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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Ali v Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust & Anor [2018] EWHC 591 (Ch) (21 March 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2018/591.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 591 (Ch) |
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BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY and APPEAL CENTRE
ON APPEAL FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT BIRMINGHAM
ORDER OF UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE ALLEN 10 MAY 2017
CLAIM NO. B10YJ213
The Priory Courts 33 Bull Street, Birmingham |
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B e f o r e :
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Abdulrazak Ali |
Claimant and Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust (2) G4S Secure Solutions UK Ltd |
Defendant Defendant and Respondent |
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Mr Gurion Taussig (instructed by G4S Legal Dept) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 14th March 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Birss :
"Yes this is security at Heartlands Hospital, one of our warders reported a parent taking a child off the ward that's got a child protection order on it.
Operator: Right okay and the mother?
Caller: And the mother yeah the mother and the father taken the child off the site.
Operator: They've tried to take the child do you know how old the child is
Caller: 3 years old.
Operator: Is it a male or female child do you know.
Caller: Female
Operator: 3 year old female
Caller: Yes
Operator: Okay which ward are they on
Caller: They're in our visitors' car park at the moment trying to leave the hospital premises.
Operator: Right so they're now on the visitors' car park
Caller: They're in a motor vehicle
Operator: Can you see the reg
Caller: Yes, it's VU11 Lima Oscar Juliet
Operator: What sort of car
Caller: It's a white Toyota
Operator And it's the Heartlands
Caller: Yes as you drive in it's the first car park on the right-hand side
Operator: Ok and what is your name Sir
Caller: Akram AKRAM
Operator: And you're on 0121 424 2001
Caller: That's right yeah
Operator: Okay we'll get someone on there all right bye."
"50. The police custody record is exhibited to Mr Ali's statement. It notes under "circumstances of arrest" that officers were called to Heartlands Hospital by staff members' stating that Mr Ali and his wife had kidnapped a 3 year old female. Staff stated they were the parents of the child and there was a child protection order in place whereby they cannot contact the child.
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52. The police incident log notes among other things police being informed at 1800 hours that there was no protection order. This was confirmed and clarified at 18:29 but the medical staff said that the child required oxygen overnight and against medical advice the parents had removed the child and if she did not receive oxygen there was a serious risk to her health. The officer advised that the child should be placed on the PPO and the parents arrested for neglect.
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54 In the police investigation log it is noted that it appears the whole incident may have been misconstrued by staff members in the hospital call centre (operator). It is said that it appears from comments made by the father that the parents had been waiting for approximately six hours in the hospital. They became impatient with the delay and stated they were going to see their GP in the morning. The staff somehow have thought the child is subject of a protection order and have called the incident and accordingly it now appears that the child may not be subject to a protection order but this will need confirming by PPU."
"56 PC Weller in his witness statement recorded what was said in the emergency call and set out above. He identified the car and blocked it. He shouted for the driver to open the door and he looked at him and the vehicle lunged forward. This concerned PC Weller, who therefore drew his baton and held it at the high carry position with the intention of smashing the driver's window if he continued to ignore his instructions. He continued to shout to the driver to open the door and he eventually complied with these instructions. Her told the driver to get on the floor but he continued to ignore him and remained in his seat and he could see there was still a potential threat of the driver driving off or PC Weller being assaulted so he pulled him out of the car and put him on the ground and he was detained and consequently arrested."
"96. The law here is clear. As set out in Davidson which I have quoted above, false imprisonment will only lie in a case such as this where a person in Mr Akram's position goes beyond merely giving information to a properly constituted authority on which that authority could act or not as it sees fit or whether he himself was the instigator, promoter and active inciter of the arrest and imprisonment and for his employer through him to be liable his actions are required to have gone beyond the giving of information to the police officers for them to take such action as they thought fit and that it amounted to some direction or procuring or direct request or direct encouragement that they should act by arresting Mr Ali. […] "
" […] [Counsel for Mr Ali] argued that the facts in the case are much more akin to those in Ahmed than those in Davidson. Among other things she argued that though no overt request for an arrest was made this was plainly the intention and expectation in reporting the information via 999, and the evidence of PC Weller confirmed that no separate evaluation of the information was conducted as in Davidson either prior to or at the time of the arrest. She also argued that the fact that the information indicated an emergency situation essentially precluded the exercise of an independent judgment by the police. In acting solely and immediately on the information received from Mr Akram she argues that no conclusion could be drawn but that the police were acting under the direction of the second defendant.
97. I disagree with this submission. I have set out above the information that was given by Mr Akram to the police as recorded on the police log. In my view it is clear that all he did was give information to the police on which they could act or not as they saw fit. There was nothing in the information given by him that amounted to a direction or a procuring or a direct request or direct encouragement that the police should act by arresting Mr Ali. In Davidson the police acted on the information given to them by the store detective, she identified H and the plaintiff and they were told that they were being arrested on suspicion of shoplifting. There was in that case as in this, an absence of any words or actions going beyond the simple provision of information for the police to decide what action they would take on it. Accordingly I conclude that the claim of false imprisonment is not made out.
