BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just Β£5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Davies, R (on the application of) v HM Deputy Coroner for Birmingham [2003] EWCA (Civ) 1739 (02 December 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/1739.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA (Civ) 1739 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Moses J
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
(Vice-President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division)
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
and
SIR MARTIN NOURSE
____________________
The Queen on the application of CHRISTINE DAVIES |
Claimant/ Appellant |
|
- and |
||
HM DEPUTY CORONER FOR BIRMINGHAM |
Defendant/Respondent |
____________________
Richard M Barraclough QC (instructed by Solicitor, Birmingham City Council) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 4th November 2003
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Brooke :
(1) After Darren's reception assessment at which a treatment plan was established, the onus was placed on him to seek his treatments and to seek further help if required.
(2) Nobody checked to see why he did not attend for treatment, or attend reporting sick, or collect his meals.
(3) Practices are in place for those considered to be at risk (diabetics and those on heart medicines) if they do not receive their treatment to be followed up; but these practices do not seem to extend to drug users. Given all the recognised risks (especially from self-harm) amongst drug users on coming into prison, this matter needs to be reviewed.
(4) If his case had been followed up, and if he had taken the treatment prescribed for him, this may have prevented his deterioration.
(5) Darren's presentation on the Sunday night was unusual. The nurse did not elicit all the available information about the vomiting and diarrhoea, or about the absence of food or fluid intake, or about the fact that he had not taken any of his prescribed medicine.
(6) She should have discussed the case with the duty doctor.
(7) She should have been able to move him to an area for closer health care supervision. HMP Birmingham does not possess such a resource, since in-patients are not monitored by health care staff through the night.
(8) Darren's collapse in the early hours was also very unusual. Again, there should have been discussion with the duty doctor, and arrangements for closer monitoring.
"It is not the function of a coroner or his jury to determine, or appear to determine, any question of criminal or civil liability, to apportion guilt or attribute blame. This principle is expressed in rule 42 of the Rules of 1984. The rule does, however, treat criminal and civil liability differently: whereas a verdict must not be framed so as to appear to determine any question of criminal liability on the part of a named person, thereby legitimating a verdict of unlawful killing provided no one is named, the prohibition on returning a verdict so as to appear to determine any question of civil liability is unqualified, applying whether anyone is named or not."
"Neglect in this context means a gross failure to provide adequate nourishment or liquid, or provide or procure basic medical attention or shelter or warmth for someone in a dependent position (because of youth, age, illness or incarceration) who cannot provide it for himself. Failure to provide medical attention for a dependent person whose physical condition is such as to show that he obviously needs it may amount to neglect. So it may be if it is the dependent person's mental condition which obviously calls for medical attention (as it would, for example, if a mental nurse observed that a patient had a propensity to swallow razor blades and failed to report this propensity to a doctor, in a case where the patient had no intention to cause himself injury, but did thereafter swallow razor blades with fatal results). In both cases the crucial consideration will be what the dependent person's condition, whether physical or mental, appeared to be."
"Neither neglect nor self-neglect should ever form any part of any verdict unless a clear and direct causal connection is established between the conduct so described and the cause of death."
"62. What is required (by way of investigation) will vary with the circumstances. A credible accusation of murder or manslaughter by state agents will call for an investigation of the utmost rigour, conducted independently for all to see. An allegation of negligence leading to death in custody, though grave enough in all conscience, bears a different quality from a case where it is said the state has laid on lethal hands. The procedural obligation promotes interlocking aims: to minimise the risk of future like deaths; to give the beginnings of justice to the bereaved; to assuage the anxieties of the public. The means of their fulfilment cannot be reduced to a catechism of rules. What is required is a flexible approach responsive to the dictates of the facts case by case."
For the House of Lords' opinions on this passage, see para 52 below.
"87. A verdict of neglect can perform different functions. In particular, in the present context, it can identify a failure in the system adopted by the Prison Service to reduce the incidence of suicide by inmates. Alternatively, it may do no more than identify a failure of an individual prison officer to perform his duties properly. We offer two illustrations, which demonstrate the distinction we have in mind. On the one hand, the system adopted by a prison may be unsatisfactory in that it allows a prisoner who is a known suicide risk to occupy a cell by himself or does not require that prisoner to be kept under observation. On the other hand, the system may be perfectly satisfactory but the prison officer responsible for keeping observation may fall asleep on duty.
