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England and Wales Court of Protection Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Protection Decisions >> A County Council v MB & Ors [2010] EWCOP 2508 (22 October 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCOP/2010/2508.html Cite as: [2011] Fam Law 32, [2010] EWHC 2508 (Fam), [2010] EWHC 2508 (COP), [2011] 1 FLR 790, [2010] EWCOP 2508, (2011) 14 CCL Rep 35, [2011] PTSR 795 |
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Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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A County Council |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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MB (by the Official Solicitor as her litigation friend) and JB and A Residential Home |
1st Respondent 2nd Respondent 3rd Respondent |
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Bridget Dolan (instructed by the Official Solicitor) for the First Respondent MB
Hearing dates: 7 and 8 September 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Charles J :
Introduction
A timetable and some cross reference to the provisions of Schedule A1 to the MCA 2005 and the issues raised concerning them
i) On 22 February 2010, MB was admitted to the Residential Home.
ii) On the same day, the managing authority issued an urgent authorisation of her deprivation of liberty there, under MCA Sch A1 part 5. This was recorded on form UA1.
iii) An urgent authorisation can last for a maximum of 7 days (MCA Sch A1 paragraph 78(2)). The UA1 Form provides for recording the date (but not the time) that an urgent authorisation commences. It was recorded that the authorisation commences on 22 February 2010 and will come to an end on 1 March 2010 (its author having crossed out 29 February 2010 presumably because there was not one in 2010).
iv) Time issues were raised as to the period of the authorisation of the deprivation of liberty given by the first urgent authorisation.
i) On 24 February 2010, the managing authority completed form SA1 requesting a standard DOLS authorisation from the Applicant (as the supervisory body) pursuant to MCA Sch A1 paragraph 24.
ii) The Applicant appointed Ms SP and Dr MK as respectively the best interests and mental health assessors.
iii) All six assessments were completed by 26 February 2010.
iv) All of the six qualifying requirements were met and the standard authorisation that was given is dated 1 March 2010 under the words "Accordingly this standard authorisation is given" and the signature of the relevant person.
v) Earlier in the form under the words "duration of authorisation" it is stated that it "will come into force on Monday 1 March 2010 and will remain in force until Monday 29 March 2010 unless the supervisory body notified otherwise".
vi) The best interests assessment provided that "the maximum period it is appropriate for a standard authorisation to be in force is one month".
vii) Time issues arose as to the period of the authorisation of Mrs B's deprivation of liberty given by this first standard authorisation, but as mentioned above by the end of the hearing it was accepted (in my view correctly) that it ended at midnight on Monday 29 March 2010 (which is within the period of one month set by the best interests assessor as the authorisation is stated to come into force on 1 March).
i) On 16 March 2010, the managing authority requested a further standard authorisation (pursuant to MCA Sch A1 paragraph 29).
ii) Following her second best interests assessment, on 28 March 2010 Ms SP determined that Mrs B was deprived of her liberty but that the best interests requirement was not met.
iii) In the absence of a positive best interests assessment no further standard authorisation was (or could be) issued by the Applicant (as the supervisory body) and the existing standard authorisation remained in force until its expiry (see MCA Sch A1 paragraph 50).
iv) The supervisory body (the Applicant) gave written notice that they were prohibited from issuing a standard authorisation to the managing authority (pursuant to MCA Sch A1 paragraph 58(2)(a)) on 1 April 2010.
v) The managing authority were aware by at the latest 30 March 2010 (and on my reading of the evidence on 28 or 29 March – albeit that I have not found an express reference to this) that the best interests assessment did not support the giving of a further standard authorisation and thus that that essential qualifying requirement for the further standard authorisation it had requested was not met.
i) On 30 March 2010, at the request of the Applicant (the supervisory body) who had obtained urgent legal advice, the managing authority issued an urgent authorisation.
ii) That second urgent authorisation is dated 30 March 2010 and states that it commences on 30 March 2010 but leaves blank the box on the form UA1 that states when it will come to an end (contrary to MCA Sch A1 paragraph 80(c)). The maximum period of validity for an urgent authorisation is 7 days (MCA Sch A1 para 78(2)). It records that the purpose for which this urgent authorisation is given is:
"Mrs B's social care team have requested that Mrs B remain at [the Residential Home] until her best interests can be determined by the Court of Protection, she will need to be deprived of her liberty pending the court's decision."
