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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 (A Patient), Re [2016] EWCOP 38 (10 August 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCOP/2016/38.html Cite as: [2016] WLR(D) 467, [2016] 4 WLR 141, [2016] EWCOP 38 |
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Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
In the matter of A (A Patient) | ||
In the matter of applications by and against Desmond Maurice Fitzgerald |
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Mr Charles Howard QC and Ms Charlotte Hartley (instructed by Hughes Fowler Carruthers) for Ms Frances Mary Theresa Hughes and Hughes Fowler Carruthers
Mr Ian Clarke QC (instructed by Hughmans) for A's deputy C
Hearing dates: 15-16, 22 March 2016
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir James Munby, President of the Court of Protection :
The litigation since 2013
"There has been no effective challenge to C's competence or integrity. Mr Fitzgerald's allegations in this respect are simply bluff and bluster."
"Where the proceedings concern P's property and affairs the general rule is that the costs of the proceedings or of that part of the proceedings that concerns P's property and affairs, shall be paid by P or charged to his estate."
"(1) … in deciding whether departure is justified the court will have regard to all the circumstances, including –
(a) the conduct of the parties;
(b) whether a party has succeeded on part of his case, even if he has not been wholly successful; and
(c) the role of any public body involved in the proceedings.
(2) The conduct of the parties includes –
(a) conduct before, as well as during, the proceedings;
(b) whether it was reasonable for a party to raise, pursue or contest a particular issue;
(c) the manner in which a party has made or responded to an application or a particular issue; and
(d) whether a party who has succeeded in his application or response to an application, in whole or in part, exaggerated any matter contained in his application or response."
With effect from 1 July 2015, an additional sub-paragraph (e) has been inserted in rule 159(2):
"(e) any failure by a party to comply with a rule, practice direction or court order."
"This is a case in which the court is justified in departing from the general rule in rule 156 because of Mr Fitzgerald's conduct and the fact that he has not succeeded on any part of his case.
Most of the issues he raised, pursued or contested had no bearing at all on the court's decision to appoint a new deputy for A and were simply a prolongation of his dispute with Macfarlanes. I find myself in agreement with the observations of the Deputy Chief Legal Ombudsman, when he said "I can see nothing in what you have said by way of reply having any bearing on the decision that has to be made."
The manner in which he made or responded to the application was, as [counsel] said, 'repetitive and vociferous', 'tantamount to harassment', and 'actionably defamatory'.
The persistence with which he kept filing application notices, if not intentionally designed to disrupt and derail the litigation process, almost succeeded in having that effect. As Sir Alan Ward recently observed in paragraph 2 of Wright v Michael Wright Supplies Ltd [2013] EWCA Civ 234:
"What I find so depressing is that the case highlights the difficulties increasingly encountered by the judiciary at all levels when dealing with litigants in person. Two problems in particular are revealed. The first is how to bring order to the chaos which litigants in person invariably – and wholly understandably – manage to create in putting forward their claims and defences. Judges should not have to micro-manage cases, coaxing and cajoling the parties to focus on the issues that need to be resolved"
Mr Fitzgerald's conduct undoubtedly resulted in the costs of the proceedings being greater than they would otherwise have been and it would be unjust to expect them to be paid by A, as would be the position under rule 156.
Accordingly, I order that the applicant's costs be assessed on the standard basis and that Mr Fitzgerald pay the applicant's assessed costs to the extent that they exceed £7,500 (including VAT).
I have selected the sum of £7,500 as this is broadly the amount that I would have expected Macfarlanes to have charged if this application had been uncontested. It covers the costs of the application itself, the application fee, the supplementary documentation relating to the 1978 settlements and, of course, Value Added Tax."
"responding succinctly to such of the questions (or parts of the questions) with the exception of Questions 12, 31, 32, 36, 38 and 40 (which he is not required to answer) as he is in a position to answer and which in his professional judgement it is appropriate for him to answer. If in his professional judgement any question can properly be answered either 'Yes' or 'No' then such answer will suffice."
Professor Howard's supplemental report is dated 6 January 2015.
"A lacks and has since 15 May 2013 lacked capacity to make decisions for herself in relation to a matter or matters concerning her property and affairs (the court making no declaration as to whether or not she had such capacity previously)."
Again, (paragraph 3 of the order) I reserved the costs of the hearing.
"Really everything is one way."
