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England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) >> CZ (Human Rights Claim: Costs) [2017] EWFC 11 (16 February 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/HCJ/2017/11.html Cite as: [2017] EWFC 11, [2017] WLR 2467, [2018] 1 FLR 23, [2017] 1 Costs LR 201, [2017] 1 WLR 2467, [2017] WLR(D) 117, [2017] 2 FCR 465 |
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SITTING AT SHEFFIELD
50 West Barr Sheffield S3 8PH |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
AZ (mother) BZ (father) CZ (child by his Children's Guardian) |
Applicants |
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- and - |
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KIRKLEES COUNCIL |
Respondent |
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Re CZ (Human Rights Claim: Costs) |
____________________
Mr. Alex Taylor (instructed by Ridley & Hall) for BZ, the father
Ms. Julia Nelson (instructed by Jordans) for CZ, the child
Ms. Gillian Irving QC and Ms. Clare Garnham (instructed by Local Authority Solicitor) for the Local Authority
Hearing date: 8 February 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr. Justice COBB:
Introduction and summary of the issues
i) It is of course appropriate for HRA 1998 claims which arise in, and on the same facts as, CA 1989 proceedings to be considered by the court within the CA 1989 proceedings. Section 7(1)(b) enables every tier of the Family Court, including the magistrates, to give effect to the parties' Convention rights (see Re L(A Child) v. A Local Authority and MS [2003] EWHC 665 (Fam) at [31]);
ii) While each case must be considered on its own facts, any award of damages for non-pecuniary loss made under section 8(3) of the HRA Act 1998 is likely in this class of case to be reasonably modest;
iii) Where a public funded certificate is granted to a party to pursue a claim under the HRA 1998 for declaration and damages arising within care proceedings, the statutory charge (section 25(1)(a) LASPO Act 2012) will apply (i.e. the damages will represent "property recovered or preserved by the individual in proceedings, or in any compromise or settlement of a dispute, in connection with which the services were provided"), and the Legal Aid Agency has the ability to recoup its costs (or a proportion of them) from any damages award;
iv) Costs of the care proceedings under the CA 1989 must be considered by reference to rule 28 of the Family Procedure Rules 2010, and with specific regard to the judgments of the Supreme Court in Re T (Children: Care Proceedings: Serious Allegations Not Proved) [2012] UKSC 36) [2013] 1 FLR 133 ("Re T") and Re S [2015] UKSC 20 ("Re S");
v) Costs of the declaration and/or damages claim under the HRA 1998 claim are awarded under the Civil Procedure Rules 1998; these rules provide (per CPR 44.2 (2) (a)) that within the court's discretion, 'the general rule is that the unsuccessful party will be ordered to pay the costs of the successful party', subject to the provisions set out elsewhere in that rule; the provisos within Part 44 are important, and include consideration of litigation conduct;
vi) The decision of Keehan J in P v A Local Authority [2016] is particular on its facts and in my view provides little assistance to the majority of potential claimants in HRA 1998 cases which arise in the context of family proceedings under the CA 1989 or otherwise.
The facts
i) "[T]he Local Authority cannot establish the threshold for intervention as currently pleaded by the Local Authority"; and
ii) CZ would return immediately to the care of his parents.
This outcome was supported by Ms. H who, by this time, had been able to undertake more complete enquiries. Ms. H confirmed that the hospital medical records had recorded that both parents had responded positively to advice from professionals and consistently displayed warm and affectionate interaction with CZ during a difficult time when on the SCBU and on the ward. Notwithstanding the concessions, further case management directions were given for assessment of the parents, and further progression of the case.
Human Rights Claims
i) The Local Authority failed to take any or any adequate steps properly to investigate the quality of the care being offered by the mother and the father to CZ while CZ was on the ward at X Hospital, from 6 November to 13 November 2015;
ii) The Local Authority did not take proper account of the positive reports of the medical staff on the ward about the parents' ability to care for CZ, nor of the increase in weight which had been recorded in the days immediately prior to CZ's formal discharge from the ward;
iii) The Local Authority failed to involve the parents sufficiently or at all, in the period when CZ was in hospital, in the plan to secure CZ's welfare, whether by way of an interim care order or otherwise;
iv) The Local Authority obtained the mother's consent to section 20 accommodation when there was an issue over her capacity to give such consent, and further failed to consult the father sufficiently (or at all) when planning section 20 accommodation for the child;
v) The Local Authority caused or permitted the hearing of the interim care order application to take place in the absence of the parents, and/or without notifying Cafcass or arranging for the child to be represented; they then wrongly and repeatedly misrepresented to District Judge Woodhead that the mother and father had been given proper notice of the hearing on 13 November 2015, and proceeded to advance the case for an Interim Care Order in the parents' absence;
vi) The Local Authority, acting upon the interim care order made without effective notice to the parents, removed CZ from their care just at the point when he was about to be discharged from hospital home with them.
i) The Health Services should have made proper referral of the family to the Local Authority under Section 11 of the Children Act 2004, in the days or weeks prior to CZ's birth; they failed to do so and this disadvantaged the Local Authority in assessing CZ's situation in the hospital after 10 November;
ii) The referral from the hospital was only made on the evening of 10 November 2015 when CZ's discharge was imminent. It appeared to the Local Authority then that the issues surrounding the family were complex: there were concerns about the father's behaviour and his attitudes to baby-care, the baby had lost weight and was now gaining weight at a lower rate than had been expected; there was a concern that the grandmother's interventions were intrusive and potentially unhelpful. The mother was assessed to be vulnerable;
iii) The social worker maintains that she advised the mother that the Local Authority were planning to take proceedings; she nonetheless concedes that she did not advise the mother or father that they were seeking an interim care order on the afternoon of 13 November 2015;
iv) At no time prior to 7 December, and not at the hearing on 7 December itself, did the parents or the Children's Guardian argue for the immediate return of CZ to the care of the parents. All parties seemed to concede that expert assessment of the parents was indicated at that hearing on the basis that CZ would remain with the grandparents;
v) There was a prima facie case for statutory intervention and the making of an interim care order, and for interim removal of CZ.
What is not in issue
i) It breached the parents and child's right to a fair trial, pursuant to Article 6 ECHR when it failed to inform them and/or Cafcass of the urgent hearing which was held at 3p.m. on Friday 13 November 2015; this breach is compounded by the fact that the Local Authority repeatedly informed the court that the parents had been so notified;
ii) Between 13 November 2015, and, at the latest, 7 December 2015 (the next hearing date), the Local Authority breached the rights of those named above to a family life as enshrined in Article 8 ECHR. The parents did not live in the same household as their son for that period albeit they enjoyed extensive contact to one another. The child was placed with the paternal grandparents in their home.
These concessions were made at an early stage of the process, and were shared with the court on 14 July 2016,
i) The Claimants' costs of the CA 1989 proceedings from 13 November to 7 December 2015 (corresponding with the period in which it is agreed that the ECHR rights of the Claimants were infringed);
ii) The costs of the HRA 1998 applications from the date of issue (April 2016) to 14 July 2016 (the date of the Case Management hearing at which the Local Authority revealed its acceptance of declarations and made its open proposal to settle at £2,000 per Claimant).
What is in issue
Should the Local Authority pay damages to the Claimants?
i) The Court of Appeal (Lord Woolf CJ, Lord Phillips MR and Auld LJ) in Anufrijeva v Southwark London Borough Council [2003] EWCA Civ 1406, [2004] QB 1124, [52-53], and [57-58]:
"The remedy of damages generally plays a less prominent role in actions based on breaches of the articles of the Convention, than in actions based on breaches of private law obligations where, more often than not, the only remedy claimed is damages. Where an infringement of an individual's human rights has occurred, the concern will usually be to bring the infringement to an end and any question of compensation will be of secondary, if any, importance" [52/53].
"Our approach to awarding damages in this jurisdiction should be no less liberal than those applied at Strasbourg or one of the purposes of the HRA will be defeated and claimants will still be put to the expense of having to go to Strasbourg to obtain just satisfaction. The difficulty lies in identifying from the Strasbourg jurisprudence clear and coherent principles governing the award of damages ."