iii) On 31 March 2010 at 7.32pm, Form UA1 (dated 30 March 2010) and Form UA2 (dated 1 April 2010) were faxed to the supervisory body (the Applicant) by the managing authority (the Residential Care Home). By the Form UA2 the managing authority requested (under MCA Sch A1 paragraph 77(3)) that the Applicant (the supervisory body) extend the period of the urgent authorisation pending an application to the Court of Protection. This request stated that:
"It is essential for the existing detention to continue until the request for a standard authorisation has been disposed of, because:
Social care team have requested that Mrs B remain at the Residential Home pending Court of Protection decision. A seven day extension is requested so that this might progress."
iv) The form recording the Applicant's (the supervisory body's) determination that an extension to 13 April should be granted is dated 31 March 2010. That form records that:
"The exceptional reasons why it has not been possible to dispose of the request for a standard authorisation is that:
An application is to be made to the Court of Protection for an urgent judgment as to Mrs B's best interests
And it is essential for the existing deprivation of liberty to continue until the request is disposed of because:
The social care team are concerned that Mrs B would be at risk of harm if she were to return home"
v) Part 2 of the Form UA1, which relates to the extension of an urgent authorisation is dated 31 March 2010 and states that the urgent authorisation is varied and will now be in force until 13 April 2010.
vi) The validity of the second urgent authorisation and its extension is challenged.
vii) Additionally, some timing points relating to them were identified but (understandably) were not argued at any length.
i) On 6 April 2010, the Applicant completed the forms required for an application to the Court of Protection, the Official Solicitor was notified of the proceedings and a provisional hearing date of 13 April 2010 was organised with the High Court Listing Officer.
ii) On 7 April 2010, the Applicant lodged an application to the Court of Protection. In section 3 of the form under the heading "Details of issue to be challenged" the Applicant stated that the date of the decision was 30/3/2010, and in respect of the boxes relating to the introduction "Where an urgent authorisation has been given, the court may determine any question relating to any of the following matters" the Applicant ticked the following:
- the period for which the urgent authorisation is in force
- the purpose of the urgent authorisation; and
- other
But did not tick
? whether the urgent authorisation should have been given
iii) Under the heading "Other issues in the case" the Applicant asserted (amongst other things) that:
"The view of the best interests assessor was not that held by the multi-disciplinary group which met look at Mrs B's best interests. It was the decision of that group that Mrs B needed to remain in a care home, where she receives the physical care she needs in a setting where there is no risk of assault or restraint. The local authority intended to continue the attempt to resolve matters so far as Mr B was concerned by a further best interests meetings. They met with Mr B and his advocate to explain that, if Mr B remained opposed to Mrs B staying in [ the Residential Home ] following a further bests interest meeting it will be necessary to refer the matter to the Court of Protection. The further best interests meeting did not take place as it became necessary to refer the matter to the Court of Protection in any event when the best interests assessor felt unable to make a decision.
The court is requested to determine what would be in Mrs B's best interests: to return home to her husband, in familiar surroundings and with her partner of nearly 60 years, but with a risk of being over- restrained, slapped or assaulted; or to remain in a care home, safe from harm but not in her own home or with her husband.
Mr B does visit his wife at the home, and is allowed to take her away from the home, as long as he is accompanied by a responsible family member or a member of staff. The issue of contact is a further issue for consideration by the court. "
iv) Initial directions were made by District Judge Rogers on 7 April 2010. The court was not asked to make, nor did it make, any order authorising the ongoing deprivation of liberty. The directions order noted that an urgent authorisation was in place.
v) On 13 April 2010, I made an order that authorised Mrs B's deprivation of liberty at the Residential Home pursuant to sections 4A(3)-(4) and 16(2)(a) of the Mental Capacity Act 2005.
vi) No timing points were raised as to when that authorisation became effective, but in writing this judgment it occurred to me that similar points arose in this respect to ones that were raised in respect of the giving of the authorisations.
A factual overview
i) she was clearly performing her role conscientiously,
ii) she had a difficult, important and independent role to play, and
iii) I agree with her views that further assessment and investigation of, for example, (a) whether Mrs B's mental health was being detrimentally affected by her detention (if I add she appreciated that she was being detained), and I add simply by her being away from her home, and (b) how practically her distress, loss of functioning and appetite could be addressed, was appropriate.
i) to send her home without 24 hour support, which they and it seems Ms SP agreed and which the Official Solicitor and the court later agreed would place her at risk of harm and would not be in her best interests, or
ii) to remove all restraints on her ability to leave the Residential Home or on Mr B from removing her which again they considered would not be in her best interests and later both the Official Solicitor and the court agreed with this view (and it is unclear whether this is what Ms SP was suggesting for the immediate future).
