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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> G, R (on the application of) v The Legal Services Commission [2004] EWHC 276 (Admin) (11 February 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2004/276.html Cite as: [2004] PIQR P26, [2004] EWHC 276 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF G | (CLAIMANT) | |
-v- | ||
THE LEGAL SERVICES COMMISSION | (DEFENDANT) |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MISS J COLLIER (instructed by The Legal Services Commission) appeared on behalf of the DEFENDANT
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Crown Copyright ©
"(1) There shall be a body known as the Legal Services Commission ...
"(2) The Commission shall have the functions relating to -
"(a) the community legal service, and
"(b) the criminal defence service,
"which are conferred or imposed on it by the provisions of this Act or any other enactment."
"The Commission shall establish, maintain and develop a service known as the Community Legal Service for the purpose of promoting the availability to individuals of services of the descriptions specified in subsection (2) and, in particular, for securing (within the resources made available, and priorities set, in accordance with this Part) that individuals have access to services that effectively meet their needs."
"The Lord Chancellor:
"(a) may by direction require the Commission to fund the provision of any of the services specified in Schedule 2 in circumstances specified in the direction, and
"(b) may authorise the Commission to fund the provision of any of those services in specified circumstances or, if the Commission request him to do so, in an individual case."
"The services which may not be funded as part of the Community Legal Service are as follows.
"1. Services consisting of the provision of help (beyond the provision of general information about the law and the legal system and the availability of legal services) in relation to-
"(a) allegations of negligently caused injury, death or damage to property, apart from allegations relating to clinical negligence ... "
"1. This is a direction by the Lord Chancellor under section 6(8) of the Access to Justice Act 1999 authorising the Legal Services Commission to fund in specified circumstances services generally excluded from the scope of the Community Legal Service Fund by paragraph 1 of schedule 2 to the Act ...
"2. In this direction descriptions of types of case and other terms should be interpreted in accordance with definitions contained in the Act and in the Funding Code ...
"... Part 2 - Legal Representation.
"Case categories.
"7. The Lord Chancellor authorises the Commission to fund Legal Representation, including excluded services, in any of the following types of case:
"... (b) Proceedings under section 8 of the Code (Proceedings against public authorities concerning serious wrongdoing, abuse of position or power, or significant breach of Human Rights)."
"This is guidance on making decisions under the Funding Code Criteria about whether the Legal Services Commission should fund or continue to fund services as part of the Community Legal Service (CLS). This guidance is issued by the Legal Services Commission and incorporates relevant guidance issued by the Lord Chancellor under section 23 of the Access to Justice Act 1999 (the "Act"). Under rule A9 of the Funding Code Procedures, all persons making decisions under the Code must have regard to this guidance."
"1. The Lord Chancellor has issued the following guidance under section 23 of the Access to Justice Act 1999, explaining the Government's intentions underlying paragraph 1 of Schedule 2 to the Act (Excluded services.)"
"4. Paragraph 1(a) excludes services relating to allegations of negligently caused injury, death or damage to property, apart from allegations relating to clinical negligence. These cases are excluded because the great majority of them are suitable for funding under conditional fee agreements.
"5. Paragraph 1(a) only excludes allegations of "negligently caused" injury or damage. It is not intended to exclude cases about personal injury arising from an alleged assault or deliberate abuse. Claims alleging assault or abuse by a public servant may well be brought against the responsible authority that employs him or her as well as, or instead of, the individual. The legal claim against the authority may be one of negligence. These claims are not prevented by paragraph 1(a) which turns on whether the injury itself was caused negligently or deliberately."
"1. The most important effect of Schedule 2 is to exclude most personal injury claims from CLS funding. Such cases are excluded because they will generally be suitable for funding under conditional fee agreements or other private funding arrangements.
"2. Paragraph 1(a) only excludes services relating to "negligently caused injury". The Lord Chancellor's guidance at section 3.2 above explains what it meant by this.
"3. What matters in deciding whether a personal injury claim is excluded is the factual basis of the claim, not how the legal case is pleaded. If the basis of the claim is that another person has failed to take proper care, with the result that the client was injured, it does not matter whether the client is bringing a claim based on tort, an implied term under any contract or statutory duty ...
"4. Negligently caused injury does not include cases concerning alleged assault or deliberately inflicted harm, such as claims for damages for alleged deliberate child abuse. It would also not cover claims based upon breach of statutory duty where that duty is absolute and does not primarily depend upon proving a lack of care to establish liability ..."
"6 ... for personal injury claims which fall to be considered under the General Funding Code, the question whether the claim relates to "negligently caused injury" is likely to be academic. This is because applications for Legal Representation under the General Funding Code will be refused where the case is individually suitable for a conditional fee agreement ... therefore, in practice, Legal Representation will only be available for personal injury claims in the following circumstances ...
