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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> RN (Deprivation of Liberty and Parental Consent) [2022] EWHC 2576 (Fam) (29 September 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2022/2576.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 2576 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
IN THE MATTER OF THE SENIOR COURTS ACT 1981
Leeds Family Court 1 Westgate Leeds LS1 3AP |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a Section 9 Deputy High Court Judge
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XY COUNCIL |
Applicant |
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MN |
First Respondent |
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FB |
Second Respondent |
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RN (A Child acting by her Children's Guardian, SH) |
Third Respondent |
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Re RN (Deprivation of Liberty and Parental Consent) |
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For the Applicant: Alex Taylor, Counsel
For the 1st Respondent: James Yearsley, Counsel
For the 2nd Respondent: Chloe Lee, Counsel
For the 3rd Respondent: Jane Aldred, Solicitor.
Heard on 20-23 September 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
HIS HONOUR JUDGE HAYES QC:
Introduction
(i) The LA by Alex Taylor of Counsel
(ii) The Mother by James Yearsley of Counsel
(iii) The Father by Chloe Lee of Counsel
(iv) The Child's Solicitor is Jane Aldred.
(i) keep all external doors locked to prevent RN leaving the home;
(ii) insist that RN can only leave the home if she is escorted by one to two carers;
(iii) keep RN under constant supervision at all times when she is awake (with particular care being taken when she is in the bathroom and/or kitchen), and;
(iv) to restrict her access to modes of social communication and favoured activities.
The Issue
(i) I am asked to consider whether the care arrangements are rendered lawful through RN's parents having consented to the same; or
(ii) Alternatively, if I were to determine parental consent cannot, as a matter of law, render the care arrangements lawful, then I am invited to authorise those arrangements through declarations under the inherent jurisdiction of the High Court.
The Legal Position
(i) Re D (A Child) (Deprivation of Liberty) [2016] 1 FLR 142 (Keehan J);
(ii) A Local Authority -v- D and Others [2016] 2 FLR 601 (Keehan J);
(iii) Re D (A Child) [2019] UKSC 42 (Supreme Court);
(iv) Lincolnshire CC -v- TGA and others [2022] EWHC 2323 (Fam) (Lieven J); and
(v) Lancashire CC -v- PX and others [2022] EWHC 2379 (HHJ Burrows sitting s.9).
(i) whether the placement satisfied the first limb of the test set out in Cheshire West;
(ii) if so, whether the parents' consent to his placement came within the exercise of parental responsibility in respect of a 15-year-old young person;
(iii) if not, should the court exercise its powers under the inherent jurisdiction and declare that the deprivation of liberty of D was lawful and in his best interests.
"The essential issue in this case is whether D's parents can, in the proper exercise of parental responsibility, consent to his accommodation in Hospital B and thus render what would otherwise be a deprivation of liberty not a deprivation of liberty (i.e. the second limb of the test in Cheshire West is not satisfied)".
"[55] When considering the exercise of parental responsibility in this case and whether a decision falls within the zone of parental responsibility, it is inevitable and necessary that I take into account D's autism and his other diagnosed conditions. I do so because they are important and fundamental factors to take into account when considering his maturity and his ability to make decisions about his day-to-day life.
[56] An appropriate exercise of parental responsibility in respect of a 5-year-old child
will differ very considerably from what is or is not an appropriate exercise of parental responsibility in respect of a 15-year-old young person.
[57] The decisions which might be said to come within the zone of parental responsibility for a 15-year old who did not suffer from the conditions with which D has been diagnosed will be of a wholly different order from those decisions which have to be taken by parents whose 15-year-old son suffers with D's disabilities. Thus a decision to keep such a 15-year-old boy under constant supervision and control would undoubtedly be considered an inappropriate exercise of parental responsibility and would probably amount to ill-treatment. The decision to keep an autistic 15-year-old boy who has erratic, challenging and potentially harmful behaviours under constant supervision and control is a quite different matter; to do otherwise would be neglectful. In such a case I consider the decision to keep this young person under constant supervision and control is the proper exercise of parental responsibility.