Unsurprisingly therefore the motivation of the Applicant and the Residential Home was to take a course:
a) which promoted what they believed to be, and which later (and without relevant changes in the circumstances) and the Official Solicitor and the court agreed was in Mrs B's best interests and which (namely that she remain appropriately detained at the Residential Home), and
b) which was lawful and thus did not involve a breach of Article 5.
The positions of the parties in broad terms
i) they were authorised to deprive MB of her liberty by s. 4B MCA 2005, alternatively
ii) the deprivation of liberty was authorised by the second urgent authorisation, and
iii) in any event, there was no arbitrary deprivation of liberty and therefore there was no breach of MB's Article 5 rights.
Issues relating to the duration of authorisations of deprivations of liberty
i) the nature of an authorisation and its purpose, because absent express provision this indicates that it should only take effect from the time it is given, and
ii) the express provision that a standard authorisation can provide that it comes into force at a time later than the time it is given but not at an earlier time (see paragraphs 52 and 63(2)), because this provision relating to standard authorisations indicates that authorisations cannot be "back-dated".
i) includes the whole of the day on which the relevant period starts, and
ii) ends at the end of the last day,
would produce a result that the maximum period of 7 days allowed was not exceeded.
i) at the exact time on the day when it is given (see paragraphs 54 and 63(1)), or
ii) as provided by paragraphs 52 and 63(2) at a later time specified in the document giving the authorisation.
i) a period of a month or months (which would in my view be calendar months as a matter of the ordinary use of language – and see by analogy s. 5 and Schedule 1 Interpretation Act 1978), or days, is so specified, or
ii) the maximum of one year is the relevant period,
in my view (for the same reasons as given in respect of an urgent authorisation) unless and until it is decided that a maximum period can be set by reference to the exact time when a standard authorisation is given the maximum period that can be included in the authorisation should be calculated by including the whole of the day on which the authorisation is given (or expressed to start) and on the basis that it ends at the end of the last day.
Guidance on issues relating to the duration of authorisations of deprivations of liberty.
i) includes the whole of the day on which the relevant period starts, and
ii) ends at the end of the last day,
would produce a result that the maximum period(s)
i) allowed for urgent authorisations and their extension of 7 days, and
ii) allowed for standard authorisations, if that is set by a period of days, months or a year,
were not exceeded.
The validity of the second urgent authorisation and whether the steps taken between the end of the first standard authorisation and the order made on 13th April authorised Mrs B's continued deprivation of liberty.
i) the request made for the second standard authorisation, or
ii) an obligation to make a further request under paragraph 24 (the third case) or paragraph 25 (which applies on a move and not here).
In my view it cannot be either.
i) for the reasons given such a request could not be the trigger to the giving of a further urgent authorisation (see paragraph 77 of Schedule A1 and above), and
ii) it would not have founded an application under s. 21A as that section is directed to authorisations that have been given rather than requests and no point arose under the first urgent and standard authorisations.
Does section 4B render Mrs B's continued deprivation of liberty between the end of the first standard authorisation and the order made on 13th April lawful?
4A Restriction on deprivation of liberty
(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).
4B Deprivation of liberty necessary for life-sustaining treatment etc
(1) If the following conditions are met, D is authorised to deprive P of his liberty while a decision as respects any relevant issue is sought from the court.
(2) The first condition is that there is a question about whether D is authorised to deprive P of his liberty under section 4A.
(3) The second condition is that the deprivation of liberty–
(a) is wholly or partly for the purpose of–
(i) giving P life-sustaining treatment, or
(ii) doing any vital act , or
(b) consists wholly or partly of–
(i) giving P life-sustaining treatment, or
(ii) doing any vital act.
(4) The third condition is that the deprivation of liberty is necessary in order to–
(a) give the life-sustaining treatment, or
(b) do the vital act.
(5) A vital act is any act which the person doing it reasonably believes to be necessary to prevent a serious deterioration in P´s condition.