I continued:
"Mr Fitzgerald, in reality, had difficulty in disputing that, as matters stand today, the patient does – in relation to the management of her property and affairs – lack capacity. He accepted in terms that she is extremely suggestible in relation to matters financially. He accepted that she did not really have the ability, for example, to manage the payment of care home fees. The real thrust of his case was … that, whatever her current lack of capacity, that was not something which, as in the view of both Dr Hirst [who did not give evidence] and Professor Howard, was irreversible; but, on the contrary, that, given time with appropriate help (including from members of the family) and in a much less restrictive setting, she would in fact with ongoing assistance be able to deal with and spend her money in such a way as no longer to lack capacity and to manage her property and affairs,
The sad reality, in my judgment, is that A plainly at present lacks and has for many, many decades lacked capacity to manage her property and affairs. One would in effect have to reject almost the totality of Professor Howard's evidence to come to any different conclusion and there is simply no basis for such a rejection
In terms of the future I regret that the prospect of any change is, if it exists at all and the reality is that it does not, vanishingly small. The fact is, as I find in accordance with Professor Howard's evidence, that the fundamental cause of the patient's intellectual deficits are the schizophrenia present for many, many decades and the tragic consequences of the surgery to which she was subjected all those years ago. Her difficulties have not been assisted, to an extent they have been compounded, by what might be called the social realities of that short period of her life before she became institutionalised and more particularly by the institutionalisation to which she has been subjected for so many decades. But it is perfectly apparent, in my judgment, that, even if the adverse consequences of those social deprivations and institutionalisation were to be wholly removed and reversed, she would not thereby – even with the maximum of appropriate assistance – regain the capacity which manifestly she does not have at present. I repeat the incapacity is unhappily the consequence of schizophrenia which has been present for many decades and the irreversible consequences of the surgery."[3]
i) Committal: I directed (paragraph 1) that Mr Fitzgerald was to file his application by 27 November 2015 "in a form complying in all respects with the rules and practice of the Court of Protection and … accompanied by an affidavit or affidavits setting out all the evidence [he] seeks to rely upon in support of the application." I gave further directions for (paragraph 3) the filing of evidence in answer by Ms Hughes and, by 8 January 2016 (paragraph 5(b)), of any evidence in response by Mr Fitzgerald and any written submissions which he sought to rely upon.ii) Wasted costs: I directed (paragraph 1) that Mr Fitzgerald was to file his application by 27 November 2015 "in a form complying in all respects with the rules and practice of the Court of Protection and … accompanied by an affidavit or affidavits setting out all the evidence [he] seeks to rely upon in support of the application." I directed that the application "must be accompanied by a schedule or schedules itemising in appropriate detail all the costs being claimed by" Mr Fitzgerald. I gave further directions for (paragraph 4) the filing of evidence in answer by Hughes Fowler Carruthers and, by 8 January 2016 (paragraph 5(c)), of any evidence in response by Mr Fitzgerald and any written submissions which he sought to rely upon.
iii) C's application: I directed (paragraph 2) that C was to file by 16 December 2015 a schedule or schedules itemising in appropriate detail all the costs being claimed by her, an affidavit or affidavits setting out all the evidence she sought to rely upon and any written submissions she sought to rely upon. I gave further directions (paragraph 5(a)) for the filing by Mr Fitzgerald of evidence in response and any written submissions he sought to rely upon.
i) Committal: Mr Fitzgerald's 'application' is dated 6 January 2016. It has not been filed.[4] It contains no particulars of any alleged contempt, except to say that the grounds are set out in an affidavit. There is, in fact, no affidavit, merely a witness statement by Mr Fitzgerald, with a statement of truth, dated 27 November 2015. Ms Hughes swore an affidavit in response on 16 December 2015. Mr Fitzgerald's witness statement in response is dated 6 January 2016. He also produced a case summary dated 27 November 2016.ii) Wasted costs: Mr Fitzgerald's 'application' is dated 6 January 2016. Again, it has not been filed.[5] It contains no particulars, except to say that the grounds are set out in evidence attached. This is a reference to a witness statement by Mr Fitzgerald, with a statement of truth, dated 27 November 2015. Ms Hughes swore an affidavit in response on 16 December 2015. Mr Fitzgerald's evidence in response is contained in his witness statement dated 6 January 2016 to which I have already referred.