"(c) Claims against Public Authorities. Where a claim for personal injury is brought against a public authority on the basis of serious wrongdoing, abuse of position or power or significant breach of human rights, the Lord Chancellor's direction set out at paragraph 4(b) [I think that should be 7(b)] of paragraph 3.3 above ensures that it is within scope and will be considered under section 8 of the Funding Code Criteria. Child abuse claims and actions against the police alleging injury caused by assault are the most common types of claim in this category. Claims of this type may be carried out only by firms who have a franchise for either personal injury or actions against the police, etc."
"In order to show that a case concerns 'serious wrongdoing' or 'abuse of position or power' it is necessary to show that the case concerns something more than a straightforward claim against a public authority, such as a simple claim for negligence or breach of contract. 'Serious wrongdoing' must involve either allegations of deliberately causing harm to the client or behaviour by a public authority which goes well beyond simple liability for negligence or breach of contract and which could objectively be considered to be really serious ..."
"3. Examples of types of case which normally fall within section 8 of the Code are given in section 17.3 below. Some proceedings, by their nature, almost inevitably come within section 8. For example a malicious prosecution case necessarily concerns allegations of serious wrongdoing or abuse of position or power. Other types of claim, for example damages claims against the police for personal injury or damage to goods, may well involve a range of allegations, some of which may constitute abuse of position or power whilst others are simple allegations of negligence. As explained below, the first issue to consider in such cases is whether the case is within scope. If it is, the next decision is whether the case should be considered under section 8."
"5. ... For the avoidance of doubt, the Lord Chancellor's directions (at paragraph 7(b) of section 3.3 of this guidance) make it clear that claims against public authorities falling within the definition given within section 8 of the Code are not excluded. However the concepts of "serious wrongdoing or abuse of position or power" and "negligently caused injury" are for practical purposes mutually exclusive. Therefore, personal injury claims against public authorities should be treated as follows:
"(a) if the allegations relate to serious wrongdoing, abuse of position or power or significant breach of human rights, the case is within scope and must be considered under section 8 of the Code."
"1. Actions against the police are the most common claims within section 8. As explained above, not every case in which the police are the opponent comes within section 8. For example a road traffic accident caused by a police car would not normally be covered. Similarly, cases concerning personal property allegedly not properly looked after by the police would not come within section 8 unless there was something about the case to suggest that the property had been intentionally lost or destroyed or otherwise the allegations in the case amount to serious wrongdoing. However, the following varieties of police claim would typically fall within section 8:
"(a) cases concerning assault or trespass by the police;
"(b) wrongful arrest;
"(c) false imprisonment.
"Section 8 of the Code is a priority area because it concerns allegations by an individual that his or her rights have been seriously infringed by the State. In those serious cases it is particularly important that the State through the legal aid scheme ensures that such challenges can be brought subject to means and merits criteria. The exclusions in Schedule 2 reflect the lowest priorities for public funding. For personal injury proceedings funding is a low priority, primarily because such cases should be expected to proceed privately under Conditional Fee Agreements. Cases concerning negligently caused injury are regarded as a particularly low priority even compared to cases where injury was deliberately caused.
"26. Looked at in terms of priorities it is therefore not surprising that there is only a small overlap between the cases falling within Section 8 of the Code (which are a high priority) and cases excluded under paragraph 1(a) of Schedule 2 (low priority cases). However it is not the Commission's case that it is impossible for a case concerning negligently caused injury to come within section 8 of the Code. In my view it is possible although such instances will be rare. As the guidance makes clear ... it is possible that an allegation of negligence is so serious or extreme that it comes within the concept of serious wrongdoing, even if there was never any deliberate intention to harm. The distinction is best illustrated with examples."
" ... it is not considered that this case comes within the exceptions to Schedule 2 to the Access to Justice Act 1999 and I think therefore that this is a negligence case, albeit a negligence case which had serious consequences. Although in theory 'serious wrongdoing' or 'abuse of position or power' does not necessarily have to be a positive act, to classify as such in a case where it is as failure to act which is relevant, I think you would have to show that the failure to act was a deliberate and malicious omission and I do not think there is evidence of that here."
The jurisdiction of the Funding Review Committee is set out in Rules C59 to C65 of the Funding Code Procedures ... in relation to matters such as prospects of success/cost benefit the decision of the Committee is final. However in relation to other matters, such as whether a case is in or out of scope, the Committee can either confirm the Regional Director's decision or refer the matter back to the Regional Director for reconsideration under Rule C62. When a matter has been referred back under that Rule, the Regional Director's subsequent decision under Rule C65 is final."
"As you know on a matter such as scope when an application is referred back by the Funding Review Committee the final decision rests with the Regional Director in accordance with Rule C65 of the Funding Code Procedures. To avoid any further delays the contents of this letter have been discussed and agreed with the regional office. You may therefore take this letter as the Regional Director's final decision on your application.