[58] The parents of this young man are making decisions, of which he is incapable, in the welfare best interests of their son. It is necessary for them to do so to protect him and to provide him with the help and support he needs.
[59] I acknowledge that D is not now cared for at home nor 'in a home setting'. His regime of care and treatment was advised by his treating clinicians and supported by his parents. They wanted to secure the best treatment support and help for their son. They have done so. It has proved extremely beneficial for D who is now ready to move to a new residential home out of a hospital setting. What other loving and caring parent would have done otherwise?
[60] Those arrangements are and were made on the advice of the treating clinicians. All professionals involved in his life and in reviewing his care and treatment are agreed that these arrangements are overwhelmingly in D's best interests. On the facts of this case, why on public policy or human rights grounds should these parents be denied the ability to secure the best medical treatment and care for their son? Why should the state interfere in these parents' role to make informed decisions about their son's care and living arrangements?
[61] I can see no reasons or justifications for denying the parents that role or permitting the state to interfere in D's life or that of his family.
[62] I accept the position might well be very different if the parents were acting contrary to medical advice or having consented to his placement at Hospital B, they simply abandoned him or took no interest or involvement in his life thereafter.
[63] The position could not be more different here. D's parents have regular phone calls with him. They regularly visit him at the unit. Every weekend D has supported visits to the family home. He greatly enjoys spending time at home with his parents and his younger brother.
[64] In my judgment, on the facts of this case, it would be wholly disproportionate, and fly in the face of common sense, to rule that the decision of the parents to place D at Hospital B was not well within the zone of parental responsibility.
Conclusions
[65] I am satisfied that the circumstances in which D is accommodated would amount to a deprivation of liberty but for his parents' consent to his placement there.
[66] I am satisfied that, on the particular facts of this case, the consent of D's parents to his placement at Hospital B, with all of the restrictions placed upon his life there, falls within the 'zone of parental responsibility'. In the exercise of their parental responsibility for D, I am satisfied they have and are able to consent to his placement.
[67] In the case of a young person under the age of 16, the court may, in the exercise of the inherent jurisdiction, authorise a deprivation of liberty.
[68] I do not propose to give wider guidance in respect of the approach taken by hospital trusts or local authorities in the cases of young people under the age of 16 who are or may be subject to a deprivation of liberty. These cases are invariably fact-specific and require a close examination of the 'concrete' situation on the ground".
"Where a child is not looked after, then an apparent deprivation of liberty may not in fact be a deprivation at all if it falls within the zone of parental responsibility exercised by his parents (see Re D). The exercise of parental responsibility may amount to a valid consent, with the consequence that the second limb of Cheshire West is not met. In those circumstances, the court will not need to make any declaration as to the lawfulness of the child's deprivation of liberty".
25. However, the Supreme Court explicitly confined its decision to the position in relation to 16 and 17 year olds. At paragraph [3] Lady Hale stated, "The principal issue can be simply stated: Is it within the scope of parental responsibility to consent to living arrangements for a 16 or 17-year-old child which would otherwise amount to a deprivation of liberty within the meaning of Art 5?" However, she added that, "…similar issues would arise in a case concerning a child under 16".
"[46] But what is the relationship between holding that the placement did deprive D of his liberty within the meaning of Art 5 of the European Convention and the view that it might otherwise have been within the scope of parental responsibility? Parental responsibility is about the relationship between parent and child and between parents and third parties: it is essentially a private law relationship, although a public authority may also hold parental responsibility. As Irwin LJ correctly pointed out (Re D (Parental Responsibility: Consent to 16-year-old Child's Deprivation of Liberty [2017] EWCA Civ 1695, [2018] 2 FLR 13, at para [157]) human rights, on the other hand, are about the relationship between individuals (or other private persons) and the State. It is, however, now agreed that any deprivation of liberty in Placement B or Placement C was attributable to the State. So is there any scope for the operation of parental responsibility to authorise what would otherwise be a deprivation of liberty?