[…]
100. The final point I address is the matter raised by Ms Ayling on causation.. She argued that Mr Ali would have been detained and arrested in any event on the basis of neglect and therefore he would not have suffered loss involving more than nominal damages in any event. In the circumstances I do not consider it is necessary to go into this point. We have no evidence from the police as to what their response would have been had the correct facts been transmitted to them. No doubt they would at least have wished to interview Mr Ali and might well have detained him, but whether they would have acted in the manner in which they did can only be a matter of speculation. In any event the point is academic and does not need to be addressed."
"There is no order in law known as a 'child protection order.' Whether what was intended to be communicated as an interim care order, an emergency protection order or any other form, for the purposes of the hearing, no counsel sought to argue that the meaning of the words 'child protection order' could be taken to mean anything other than an order preventing [Mr Ali's daughter] from being removed from the hospital or being placed in the care of her parents."
Assessment
"The gist of the tort is the mere imprisonment. The claimant need not prove that the imprisonment was unlawful or malicious, but establishes a prima facie case if he was imprisoned by the defendant; the onus then lies on the defendant of proving a justification." (see para 442 of Vol. 45(2) of Halsbury's Laws (Tort) and also Dallison at 370).
"Accordingly, as it would seem to me, the question which arose for the decision of the learned judge in this case was whether there was information properly to be considered by the jury as to whether what Mrs Yates did went beyond laying information before police officers for them to take such action as they thought fit and amounted to some direction, or procuring, or direct request, or direct encouragement that they should act by way of arresting these defendants. He decided that there was no evidence which went beyond the giving of information. Certainly there was no express request. Certainly there was no encouragement. Certainly there was no discussion of any kind as to which action the police officers should take.
The crux of Mr Clover's submission is that this case is different from the case in which an ordinary member of the public gives information to a police officer because this is a store detective, somebody better informed than an ordinary member of the public as to what was likely to happen upon making a complaint, and somebody with a very clear intention and expectation as to what would happen. No doubt the store detective did have an intention and expectation as to what would happen. The fact remains that the learned judge to my mind quite correctly held that to what Mrs Yates did and said in no way went beyond the mere giving of information, leaving it to the officers to exercise a discretion which on their unchallenged evidence they did as to whether they should take any action or not."
"In those circumstances, like Sir Thomas Bingham MR, I would refer to the passage in the judgment of Barry J in Pike and Waldrum & Peninsular & Oriental Stream Navigtation Company[1952] 1 Lloyd's Rep 431 at 454:
'The authorities cited to me, to which I need not refer in detail, establish quite clearly to my mind that he person who requests a police officer to take some other person into custody may be liable to an action for false imprisonment; not so if he merely gives information upon which the constable decides to make an arrest.'
"Whether a request by itself is sufficient to make a person liable does not arise in this case. What is clear in the passage I have read is that merely giving information is not enough. That does not give rise to false imprisonment. Mrs Yates did no more than that. However much one may look at evidence and analyse what possible consequences might or would arise from the information which she gave, the fact is that all she did was to give the information."
"85. No reference was made either in Martin or in Sallow to Davidson, or the authorities considered by the Court of Appeal in the latter case. This is not surprising as the torts of false arrest and the malicious abuse of process torts have important differences as I have mentioned above, in particular, that the claimant in the respect of the latter is obliged to establish as part of his cause of action both that the defendant was malicious, and lack of reasonable and probable cause. The Claimant in a claim for false arrest on the other hand, has to establish neither. There are, so it seems to me potentially significant implications in those circumstances for lowering the threshold by which a private individual can become liable for false arrest by giving information to the police, which Mr Davies does not address in argument."
86. On one view, it might be thought that the state of mind of the informant should be irrelevant to the (apparently) objective question as to whether they had, or had not procured an arrest. But there are obviously sound reasons why a malicious informant who knowingly gives false information to the police (which they are not in a position to check) with the intention of bringing about an innocent person's prosecution and conviction should be held to account. Similarly, it might be thought, if an individual maliciously procures an arrest, as there was a finding the defendants had done in Sallow (whether an arrest is judicial, or even ministerial: see para 16-15 note 62 Clerk & Lindsell). The position is otherwise it seems to me in a case where a person (such as the store detective in Davidson) gives information in good faith which is merely mistaken. Whilst the Claimant does not accept the bona fides of the Defendants in these proceedings, nonetheless it is not suggested on his behalf, that he must prove malice in order to establish a prima facie case.
87. It seems to me therefore the test I am bound to apply in determining whether the Defendants procured the Claimant's arrest is that identified in Davidson. Were the Defendants responsible for the Claimant's arrest by directing or requesting, or directly encouraging the officers to arrest the Claimant; and in that respect did they go beyond laying information before police officers for them to take such action as they saw fit?
"But it is quite a different thing if a party simply gives information, and the constable thereupon acts according to his own judgment. In such a case the informer incurs no responsibility in the tort of false imprisonment. The critical test is whether the defendant was 'responsible for the claimant's arrest by directing or requesting or directly encouraging the officers to arrest the claimant; and in that respect did they go beyond laying information before police officers for them to take such action as they saw fit.' [citing Ahmed and Davidson]"