iii) C's application: C filed an affidavit by Ms Hughes, sworn on 16 December 2015. This was supplemented by a witness statement from Mr Matthew George Jenkins of Hughmans dated 26 February 2016. Apart from some passing references in his witness statement dated 6 January 2016 to which I have already referred, Mr Fitzgerald's only written response to this material, notwithstanding the directions I had given on 11 November 2015, was a witness statement dated 29 February 2016, none of it relevant to any issue I have to determine. Only after I had adjourned the hearing on 16 March 2016 to come back on 22 March 2016, did Mr Fitzgerald file a position statement dated 21 March 2016. (That, it should be noted, was after I had dismissed, on 16 March 2016, his committal and wasted costs applications against Ms Hughes and Hughes Fowler Carruthers as being totally without merit: see paragraphs 40 and 47 below.) Much of this position statement is irrelevant to anything I have to determine. It contains wild and scurrilous allegations against various people, including C, of "income tax fraud" and "criminal tax evasion", of which, Mr Fitzgerald asserts, Ms Hughes had "almost certain knowledge." He accuses Ms Hughes of "deliberate falsification" in her evidence to the court and invites me to refer her to the Attorney General for committal (which I unhesitatingly decline to do). Despite the vast amount of material put before me by Mr Fitzgerald, it is perfectly obvious that there is no factual merit in any of these allegations, in particular, in any of his allegations against C and Ms Hughes, allegations which, in my judgment, are scurrilous and fatuous and which should never have been made.
Costs warnings
"On 8 May 2013, following a spate of application notices filed by Mr Fitzgerald, I considered it necessary to issue the following costs warning:
1 These application notices and any further applications yet to be filed, if relevant, will be considered at the attended hearing at 11 AM on Wednesday 15 May 2013.
2 Insofar as any application has no bearing on the applicant's suitability to be appointed A's deputy for property and affairs and to exercise the powers of appointment and consent vested in her, the parties' attention is drawn to the provisions of rule 159 of the Court of Protection Rules 2007."
The hearing on 15-16 and 22 March 2016
i) The first related to the appeal against SJ Lush's costs order of 28 May 2013. I allowed the appeal and, exercising my discretion afresh, ordered Mr Fitzgerald to pay C's costs, in excess of £7,500, on the standard basis. I ordered Mr Fitzgerald to make an interim payment of £60,000 (inclusive of VAT) on account. I reserved judgment on the balance of C's application. I reserved C's costs of the hearing on 15, 16 and 22 March 2016 and gave directions for those reserved costs to be determined without a hearing once the parties had filed further written submissions by 29 March 2016.ii) The second order was an interim charging order in the sum of £60,000 in respect of Mr Fitzgerald's interest in his former matrimonial home.
iii) The third order was an extended civil restraint order, to remain in effect until 21 March 2018, restraining Mr Fitzgerald from issuing claims or making applications in any court "concerning any matter involving or relating to or touching upon or leading to the proceedings in which this order is made or the subject matter of or any application or proposed draft application therein." There were expressly excluded from the ambit of this order the proceedings in the family court between Mr Fitzgerald and his wife and certain proceedings brought against Mr Fitzgerald in the Chancery Division.
i) The first[8] related to the costs reserved by the orders dated 19 December 2013, 10 June 2014, 13 November 2014 and 20 January 2015. In relation to the costs reserved by the order dated 13 November 2014, I ordered Mr Fitzgerald to pay C's costs of the application dated 24 October 2014 on the standard basis. In relation to the costs reserved by the order dated 20 January 2015 I ordered Mr Fitzgerald to pay 50% of certain specified parts of those costs, again on the standard basis. I ordered Mr Fitzgerald by way of interim payment to pay £7,000 (inclusive of VAT) on account of the former and £16,000 (inclusive of VAT) on account of the latter.ii) The second order was an interim charging order in the sum of £23,000 (being the aggregate of the sums of £7,000 and £16,000) in respect of Mr Fitzgerald's interest in his former matrimonial home.
Committal
"An application for an order of committal must be made by filing an application notice, stating the grounds of the application, and must be supported by an affidavit made in accordance with the relevant practice direction."
Rule 188(1) provides as follows:
"Except where the court permits, no grounds shall be relied upon at the hearing except the grounds set out in the application notice."
i) Allegation 1 is meaningless and, if it has any meaning at all, absurd.ii) Allegations 2-4 and 17 are of "obstruction of" various of my orders. Comparison of the allegations with the terms of the relevant orders demonstrates that the matters alleged do not involve either breach of or non-compliance with the orders. Moreover, the allegations of "obstruction" are groundless and, even if established, would not amount to improper interference with the administration of justice.
iii) Allegations 5, 7, 9-10 and 14-15 are of "contempt of" or "non-compliance with" an order (allegation 5), various "directions" (allegations 7, 10, 14-15) and my judgment (allegation 9). Comparison of the allegations with the terms of the relevant orders demonstrates that the matters alleged do not involve either breach of or non-compliance with any of the orders. Moreover, the allegations are groundless and, even if established, would not amount to improper interference with the administration of justice.
iv) Allegations 6 and 8 are of "improperly" initiating process. Whatever these allegations mean, they are devoid of any remotely arguable factual or legal substance.
v) Allegations 11-13 are of "interfering with the administration of justice." The allegations, so far as they allege contempt, are devoid of any remotely arguable factual substance and in any event, as pleaded, do not in law constitute any contempt of the Court of Protection.
vi) Allegation 16 is, as a matter of law, capable of constituting a contempt. But it is devoid of any remotely arguable factual substance.
Wasted costs
"three years loss of maintenance of £25,000 per year for the years 2013, 2014 and 2015, and five years loss of maintenance for the years 2016-2020 caused by the breakup of my marriage for which Hughes Fowler Carruthers' irresponsible and negligent conduct is the cause."
He continues:
"Frances Hughes has pursued a strategy of "costs intimidation" against a self-represented litigant-in-person with the intention of depriving that litigant-in-person of his home, his livelihood and his maintenance, and that she has acted for no other purpose than her own enrichment … Frances Hughes has intentionally sought to destroy my marriage in order to achieve this end. I believe the court is justified in imposing a wasted costs order in the sum of £200,000 on her firm."
He concedes in terms that "I have never at any time had any legal costs of my own." In his witness statement dated 6 January 2016 Mr Fitzgerald invites me:
"to award exemplary and punitive damages in the form of wasted costs order against her and her firm."
The appeal against SJ Lush's costs order
i) Ground B5: It is said, correctly, that SJ Lush did not impugn Mr Fitzgerald's good faith. It is asserted that, because he acted in good faith and raised what were said to be a number of legitimate points in the interests of A, no order for costs should have been made against Mr Fitzgerald. I do not agree. Rule 159 does not require proof of bad faith, thought its absence is no doubt relevant. I agree with SJ Lush that most of the matters pursued with such vigour by Mr Fitzgerald (and I agree with SJ Lush's characterisation of them, while noting, as Mr Clarke points out, that there is no appeal against the part of SJ Lush's findings which I have quoted in paragraph 3 above) were irrelevant to the only issue to be determined. The "legitimate points" prayed in aid in paragraph B5 were, in large part, irrelevant. What SJ Lush described as the "sensible reasons" put forward by Mr Fitzgerald in his challenge to C's appointment were convincingly answered by SJ Lush in a part of his judgment (paragraphs 45-55) with which I find myself in complete agreement. The simple fact, in my judgment, is that Mr Fitzgerald chose to oppose C's appointment in a way which was, for the most part, utterly unreasonable and which had, as a direct consequence, the grotesque driving up of the costs. If ever there was a case for the application of rule 159, this was that case. I cannot improve upon the way in which SJ Lush explained why the order should be made. I agree with both his reasoning and his conclusions, including his reasons for determining the appropriateness of the figure of £7,500 for which he made allowance.ii) Ground B6: It is asserted that, because SJ Lush placed reliance upon the costs warning he had issued on 8 May 2013, any order for costs against Mr Fitzgerald should have been limited to costs incurred thereafter. I do not agree. The giving of a costs warning is not a pre-requisite to the application of rule 159, and the fact that such a warning is given cannot immunise a litigant from the application of rule 159 to previously incurred costs. Moreover, it is not as if the giving of the costs warning induced Mr Fitzgerald to moderate his behaviour in the slightest. He simply carried on regardless.
iii) Ground B7: It is asserted that no order for costs should have been made against Mr Fitzgerald given that he "had at no stage been given any indication as to the scale of the costs he was at risk of having to pay", alternatively, that the costs "should have been capped at a reasonable foreseeable sum so as to not to permit the exorbitant claim for £127,500." There is nothing in either of these points. There is no requirement, whether in law or in practice, for someone in Mr Fitzgerald's position to be given such an indication. And the second point is met by the fact that the order (that is, both the order that SJ Lush made and the order I made) provides for a detailed assessment of the costs, so there is no risk of Mr Fitzgerald being required to pay anything unreasonable, let alone exorbitant.
iv) Ground B8: It is asserted that, in breach of the principles laid down in Re RC deceased (2010) COPLR Con Vol 1022, para 73, SJ Lush made no inquiry of Mr Fitzgerald as to his means to pay any order for costs and that, if he had done so, the award "would have been capped at a more reasonable and proportionate level." The short answer to this is that, in my judgment, Re C lays down no principle requiring such an inquiry before rule 159 is applied, and the court can, as here, properly apply rule 159 without first conducting such an inquiry.
v) Ground B9: Finally, it is asserted that SJ Lush's "open-ended order" has "effectively left the deputy's lawyers free to charge a grossly disproportionate and unreasonable sum" and that the court should now intervene to ensure that Mr Fitzgerald is not "disproportionately punished for objecting to" C's appointment as A's deputy. This is simply a variant on Ground B7. I reject it for the reasons already given.
C's other applications for costs
The charging orders
The Extended Civil Restraint Order
Other matters
The costs reserved by the order of 22 March 2016
Postscript
Annexe
"1. Accepting Instructions in Violation of Her Own Compliance (21st February 2014 and continuously thereafter)
2. Obstruction of Implementation of Para 2. of the President's Order of 19th December 2013 (21st February 2014 continuously until 13th November 2014)
3. Obstruction of Implementation of Para 2.a of the President's Order of 19th December 2013 (18th June 2014 to 13th November 2014)
4. Obstruction of Implementation of Para 4 of the President's Order of 19th December 2013 (21st February 2014 until 10th June 2014)
5. Contempt of the President's Order of 10th June 2014 Appointing Dr [T] Jointly Instructed Expert
6. Improperly Obtaining Injunction on the Respondent In Order to Obstruct Proceedings (10th June 2014)
7. Non-Compliance with the President's Direction to Reintroduce Injunction Application of 13th November 2014 in Proper Legal Form (13th November and continuously thereafter)
8. Improper Filing of COP1 Applications in the Patient's Property and Affairs and Health and Welfare to a Court Without Jurisdiction (14th January 2015 to 20th January 2015)
9. Contempt of the President's Reported Judgment of 20th January 2015 by Pursuance of Unlawful COP1 Application in the Patient's Health and Welfare in a Court Without Jurisdiction (20th January 2015 and continuously thereafter)
10. Contempt of the President's Direction to the Parties of 20th January 2015 to Seek Consent In All Areas Possible In Furtherance of the Court of Protection's Overriding Objective (20th January 2015 to 21st August 2015)
11. Interfering With the Administration of Justice in the President's Court By Deliberately Misleading the Respondent's Wife As To The Factual Position With Regard To Her Claim For Financial Remedy In Family Division Proceedings (13th January 2015 to 12th August 2015)
12. Interfering With the Administration of Justice in the President's Court By Disclosing Information Confidential to the President's Court to Hughmans Solicitors For The Purposes of Depriving the Respondent of His Home (13th November 2014 to 19th March 2015)
13. Interfering With the Administration of Justice in the President's Court By Releasing Information Confidential to the President's Court to Hughmans Solicitors For The Purposes of Seeing the Respondent Prosecuted For Contempt of Court (Unknown Date in May 2015)
14. Contempt of the President's Direction on Applicant's Counsel to Draft His Order At Hearing of 20th January 2015 As Per Determination and Findings (20th January 2015 to 26th January 2015)
15. Contempt of the President's Direction on the Parties To Co-operate In The Drafting of His Procedural Directions Order for Further Proceedings (20th January 2015 to 21st August 2015)
16. Filing Dishonest and Misleading Evidence Under Her Statement of Truth To the President's Court (14th January 2015 and thereafter)
17. Obstruction of the President's Order of 21st August 2015 Directing Deputy's Replacement To Be Determined By Order of SJ Lush Or The District Court (21st August 2015 continuously to present)"
"(1) Contempt of the President's Order of 19th December 2013 by:
(a) Taking instructions in a case prohibited by her compliance with a view to seeing that order's implementation frustrated
(b) Taking instruction in the Court of Protection at a time when prohibited from doing so by the provisions of Mental Capacity Act 2005
(c) Drafting a Letter of Instruction intended to see that order's implementation frustrated
(d) Obstructing A's assessment by the initially jointly agreed expert Dr Janet Grace
(2) Contempt of the President's Order of 10th June 2014 by obtaining that order naming Dr [T] as jointly instructed independent expert to the President's court and then frustrating its implementation with a view to seeing justice defeated in the President's court; the Patient's best interests improperly overridden; and her human rights violated
(3) Contempt of the President's Order of 13th November 2014 to reintroduce Applicant's COP9 injunction application in proper form and with the intention of "leaking" confidential information concerning that hearing in the hope of seeing justice defeated in the President's court. (The President gave further direction that this COP9 Application should be reintroduced in his court on 20th January 2015, and Frances Hughes is in contempt of this direction also.)