88. For the purpose of vindicating the right protected by article 2 it is more important to identify defects in the system than individual acts of negligence. The identification of defects in the system can result in it being changed so that suicides in the future are avoided. A finding of individual negligence is unlikely to lead to that result. If the facts have been investigated at the inquest, the evidence given for this purpose should usually enable the relatives to initiate civil proceedings against those responsible without the verdict identifying individuals by name. The shortcomings of civil proceedings in meeting the requirements of article 2 do not in general prevent actions in the domestic courts for damages from providing an effective remedy in cases of alleged unlawful conduct or negligence by public authorities.
89. In contrast with the position where there is individual negligence, not to allow a jury to return a verdict of neglect in relation to a defect in the system could detract substantially from the salutary effect of the verdict. A finding of neglect can bring home to the relevant authority the need for action to be taken to change the system, and thus contribute to the avoidance of suicides in the future. The inability to bring in a verdict of neglect (without identifying any individual as being involved) in our judgment significantly detracts, in some cases, from the capacity of the investigation to meet the obligations arising under article 2." (Emphasis added)
"91. In a situation where a coroner knows that it is the inquest which is in practice the way the state is fulfilling the adjectival obligation under article 2, it is for the coroner to construe the Rules in the manner required by section 6(2)(b) [of the Human Rights Act 1998]. Rule 42 can and should, contrary to R v Coroner for North Humberside and Scunthorpe, Ex p Jamieson [1995] QB 1, when necessary be construed (in relation to both criminal and civil proceedings) only as preventing an individual being named, with the result that a finding of system neglect of the type we have indicated will not contravene that rule. If the coroner is acting in accordance with the rule for this purpose he will not be offending in this respect section 6(1).
92. For a coroner to take into account today the effect of the Human Rights Act 1998 on the interpretation of the Rules is not to overrule Jamieson's case by the back door. In general the decision continues to apply to inquests, but when it is necessary so as to vindicate article 2 to give in effect a verdict of neglect, it is permissible to do so. The requirements are in fact specific to the particular inquest being conducted, and will only apply where in the judgment of the coroner a finding of the jury on neglect could serve to reduce the risk of repetition of the circumstances giving rise to the death being inquired into at the inquest."
" He was put in his cell on his own. No observations at specific intervals were required.
All this seems to have flowed from the views formed by the medical practitioners at the prison, but that in itself, while relevant, cannot rule out neglect.
There have been a number of cases where there had been medical attention but where neglect remained a possible element in a verdict ... Omissions on the part of medical practitioners are capable of forming part of the total picture which amounts to neglect."
"Notwithstanding [Counsel's] submission that neglect and negligence are two different 'animals', there is, in reality, no precise dividing line between 'a gross failure to provide ... basic medical attention' and a 'failure to provide ... medical attention'. The difference is bound to be one of degree, highly dependent on the facts of the particular case."
"But you must understand that it is nothing at all to do with negligence. It is very unusual and will only arise in a very, very, small percentage of cases, but in view of the circumstances of this case, it was appropriate that you are given the option."
A little later he emphasised again the rarity of the verdict, quoting a textbook writer as saying that such cases would be very few and far between.
"You have to establish the facts. For example, did someone make a decision? Yes or no. It is not your province to determine whether that decision was right or wrong."
"It is a very, very, narrow definition indeed. First of all there has got to be a gross failure which really means a total and complete failure; to provide adequate nourishment, liquid, et cetera, so it really means doing absolutely nothing. It doesn't mean doing your incompetent best, if that be the situation. It means doing absolutely nothing. It's far more than an error of judgment, if an error of judgment there has been. There's got to be a total and complete failure."
"An error of judgment by an individual, being an individual qualified to make that judgment, as to the appropriate medical attention needed by Mr Davies would not amount to a gross failure unless it can be said that their plan was plainly wrong and they would not have allowed the plan ... followed the plan if they were to stop and think about it in the cold light of day."
