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United Kingdom Information Tribunal including the National Security Appeals Panel


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Information Tribunal including the National Security Appeals Panel >> Brigden v Information Commissioner [2007] UKIT EA_2006_0034 (05 April 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIT/2007/EA_2006_0034.html
Cite as: [2007] UKIT EA_2006_34, [2007] UKIT EA_2006_0034

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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0034
Freedom of Information Act 2000
Heard on:
18 January 2007 and
1 March 2007
Decision Promulgated: 5th April 2007
BEFORE
INFORMATION TRIBUNAL
DEPUTY CHAIRMAN
Anisa Dhanji
and
LAY MEMBERS
Jacqueline Clark and Pieter de Waal
BETWEEN
JOHN WILLIAM BRIGDEN
and
THE INFORMATION COMMISSIONER
and
Appellant
Respondent
NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE AND GOOLE HOSPITALS NHS TRUST
Additional Party
DECISION
The Tribunal allows the appeal but does not issue a substituted decision notice.

Appeal Number: EA/2006/0034
REASONS FOR DECISION
Introduction
1.     This is an appeal by Mr John Brigden (“the Appellant”), against a Decision
Notice of the Information Commissioner (“the Commissioner”) dated 18 May
2006, in connection with a request for information made by the Appellant to the
North Lincolnshire and Goole Hospitals NHS Trust (the “Trust”).
2.     The request for information related to the withdrawal of medical treatment from
the Appellant by the Trust, on 19th June 2002.
The Request for Information
3.     The Appellant has taken a number of steps and has made various complaints
in connection with the withdrawal of his treatment. He also requested the Trust
to provide him with a number of documents. There has been much
correspondence between him and the Trust, but the request for information in
issue was set out in the Appellant’s letter to the Trust dated 16 February 2005.
4.     That letter requested various documents. It is paragraph 1 that is relevant to
this appeal. It stated as follows:
“I require a copy of the specific “zero-tolerance and or withdrawal of treatment
policy/s” in use by your Trust (and therefore applicable to me at that time, as
your then patient) and referred to by your Divisional Manager of Medicine,
Frank Hazelhurst in his Media Release of Thursday, 17 January 2002.
It is the specific “step by step” process stated within the applicable procedure,
that would, as of the above date, have been used to “withdraw treatment” from
any and all patients, that I require.”
5.     On 4th March 2005, the Trust wrote to the Appellant and provided him with
several documents. Further correspondence then ensued, in the course of
which it appears that most of the Appellant’s requests were met. By 29 March
2005, when the Appellant submitted what he described as “21 Formal
Complaints”
, he referred to only one outstanding item of information. He stated:
“I have made numerous documented requests of your Trust within and
according to the Freedom of Information Act for a full and complete copy of the
one specific individually named actual Policy that was referred to and strictly
adhered to and used by your Trust to Withdraw my Treatment 19.06.02.
The North Lincolnshire and Goole Hospitals NHS Trust have failed to provide
me with a copy.”
6.     In his Formal Complaint 1, the Appellant explained that he has sought the
above information in order to support his complaint that the Trust withdrew his
treatment on 19 June 2002 without “sufficient or relevant grounds” required
“according to any individual or specific NHS or Trust Policy.”
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0034
7. On 21st April 2005, Mr A K North, Chief Executive of the Trust, replied to the
Appellant’s letter of 29th March 2005, as follows:
“…I would acknowledge that you have not received a copy of a Northern
Lincolnshire and Goole (NLG) Hospitals NHS Trust Policy covering the above
period and providing specific guidance on the withdrawal of treatment where
patients are violent and abusive. As I believe you have been informed by
Simon Rigg, this is because no such policy existed for the merged Trust at that
time.
I can also confirm, however, that in November 2001 the Department of Health
(DOH) issued guidance to Trusts under cover of Health Service Circular HSC
2001/018 ‘Withholding Treatment from Violent and Abusive Patients in NHS
Trusts – NHS Zero Tolerance Zone’ on this issue. This was made available to
senior Trust management in January 2002 ……and I can confirm therefore
[sic]
would have been available and referred to at the time of the withdrawal of your
treatment
.
(emphasis added)
Whilst I understand that Simon Rigg has previously sent you a copy of the
above mentioned circular, the detailed guidance document enclosed with the
circular was not sent to you, although Simon Rigg did confirm that copies were
available from the DOH. I have however now enclosed a copy of the complete
guidance received by the NHS Trusts, for your reference.
