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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> B, R (on the application of) v Criminal Injuries Compensation Appeals Panel [2007] EWHC 180 (Admin) (14 February 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2007/180.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 180 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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The Queen on the application of "B" who acts by his litigation friend PW |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Criminal Injuries Compensation Appeals Panel |
Defendant |
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WordWave International Ltd
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Robert Jay Q.C. with Mr Jeremy Johnson (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 12 January 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Langstaff :
Background Facts.
"C requires total care for all his needs and this will continue for the rest of his life. He requires physical care in terms of washing, toileting, dressing and help with feeding. He requires help with his mobility. He requires extra stimulation in view of his severe learning difficulties and his visual impairment.
His carers will also need to provide daily physiotherapy to ensure that his muscles and joints are kept flexible. There is a particular problem with the sensitivity of the scalp, which makes washing his hair very difficult and carers would need to be aware of this.
The carers will need to be aware of C's medical needs. He does have a ventriculo-peritoneal shunt and this could become blocked or infected at any stage and the carers would need to be aware of the medical indications of this.
C will need to remain under medical supervision for the rest of his life, including supervision of his general health, his orthopaedic needs, his visual impairment and the ventriculo-peritoneal shunt.
C will need to attend a special school for children with severe learning difficulties on a long term basis. When he reaches the age of 18 years and leaves school he will continue to require full-time care. This could obviously be provided at home if his parents are able to do this. There are also residential colleges that can provide 24 hour care for children like C. There are also other residential facilities available, which can provide fulltime care if his parents are not able to do this."
The 1990 Criminal Injuries Compensation Scheme.
"Subject to other provisions of this Scheme, compensation will be assessed on the basis of common law damages, and will normally take the form of a lump sum payment, although the Board may make alternative arrangements in accordance with paragraph 9 above. More than one payment may be made where an applicant's eligibility for compensation has been established but a final award cannot be calculated in the first instance - for example where only a provisional medical assessment can be given. In a case in which an interim award has been made, the Board may decide to make a reduced award, increase any reduction already made or refuse to make any further payment at any stage before receiving notification of acceptance of a final award."
"It will be for the applicant to make out his case at the hearing, and where appropriate this will extend to satisfying the Board compensation should not be withheld or reduced under the terms of paragraph 6 or paragraph 8…The Board will reach their decision solely in the light of evidence brought out at the hearing, and all the information and evidence made available to the Board members at the hearing will be made available to the applicant, at, if not before, the hearing. The Board may adjourn a hearing for any reason…"
"Compensation will be reduced by the full value of any present or future entitlement to:
(a) United Kingdom social security benefits;
(b) …
(c) social security benefits, compensation awards or similar payments whatsoever from the funds of other countries; or
(d) payments under insurance arrangements except as excluded below which may accrue, as a result of the injury or death, to the benefit of the person to whom the award is made"
"If in the opinion of the Board it is in the interests of the applicant (whether or not a minor or a person under a incapacity) so to do, the Board may pay the amount of any award to any trustee or trustees to hold on such trusts…as the Board shall think fit. Subject to this the Board will have a general discretion in any case in which they have awarded compensation to make special arrangements for its administration."
"Although the Board's decisions in a case will normally be final, they will have discretion to reconsider a case after a final award of compensation has been accepted where there has been such a serious change to the applicant's medical condition that injustice would occur if the original assessment of compensation were allowed to stand, or where the victim has since died as a result of his injuries…"
The Progress of the Claim after 2003.
"C is now just 10 years of age. Having considered the medical report from Doctor B. Morrell, consultant paediatrician, dated 13th June 2003, I fail to see how this application will be capable of final assessment for many years, probably not until C is 19 years of age after he has left school and his long term care requirements and provision would be better capable of being assessed…(3) prior to final assessment of this application, it would be entirely appropriate for staged interim payments to be made generally on account on the final award of compensation, upon written application by the applicants' representatives supported by reasons for the need for such payments…"
"1. Does Applicant require provision of care and accommodation?
2. Burden is on Applicant to establish that local authority care and accommodation is not sufficient to meet Applicant's reasonable needs
3. Receiver is under a duty to investigate what is available from welfare services
4. Has there been an assessment by the local authority under Section 21 of the National Assistance 1948…?
5. If not, the presumption (subject to paragraph 6 below) is that a final assessment cannot be made and you should consider only an interim payment generally on account of compensation, but not so high as effectively to bind the next Panel (e.g. avoid assumption that Applicant needs own specially adapted house and one-to-one care)
6. There is a statutory obligation on local authorities to carry out an assessment when Applicant is 18 years old. In absence of an assessment before Applicant's 18th Birthday, do not finalise claim until after this statutory assessment has been carried out. But where an Applicant is over the age of 18, living at home, and the carer (usually a spouse or other family member) has not asked the local authority to carry out an assessment and does not intend to do so, it will be open to the Panel to make no award for future care on the grounds that the Applicant has not established that the local authority cannot provide care and accommodation for the Applicant's reasonable needs."
"We generally adopted it and it is now official policy of the Board"
Then added:-
"There may be cases where we would not follow it."
It was thus not treated as an inflexible policy permitting of no exception.
"Our priority today is to take a proportionate and fair approach but above all to do what is in C's best interests. He is only 11 years of age at the moment. Counsel urges us to make directions and list for final hearing. We considered the 2001 and 2002 cases cited by counsel. But we take the view Dowden and Crookdale (sic) cases have application here and account must be taken of what the local authority can and will provide for C's case both pre and post 19 years of age.
The parents have made it clear that post 19 years (i.e. 2013) they anticipate C will be placed in suitable residential accommodation. We have considered that overall it is preferable for C if a finalisation of his compensation is done when the Board have an assessment of his needs and know what the local authority will provide for him. That information is not available now thus we decide not to finalise. The appropriate way is to make a substantial interim payment now to be used for C's benefit.
Moreover, if and when further money is required e.g. to provide for further care, then additional interims can be appealed for (sic).
Therefore, we decide on the basis of evidence in the papers and needs care provided to date and likely to be provided in the future, in these circumstances further interim of £250,000.00p to be made."
Challenges By Way of Judicial Review.
The Claimant's Submissions.
"In general terms, the approach is to compare what a claimant can reasonably require with what a local authority, having regard to uncertainties which almost inevitably are present, are likely to provide in the discharge of their duty under Section 21. If the second falls significantly short of the first, as Owen J. found in Crookdake it did, the tortfeasor must pay, subject to the argument raised in both cases that Section 21 provision augmented by contribution from the tortfeasor meets the reasonable requirements. If it is the statutory provision which reaches the claimant's reasonable requirements, as assessed by the Judge, the tortfeasor does not have to pay for a different regime. I accept that in making the comparison a court may have regard to the power to compel a local authority to perform its duties"
"In written submissions on behalf of the defendant, reliance was sought to be placed on the absence of 'proper evidence before the court as to how the local authority would in fact discharge its statutory duty in providing 24 hour care'. That absence does not assist the defendant. The Judge must reach a conclusion on the evidence before him, drawing inferences where appropriate. That is what the Judge did and I see no fault in the way in which he did it. The defendant did not call evidence of what the local authority would have, or would be likely to have, provided, evidence which might, I put it no higher, have undermined the claimant's case.
63. While claimants, and those advising them, must be expected to cooperate with local authorities discharging their statutory duties, they claim in the action that to which they believe the claimant is entitled and there is no legal burden upon them first to disprove that statutory provision will be adequate. It may of course be prudent to call evidence, as in any situation where a judgment on the facts is to be made, as to why statutory provision is inadequate."
"…while it is for a claimant to assert what are his or her reasonable needs, it is for a defendant who asserts that a claimant should be content with local authority residential care to set out in clear terms whether such reasonable needs can be met by such care and whether there is any respect in which they accept such care does not meet the claimant's reasonable needs, so that top up will be appropriate. It will then be for the claimant to assert that top up or further top up in addition to that proposed by the defendant will be required, if local authority residential accommodation is to be provided."
Discussion
Conclusions.