(4) Contempt of the President's Order of 10th December 2014 ordering the Patient's capacity to manage her property and affairs be determined in his court on 20th January 2015 by introduction COP1 Application in property and affairs in the District Court of Protection lacking the mandatory COP3 Assessments of Capacity in advance of the President's determination reserved to himself
(5) Contempt of the President's Determination of 20th January 2015 that her COP1 Application in the Patient's health and welfare could not proceed as lacking the mandatory COP3 Assessment of Capacity
(6) Contempt of the President's Direction on the Parties of 20th January 2015 to Seek Agreement in Compliance with the Overriding Objective by:
(a) Seeking Respondent's agreement to Applicant's continuation as deputy when Applicant's evidence to the President was that she wished to resign
(b) Refusing contact for the purposes of agreement with the Respondent following the President's intervention by Order of 26th January 2015
(7) Contempt of the President's Order of 21st August 2015 directing the District Court of Protection to issue the orders necessary for the Applicant's resignation as Patient's deputy for property and affairs by obstructing the District Court of Protection in doing so
(8) Contempt of the President's Order of 11th November 2015 directing Frances Hughes to give truthful evidence to his court by giving knowingly misleading evidence in her Affidavits of 16th December 2015
(9) Contempt of the President's Court by "Leaking" Confidential Information on Proceedings to Hughmans Solicitors on or before 20th November 2014; this being done with a view to seeing justice defeated in the President's court; the Patient's best interests overridden; and her human rights violated
(10) Contempt of the President's Court by Improperly Giving False Information in the Respondent's Divorce Proceedings with a view to seeking justice defeated in the President's court; the Patient's best interests overridden; and her human rights violated"
Note 1 In his email dated 8 August 2016 (see paragraph 71 below) Mr Fitzgerald says this: “In your resume of proceedings prior to 2016 I would be grateful if you include reference to Order of Your Own Motion of 11 November 2013 in which you direct me to: a) Provide variations to SJ Lush’s Orders of 28 May 2013 in my aunt’s best interests; b) Grounds for proceedings against SJ Lush under the Human Rights Act 1999. I would be grateful if you would refer to my Responses filed with your court on 6 December 2013; to include: i) My proposal there should be an Interim Independent deputy for my aunt’s property and affairs while her capacity was properly assessed; b) [C]’s acceptance that my aunt possessed capacity to manage her property and affairs within limits (excluding trusts of extraordinary legal complexity) through the Report and findings to that effect of my aunt’s GP Dr Graham Gibson obtained by [C] on 10 December 2013 and filed with your court on 17 December 2013.” I saw, and see, no need to include reference to these matters in this judgment. In relation to the question of A’s capacity, I point out that, so far as I am aware, Mr Fitzgerald has never sought to challenge, whether in the Court of Appeal or elsewhere, either my order (see paragraph 12 below) or my findings (see paragraph 13 below). [Back] Note 2 In his email dated 8 August 2016 (see paragraph 71 below) Mr Fitzgerald says this: “In referring to your Order in Declaration of 25 March 2015 please confirm that you reported five assessments of capacity on my aunt for the period 2013-2015 by her carers and clinicians all finding her to possess capacity to make important decisions in her life for herself, and that she possesses this capacity at present despite her age and life history.” The judgment which I gave on 20 January 2015 (see paragraph 13 below), of which the transcript is available, speaks for itself. I repeat (see footnote 1 above) that, so far as I am aware, Mr Fitzgerald has never sought to challenge, whether in the Court of Appeal or elsewhere, either my order (paragraph 12) or my findings (paragraph 13). [Back] Note 3 In his email dated 8 August 2016 (see paragraph 71 below) Mr Fitzgerald says this: “You may or may not recall that Professor Robert Howard’s evidence to your court was that my aunt’s supposed schiyophrenis [sic] displayed no symptoms which would justify her restrained in locked psychiatric detention, as she was found to be during Hearing before SJ Lush in 2013. Professor Robert Howard also confirmed that she definitely does not suffer dementia or any dementa-related condition despite her present restraint in dementia ward. If you are unable to recall Professor Howard’s evidence to you of January last year, please direct that the transcript of his evidence to your court of 20 January 2015 is prepared free of charge.” The