"So Nurse Spencer made her clinical assessment. Whether or not that assessment was right or wrong, as we've said more than once, we're not concerned with. She made that assessment."
"I am still concerned however that a prisoner who may be suffering from withdrawal symptoms may slip through the net because the prison officer or nurse at the Treatment Hatch may not recognise the signs or symptoms. Therefore, the sooner a new prisoner can be seen, assessed and taken under the wing of the Drugs Team the better, and although I appreciate that there are staffing and costs implications, I wonder whether a procedure could be introduced to ensure that a prisoner who arrives on a Thursday or Friday is dealt with in the same way as a prisoner who arrives earlier in the week."
" [W]here there has been neglect on the part of the State, and that neglect was a substantial contributory cause of the death, my view is that a formal and public finding of neglect on the part of the State is in general necessary in order to satisfy [the requirements of Article 2]. A formal public finding is likely to be very much more effective in prompting action to prevent a recurrence of breach of Article 2 than a private communication from the Coroner pursuant to Rule 43, particularly given the prohibition on the Coroner announcing publicly the content of his concerns at the inquest. As Lord Woolf MR said in R v Inner South London Coroner, ex parte Douglas-Williams [1999] 1 All ER 344, 349:
' where someone dies in custody, an inquest can provide the family with the only opportunity they will have of ascertaining what happened. In addition, an inquest's verdict can have a significant part to play in avoiding the repetition of inappropriate conduct and in encouraging beneficial change.'
In a democracy, the defects of the workings of the State should be open to public scrutiny and, where appropriate, to adverse public findings."
"30. The state owes a particular duty to those involuntarily in its custody Reasonable care must be taken to safeguard their lives and persons against the risk of avoidable harm.
31. The state's duty to investigate can fairly be described as procedural But in any case where a death has occurred in custody it is not a minor or unimportant duty. In this country, effect has been given to that duty for centuries by requiring such deaths to be publicly investigated before an independent judicial tribunal with an opportunity for relatives of the deceased to participate. The purposes of such an investigation are clear: to ensure so far as possible that the full facts are brought to light; that culpable and discreditable conduct is exposed and brought to public notice; that suspicion of deliberate wrongdoing (if unjustified) is allayed; that dangerous practices and procedures are rectified; and that those who have lost their relative may at least have the satisfaction of knowing that lessons learned from his death may save the lives of others."
(i) There must be a full and effective inquiry into the death at the coroner's inquest if this is realistically the only occasion on which the state will perform its procedural duty;
(ii) It is open to a jury to return a verdict incorporating a finding of neglect in a broader range of circumstances than those contemplated by the approach laid down in Jamieson's case if the verdict relates to systemic neglect;
(iii) A letter written by a coroner pursuant to Rule 43 is not an adequate substitute, for Article 2 purposes, for a verdict by the jury in cases where a verdict of neglect is available on the evidence.
Lord Justice Longmore:
(1) he told the jury that a verdict of "neglect" in answer to the question "how did Mr Davies come by his death?" was very rare;
(2) he failed to leave to the jury the question whether the conduct of Nurse Spencer constituted neglect which contributed to the death of Mr Davies;
(3) he failed to leave to the jury the question whether any systemic failure on the part of the Prison Service constituted neglect which contributed to the death of Mr Davies.
There is no appeal from these decisions.
"The state's duty to investigate is secondary to the duties not to take life unlawfully and to protect life, in the sense that it only arises where a death has occurred or life-threatening injuries have occurred . . . It can fairly be described as procedural. But in any case where a death has occurred in custody it is not a minor or unimportant duty. In this country, . . . effect has been given to that duty for centuries by requiring such deaths to be publicly investigated before an independent judicial tribunal with an opportunity for relatives of the deceased to participate. The purposes of such an investigation are clear: to ensure so far as possible that the full facts are brought to light; that culpable and discreditable conduct is exposed and brought to public notice; that suspicion of deliberate wrongdoing (if unjustified) is allayed; that dangerous practices and procedures are rectified; and that those who have lost their relative may at least have the satisfaction of knowing that lessons learned from his death may save the lives of others."
Sir Martin Nourse: