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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 >> X & Ors (Deprivation of Liberty) (Number 2), Re [2014] EWCOP 37 (16 October 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCOP/2014/37.html Cite as: [2015] 2 All ER 1165, [2014] WLR(D) 434, [2015] 2 FCR 28, [2014] EWCOP 37, [2014] Med LR 545, (2014) 17 CCL Rep 464, [2015] 1 WLR 2454 |
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(In Open Court)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Re X and others (Deprivation of Liberty) (Number 2) |
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Ms Joanne Clement for the Secretary of State for Health and the Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice
Mr Stephen Cragg QC for the Law Society of England and Wales
Ms Alison Ball QC and Mr Andrew Bagchi for the Association of Directors of Adult Social Services
Mr Neil Allen for Cheshire West and Chester Council, Surrey County Council and Northumberland County Council
Mr Michael Dooley for Cornwall Council
Ms Bethan Harris for Worcestershire County Council
Mr Conrad Hallin for Sunderland City Council
Ms Natalia Perrett and Ms Emily Reed for Barnsley Metropolitan Borough Council
Mr Simon Burrows for Rochdale Metropolitan Borough Council
Mr Michael Mylonas QC for Surrey Downs Clinical Commissioning Group
Mr Jonathan Auburn for NHS Sheffield Clinical Commissioning Group
Mr John McKendrick for Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust
Mr Jonathan Butler for KW (a patient)
Ms Katie Scott for AS and GS (patients)
Mr Joseph O'Brien for PMLP (a patient)
Mr Ian Wise QC, Ms Martha Spurrier and Ms Alison Fiddy filed written submissions on behalf of Mind
Hearing dates: 5-6 June 2014
This judgment was delivered in Open Court
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HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT
Crown Copyright ©
Sir James Munby, President of the Court of Protection :
"(7) Does P need to be joined to any application to the court seeking authorisation of a deprivation of liberty in order to meet the requirements of Article 5(1) ECHR or Article 6 or both?
(9) If so, should there be a requirement that P … must have a litigation friend (whether by reference to the requirements of Article 5 ECHR and/or by reference to the requirements of Article 6 ECHR)?
(16) If P or the detained resident requires a litigation friend, then: (a) Can a litigation friend who does not otherwise have the right to conduct litigation or provide advocacy services provide those services, in other words without instructing legal representatives, by virtue of their acting as litigation friend and without being authorised by the court under the Legal Services Act 2007 to do either or both …?"
"At first sight, it might seem strange to make an order about a person who is not a party to the proceedings. On the other hand, the infant is generally very young, and the appointment of a guardian ad litem and service on him or her involves expense which generally results in no corresponding benefit. The court would, of course, not make the order if in doubt whether it was for the infant's benefit, and it has indisputable jurisdiction to order the infant to be made a respondent if it desires to do so. For example, the infant might be approaching full age; or the parties might be so much wrapped up in matrimonial disputes that they cared nothing for the infant. The court has an unfettered discretion. But I propose to express the view, after consultation with my brethren of the Chancery Division, that an infant should not be made a respondent to an originating summons under the Act unless the master or a judge so directs".
"Wardship proceedings are not like ordinary civil actions. There is no "lis" between the parties. The plaintiffs are not asserting any rights; they are committing their child to the protection of the court and asking the court to make such order as it thinks is for her benefit."
This reflects the classic analysis, applying be it noted to both children and those who were then labelled lunatics, to be found in Scott (Otherwise Morgan) v Scott [1913] AC 417. One short extract will suffice, from the speech of Viscount Haldane LC, at 437, 438:
"The case of wards of Court and lunatics stands on a different footing. There the judge who is administering their affairs, in the exercise of what has been called a paternal jurisdiction delegated to him from the Crown through the Lord Chancellor, is not sitting merely to decide a contested question. His position as an administrator as well as judge may require the application of another and overriding principle to regulate his procedure in the interest of those whose affairs are in his charge … In the two cases of wards of Court and of lunatics the Court is really sitting primarily to guard the interests of the ward or the lunatic. Its jurisdiction is in this respect parental and administrative, and the disposal of controverted questions is an incident only in the jurisdiction."
"Thus far, as will be appreciated, the authorities to which I have referred have mainly related to children. Do the same principles apply in cases in the Court of Protection relating to adults? To that question there can, in my judgment, be only one sensible answer: they do. One really needs look no further than Scott v Scott to see that the same fundamental principles underlie both jurisdictions."
"The processes of the Court of Protection are essentially inquisitorial rather than adversarial. In other words, the ambit of the litigation is determined, not by the parties, but by the court, because the function of the court is not to determine in a disinterested way a dispute brought to it by the parties, but rather, to engage in a process of assessing whether an adult is lacking in capacity, and if so, making decisions about his welfare that are in his best interests."
The resonance with what Viscount Haldane had said in Scott v Scott and Cross J had said in Re B, is palpable.
"Unless the court orders otherwise, P shall not be named as a respondent to any proceedings."
That is complemented by Rule 74, which provides that P "shall be bound by any order made or directions given by the court in the same way that a party to the proceedings is bound."