"I have looked carefully at all the information submitted with this application and have taken into account your submissions and the views of the Funding Review Committee. However I regret I must conclude that this application is out of scope and cannot be funded.
"Paragraph 1A of Schedule 2 of the Act excludes the provision of services in relation to 'allegations of negligently caused injury ... '. This is a wide provision which our guidance recognises is not restricted just to cases containing routine common law negligence. The main consideration is the substance of the allegations in the case, rather than just on the legal basis of the cause of action. In any event this case is clearly all about a potential claim for negligently caused injury. Your allegation is that Social Services owed your client a duty, they negligently took steps to protect G as a result of which he suffered foreseeable injuries. The fact that the circumstances giving rise to the duty are unusual does [not] make the case any less about negligently caused injury. Mrs G is in effect saying: 'If Social Services had taken proper care, G would not have suffered these injuries'. The alleged breaches of statutory duty do not detract from that basic analysis of the claim.
"Having decided that the case falls within the Schedule it is necessary to consider whether any of the Lord Chancellor's directions on scope assist. In my view it cannot be argued that this case concerns significant wrongdoing, abuse of position or power or significant breach of human rights by a public authority. This direction in relation to Section 8 of the Funding Code primarily covers cases where a public authority is deliberately or knowingly causing harm. In the present case the allegation is one of negligence namely that Social Services negligently caused harm through their inactivity. That does not come within the direction."
" ... the legal test is therefore whether the case concerns 'serious wrongdoing, abuse of position or power or significant breach of human rights' as against a public authority. Guidance on the scope of those words is at section 17.2 of the Funding Code guidance. As the guidance makes clear, and as is clear from the natural meaning of the words, simple negligence by a public authority would not fall within this section. By contrast deliberate, malicious or dishonest actions by a public authority clearly would come within section 8."
"Your main argument appears to be that because paragraph 1(a) of Schedule 2 only excludes allegations of negligently caused injury, the impact of the direction must bring negligence claims back within scope otherwise there would be no point in the direction."
"The test of serious wrongdoing etc is primarily used to identify such cases as a priority area. This appears in the Lord Chancellor's directions on priorities and in the definition in Section 8 of the Funding Code which gives such cases more generous funding criteria than other parts of the Code. In my view, and in light of the policy intention behind the direction, in relation to paragraph 1(a) of Schedule 2 the direction functions primarily as an avoidance of doubt provision: if you are within Section 8 of the Code you know you are within scope."
"I am not arguing that, as a matter of law, cases involving matters of negligence can never come within the direction. Perhaps there are cases where the negligence is so serious and extreme that it would come within the concept of serious wrongdoing even if there was never any deliberate intention to harm. In practice however because the wording of the exclusion and the direction are so different the concepts are almost mutually exclusive."
"If it had been the policy intention for most negligence claims against public authorities to be in scope, this could easily have been achieved by wording the direction more widely to make this clear.
"In any event it is clear on the facts of this case that it does not fall within the direction. The allegation is that public authorities negligently failed to take action to prevent harm occurring. The case does not come within any sensible interpretation of the concept of serious wrongdoing by a public authority."
"'Serious wrongdoing' must involve either allegations of deliberately causing harm to the client or behaviour by a public authority which goes well beyond simple liability for negligence or breach of contract ... "
"I ... did not consider that the allegations of negligence involved serious wrongdoing. It was a case where Social Services were alleged to have negligently caused harm through their inactivity. The Claimant contended that his mother and agencies had made requests to the Social Services Department to take steps to keep her son safe, and that Social Services took no action; that the Social Services Department did not complete the full assessment required by the Department of Health; and that it failed to attend disciplinary meetings. Because of its lack of action the Claimant remained at risk and eventually sustained severe head, hip and lung injuries in a car crash. He was involved in a serious road traffic accident while driving a stolen car and being chased by the police (see Claimant's solicitors' application for legal funding). I did not consider that those factual allegations could constitute negligence that constituted serious wrongdoing within the meaning of Section 8. Although I accepted that there could be cases where a public authority negligently caused harm in such a way that serious wrongdoing was involved. I did not consider that this was such a case."
"by that letter I did not suggest, or intend to suggest, that negligently caused injury could never fall within Section 8. I consider, and considered, that if negligence involved serious wrongdoing, it could fall within Section 8 - but that it will be rare for negligence to amount to serious wrongdoing. My reference to 'simple negligence' meant negligence which did not involve serious wrongdoing. This reflects the Guidance. For example, section 17.2(4) states that if a case is really about simple negligence and is likely to stand or fall on that basis, the case should not be considered under Section 8 of the Code. That does not mean that claims for negligently caused injury can never fall within Section 8 of the Code, but that such claims would have to involve very serious wrongdoing, and would in practice be very rare."