In summary, therefore, whilst no specific policy existed for NLG, there was in
fact National NHS policy on the withdrawal of treatment available to Trusts
covering the period in question.”
Mr North went on to say that he accepted that the above guidance was not
strictly adhered to in the Trust’s decision to withhold treatment from the
Appellant.
8.     On 6 May 2006, Mr North wrote again to the Appellant. In respect of the
Appellant’s Formal Complaint 1, Mr North stated:
“I have already acknowledged to you in my letter of 21st April 2005, that the
staff involved in the withdrawal of your treatment in 2002 failed to strictly
adhere to the guidance that was in fact current and available to the Trust at
that time…”
He gave a similar response in respect of the Appellant’s Formal Complaint 2.
The Complaint to the Information Commissioner
9.     On 22 April 2005 the Appellant made a complaint to the Information
Commissioner. His grounds were as follows:
“I asked the Trust to provide me with a copy of the specific policy they used to
withdraw my treatment, they told me they could not be specific and did not
produce it. Today 22 April 2005 the Trust have written + admitted they did have
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0034
a specific policy and failed to produce it via my Freedom of Information
Request, and have only done so now as it is the subject of an NHS formal
complaint I have made about this very issue.”
10.   The Commissioner undertook inquiries. He put a number of specific questions
to the Trust in writing, and also had several telephone discussions with the
Trust. The Commissioner also communicated with the Appellant, in writing and
by telephone. The Commissioner informed the Appellant, in advance of issuing
his Decision Notice, that he was satisfied that the Trust did not have a policy
specific to the Trust at the time of the Appellant’s request. He asked if the
Appellant had any evidence to demonstrate that the specific policy he had
asked for did exist. The Appellant’s replies to the Commissioner are not entirely
clear. He appeared to maintain that the Trust did in fact have a policy, but it is
not clear whether he then accepted that he had been provided with all the
relevant documentation.
11.   The Commissioner’s inquiries focused on whether the Trust had complied with
section 1 of the Freedom of Information Act 2000 (“the Act”) (right to
information). The Commissioner did not consider whether the Trust had
complied with section 10 of the Act (time for compliance), on the basis that the
Trust had agreed with the Appellant a response date exceeding 20 days.
12.   Following his inquiries, the Commissioner was satisfied, that the Trust had
complied with Section 1 of the Act. Specifically, the Commissioner found, as
stated at paragraph 4.10 of the Decision Notice, that:
“…there was no single policy ‘specific’ to the complainant’s withdrawal of
treatment in 2002. Rather, a host of national and historical guidance and policy
was of relevance and this has been provided. In the absence of a “specific”
policy, Health Circular HSC 2001/18, is the closest document the Trust have
been able to supply of relevance to the complainant’s circumstances at the
relevant time.”
13.   Accordingly, the Commissioner did not uphold the Appellant’s complaint and
required no remedial steps to be taken by the Trust. The Commissioner issued
a Decision Notice dated 18th May 2006 to this effect.
The Appeal to the Tribunal
14.   By a Notice of Appeal dated 15th June 2006, the Appellant appealed to the
Tribunal against the Decision Notice. The Notice of Appeal does not set out the
grounds of appeal. Following inquiries by the Tribunal staff, the Appellant
stated, in his e mail of 28th June 2006, that he disagreed:
“...with the whole of the Commissioner’s arguments in his decision notice, not
because of any fault of the Commissioner but because his decision notice was,
in hindsight, based on “unmeaningful, inaccurate and misleading” information
given to him by the NLG Trust.
15.   The Tribunal joined the Trust as a party pursuant to Rule 7 of the Information
Tribunal (Enforcement Appeals) Rules 2005 (2the Rules”).
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0034
Evidence and Submissions
16.   The Tribunal has considered all the documents and submissions received from
the parties, even if not specifically referred to in this determination. In
particular, the Tribunal has considered the agreed bundle of documents, as
well as the further submissions received in response to the Tribunal’s
Directions of 26 January 2007.
17.   At the request of the parties, this appeal has been determined without an oral
hearing, pursuant to rule 16 of the Rules. Having regard to the nature of the
issues raised, the Tribunal was satisfied that the appeal could be properly
determined without an oral hearing.