And then quoting from the Law Commission:
"Perhaps the most striking feature of the Strasbourg case-law, is the lack of clear principles as to when damages should be awarded and how they should be measured". [57/58]
ii) Lord Bingham in Regina v. Secretary of State for the Home Department (Respondent) ex parte Greenfield [2005] UKHL 14, [2005] 1 WLR 673 at [9] and [19],
"The routine treatment of a finding of violation as, in itself, just satisfaction for the violation found reflects the point already made that the focus of the Convention is on the protection of human rights and not the award of compensation." [9]
"The Court [in Strasbourg] routinely describes its awards as equitable, which I take to mean that they are not precisely calculated but are judged by the Court to be fair in the individual case. Judges in England and Wales must also make a similar judgment in the case before them." [19]
iii) Lord Reed in R (o.t.a. Faulkner) v. Secretary of State for Justice [2013] UKSC 23 at [13](4)/(7):
"(4) [T]he quantum of awards under section 8 should broadly reflect the level of awards made by the European court in comparable cases brought by applicants from the UK or other countries with a similar cost of living
(7) The appropriate amount to be awarded in such circumstances will be a matter of judgment, reflecting the facts of the individual case and taking into account such guidance as is available from awards made by the European court, or by domestic courts under section 8 of the 1998 Act, in comparable cases".
iv) And in a passage which directly chimes with the facts of this case, Wilson LJ in Re C (Breach of Human Rights: Damages) [2007] EWCA Civ 2, [2007] 1 FLR 1957 at [64]
" the European Court generally favours an award of damages in cases in which local authorities have infringed the right of parents under Article 8 to respect for their family life by shortcomings in the procedures by which they have taken children into care or kept them in care, whether temporarily or permanently" [64]
"The purpose of the Court's award in respect of damage is to compensate the applicant for the actual harmful consequences of a violation. It is not intended to punish the Contracting Party responsible. The Court has therefore, until now, considered it inappropriate to accept claims for damages with labels such as "punitive", "aggravated" or "exemplary"." [9]
"It is in the nature of non-pecuniary damage that it does not lend itself to precise calculation. If the existence of such damage is established, and if the Court considers that a monetary award is necessary, it will make an assessment on an equitable basis, having regard to the standards which emerge from its case-law." [14]
"Applicants who wish to be compensated for non-pecuniary damage are invited to specify a sum which in their view would be equitable. Applicants who consider themselves victims of more than one violation may claim either a single lump sum covering all alleged violations or a separate sum in respect of each alleged violation". [15]
It is convenient to cite here also what is said in the Practice Direction (at [17]) about costs and expenses (to which I make reference at [58(vi)] below):
"The Court will uphold claims for costs and expenses only in so far as they are referable to the violations it has found. It will reject them in so far as they relate to complaints that have not led to the finding of a violation, or to complaints declared inadmissible".
What order for costs should be made?
i) On 22 February 2016, the Local Authority sent a without prejudice letter asking the solicitors for both parents to indicate a 'settlement amount' in relation to any prospective HRA 1998 claim; the Local Authority invited the solicitors to attend a round table meeting in early March 2016 "to see if an early resolution can be brought without the need to issue proceedings we are mindful of the statutory charge that would apply";
ii) On 11 March, Ms. Irving QC (counsel for the Local Authority) contacted Ms. Anning (counsel for the mother) directly, encouraging her solicitors/client not to issue a HRA 1998 claim "so as to avoid the statutory charge applying to any settlement achieved";
iii) A round table meeting was held on 17 March 2016 at the instigation of the Local Authority. The Local Authority had invited each party to bring a schedule of costs, but in the event only the solicitors for the father did so; it is said, without demur at this hearing, that at the round table meeting the Local Authority made an apology to the parents. In a 'without prejudice' letter which followed the meeting (23 March 2016) the Local Authority offered the sum of £2,500 per Claimant on the basis of no order as to costs (schedules still not having been produced on behalf of the mother or the child);
iv) On 13 July 2016, the Local Authority made a further without prejudice offer to settle the HRA 1998 claims for £2,000 together with the costs of the HRA claim; the letter contains an apology about the failure of the Local Authority representatives to notify the parents of the hearing on 13 November;
v) On 14 July 2016, at a hearing before me, this offer was repeated as an open offer; the Local Authority confirmed that it conceded declarations.
vi) On 15 July 2016, the offer was increased to £2,500 on an open basis, together with the costs of the HRA 1998 proceedings; the Local Authority proposed a further 'round table' discussion ("the Local Authority feel that this was very much the steer given by [the Judge] this morning");
vii) So far as I can tell, there was no response to that offer;
viii) An advocates meeting took place on 13 December 2016, but the agenda focused on arrangements for preparation for trial;
ix) On 6 January 2017, the Local Authority made further open proposals for settlement;
x) A further advocates meeting took place on 16 January 2017, at which the figure of £3750 was agreed;
xi) On the information available to me, the Claimants have not complied with the direction which I made (on 14 July and again on 5 October 2016) to make open proposals for settlement in a timely way, or indeed at all.
1. | Father's costs | £20,908.34 |
2. | Mother's costs | £25,151.91 |
3. | Children's Guardian's costs | £32,885.89 |
Total [Claimants' costs] | £78,946.14 | |
4. | Local Authority costs | c.£40,000 |
Grand Total | c.£120,000 |
"25 Charges on property in connection with civil legal services
(1) Where civil legal services are made available to an individual under this Part, the amounts described in subsection (2) are to constitute a first charge on
(a) any property recovered or preserved by the individual in proceedings, or in any compromise or settlement of a dispute, in connection with which the services were provided (whether the property is recovered or preserved for the individual or another person), and
(b) any costs payable to the individual by another person in connection with such proceedings or such a dispute.
(2) Those amounts are
(a) amounts expended by the Lord Chancellor in securing the provision of the services (except to the extent that they are recovered by other means), and
(b) other amounts payable by the individual in connection with the services under section 23 or 24".
" if the following conditions are satisfied, (a) the Director was satisfied, in determining that a legally aided party qualified for legal representation, that the proceedings had a significant wider public interest; and (b) the Director in making the determination took into account that there were other claimants or potential claimants who might benefit from the proceedings."
The discretion under regulation 9 can only be exercised in cases where the Director has funded the individual's representation in accordance with that regulation. This does not apply here.
i) That I should make the award under section 8(1) of the HRA 1998 because if I do not do so, the Claimants do not obtain "just satisfaction" in relation to the award of damages (section 8(3));
ii) That the conduct of the Local Authority was sufficiently unreasonable and/or reprehensible that it should sound in an adverse award of costs (reference Re T and Re S above);
iii) That although Article 13 ECHR is not incorporated into English law by the HRA 1998, I should nonetheless have regard to Article 13 ECHR when considering section 8(1) to ensure that the Claimants' remedy is truly an "effective" one.
"In relation to any act (or proposed act) of a public authority which the court finds is (or would be) unlawful, it may grant such relief or remedy, or make such order, within its powers as it considers just and appropriate".
The Claimants accept that while section 8(1) offers the court a very wide discretion, in this case I "must" (they argue) exercise my discretion in the only way contended for, otherwise I will not be offering the Claimants "meaningful recompense" for the violations under section 8(3).
"It would be plainly unfair for Mr Faulkner to obtain no real remedy from these proceedings due to the operation of the 'statutory charge' in circumstances in which (a) the court has recognised that he should receive £6,500 in damages as a result of breach of Article 5 (4) that led to a loss of conditional liberty and (b) a large number of other litigants will now be able to fully litigate their claims as a result of Mr Faulkner's conduct of this appeal."
"If it was so obviously a violation of the human rights of Mr Faulkner for his award of damages to be encroached by the statutory charge then one would have thought that it would have been listed as an exemption from the statutory charge within Regulation 44 of the 2000 Regulations [i.e. predecessor regulations to those currently in force], but it is not. The fact that something is not mentioned there does not necessarily answer the question. But it does demonstrate to me that Parliament must have decided not to expand the list of exempt items beyond those which have been in existence for many years" [32]
"It is a feature of our costs regime, particularly so in civil proceedings but perhaps less so in family proceedings, that an award of costs is never in the full amount. The reason for this is to provide a deterrent to litigation, so it is said. That is why an assessment of costs on a standard basis rarely achieves more than 70 pence in the pound. The consequence of that is of course that even where there is an award of costs in favour of a successful party, the consequence of the assessment process may see a large part - perhaps even all - of a modest award of damages eliminated" [34]
"I do not accept that because [the damages] are awarded to Mr Faulkner as a victim of human rights violation that they should be subjected to a process of immunisation in the way that perhaps damages for personal injury or an award of damages for, say, the loss of an eye or a leg would not" [37].