[47] There are two contexts in which a parent might attempt to use parental responsibility in this way. One is where the parent is the detainer or uses some other private person to detain the child. However, in both Nielsen and Storck it was recognised that the State has a positive obligation to protect individuals from being deprived of their liberty by private persons, which would be engaged in such circumstances.
[48] The other context is that a parent might seek to authorise the State to do the detaining. But it would be a startling proposition that it lies within the scope of parental responsibility for a parent to license the State to violate the most fundamental human rights of a child: a parent could not, for example, authorise the State to inflict what would otherwise be torture or inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment upon his child. Likewise, s 25 of the 1989 Act recognises that a parent cannot authorise the State to deprive a child of his liberty by placing him in secure accommodation. While this proposition may not hold good for all the Convention rights, in particular the qualified rights which may be restricted in certain circumstances, it must hold good for the most fundamental rights – to life, to be free from torture or ill-treatment, and to liberty. In any event, the State could not do that which it is under a positive obligation to prevent others from doing.
[49] In conclusion, therefore, it was not within the scope of parental responsibility for D's parents to consent to a placement which deprived him of his liberty. Although there is no doubt that they, and indeed everyone else involved, had D's best interests at heart, we cannot ignore the possibility, nay even the probability, that this will not always be the case. That is why there are safeguards required by Art 5 of the European Convention. Without such safeguards, there is no way of ensuring that those with parental responsibility exercise it in the best interests of the child, as the Secretaries of State acknowledge that they must. In this case, D enjoyed the safeguard of the proceedings in the Court of Protection. In future, the deprivation of liberty safeguards contained in the MCA 2005 (as amended by the Mental Capacity (Amendment) Act 2019) will apply to children of 16 and 17. I would therefore allow this appeal and invite the parties' submissions on how best to incorporate this conclusion in a declaration.
[50] Logically, this conclusion would also apply to a younger child whose liberty was restricted to an extent which was not normal for a child of his age, but that question does not arise in this case. The common law may draw a sharp distinction, in relation to the deprivation of liberty, between those who have reached the age of 16 and those who have not, but the extent to which that affects the analysis under the Human Rights Act 1998 is not clear to me and we have heard no argument upon it. I therefore prefer to express no view upon the question. Nor would I express any view on the extent of parental responsibility in relation to other matters, such as serious and irreversible medical treatment, which do not entail a deprivation of liberty. Some reference to this was made in the course of argument, but it does not arise in this case, which is solely concerned with depriving 16 and 17-year-olds of their liberty…"
"[124] As [Lady Hale] also explains (para [1]), and as is common ground, the application of Art 5 of the European Convention is to be tested by reference to three components: (a) the objective component of confinement in a particular restricted place for a not negligible length of time; (b) the subjective component of lack of valid consent; and (c) the attribution of responsibility to the State … It is further common ground that on the facts of this case, components (a) and (c) are satisfied. The area of debate is about component (b): whether on the facts of this case the exercise of parental responsibility could make up for the lack of consent by D himself.
[125] That it could do so while he was under the age of 16 was not in dispute in the courts below. That was supported by reference to the decision of the ECHR in Nielsen v Denmark (Application No 10929/84) (1988) 11 EHRR 175 (see Lady Hale, para [34]). It is worth stating at the outset the reasons for this view, as stated by Keehan J, and adopted by Sir James Munby P giving the leading judgment in the Court of Appeal (para [108])…"
"The good sense of that appraisal has not, as I understand it, been challenged by any of the parties to this court…"
"… I say at once, with respect, that I am not persuaded that such comparisons are fair or helpful. D's parents were not authorising the state to commit torture or anything comparable to it. They were doing what they could, and what any conscientious parent would do, to advance his best interests by authorising the treatment on which all the authorities were agreed. That this involved a degree of confinement was an incidental but necessary part of that treatment, and no more than that".
