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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> L, R (on the application of) v Leeds City Council (Rev 1) [2010] EWHC 3324 (Admin) (12 November 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2010/3324.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 3324 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
The Court House 1 Oxford Row Leeds West Yorkshire England LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF L | Claimant | |
v | ||
LEEDS CITY COUNCIL | Defendant |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Ms Jenni Richards (instructed by Leeds City Council) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE LANGSTAFF:
Introduction
The Background History
"It became quickly apparent that the local authority appeared to have had something of an entrenched view in respect to (mum) and she in turn had a very jaundiced view about the quality of service offered by the local authority. It was clear from the onset of the assessment some time would be needed to be spent developing a rapport with (mum) in order to facilitate a principle of 'working in partnership', something which I felt she believed has never been the case with Leeds City Council social workers."
The Legal Duty
3.Section 2 provides:
"(1) Where a local authority having functions under section 29 of the National Assistance Act 1948 are satisfied in the case of any person to whom that section applies who is ordinarily resident in their area that it is necessary in order to meet the needs of that person for that authority to make arrangements for all or any of the following matters, namely...
(a) the provision of practical assistance for that person in his home;
(b) the provision for that person of, or assistance to that person in obtaining, wireless, television, library or similar recreational facilities;
(c) the provision for that person of lectures, games, outings or other recreational facilities outside his home or assistance to that person in taking advantage of educational facilities available to him;
(d) the provision for that person of facilities for, or assistance in, travelling to and from his home for the purpose of participating in any services provided under arrangements made by the authority under the said section 29 or, with the approval of the authority, in any services provided otherwise than as aforesaid which are similar to services which could be provided under such arrangements;
(e) the provision of assistance for that person in arranging for the carrying out of any works of adaptation in his home or the provision of any additional facilities designed to secure his greater safety, comfort or convenience ...
it shall be the duty of that authority to make those arrangements in exercise of their functions under the said section 29."
"In terms of the treatment room, we feel that the girls' current treatment needs do not warrant the provision of a separate room. One issue seems to be that of excess equipment and medication that if removed could enable (mum) to look at more appropriate storage solutions. The use of multiple fridges in the home which appear to be surplus to requirement also eat up valuable space in the home."
I interpose to note that they had identified some six fridges, one being a large American-style fridge. The observations continued:
"The current physiotherapy regime for girls of this age and developing independence is for 2 x 15 minutes sessions in a sitting position. There is no need for a specialist bed to be set up... to allow this technique to be performed. Nevertheless (mum) feels that in terms of the girls' emotional and psychological well-being it is important to separate the trappings of their CF to another room and for them not constantly to be reminded that they have this condition. As stated previously it seems a little unrealistic as CF is a condition which the girls have and as such cannot be separated into just one room. Dr Conway, in a letter dated 1st March 2010, supported the need for a treatment room in the family home and cited several reasons for this, which can be seen in his letter. This information along with all other relevant information will be considered by senior managers within the children and young persons social care, who will then make a formal decision in due course."
"When children with CF are younger it is a standard practice that they lie down whilst an adult administers gentle tapping to the torso to aid the loosening of mucus built up in the lungs. However, at H and L's age this approach is not recommended. They have been prescribed acapella devices to use as part of their physiotherapy. This does not require the recipient to lie down but rather is administered in a sitting position."
She went on to say:
"You [that is mum]have stated that from time to time the girls require tapping physiotherapy when they are poorly. If the physiotherapy table is required on such occasions, your back pain should not be an issue in relation to setting it up, in that [your husband] should now be able to assist in this exercise."
"In both the visit undertaken by Julie Bringloe SDM and Hilary Suddes TM and the contact with the social workers during the core assessment, you repeatedly stated that you want a treatment room to isolate CF within the home so the whole family is not constantly reminded of the girls' condition. In reality this will not work and it does not address the issues of yours, H and L's emotional ability to cope with CF and the impact it has upon your lives. A more proactive way, as was recommended in the core assessment, is to offer both the girls and you some individual psychological support."
"Taking all these factors into account and considering the reasons you have put forward both singly and cumulatively I am of the clear opinion that the girls' needs do not trigger a duty on the part of the council such that a treatment room should be provided."
Procedural Issues
"The present litigation exemplifies a certain type of judicial review case which experience suggests can too often end up following a less than desirable course: I have in mind community care, housing and other cases involving either children or vulnerable adults, especially those where, as here, the first task of the local or other public authority is the preparation of an assessment.
[31] This is not the first time that I have felt compelled to express my unease about this particular type of litigation..."
He then cited some decisions he had earlier made.
"...There is I think a problem here that needs to be addressed. Too often, in my experience, inadequate thought is given to what precisely the court is being asked or can properly be asked to do. But before identifying what can go wrong and suggesting how it can be avoided it may be helpful set out a few basic principles...…
At paragraph 32:
"... I am here concerned with an area of decision-making where Parliament has chosen to confer the relevant power on the County Council: not on the court or anyone else. It follows that we are here within the realm of public law, not private law. It likewise follows that the primary decision maker is the County Council and not the court. The court's function in this type of dispute is essentially one of review – review of the County Council's decision, whatever it may be – rather than of primary decision making. It is not the function of the court itself to come to a decision on the merits. The court is not concerned to come to its own assessment of what is in these children's best interests. The court is concerned only to review the County Council's decisions, and that is not a review of the merits of the County Council's decisions but a review by reference to public law criteria..."
He referred to various other cases for that observation. Paragraph 33:
"[33] Now this has two important corollaries. Although I am, in a sense, concerned with the future welfare of very vulnerable children, I am not exercising a 'best interests' or 'welfare' jurisdiction, nor is it any part of my functions to monitor, regulate or police the performance by the County Council of its statutory functions on a continuing basis. A judge of the Family Division exercising the wardship jurisdiction has a continuing responsibility for the day to day life and welfare of the ward, exemplified by the principle that no important or major step in the life of a ward of court can be taken without the prior consent of the court: see Kelly v British Broadcasting Corpn [2001] Fam 59 at p 75. The function of the Administrative Court is quite different: it is, as it is put in CPR Part 54.1(2)(a), to review the lawfulness of a decision, action or failure to act in relation to the exercise of a public function. In other words, the Administrative Court exists to adjudicate upon specific challenges to discrete decisions. It does not exist to monitor and regulate the performance of public authorities: see in the context of community care R v Mayor and Burgesses of the London Borough of Hackney ex p S (unreported, 13 October 2000) at paras [8] and [11] and R v Mayor and Burgesses of the London Borough of Hackney ex p S (No 2) [2001] EWHC Admin 228 at para [4].
...
[34] It is elementary that it is for the claimant to set out what his case is and then to adduce the necessary evidence in support. That applies as much to proceedings for judicial review as to any other type of adversarial litigation. Consistently with this CPR Part 8.2 and Part 54.6 identify what the claim form is required to contain (see also paragraph 5.6 of the Practice Direction to CPR Part 54) and CPR Part 22.1 requires the claim to be verified by a statement of truth. The relevant form – Form N461 – requires a claimant seeking judicial review to set out in Section 3 'details of the decision to be judicially reviewed', in Section 5 a 'detailed statement of grounds', in Section 6 'details of remedy (including any interim remedy) being sought' and in Section 8 a 'statement of facts relied on'. There is good reason why all this information is required and why, although no doubt prolixity is to be discouraged, it is important that the claimant does actually provide, properly particularised, the 'detail' called for by Form N461."
He continued:
"[37] ... A child seeking to compel a local authority to perform what he asserts are its duties under section 20 of the Act may complain that the local authority has failed to make an initial assessment of his needs. As here in the cases of W, P and G, judicial review proceedings may be launched to compel the local authority to carry out an assessment. But once that process has been completed the child may complain that the local authority has assessed him incorrectly – perhaps as a child requiring services not under section 20 but only under section 17 – and he may wish to bring judicial review proceedings to quash the assessment with a view to making the local authority assess him correctly. And even once that process has been completed satisfactorily he may still wish to complain, for example, that the local authority, although it has correctly assessed him as requiring accommodation under section 20, has nonetheless failed to provide him with accommodation that is suitable.
