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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> DM v Doncaster Metropolitan Borough Council [2011] EWHC 3652 (Admin) (16 December 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2011/3652.html Cite as: 15 CCL Rep 128, [2011] EWHC 3652 (Admin), [2012] MHLR 120, (2012) 15 CCL Rep 128 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Oxford Row Leeds LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
DM |
Claimant |
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and |
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DONCASTER METROPOLITAN BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Defendant |
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and |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR HEALTH |
(First Interested Party) |
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and |
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FM |
(Second Interested Party) |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7404 1424
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr O'Brien (instructed by Doncaster Metropolice BC In House) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
Mr Coppell (instructed by Department of Work & Pensions) appeared on behalf of the First Interested Party
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE LANGSTAFF:
The Claim
"(1) Subject to section 26 of this Act, where a person is provided with accommodation under this Part of this Act the local authority providing the accommodation shall recover from him the amount of the payment which he is liable to make in accordance with the following provisions of this section."
Whether those provisions as to the precise charge to be levied were applied properly in this case is no longer in issue, having been resolved by agreement during the course of the hearing before me.
"Nothing in this section shall authorise or require a local authority to make any provision authorised or required to be made (whether by that or by any other authority) by or under any enactment not contained in this Part of this Act or authorised or required to be provided under the National Health Service Act 2006…"
(1) This Act does not authorise any person ("D") to deprive any other person ("P") of his liberty.
(2) But that is subject to—
(a) the following provisions of this section, and
(b) section 4B.
(3) D may deprive P of his liberty if, by doing so, D is giving effect to a relevant decision of the court.
(4) A relevant decision of the court is a decision made by an order under section 16(2)(a) in relation to a matter concerning P's personal welfare.
(5) D may deprive P of his liberty if the deprivation is authorised by Schedule A1 (hospital and care home residents: deprivation of liberty)."
I shall consider the provisions of Schedule A1 later.
"5 Acts in connection with care or treatment
(1) If a person ("D") does an act in connection with the care or treatment of another person ("P"), the act is one to which this section applies if—
(a) before doing the act, D takes reasonable steps to establish whether P lacks capacity in relation to the matter in question, and
(b) when doing the act, D reasonably believes—
(i) that P lacks capacity in relation to the matter, and
(ii) that it will be in P's best interests for the act to be done.
(2) D does not incur any liability in relation to the act that he would not have incurred if P—
(a) had had capacity to consent in relation to the matter, and
(b) had consented to D's doing the act.
(3) Nothing in this section excludes a person's civil liability for loss or damage, or his criminal liability, resulting from his negligence in doing the act.
(4) ….."
"6 Section 5 acts: limitations
(1) If D does an act that is intended to restrain P, it is not an act to which section 5 applies unless two further conditions are satisfied.
(2) The first condition is that D reasonably believes that it is necessary to do the act in order to prevent harm to P.
(3) The second is that the act is a proportionate response to—
(a) the likelihood of P's suffering harm, and
(b) the seriousness of that harm.
(4) For the purposes of this section D restrains P if he—
(a) uses, or threatens to use, force to secure the doing of an act which P resists, or
(b) restricts P's liberty of movement, whether or not P resists.
(5) . . .(the following subsections are not material)"
"24(1) The managing authority must request a standard authorisation in any of the following cases.
(2) The first case is where it appears to the managing authority that the relevant person—
(a) is not yet accommodated in the relevant hospital or care home,
(b) is likely—at some time within the next 28 days—to be a detained resident in the relevant hospital or care home, and
(c) is likely—
(i) at that time, or
(ii) at some later time within the next 28 days, to meet all of the qualifying requirements.
(3) The second case is where it appears to the managing authority that the relevant person—
(a) is already accommodated in the relevant hospital or care home,
(b) is likely—at some time within the next 28 days—to be a detained resident in the relevant hospital or care home, and
(c) is likely—
(i) at that time, or
(ii) at some later time within the next 28 days, to meet all of the qualifying requirements.
(4) The third case is where it appears to the managing authority that the relevant person—
(a) is a detained resident in the relevant hospital or care home, and
(b) meets all of the qualifying requirements, or is likely to do so at some time within the next 28 days.
(5) This paragraph is subject to paragraphs 27 to 29."
"(1) The following provisions of this section shall have effect for the purposes of securing the necessary care and attention for persons who—
(a) are suffering from grave chronic disease or, being aged, infirm or physically incapacitated, are living in insanitary conditions, and
(b) are unable to devote to themselves, and are not receiving from other persons, proper care and attention.
(1A) But this section does not apply to a person ("P") in either of the following cases.
(1B) The first case is where an order of the Court of Protection authorises the managing authority of a hospital or care home (within the meaning of Schedule A1 to the Mental Capacity Act 2005) to provide P with proper care and attention.