"treatment which in the view of a person providing health care for the person concerned is necessary to sustain life"
the terms life saving treatment and the definition of a vital act (rather than that term) are used in ss. 6(7) and 26(5) to define the purposes of an act for which protection is given to the person doing it whilst a decision is sought from the court in the context of conflict concerning respectively (a) decisions made (within the scope of their authority) by a donee under a lasting power of attorney or a deputy, and (b) an apparent advance directive.
i) the language of the definitions of life sustaining treatment and vital acts, and
ii) the context in which they describe purposes that protect persons doing acts whilst decisions are sought by the court,
that they are far from being synonymous with a best interests test, albeit that they could found a best interests decision.
i) the evidence shows that (a) the section, and (b) the tests it contains were not considered by the relevant decision makers at the time,
ii) the evidence is not directed to, and does not indicate, whether the best interests reasoning of the relevant decision makers in fact encompassed the test set by s. 4B, namely whether the deprivation of Mrs B's liberty was in their view necessary to prevent a serious deterioration in her condition, and consequently
iii) the evidence was not directed to whether that belief was, or would have been, reasonably held by the relevant persons.
i) they do not show or establish that this is what the relevant persons believed and/or that in reaching their conclusions (later shared by the Official Solicitor and the court) on best interests their reasoning included that belief (albeit that they did not address it expressly), and
ii) they do not enable the court to properly evaluate the reasonableness of the belief by reference, for example, to the impact on Mrs B's condition of (a) a move back home (whether or not followed shortly by another move to residential care) or (b) the lifting of her deprivation of liberty at the Residential Home, and thus whether it was (or would have been) reasonable to believe that such changes would result (or be likely to result) in a serious deterioration of her mental health (which sadly deteriorated to an extent that she was detained under s. 3 Mental Health Act in May 2010) or her physical health and functioning because of the change in placement, her wandering away from home or her treatment at home.
i) was multi-faceted and involved the consideration of a number of matters that could have different causes or results, and
ii) need not be, and in my view was not, dependent on a view that any of the alternatives (including a return home and the risks it carried) would bring about in the short term a serious deterioration in Mrs B's condition or its symptoms and manifestations.
Indeed the best interests assessment is not focused on that point as the test set by s. 4B has to be.
i) the Residential Home did not issue the proceedings,
ii) it seems that the Applicant (who did issue the proceedings) was relying only on s. 21A rather than ss. 4A and 16 MCA 2005 in issuing the proceedings, and in them
iii) the Applicant did not raise expressly whether the second urgent authorisation lawfully authorised a deprivation of Mrs B's liberty and thus whether the Residential Home and/or the Applicant were so entitled to deprive Mrs B of her liberty,
that it is arguable that ss. 4B(1) and (2) would have been satisfied in this case, if the existence of the belief referred to in subsections 4B(3) and (4) had been established by the evidence.
What alternatives were open to the Applicant and the Residential Home under the procedure prescribed by law?
Lessons to be learned / guidance
i) in the event of disagreement between a best interests, or other, assessor and those involved in a detained resident's care, and
ii) in respect of the appropriate time to end a deprivation of liberty of a person who is to be (and is) discharged from a residential home, or hospital, where he has been deprived of his liberty.
The Applicant invited the court to give guidance in respect of them.
i) In the present case, it would not have been in Mrs B's best interests to immediately return home, or to remain at the Residential Home without a continuation of safeguards which prevented her leaving or being removed therefrom, other than in agreed circumstances, and therefore the Applicant and the Residential Home faced a number of difficulties concerning what should be done in, and to promote, Mrs B's best interests as a result of the best interests assessment relating to the request for the second standard authorisation.
ii) In relation to discharge from Article 5(1)(e) detention, the jurisprudence has typically involved situations where:
a) the person is mentally ill and requires treatment but, under appropriate conditions, such treatment can be provided in the community (see R (K) v Camden and Islington Health Authority [2002] QB 198); or
b) the person is no longer suffering from mental illness, is not in need of treatment but needs to be discharged into a controlled environment in order to reduce the stress involved, to make sure that he is indeed free of the illness and to reduce the risk that the illness may recur (see Johnson v United Kingdom (1999) 27 EHRR 296).
