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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Protection Decisions >> A Local Authority v SY [2013] EWCOP 3485 (12 November 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCOP/2013/3485.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 3485 (COP), [2013] EWCOP 3485 |
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The Judge gives leave for this judgment to be reported in this anonymised form. Pseudonyms have been used for all of the relevant names of people, places and companies.
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 his or her true name or actual location and their anonymity must be strictly preserved.
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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A Local authority |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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SY (by her litigation friend, the Official Solicitor) |
Respondent |
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Andrew Bagchi (instructed by Bindmans LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 1st November 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Keehan:
Introduction
Issues
a. declaring that SY lacks capacity to litigate;
b. declaring that she lacks capacity to make decisions (i) as to her residence; (ii) as to the contact she should have with others; (iii) as to the care package she should receive; and (iv) about entering into a contract of marriage;
c. declaring it is lawful and in SY's best interests (i) to reside at the placement or such placement identified by the authority in accordance with her assessed needs; (ii) to have contact with others as shall be agreed between the authority and the other person with whom it is intended she should have contact and (iii) to receive a care package in accordance with her assessed needs;
d. in the event SY absconds from the placement and/or refuses to return to it, it shall be lawful and in her best interests for reasonable and proportionate measures to be taken to return her to the placement, including measures which may amount to a deprivation of liberty; and
e. other consequential directions.
Background
Expert Evidence
Discussion – Capacity & Best Interests
Discussion – Declaration of Non-Marriage
a. it was not conducted in a registered place; and
b. it was not conducted by a registrar or by a priest according to Anglican rites.
"It is clear, however, that the present ceremony did not begin to purport to be a marriage according to the Marriage Acts, with or without fatal consequences. It was not conducted under the rites of the Church of England, nor was there ever any question of an application for, still less a grant of, a superintendent registrar's certificate, and it was conducted in a flat which was clearly none of the places which were authorised for marriage. The ceremony was consciously an Islamic one rather than such as is contemplated by the Marriage Acts……It is not any question of polygamy which ipso facto takes this ceremony outside s. 11, but the fact that it in no sense purported to be effected accordingly to the Marriage Acts, which provide for the only way of marrying in England. …It follows that I hold that the 1980 ceremony is neither a valid marriage in English law nor one in respect of which jurisdiction exists to grant a decree of nullity".
"As to Mr Leigh's amended petition, Mr Mostyn has abandoned the secondary prayer in it for a declaration that "…no marriage between the parties subsisted on the 23rd January 2004 or thereafter". That had seemingly been inserted into the pleading by amendment and as an afterthought so as to try to bring Mr Leigh's case into S55 (1) (c), as being 'a declaration that the marriage did not subsist on a date so specified in the application'. I am clear that the making of such a declaration would have been wholly impermissible as being a device to get around S58 (5) (which outlaws any declaration that a marriage was at its inception void) and I would therefore have dismissed that prayer had it stood alone. There remains Mr Mostyn's application for a declaration that the Cape Town ceremony did not effect a marriage at all….It goes without saying that, if appropriately worded, the mere dismissal of Miss Hudson's petition for divorce and alternatively for nullity would inform any reasonably knowledgeable interested party that there was not a marriage between herself and Mr Leigh. There would indeed be nothing to prevent a specific recital to that effect. That would not be entirely satisfactory, however, since it would not theoretically bind third parties and problems might arise if either party wanted to marry here or abroad, or otherwise needed to demonstrate his or her status. A declaration, if permissible, would be in the public interest of creating certainty and would be beneficial and convenient for both parties. In my judgment, the making of such a declaration is not outlawed by S58 (5) if and for so long as it is made to declare that there never was a marriage, as distinct from being a declaration (which is not permitted) that a given marriage was void at its inception. When the facts dictate the latter (which, as found here, they do not) then the only route to resolution is nullity. Nor do I find persuasive Mr Le Gryce's argument about the former practice of the ecclesiastical courts. For so long as the High Court has an inherent jurisdiction, as it does, and has the authority of the RSC to make free-standing Declarations in appropriate circumstances, then such jurisdiction needs within reason to be flexible and to move with the times. I cannot accept that it is stuck in the mid-19th century. Were it so, then countless orders must have been made (for example in the management of life-support systems) without jurisdiction. Accordingly I propose to make a Declaration that the Cape Town ceremony of 23.1.04 did not create the status of marriage as between Miss Hudson and Mr Leigh."
"The protection or intervention of the inherent jurisdiction of the High Court is available to those lacking capacity within the meaning of the MCA 2005 as it is to capacitous but vulnerable adults who have had their will overborne, and on the same basis, where the remedy sought does not fall within the repertoire of remedies provided for in the MCA 2005. It would be unjustifiable and discriminatory not to grant the same relief to incapacitated adults who cannot consent as to capacitous adults whose will has been overborne…..I am satisfied that once a matter is before the Court of Protection, the High Court may make orders of its own motion, particularly if such orders are ancillary to, or in support of, orders made on application. Since the inherent jurisdiction of the High Court in relation to adults is an aspect of the parens patriae jurisdiction the court has particularly wide powers to act of its own motion."
Conclusions