Findings
18.   The scope of the Tribunal’s jurisdiction in dealing with an appeal from a
Decision Notice is set out in section 58(1) of the Act. If the Tribunal considers
that the notice is not in accordance with the law, or to the extent the notice
involved an exercise of discretion by the Commissioner, the Tribunal considers
that he ought to have exercised the discretion differently, the Tribunal must
allow the appeal or substitute such other notice as could have been served by
the Commissioner. Otherwise, the Tribunal must dismiss the appeal. Section
58(2) confirms that on an appeal, the Tribunal may review any finding of fact on
which the notice is based.
19.   In the present case there was no exercise of discretion by the Commissioner.
20.   Having considered carefully the Appellant’s initial request (as set out in
paragraph 4 above), as well as all the other evidence and submissions put
forward by the parties during the course of this appeal, the Tribunal considers
that there has been some misinterpretation, both on the part of the Trust, as
well as the Commissioner, as to precisely what information the Appellant had
requested. However, in the Tribunal’s view, it is clear that the Appellant was
requesting information not only as to the policy or policies applicable at the
time his treatment was withdrawn (which we refer to for convenience as “Part
A” of his request), but also that he was seeking information as to which policy
or policies, if any, were actually applied by the Trust in deciding to withdraw his
treatment (which we refer to for convenience as “Part B” of his request). If there
was any doubt on the part of the Trust as to what information the Appellant
was seeking, then the Trust had an obligation to assist the Appellant to clarify
this, pursuant to its duties under section 16 of the Act (duty to provide
assistance and advice).
21.   We consider that it was clear from his letters of 16 February 2005 and in
particular from his letter of 29th March 2005 that the Appellant’s request
included Part B. In his letter of 29th March 2005 he specifically requests:
“…the one specific individually named actual Policy that was referred to and
strictly adhered to and used by your Trust to Withdraw my Treatment
19.06.02.”
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0034
The Appellant reiterated this in his e mail dated 2 October 2006, in which he
explained the basis of his appeal in the following terms:
“The NLG NHS Trust instead provided me with a mixed bundle of various
policies, without any indication as to which was the specific policy they did refer
to, and should have referred to, did adhere to, and should have adhered to”.
22.   The Trust appears to have responded to the Appellant only in relation to the
Part A request, namely as to which policy or policies were applicable at the
time the Appellant’s treatment was withdrawn. Likewise, as is evident from
paragraph 4.2 of the Decision Notice, the Commissioner appears to have
directed its inquiries to the same issue, and to confirming that such policy or
policies had been supplied to the Appellant.
23.   It was the absence of proper consideration of the Part B request by the Trust
and the Commissioner that led the Tribunal to seek further evidence from the
parties by its Directions of 27 January 2007. The response to the Directions
from Mr Riggs, on behalf of the Trust, includes a statement that:
“At no time in correspondence with myself did Mr Brigden ask for a full and
complete copy of the one specific individually named actual policy that was
referred to and strictly adhered to and used by your Trust to withdraw my
treatment”.
The Tribunal finds this statement puzzling because the request, in exactly
these terms, was made by the Appellant in his letter dated 29th March 2005 to
the Trust’s Chief Executive, and that letter was acknowledged by him on 30th
March 2005.
24.   We turn now to consider more specifically whether the Trust has complied with
its obligations under the Act in respect of Parts A and B of the Appellant’s
request.
Part A
25.   The Tribunal makes the following findings in respect of Part A of the
Appellant’s request:
•      When the Trust withdrew treatment from the Appellant on 19th June 2002,
it did not have a policy, specific to the Trust, in relation to the withdrawal
of treatment. The Trust was then in the process of formulating a policy.
That policy (the Policy for the Management of Violent and Aggressive
Behaviour), came into effect in 2003. It was supplied to the Appellant on
21 March 2005.
•      The Appellant’s belief that there was a policy specific to the Trust appears
to be based on the Trust’s press release dated 17 January 2002, headed
‘Policy Aims to Reduce Abuse of Staff by Patients”. This press release
concerns the Trust’s decision to send out letters to patients who verbally
or physically abused members of staff. In it, the Trust’s Divisional
Manager of Medicine, Frank Hazlehurst is quoted as stating that the Trust
had already adopted a zero-tolerance policy. This is the press release that
6

Appeal Number: EA/2006/0034
the Appellant referred to in his initial request on 16 February (see
paragraph 4 above). The Tribunal is satisfied that the policy referred to in
the press release was the guidance issued by the Department of Health.