According to domestic and European law, neither scenario leads inevitably to that person's immediate and unconditional discharge from detention, although in the latter, discharge must not be unreasonably delayed. As the Master of the Rolls stated in R (K) v Camden and Islington Health Authority [2002] QB 198, at paragraphs 33-34:
"Where (i) a patient is suffering from mental illness, and (ii) treatment of that illness is necessary in the interests of the patient's own health or for the protection of others, and (iii) it proves impossible or impractical to arrange for the patient to receive the necessary treatment in the community, it seems to me that the three criteria identified by the European Court of Human Rights in Winterwerp's case 2 EHRR 387 are made out. Whether or not it is necessary to detain a patient in hospital for treatment may well depend upon the level of facilities available for treatment within the community. Neither article 5 nor European Court of Human Rights jurisprudence lays down any criteria as to the extent to which member states must provide facilities for the care of those of unsound mind in the community, thereby avoiding the necessity for them to be detained for treatment in hospital.
If a health authority is unable, despite the exercise of all reasonable endeavours, to procure for a patient the level of care and treatment in the community that a tribunal considers to be a prerequisite to the discharge of the patient from hospital, I do not consider that the continued detention of the patient in hospital will violate the right to liberty conferred by article 5."
The House of Lords has subsequently endorsed this reasoning in R v Secretary of State for the Home Department, ex parte IH [2003] UKHL 59 at paragraph 28 (and see R (W) v Doncaster MBC [2004] EWCA Civ 378 where detention prolonged by a Local Authority's failure to procure after-care services did not breach Article 5).
iii) In G v E and others [2010] EWHC 1115, Baker J. ruled that a best interests approach should be adopted to govern an incapacitated person's discharge from detention. His Lordship stated that:
" … it would be quite contrary to [E]'s best interests to insist upon his immediate return home because of a narrow, inflexible interpretation of Article 5".
In those circumstances, discharge was delayed in his best interests whilst preparations for his return home could be made.
iv) To immediately discharge a detained resident from a care home, or to remove the provisions relating to his deprivation of liberty there, may engage, and risk violating, his other human rights even when the change of residence that is planned would not, when it is ready to be implemented, involve a deprivation of his liberty.
v) Detained residents are owed a duty of care by the relevant authority and immediate discharge or removal of the provisions relating to deprivation of liberty might expose that authority to the risk of liability in negligence for the foreseeable consequences of such actions.
vi) In accordance with s.47(1) of the NHS and Community Care Act 1990, a Local Authority is duty bound to carry out a community care assessment of detained residents and, having regard to the results, then decide whether those needs call for the provision of any community services and to construct a care plan to detail how those needs will be met by the specified services.
vii) The existence of the common law doctrine of necessity and its interface with the power to issue urgent authorisations under Schedule A1 has not been judicially explored since the Bournewood litigation. (I add that this is not the case in which this should be done and no argument was addressed to me on it).
i) do not found the conclusion
a) that the course taken by the Applicant and the Residential Home of giving and extending a further urgent authorisation and applying to the court were in accordance with DOLS, or
b) that the continued deprivation of liberty was authorised by s. 4B MCA 2005, and
ii) could have been addressed within the procedure provided by the MCA 2005 and its Schedules.
i) rely on s. 4B, and that to do so they should expressly address the test set out therein and record their reasoning as to why they believe it is satisfied, or
ii) seek an interim order from the court to authorise a continuation of an existing detention.
Was the period of the unauthorised deprivation of liberty not a breach of Article 5 because it was not arbitrary?
"1. Everyone has the right to liberty and security of person. No one shall be deprived of his liberty save in the following cases and in accordance with a procedure prescribed by law ...
(e) the lawful detention … of persons of unsound mind …;
4. Everyone who is deprived of his liberty by arrest or detention shall be entitled to take proceedings by which the lawfulness of his detention shall be decided speedily by a Court and his release ordered if the detention is not lawful. "
i) these paragraphs provide 'distinctive and cumulative protections.' Article 5(1) 'strictly regulates the circumstances in which one's liberty can be taken away' whereas Article 5(4) 'requires a review of its legality thereafter' (see HL v United Kingdom (2004) 40 EHRR 761, at paragraph 123),
ii) the key purpose of Article 5 is to prevent arbitrary or unjustified deprivations of liberty (see McKay v United Kingdom (2007) 44 EHRR 41, at paragraph 30),
iii) the phrase 'in accordance with a procedure prescribed by law' refers back to domestic law. The European Court of Human Rights ('ECtHR') has stated that 'the conditions for deprivation of liberty under domestic law must be clearly defined' (see Kawka v Poland (Application No. 25874/94, 9th January 2001, BAILII: [2001] ECHR 4 ), at paragraph 49).
i) define the DOLS process and within it how, and the periods for which, a deprivation of liberty can be authorised by an urgent and a standard authorisation,
ii) empower the court to authorise a deprivation of liberty when the authorisation process does not apply or breaks down and if the authorisation process is challenged, and
iii) provide through (a) s. 4B MCA 2005 and (b) interim order of the court a process by which an existing detention can continue to be authorised pending the final decision of the court.