i) I do not accept that the very wide discretion afforded to me under section 8(1) has to be condensed to one option only (i.e. to make a substantive award of costs) simply in order to achieve a 'just' outcome under section 8(3);
ii) If it had been the intention of Parliament that damages awarded under the HRA 1998 would be exempt from the statutory charge, it would have provided for this in the revised Statutory Charge Regulations (2013); it did not;
iii) Most awards of damages would be likely to be reduced to some extent by the incidence of assessment/taxation of the litigant's own bill. While this may not apply so harshly to publicly funded litigants, it seems to me that the Claimants could not be insulated against the eventuality that the shortfall in any assessment would in itself lead to the obliteration of a modest award of damages;
iv) The award of non-pecuniary damages under section 8(3) is intended to reflect the Court's disapproval of infringement of the claimants' rights, in providing "just satisfaction" to the claimant; it is not intended to be, of itself, a costs award. I would regard it as unprincipled to increase the award of damages by a significant sum (which on the instant facts could be approximately seven-fold) to reflect the costs of the proceedings. Parliament has devised a legitimate mechanism for the recovery of the costs incurred from those who benefit from state-funded support to pursue their litigation, and however unfairly it may operate in an individual case, it must be respected;
v) In any evaluation of costs whether under the CPR 1998 or the FPR 2010, I am obliged to have regard to the parties' litigation conduct, and whether costs are reasonably or not reasonably incurred. The Claimants' approach would require me to ignore or forgive any reckless, wasteful or profligate manufacture of costs in order to ensure that the Claimants receive their award; this cannot be right. In this case, as will be apparent from my comments below, the Claimants did not conscientiously attempt to settle their claims, whereas I am satisfied that the Local Authority did make genuine efforts to do so, and this influenced my approach to the second argument below;
vi) The Practice Direction of the European Court of Human Rights (see [40] above) specifically refers to costs awards being upheld "only in so far as they are referable to the violations it has found". If I am to cast an eye across to Strasbourg for guidance under section 8(4), then this is the answer I receive; this guidance would steer me towards an award of costs referable to the period 13.11.15-7.12.15 but not otherwise;
"The court may at any time make such order as to costs as it thinks just".
i) It is relatively rare to make an order for costs in children cases: London Borough of Sutton v Davis (Costs)(No.2) [1994] 2 FLR 569 per Wilson J (as he then was):
"Where the debate surrounds the future of a child, the proceedings are partly inquisitorial and the aspiration is that in their outcome the child is the winner and indeed the only winner. The court does not wish the spectre of an order for costs to discourage those with a proper interest in the child from participating in the debate. Nor does it wish to reduce the chance of their co-operation around the future life of the child by casting one as the successful party entitled to his costs and another as the unsuccessful party obliged to pay them. The proposition applies in its fullest form to proceedings between parents and other relations; but it also applies to proceedings to which a local authority are a party. Thus, even when a local authority's application for a care order is dismissed, it is unusual to order them to pay the costs of the other parties. But the proposition is not applied where, for example, the conduct of a party has been reprehensible or the party's stance has been beyond the band of what is reasonable" (emphasis by underlining added).
ii) Local Authorities have a duty to investigate allegations of child harm, and should be protected from orders on costs if on investigation the allegations prove to be without foundation: see Re T (above) at [42]:
"The Children Act 1989 imposes duties on the local authority in respect of the care of children. If the local authority receives information that a child has been subjected to or is likely to be subjected to serious harm it has a duty to investigate the report and, where there are reasonable grounds for believing that it may be well founded, to instigate care proceedings. In this respect the role of a local authority has much in common with the role of a prosecuting authority in criminal proceedings. It is for the court, and not the local authority, to decide whether the allegations are well founded. It is a serious misfortune to be the subject of unjustified allegations in relation to misconduct to a child, but where it is reasonable that these should be investigated by a court, justice does not demand that the local authority responsible for placing the allegations before the court should ultimately be responsible for the legal costs of the person against whom the allegations are made". (emphasis by underlining added).
iii) Every party has their part to play in assisting the Court to reach the right conclusion in the interests of the child: see Baroness Hale in Re S at [20]/[21]:
" there are no adult winners and losers the only winner should be the child.
Furthermore, it can generally be taken for granted that each of the persons appearing before the court has a role to play in helping the court to achieve the best outcome for the child."