This was the Health Service Circular HSC 2001/018 ‘Withholding
Treatment from Violent and Abusive Patients in NHS Trusts – NHS Zero
Tolerance Zone’ (the “NHS Policy”). This is also clear from the reference,
later in the press release, to “the government’s new policy”.
•      The NHS Policy was applicable at the time the Trust withdrew treatment
from the Appellant. It appears that the NHS Policy is two parts, comprising
a circular which the Trust sent to the Appellant on 23 March 2005, and a
guidance document, which the Trust sent to the Appellant on 21 April
2005.
•      There were a number of other policies and documents of general
relevance that were in effect, and these were provided to the Appellant on
21st March 2005 and 23 March 2005.
These findings are entirely consistent with the Commissioner’s findings as set
out in the Decision Notice. In short, the Tribunal finds that the Trust complied
with its obligations under section 1 of the Act in relation to Part A of the
Appellant’s request.
Part B
26.   As regards which policy or policies were actually applied by the Trust when it
withdrew treatment from the Appellant, the Tribunal finds that the Trust did not
respond properly to this part of the Appellant’s request, and that it has given
inconsistent responses on the issue. As noted in paragraph 7 above, Mr A K
North said, in his letter of 21st April 2005, that NHS Policy “would have been
available and referred to at the time of the withdrawal of your treatment”.
This
suggests that the NHS Policy was actually referred to at the relevant time.
27.   However, in response to the Tribunal’s Directions of 26 January 2007, the
Trust has said that in fact, it has no record of which policies, if any, were
referred to by the Trust in withdrawing the Appellant’s treatment. The Trust has
now explained that Frank Hazelhurst, who wrote to the Appellant withdrawing
his treatment on 19th June 2002, was on long term sick leave when the
Appellant made his request in February 2005, and that Mr Nasr, the consultant
treating the Appellant, had by then left the Trust. The Trust has also said that it
had “no documented records as to which of the policies in existence they had
relied on to withdraw Mr Brigden’s treatment”
. The Tribunal accepts that this is
so; there is no reason, on the evidence before the Tribunal, to doubt the Trust’s
explanation, bearing in mind in particular the length of time that had elapsed
between the withdrawal of treatment in 2002 and the Appellant’s request in
2005 after the Act came into force. The Tribunal accepts that the Trust does
not have this information, and that it did not have it at the date of the
Appellant’s request. Whether they should have had such information is not a
matter for the Tribunal. The Tribunal is concerned only with whether the Trust
complied with its obligations under the Act to provide the information it held
when the request was received, or to inform the Appellant if it did not hold such
7

Appeal Number: EA/2006/0034
information. The Tribunal finds that the Trust was in breach of its obligations
under section 1(a) of the Act by failing to inform the Appellant that it did not
hold the information he had requested.
28.   The Tribunal notes that the issue of what policy or policies were actually
applied by the Trust when it withdrew treatment from the Appellant has also
formed part of the Appellant’s complaint to the Healthcare Commission and
has been dealt with in their decision dated 26 May 2006. They upheld the
Appellant’s complaint that he should not have been excluded from treatment
and found that:
“There is no evidence that any withdrawal of treatment policy or procedure was
referred to or followed by the trust staff during the decision to exclude you, or
during the carrying out of this exclusion process…..The trust response to you
said that the national guidance on zero tolerance ‘would have been referred to,
which
is not the same thing as stating that it was definitely referred to”.
The Healthcare Commission went on to set out the reasons why it considered it
extremely unlikely that the Department of Health guidance was used in relation
to the Appellant’s case. It then concluded that:
“….the trust’s statement, made several times in its response letter to your
complaint, that it did not ‘adhere strictly’ to the procedure for withdrawal of
treatment, is inadequate and misleading”
29.   For the avoidance of doubt, the Tribunal makes it clear that it has referred to
the Healthcare Commission’s findings for completeness, but that it has reached
its findings independently of their findings.
30.   For the reasons set out in paragraphs 27 and 28 above, the Tribunal allows the
Appellant’s appeal against the Decision Notice. However, since the Tribunal
has found that at the date of the request, the Trust did not (and does not) hold
the relevant information, the Tribunal does not issue a substituted notice and
no action by the Trust is required.
Date 05 April 2007
Anisa Dhanji
Deputy Chairman
8


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