They therefore provide a procedure that enables existing and expected deprivations of liberty to be authorised whilst they continue.
i) the Applicant and the Residential Home acted conscientiously, in what they considered to be Mrs B's best interests and with reasonable speed (having regard to the route they took of giving, extending and relying on the second urgent authorisation),
ii) the Applicant (and the Residential Home) were seeking an order from the court, and thus that
iii) in a general sense they were not acting in an arbitrary manner.
But, in my view, this does not mean that they were acting in accordance with the procedure prescribed by the MCA 2005 and its schedules (and thus by domestic law) for the purposes of Article 5. Also, as I have pointed out, that procedure includes provisions that the Applicant (and the Residential Home) could have considered and possibly applied (s. 4B MCA), or taken (application to the court for an interim order) to authorise the continuation of the existing detention of Mrs B on and after the expiry of the first standard authorisation.
Overall conclusion
The most relevant paragraphs of Schedule A1, with my emphasis in italics, are set out below.
i) In respect of Urgent Authorisations:
"78 (1) If the managing authority decide to give an urgent authorisation, they must decide the period during which the authorisation is to be in force.
(2) That period must not exceed 7 days.
79 An urgent authorisation must be in writing.
80 An urgent authorisation must state the following things–
(a) the name of the relevant person;
(b) the name of the relevant hospital or care home;
(c) the period during which the authorisation is to be in force;
(d) the purpose for which the authorisation is given.
82 (1) This paragraph applies if an urgent authorisation is given.
(2) The managing authority must keep a written record of why they have given the urgent authorisation.
(3) As soon as practicable after giving the authorisation, the managing authority must give a copy of the authorisation to all of the following–
(a) the relevant person;
(b) any section 39A IMCA.
84 (1) This paragraph applies if the managing authority make a request under paragraph 77 for the supervisory body to extend the duration of the original authorisation.
(2) The managing authority must keep a written record of why they have made the request.
(3) The managing authority must give the relevant person notice that they have made the request.
(4) The supervisory body may extend the duration of the original authorisation if it appears to them that–
(a) the managing authority have made the required request for a standard authorisation,
(b) there are exceptional reasons why it has not yet been possible for that request to be disposed of, and
(c) it is essential for the existing detention to continue until the request is disposed of.
(5) The supervisory body must keep a written record that the request has been made to them.
(6) In this paragraph and paragraphs 85 and 86–
(a) "original authorisation" and "existing detention" have the same meaning as in paragraph 77;
(b) the required request for a standard authorisation is the request that is referred to in paragraph 76(2) or (3).
85 (1) This paragraph applies if, under paragraph 84, the supervisory body decide to extend the duration of the original authorisation.
(2) The supervisory body must decide the period of the extension.
(3) That period must not exceed 7 days.
(4) The supervisory body must give the managing authority notice stating the period of the extension.
(5) The managing authority must then vary the original authorisation so that it states the extended duration.
(6) Paragraphs 82(3) and 83 apply (with the necessary modifications) to the variation of the original authorisation as they apply to the giving of an urgent authorisation.
(7) The supervisory body must keep a written record of–
(a) the outcome of the request, and
(b) the period of the extension.
88 An urgent authorisation comes into force when it is given.
89 (1) An urgent authorisation ceases to be in force at the end of the period stated in the authorisation in accordance with paragraph 80(c) (subject to any variation in accordance with paragraph 85).
(2) But if the required request is disposed of before the end of that period, the urgent authorisation ceases to be in force as follows.
(3) If the supervisory body are required by paragraph 50(1) to give the requested authorisation, the urgent authorisation ceases to be in force when the requested authorisation comes into force.
(4) If the supervisory body are prohibited by paragraph 50(2) from giving the requested authorisation, the urgent authorisation ceases to be in force when the managing authority receive notice under paragraph 58.
(5) In this paragraph–
- "required request" means the request referred to in paragraph 76(2) or (3);
- "requested authorisation" means the standard authorisation to which the required request relates.