judgment I gave on 20 January 2015 speaks for itself. I repeat what I have said in footnote 2 above. I refuse to direct the preparation at public expense of a transcript of Professor Howard’s evidence. [Back] Note 4 In the draft judgment I had added here, as also in paragraphs 18(ii) and 23, the words “nor has the appropriate court fee been paid.” In his email dated 9 August 2016, 13:59 (see paragraph 71 below) Mr Fitzgerald disputes that any such fee was payable and asks that I remove from the judgment all references to his supposed non-payment of court fees. I agree that this should be done, and have accordingly deleted the relevant words from paragraphs 18(i), 18(ii) and 23. [Back] Note 5 See footnote 4 above. [Back] Note 6 See footnote 4 above. [Back] Note 7 See footnote 4 above. [Back] Note 8 In his email dated 8 August 2016 (see paragraph 71 below) Mr Fitzgerald says this: “By your Order of 24 March 2016 you direct that no further costs orders are to be made in this case. Your Order is of record in your court (as well as being presently lodged with the Court of Appeal) and I would be most grateful if you would confirm its terms. At Paragraph 70 of Draft Judgement you make exactly the further costs order which you have directed should not be made. Please confirm that your further costs order of Paragraph 70 of Draft Judgement is rescinded. Please also confirm that Hughmans’ Draft Order of today’s date will not be issued by your court.” Mr Fitzgerald mistakes the meaning and effect of this order of 24 March 2016, which needs to be read in conjunction with the earlier order I had made on 22 March 2016, referred to in paragraph 27(i) above. My directions in paragraph 70 below stand. [Back] Note 9 In his email dated 8 August 2016 (see paragraph 71 below) Mr Fitzgerald says this: “Your Orders of 22 & 24 March are now invalidated by [C]’s failure to comply with standard costs assessment process. With your permission I will now enter an Application to you to rescind these Orders as ineffective, unenforceable, and tending to obstruct the independent and impartial investigation of [C]’s tax-evasion on our aunt’s estate by the statutory authorities. I would be grateful if you would confirm permission for this application to you this week.” I have made clear to Mr Fitzgerald (emails dated 9 August 2016, 11:19, 11:53) that I will consider his application for permission (required by the civil restraint order I made on 22 March 2016) if the application is made in proper form. As yet, so far as I am aware, no such application has been made. [Back] Note 10 In his email dated 8 August 2016 (see paragraph 71 below) Mr Fitzgerald says this: “In your Annexe A you set out in full my Affidavit in Committal of solicitor Frances Hughes dated 27 November 2015 and lodged with your court on that date. You refer to its contents elsewhere in Draft Judgement. Please confirm that it is made in the required format of the Court of Protection Practice Direction in so far as a Litigant-in-Person can be reasonably expected to comply with the Practice Direction.” I decline to provide the confirmation Mr Fitzgerald seeks. I draw attention to what I had said, and say, in paragraph 33 below. [Back] Note 11 In his email dated 8 August 2016 (see paragraph 71 below) Mr Fitzgerald says this: “You omit all mention of my written submissions to your court of 21 March. At hearing on 16 March you directed I file written submissions in Response to Ian Clarke Counsel for [C] by 21 March. My written submissions to your court of 21 March detail how the tax evasion practiced by [C] on our aunt's estate is proved on documents filed by [C] herself with your court. Please Report the contents of my written submissions to you of 21 March in Final Approved Judgement.” This is simply wrong: I referred to Mr Fitzgerald’s position statement in some detail in paragraph 18(iii) above, and both there and in this paragraph I actually quote parts of it. However, as I explained in paragraph 18(iii) above, much of his position statement “is irrelevant to anything I have to determine”, being taken up with “wild and scurrilous allegations”, for example of tax fraud on the part of C and complaints of “falsification” and “wrongdoing” on the part of Ms Hughes. Included in Mr Fitzgerald’s position statement are some specific complaints in relation to particular items in the Bill of Costs. These, however, are matters for consideration by the Taxing Judge on the detailed assessment I have directed, not by me. [Back] Note 12 In his email dated 8 August 2016 (see paragraph 71 below) Mr Fitzgerald says this: “Please confirm immediately that your email of 24 March (to which you refer in your Paragraph 68) was not sent to me, but sent only to solicitors for [C]. Please confirm that I was given no knowledge of its contents and no opportunity to respond. Please confirm that I have been given