(1C) The second case is where—
(a) an authorisation under Schedule A1 to the Mental Capacity Act 2005 is in force, or
(b) the managing authority of a hospital or care home are under a duty under paragraph 24 of that Schedule to request a standard authorisation, and
P is, or would be, the relevant person in relation to the authorisation.
(2) If the medical officer of health certifies in writing to the appropriate authority that he is satisfied after thorough inquiry and consideration that in the interests of any such person as aforesaid residing in the area of the authority, or for preventing injury to the health of, or serious nuisance to, other persons, it is necessary to remove any such person as aforesaid from the premises in which he is residing, the appropriate authority may apply to the court for an order
…..(for)
(3) …. the removal of the person to whom the application relates, by such officer of the appropriate authority as may be specified in the order, to a suitable hospital or other place in, or within convenient distance of, the area of the appropriate authority, and his detention and maintenance therein…..
(4) An order under the last foregoing subsection may be made so as to authorise a person's detention for any period not exceeding three months, and the court may from time to time by order extend that period for such further period, not exceeding three months, as the court may determine.
……….
(9) … any expenditure incurred by virtue of this section in connection with the maintenance of a person in premises where accommodation is provided under Part III of this Act shall be recoverable in like manner as expenditure incurred in providing accommodation under the said Part III.
Argument
"The statutory provision is not at all anomalous, and not at all surprising. The persons referred to in section 117(1) are an identifiable and exceptionally vulnerable class. To their inherent vulnerability they add the burden, and the responsibility for the medical and social service authorities, of having been compulsorily detained. It is entirely proper that special provision should be made for them to receive after-care, and it would be surprising, rather than the reverse, if they were required to pay for what is essentially a health-related form of care and treatment."
Discussion
"... It follows from the ECHR's ruling that because sections 5 and 6 of the 2005 Act provide a defence to a battery action, rather than prescribe a procedure, they cannot satisfy the requirements of Article 5(1)(e) in relation to a detention on grounds of unsound mind. For that reason, the Government decided to implement the judgment and bridge 'the Bournewood Gap' by way of amendments introduced to the Mental Capacity Act 2005 to provide for Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards in relation to adults who lack capacity to decide where they should reside."
It is these deprivation of liberty safeguards with which schedule A1 is concerned.
"Granting of DOL standard authorisations is a matter for the local authority in its role as a supervisory body. The responsibilities of a supervisory body, correctly understood, require it to scrutinise the assessment it receives with independence and a degree of care that is appropriate to the seriousness of the decision and to the circumstances of the individual case that are or should be known to it."
He said nothing to suggest that it is the role of the supervising body to be an accommodating authority.
"... The Secretary of State hereby directs local authorities to make arrangements under section 21(1)(a) of the Act to provide accommodation.
(a) in relation to persons who are or have been suffering from mental disorder; or (b) for the purposes of the prevention of mental disorder, for persons who are ordinarily resident in their area and for persons with no settled residence who are in the authority's area.
4. Without prejudice to the generality of subparagraph (1) and subsection 224(4) of the Act the Secretary of State hereby approves the making by local authorities of arrangements under section 21(1)(a) of the Act to provide residential accommodation (a) in relation to persons who are or have been suffering from mental disorder; or (b) for the purposes of the prevention of mental disorder for persons who are ordinarily resident in the area of another local authority but who following discharge from hospital have become resident in the authority's area."
(a) that the Mental Capacity Act 2005, on any proper reading does not impose a duty, nor confer a power upon a local authority to provide accommodation, such that the accommodation given to FM was to be regarded as provided under it rather than some other provision.
(b) that section 21(8) therefore does not exclude FM's case from the ambit of section 21.
(c) that section 21 is capable of providing and does provide a duty on Doncaster to provide accommodation for FM; and.
(d) that there being no other statutory duty or power, which it is suggested might apply, such that section 21(8) would take FM's case out of the ambit of section 21, section 22 applies.
Doncaster are therefore bound in law to recover a charge for that accommodation in accordance with regulations.
1. The Mental Capacity Act does not create either a duty or power to accommodate FM.
2. FM falls within the terms of section 21 of the National Assistance Act and is not excluded from its scope by the operation of section 21(8).
3. Section 3 of the Human Rights Act gives no reason to read down section 21(8) to reach any other conclusion.
4. FM's accommodation at Castle Garth care home has thus to be paid for by him or on his behalf, in accordance with section 22 of the National Assistance Act and regulations made under it.
5. This is not discriminatory upon an application of Article 14 read with Article 1 of Protocol 1. FM is not materially in the same position as those who receive after care under the provisions of section 117 of the Mental Health Act and the State would in any event have offered sufficient justification for the result.
6. Next, domestic legislation requires the result that I have reached and it is not suggested that this legislation is incompatible with European obligations.
[MR JUSTICE LANGSTAFF (addressing solicitors present to receive judgment): You probably do not want to say anything at the moment. I am happy to hear any submissions which you or your counsel may wish to make by paper communication in the usual way and you can talk to the Associate, if you wish, to get the communication details.]