(6) This paragraph does not affect the powers of the Court of Protection or of any other court. "
ii) In respect of standard authorisations:
"42 (1) The assessor must state in the assessment the maximum authorisation period. {Note: this is the best interests assessment}
(2) The maximum authorisation period is the shorter of these periods–
(a) the period which, in the assessor´s opinion, would be the appropriate maximum period for the relevant person to be a detained resident under the standard authorisation that has been requested;
(b) 1 year, or such shorter period as may be prescribed in regulations.
50 (1) The supervisory body must give a standard authorisation if–
(a) all assessments are positive, and
(b) the supervisory body have written copies of all those assessments.
(2) The supervisory body must not give a standard authorisation except in accordance with sub-paragraph (1).
(3) All assessments are positive if each assessment carried out under paragraph 33 has come to the conclusion that the relevant person meets the qualifying requirement to which the assessment relates.
51 (1) If the supervisory body are required to give a standard authorisation, they must decide the period during which the authorisation is to be in force.
(2) That period must not exceed the maximum authorisation period stated in the best interests assessment.
52 A standard authorisation may provide for the authorisation to come into force at a time after it is given.
54 A standard authorisation must be in writing.
55 (1) A standard authorisation must state the following things–
(a) the name of the relevant person;
(b) the name of the relevant hospital or care home;
(c) the period during which the authorisation is to be in force;
(d) the purpose for which the authorisation is given;
(e) any conditions subject to which the authorisation is given;
(f) the reason why each qualifying requirement is met.
58 (1) This paragraph applies if–
(a) a request is made for a standard authorisation, and
(b) the supervisory body are prohibited by paragraph 50(2) from giving the standard authorisation.
(2) The supervisory body must give notice, stating that they are prohibited from giving the authorisation, to each of the following–
(a) the managing authority of the relevant hospital or care home;
(b) the relevant person;
(c) any section 39A IMCA;
(d) every interested person consulted by the best interests assessor.
(3) The supervisory body must comply with this paragraph as soon as practicable after it becomes apparent to them that they are prohibited from giving the authorisation.
60 A supervisory body must keep a written record of all of the following information–
(a) the standard authorisations that they have given;
(b) the requests for standard authorisations in response to which they have not given an authorisation;
(c) in relation to each standard authorisation given: the matters stated in the authorisation in accordance with paragraph 55.
62 (1) This paragraph applies where the managing authority request a new standard authorisation under either of the following–
(a) paragraph 25 (change in place of detention);
(b) paragraph 30 (existing authorisation subject to review).
(2) If the supervisory body are required by paragraph 50(1) to give the new authorisation, the existing authorisation terminates at the time when the new authorisation comes into force.
(3) If the supervisory body are prohibited by paragraph 50(2) from giving the new authorisation, there is no effect on the existing authorisation´s continuation in force.
63 (1) A standard authorisation comes into force when it is given.
(2) But if the authorisation provides for it to come into force at a later time, it comes into force at that time.
64 (1) A standard authorisation ceases to be in force at the end of the period stated in the authorisation in accordance with paragraph 55(1)(c).
(2) But if the authorisation terminates before then in accordance with paragraph 62(2) or any other provision of this Schedule, it ceases to be in force when the termination takes effect.
(3) This paragraph does not affect the powers of the Court of Protection or of any other court.
65 (1) This paragraph applies if a standard authorisation ceases to be in force.
(2) The supervisory body must give notice that the authorisation has ceased to be in force.
(3) The supervisory body must give that notice to all of the following–
(a) the managing authority of the relevant hospital or care home;
(b) the relevant person;
(c) the relevant person´s representative;
(d) every interested person consulted by the best interests assessor.
(4) The supervisory body must give that notice as soon as practicable after the authorisation ceases to be in force.
66 A request for a standard authorisation is to be regarded for the purposes of this Schedule as disposed of if the supervisory body have given–
(a) a copy of the authorisation in accordance with paragraph 57, or
(b) notice in accordance with paragraph 58."
iii) In respect of both authorisations:
"169 Any notice under this Schedule must be in writing."
The most relevant paragraphs of Schedule A1, with my emphasis in italics, are set out below.
Duty to request authorisation: basic cases
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.
Duty to request authorisation: change in place of detention
25 (1) The relevant managing authority must request a standard authorisation if it appears to them that these conditions are met.
