to take reasonable care to prevent another person from doing something to his loss, injury or damage deliberately. On the whole people are entitled to act as they please, even if this would inevitably lead to their own death or injury."
"But the duty of care may sometimes extend to preventing people injuring themselves deliberately. The person to whom the duty is owed may be unaware of the risks to which he will expose himself by his deliberate act. Or he may be too young to appreciate them, as Yachuk -v- Oliver Blais Co Ltd [1949] AC 386, where petrol was sold to a child aged 9 who was unaware of its dangerous properties, or Hughes -v- Lord Advocate [1963] AC 837, where the inquisitive children meddled with objects in the unattended shelter in the roadway without thought as to the consequences. Or he may be of unsound mind, with the result that he is at risk of doing something to himself which no rational person would do as he would appreciate that to do this would inevitably lead to injury. Or the risk that the person may commit an act of deliberate self harm may be the result of something which the defendant has done or is doing to him.
That is the situation which may arise where a person who is of sound mind is deprived of his liberty and put in prison or detained in custody by the police. The duty of those who are entrusted with his custody is to take reasonable care for his safety while he remains in their hands. If it is known that he may engage in self mutilation or suicide while he is in their custody, their duty is to take reasonable care to prevent him from engaging in these acts so that he [may] remain free from harm until he is set at liberty. This duty is owed to the prisoner if there is that risk, irrespective of whether he is mentally disordered or of sound mind. It arises simply from the fact that he is being detained by them in custody and is known to be at risk of engaging in self mutilation or of committing suicide."
"The suicide was a foreseeable consequence of the failure in duty which occurred when the deceased who was a known suicide risk, was placed in a cell which provided him with the opportunity to carry out that act."
"It might be thought that any person locked up in a cell was almost certainly being subjected to abnormal stress which would be liable to cause him to act in an irrational fashion and do things which we would not normally contemplate; he may suffer impulses which he would not normally suffer. He may be in all other respects a normal person. He may not be mentally ill or otherwise suffering from any disturbance of the mind. It is the general experience of those concerned with prison administration and the custody of persons in police stations that the risk of suicide or self harm exists among those confined whether they be suffering from some frank mental condition or appear to be relatively undisturbed. Your Lordships have been referred to reports and statistics which support this and the risk is clearly recognised in the instructions and recommendations issued by the Police Authorities and the Home Department. The risk of suicide is a concern of those responsible for holding persons in custody and within their contemplation."
"Suicide being reasonably foreseeable for prisoners as a group, and the defendants not having time to examine each person to see whether or not he is likely to attempt suicide, the reasonable course is to adopt a minimum standard applicable to all prisoners except those who require special attention. The steps outlined in the Operating Manual seem appropriate for the purpose."
"As I view the findings of fact they result in the conclusion that Constable Clapp was not in breach of his duty to take reasonable care for the safety of this particular prisoner. I say that having regard for the circumstances of this case which indicate that there was no special reason for either Constable Clapp nor Mr Lafleche to believe that Mr Funk was suicidal in nature. They viewed him as a person who was impaired by alcohol who had committed a driving offence and they appear to have treated him in a way in which others were treated in similar circumstance."
"Everyone's right to life shall be protected by law. No one shall be deprived of his life intentionally save in the execution of a sentence of a court following his conviction of a crime for which this penalty is provided by law."
"The court has examined whether the authorities knew or ought to have known that Mark Keenan posed a real and immediate risk of suicide and, if so, whether they did all that reasonably could have been expected of them to prevent that risk."