iv) There is a public policy element to this approach: see Cazalet J in Re M (Local Authority's Costs) [1995] 1 FLR 533:
"As a matter of public policy it seems to me that where there is the exercise of [a] nicely balanced judgment to be made by a local authority carrying out its statutory duties, the local authority should not feel that it is liable to be condemned in costs if, despite acting within the band of reasonableness (to adopt the words of Wilson J), it may form a different view to that which a court may ultimately adopt." (emphasis added)
v) Where a local authority has caused costs to be incurred by acting in a way which is unreasonable or reprehensible, justice may well require that the local authority pay the costs in question: see London Borough of Sutton v Davis (Costs)(No.2) (above), Re T (above) at [44], and Re L (Costs of Children Proceedings) [2014] EWCA Civ 1437 ([38]-[41]); examples of such cases include: Re R (Care: Disclosure: Nature of Proceedings) [2002] 1 FLR 755; Re X (Emergency Protection Orders) [2006] EWHC 510 (Fam), [2006] 2 FLR 701; Coventry City Council v X, Y and Z (Care Proceedings: Costs) [2011] 1 FLR 1045;
"the general practice of not awarding costs against a party, including a local authority, in the absence of reprehensible behaviour or an unreasonable stance, is one that accords with the ends of justice and which should not be subject to an exception in the case of split hearings" [44]
vi) There is no fixed or defined category of case within which costs could or should be awarded. Baroness Hale in Re S expressed the view at [31] that:
"I do not understand that Lord Phillips, giving the judgment of the court in Re T, was necessarily intending to rule out the possibility that there might be other circumstances in which an award of costs in care proceedings might be appropriate and just."
vii) If the family proceedings had been essentially adversarial in nature (i.e. appeal against refusal of day nursery registration), costs may well follow the event: see again Wilson J in London Borough of Sutton v Davis (Costs)(No.2):
"The proceedings were adversarial and the local authority lost the argument. Such were circumstances for application of the principle that costs should follow the event."
viii) If "real hardship" would be caused to a party in achieving an outcome in the best interests of the child, that may provide a proper basis for a costs order per Baroness Hale in Re S (above) at [33]:
"The object of the exercise is to achieve the best outcome for the child. If the best outcome for the child is to be brought up by her own family, there may be cases where real hardship would be caused if the family had to bear their own costs of achieving that outcome. In other words, the welfare of the child would be put at risk if the family had to bear its own costs. In those circumstances, just as it may be appropriate to order a richer parent who has behaved reasonably in the litigation to pay the costs of the poorer parent with whom the child is to live, it may also be appropriate to order the local authority to pay the costs of the parent with whom the child is to live, if otherwise the child's welfare would be put at risk. (It may be that this is one of the reasons why parents are automatically entitled to public funding in care cases.)" (emphasis by underlining added).
i) They failed to respond constructively to the Local Authority's efforts to achieve a negotiated settlement; from an early stage (i.e. February 2016: see [45](i) above), through until July and beyond, the Local Authority was making appropriate overtures to sort out this dispute, but the Claimants were ostensibly unreceptive;
ii) The Claimants were invited from 22 February 2016 to indicate a 'settlement amount' in relation to any prospective HRA 1998 claim, but they did not apparently (i.e. from the correspondence including that marked 'without prejudice' which I have now seen) do so;
iii) The mother and Children's Guardian did not respond positively to the request to provide costs schedules at an early stage or an order to the same effect, and none of the Claimants complied with my direction for the provision of open offers of settlement;
iv) Further 'without prejudice' offers were made on the days either side of the Case Management hearing on 14 July, without any meaningful response. On the 14 July itself, at court, Ms. Irving QC made an open offer. On 15 July 2016, the offer was increased to £2,500 on an open basis, together with the HRA 1998 costs; the Local Authority proposed a further 'round table' discussion but this fell on deaf ears;
v) So far as I can tell, there was no response to the offer made on 15 July 2016;
vi) On the information available to me, the Claimants have not complied with the direction which I made (on 5 October 2016) to make open proposals for settlement in a timely way, or at all.
On ordinary costs principles, I am of the view that the Claimants should be entitled to recovery of their costs of the HRA 1998 proceedings from the grant of certificates up to and including 14 July, but no further.
"Everyone whose rights and freedoms as set forth in this Convention are violated shall have an effective remedy before a national authority notwithstanding that the violation has been committed by persons acting in an official capacity" (emphasis by underlining added).
"P's claim is and was always based upon his Art. 8 Convention right to respect for his private and family life. The claim had nothing to do with the declaratory relief granted to P in the wardship proceedings" [71] (emphasis added).
On the facts, P v A Local Authority is materially different from the situation which obtains here.
Conclusions and decisions
a) 13.11.15-7.12.15 (all Claimants: CA 1989 proceedings);
b) From the date on which the LAA granted extensions to the Claimants' existing certificates (issued for the CA 1989 proceedings) for them to pursue HRA 1998 claims to 14.7.16, excluding the costs incurred by those who attended on behalf of the mother and the child at the meeting arranged by the Local Authority on 17 March 2016 (save as provided for herein, all Claimants: HRA 1998 proceedings).