(2) The first condition is that a standard authorisation–
(a) has been given, and
(b) has not ceased to be in force.
(3) The second condition is that there is, or is to be, a change in the place of detention.
(4) This paragraph is subject to paragraph 28.
26 (1) This paragraph applies for the purposes of paragraph 25.
(2) There is a change in the place of detention if the relevant person–
(a) ceases to be a detained resident in the stated hospital or care home, and
(b) becomes a detained resident in a different hospital or care home ("the new hospital or care home").
(3) The stated hospital or care home is the hospital or care home to which the standard authorisation relates.
(4) The relevant managing authority are the managing authority of the new hospital or care home.
Other authority for detention: request for authorisation
27 (1) This paragraph applies if, by virtue of section 4A(3), a decision of the court authorises the relevant person to be a detained resident.
(2) Paragraph 24 does not require a request for a standard authorisation to be made in relation to that detention unless these conditions are met.
(3) The first condition is that the standard authorisation would be in force at a time immediately after the expiry of the other authority.
(4) The second condition is that the standard authorisation would not be in force at any time on or before the expiry of the other authority.
(5) The third condition is that it would, in the managing authority´s view, be unreasonable to delay making the request until a time nearer the expiry of the other authority.
(6) In this paragraph–
(a) the other authority is–
(i) the decision mentioned in sub-paragraph (1), or
(ii) any further decision of the court which, by virtue of section 4A(3), authorises, or is expected to authorise, the relevant person to be a detained resident;
(b) the expiry of the other authority is the time when the other authority is expected to cease to authorise the relevant person to be a detained resident.
Request refused: no further request unless change of circumstances
28 (1) This paragraph applies if–
(a) a managing authority request a standard authorisation under paragraph 24 or 25, and
(b) the supervisory body are prohibited by paragraph 50(2) from giving the authorisation.
(2) Paragraph 24 or 25 does not require that managing authority to make a new request for a standard authorisation unless it appears to the managing authority that–
(a) there has been a change in the relevant person´s case, and
(b) because of that change, the supervisory body are likely to give a standard authorisation if requested.
Authorisation given: request for further authorisation
29 (1) This paragraph applies if a standard authorisation–
(a) has been given in relation to the detention of the relevant person, and
(b) that authorisation ("the existing authorisation") has not ceased to be in force.
(2) Paragraph 24 does not require a new request for a standard authorisation ("the new authorisation") to be made unless these conditions are met.
(3) The first condition is that the new authorisation would be in force at a time immediately after the expiry of the existing authorisation.
(4) The second condition is that the new authorisation would not be in force at any time on or before the expiry of the existing authorisation.
(5) The third condition is that it would, in the managing authority´s view, be unreasonable to delay making the request until a time nearer the expiry of the existing authorisation.
(6) The expiry of the existing authorisation is the time when it is expected to cease to be in force.
Part 5 Urgent authorisations
Managing authority to give authorisation
74 Only the managing authority of the relevant hospital or care home may give an urgent authorisation.
75 The managing authority may give an urgent authorisation only if they are required to do so by paragraph 76 (as read with paragraph 77).
Duty to give authorisation
76 (1) The managing authority must give an urgent authorisation in either of the following cases.
(2) The first case is where–
(a) the managing authority are required to make a request under paragraph 24 or 25 for a standard authorisation, and
(b) they believe that the need for the relevant person to be a detained resident is so urgent that it is appropriate for the detention to begin before they make the request.
(3) The second case is where–
(a) the managing authority have made a request under paragraph 24 or 25 for a standard authorisation, and
(b) they believe that the need for the relevant person to be a detained resident is so urgent that it is appropriate for the detention to begin before the request is disposed of.
(4) References in this paragraph to the detention of the relevant person are references to the detention to which paragraph 24 or 25 relates.
(5) This paragraph is subject to paragraph 77.
77 (1) This paragraph applies where the managing authority have given an urgent authorisation ("the original authorisation") in connection with a case where a person is, or is to be, a detained resident ("the existing detention").
(2) No new urgent authorisation is to be given under paragraph 76 in connection with the existing detention.
(3) But the managing authority may request the supervisory body to extend the duration of the original authorisation.
(4) Only one request under sub-paragraph (3) may be made in relation to the original authorisation.
(5) Paragraphs 84 to 86 apply to any request made under sub-paragraph (3).