no opportunity to made the “further submissions” referred to by you in your previously undisclosed email of 24 March.” In his email dated 9 August 2016 (11:34) Mr Fitzgerald says this: “As presiding judge your responsibility is to ensure the parties are placed on an equal footing. This is the fundamental principle of all civil proceedings in all Divisions and jurisdictions in England and Wales. There can scarcely be an example of a judge paying less regard to this fundamental principle than for that judge to enter into “one-sided” deliberations with the legal representatives of one party to the utter exclusion of the other. When these deliberations involve costs against the excluded party which are to met by deprivation of his equity in his home, I believe this to be a matter of public concern. When these deliberations are conducted by a judge who is aware of provable allegations of tax-evasion against the favoured party, I believe this to be a resignation issue.” In his email of 9 August 2016 (12:55) Mr Fitzgerald says: “I believe your “one-side” deliberations with [C]’s legal representatives conducted at a time when you were aware of provable allegations of tax-evasion against her and of immediate relevance to those deliberations to be a resignation issue.” The facts, as shown by the emails sent at the time, of which I have contemporaneous copies, are as follows: My email of 24 March 2016 was sent to Mr Clarke and Hughmans at 08:53, with a request that it be copied to Mr Fitzgerald. It was forwarded by Hughmans to Mr Fitzgerald the same day at 09:49. The submissions by Hughmans in relation to the costs were sent to me by an email the same day at 10:24, that email also being copied to Mr Fitzgerald. Since I drafted this footnote, there have been further emails. An email sent by Mr Jenkins of Hughmans to Mr Fitzgerald on 9 August 2016 (14:47) reads as follows: “The events of 22 and 24 March 2016 were as follows: 1. On 22 March 2016 the President made an Order (a copy of which is attached) (a) allowing your appeal and exercising his discretion afresh (b) reserving his judgment on the remaining issues in dispute and (c) ordering each party to file and serve short written submissions as to the costs of the March 2016 hearing by 4pm on 29 March 2016. 2. On 24 March 2016 at 08.53 Mr Clarke and I received an email from the President notifying us of his decision in relation to the remaining issues in dispute and of his provisional view as to the costs of the March 2016 hearing. He asked us to submit a revised draft order by email, with copy to you, and also to provide you with a copy of his 08.53 email. 3. At 09.49 I sent an email to the President attaching the draft order as requested and asking for a further charging order. I copied you into that email, which also appended a copy of the email Mr Clarke and I had received from the President at 08.53. A further copy of my email is attached. 4. At 10.24 I sent a further email to the President with our submissions as to the costs of the March 2016 hearing. Again, I copied you into that email. A further copy of that email is also attached. You will note that there have been no “one sided deliberations” as you have alleged. You were provided with copies of the emails at the time.” Mr Fitzgerald replied to Mr Jenkins (9 August 2016, 15:27): “Both you and the President are aware that I was not copied in to your emails of 09.49 and 10.24 of 24 March.” He followed this with a further email to me (9 August 2016, 15:35): “I trust you will have the judicial integrity to confirm that Hughmans Solicitors’ emails referred to below were not copied to me at the time and you will not seek to rely on the questionable evidence of a solicitor who in breach of his professions code of conduct has been assisting his clients in concealment of serious fraud and tax-evasion.” I make no observations in relation to Mr Fitzgerald’s attacks on my integrity, beyond emphasising that the facts, as I believed them to be at time and when I prepared the draft of this judgment, and as I now believe them to be, are as I have set them out above. Despite Mr Fitzgerald’s bluster in relation to Hughmans, there is, in my judgment, no substance in any of the allegations he makes against either the firm or Mr Jenkins. [Back] Note 13 See further, paragraph 28 above, footnote 8. [Back] Note 14 In his email dated 8 August 2016 (see below) Mr Fitzgerald says this: “Please confirm that I was not given any prior knowledge of Hughmans’ Draft Order of today’s date before circulation of your Draft Judgement on Saturday past 6 August. I would be grateful if you would give this confirmation this week.” This is self-evidently correct; as Hughmans’ email of 8 August 2016 makes clear, it was sent in response to their receipt of the draft judgment. [Back] Note 15 See paragraphs 18(i), 18(ii) and 23, footnotes 4-7, above. [Back]