"[159] I note with some concern that Lady Hale (para [50]) has raised a question as to the logic of the differential treatment of those under 16, at least in the context of Art 5 of the European Convention taken on its own. That does not reflect any issue between the parties. Keehan J's application of parental responsibility to those under 16 has not been questioned by any of the parties in the Court of Appeal or in this court. Nor does Lady Hale, as I understand it, suggest that there is anything in the Strasbourg law as it stands which invalidates that aspect of Keehan J's judgment. For the time being his reasoning remains the law, and as such appears to fit well with the new legislative scheme".
"[50] The contrast with the statutory position of children aged 16 and over is set out by Lady Hale in Re D at [26]. There are a host of statutory provisions which mark the legal importance of attaining the age of 16, and the legal separation that gives between a child's rights and those of his/her parents.
[51] However, the position is different for a child under 16 years old, both in common law and under the ECHR. It follows that the very nature of "family life" and therefore the protections under Article 8 for the parents' rights, will be different for a younger child. It is however critical to have in mind that the exercise of any parental rights in respect of a child must be for the benefit of the child. If the parent was exercising parental rights, including consenting to the deprivation of liberty, in a way which was said to be contrary to the child's best interests then such a decision would no longer fall within the zone of parental responsibility".
Analysis and Conclusion
40. As I told Mr Taylor when that hypothetical example was introduced in submissions, I did not find it helpful addressing the issue I must resolve. Nor, I suggested, did it help the parents to have to listen to it. Mr Taylor used it to make the point that there should be no different approach to children of different ages. But the choice of the hypothetical scenario illustrates just how far removed that is from what this Court is in fact being asked to address. Given RN's complex needs and the care she requires to keep her safe, I ask, rhetorically, what these parents must think when listening to that example. The two situations are not remotely comparable. As Lord Carnworth rightly cautioned in Re D, the parents in that case were not acting in an abusive or harmful manner towards their child. They "…were doing what they could, and what any conscientious parent would do, to advance their child's best interests. They did so by authorising the treatment on which all the authorities were agreed. That this involved a degree of confinement was an incidental but necessary part of that treatment, and no more than that".
41. Lord Carnworth's essential point is irrefutable. If the law is to ensure respect for the private and family life of those who meet the day-to-day challenges of caring for disabled children, a distinction must be drawn between parenting which is abusive and parenting which is anything but. Caring parents of children with a disability do not want those children to be subjected to restrictions on their liberty. It is the child's disability which is the root cause of the restrictive care arrangements, not the conduct of the parents. Far from acting in a manner that is harmful to the child, the restrictions that are in place are vital for their protection. Where the decisions that such parents make are driven by that objective, why should such parents be the subject of state intervention in their lives (in the form of High Court litigation)? This is the point made clearly and persuasively by Keehan J in his first instance ruling in Re D: "… Why on public policy or human rights grounds should these parents be denied the ability to secure the best medical treatment and care for their son? Why should the state interfere in these parents' role to make informed decisions about their son's care and living arrangements? I can see no reasons or justifications for denying the parents that role or permitting the state to interfere in D's life or that of his family" (paragraph [60] and [61])..
42. I consider that there is no good reason for me to take a different approach in the current case. Indeed, I consider that those words apply with equal force to RN's situation. I am fortified in this conclusion by the ruling of Lieven J in the case of Lincolnshire CC -v- TGA and others. To take a different approach would also require me to ignore the observations of Lord Carnworth in Re D that for children under 16, "… his [Keehan J's] reasoning remains the law". RN is only 12 years old. That law therefore applies to her.
HHJ Hayes KC, sitting as a s.9 Deputy High Court Judge
29 September 2022