[38] Those three complaints relate to three different actions (or failures to act) on the part of the local authority and moreover occurring, it may well be, on successive and different occasions. Each in principle properly forms the subject of a distinct and separate application for judicial review. Now it may be that a pragmatic application of the overriding objective in CPR Part 1.1 will often indicate that these successive claims can appropriately be pursued within the ambit of the original proceedings for judicial review, rather than condemning the claimant to bring three successive applications, but that is no reason why the normal principles should not apply in relation to what will in that event be the necessary amendments to the original proceedings."
He went on to observe in paragraph 39:
"If proper control is not kept on the pleadings – if the Form N461 is not promptly and properly amended to keep pace with what may be the rapidly changing dynamics of a case such as these – and if proper control is not also kept on the evidence there is likely to be difficulty. The parties may be left in confusion or be at loggerheads as to what precisely the court is being asked to do."
Issue 1: What challenge is the Court asked to resolve?
"The council is under a positive duty under section 17 of the Children Act 1989 to safeguard the claimant's welfare and that of her sister. Professor Taylor's evidence highlights the risk of harm to children posed by the current unsatisfactory arrangements and their treatment of the family room. We can see no basis on which this evidence should not now be considered by the council pursuant to his duty under section 17 and nor do we accept the claimant out of time to challenge the council's continued failure to provide a treatment room in the home"
Conclusion on first procedural issue
Second Preliminary Point: Standard of Review
"It is therefore important that cases involving Convention rights must be analysed in the correct way. This does not mean that there has been a shift to merits review. On the contrary, as Professor Jowell [2000] PL 671, 681 has pointed out the respective roles of judges and administrators are fundamentally distinct and will remain so. To this extent the general tenor of the observations in Mahmood [2001] 1 WLR 840 are correct. And Laws LJ rightly emphasised in Mahmood, at p 847, para 18, "that the intensity of review in a public law case will depend on the subject matter in hand". That is so even in cases involving Convention rights. In law context is everything."
Alternative Remedy
"If there was real complaint about any individual assessment or care plan or any true deficiency in the provision of community care the complaints procedure was the forum to which it should have been brought."
Substance of the Claim
"Having considered all the relevant information, the council has reached the conclusion that [H] and [L's] needs are not such that they require a treatment room and it is not necessary for the council to make provision for the treatment room in the family home. Although a need was identified in both 2005 and 2006, and appropriate offers made by the council, the children's needs have changed since then and further information is now available. In particular, as they are now older, their physiotherapy needs are significantly different. Medical opinion does not suggest that either H or L require a physiotherapy table to be erected to undergo their daily treatment regime. On the infrequent occasions they may need to lie down to undergo physiotherapy, I believe that it is reasonable for the table to be set up and lowered on each occasion.
75. Information obtained by the social workers suggest that the space required for storage of essential medication and equipment is not substantial.." She added that additional storage room would be made available by the disposal of unnecessary equipment and medications, and removal of such items as medical fridges save on the particular occasions when they were required.
"L has particularly severe disease possibly associated with a typical micro bacterial infection and is verging on referral for lung transplantation." (There is no other reference to the possibility of such a referral in the papers).
The rest of his report is plainly written in the light of that material. If he had looked at the fuller medical records which were in fact available, he would have seen (see the material produced at the conclusion of a report by the multi-disciplinary team) that the percentage figures he quoted were the very lowest of the figures obtained in a succession of attendances which L and H respectively had on the Leeds team: i.e. he had relied on a single reading which portrayed the condition of the girls at its worst. The generality seems best described (if Professor Taylor had only had regard to it), at page 2 of the Multi Disciplinary Team report of the 23rd March 2010, in which it was noted that had H's usual FEV1 was approximately 70%of predicted and L's approximately 50% of predicted.
"The case for a separate treatment room within the current family accommodation remains as strong today until I prepared my original report in 2005. Indeed more so, as the girls overall condition has deteriorated over time."
"I think it completely unrealistic to expect a medical fridge to be delivered to the house as and when a course of intravenous antibiotics is required."
The hyperbole might be noted
"Intravenous antibiotics are delivered to the home when required by a specialised contractor."
The team went on in the same paragraph to say:
"Fridges are provided by the specialised provider of antibiotics. If a patient requires repeated intravenous antibiotics the fridge is normally left in the patient's house." (quote unchecked)